‘Mozart dropped a new single’ – classical fans queue to hear newly discovered work in Leipzig
https://www.classicfm.com/composers/...cipal-library/
25 September 2024 - By Kyle Macdonald
Long lines of music lovers formed to hear a piece of history, as a previously unknown Mozart trio received its first public performance.
It‘s not often that you can hear new music from Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. But that’s just what modern audiences enjoyed last weekend, with performances of a newly discovered string trio.
Last Thursday, Leipzig municipal libraries revealed their discovery of a previously unknown work by the great Austrian composer.
The music was found in the collection of the Leipzig Municipal Library while researchers were completing a new edition of the Köchel catalogue of Mozart’s works.
Composed for string trio, the seven-movement piece is believed to have been written in the mid to late 1760s, when Mozart was a teenager. The manuscript features dark brown ink on off-white laid paper, with the title Serenate ex C.
The 12-minute piece has now been named Ganz kleine Nachtmusik. The first modern performance of it took place last week at the composer’s birthplace in Salzburg.
With huge excitement, Ganz kleine Nachtmusik received its German premiere at the Leipzig Opera. On Saturday, 400-metre-long queues formed in Augustusplatz outside the opera house with fans eager to hear the performance. It was played by graduates of the Johann Sebastian Bach Music School.
“Mozart dropped a new single,” commented one viewer on YouTube. Watch it being played above.
“We are convinced that we can now present a completely unknown, charming piece by the young Mozart,” Ulrich Leisinger, head of research at the Mozarteum Foundation, told the German Press Agency.
Leisinger said the piece displayed compositional characteristics which suggested Mozart would have been between 10 and 13 years old at the time of writing. Experts also suggested it was likely the piece was written for an outdoor performance, with the opening march intended to grab the audiences attention.
“Absolutely beautiful,” commented one Mozart fan, who made it to the Leipzig premiere.
“It’s an honour to be one of the first humans to hear this song in hundreds of years,” wrote another viewer on YouTube.
In an era of streaming, international pop acts, and trending TikTok sounds, new music of a teenage Mozart still creates a moment like no other.
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