Listening to classical music is like a journey through history. It's incredible to think that the compositions we hear today have been cherished for centuries.
The french horn is one of my favorite instruments! They are so regal and powerful. Of course I'm bias since my brother is a professional horn player in South America. So I dearly love the french horn.
I also LOVE the instrument. My favourites are Cello, Piano, Flute and French Horn. But all of them are just too costly for me, maybe...i could buy a flute though.
I have adored Mozart since I was a little kid. When I was 12 or 13 an aunt of mine gave me an LP from Deutch Grammophone of all of Mozart's horn concertos. I'd never heard them before. They were just love at first sight and it has never changed.
The diversity’s depths of Mozart’s music is immeasurable, and beyond description, and full of admiration and emotion These masterpieces are a paramount gift to horn sound lovers My emotion is immeasurable depths Tokyo is full of Mozart’s enthusiasts
Muziek gaat gepaard met seizoenen voor mij, en deze horen bij de herfst zoals de bladeren die van de bomen vallen in mijn Park 🍂. Laat ze maar komen die lange herfst wandelingen, en druk in het weer met bomen snoeien,en hout verzagen voor volgende winter, en weg stapelen 🪵 Geniet van de herfst mensen 👍
From the time my music teacher Lt. Col. Sam Rhodes retd. introduced me to the Mozart horn concertos back in the early 1960s, I was hooked. I dearly wanted to play the French horn, but my parents couldn't afford the instrument or the lessons - back then you couldn't hire an instrument, and the school had none. It never happened, but I still love the instrument.
The nice thing about these pieces is that I can whistle along with every melody in every concerto. That says something about the quality of the music; it stays with you.
There was a French horn theme going through my head, I supposed it was Mozart's. So I tried this album and lastly I found it... Of course it was the 3rd movement from the 4th concert, fortunately the rest of album was good too, lol.
I love the resonance of the horn. These concerti were wonderful to listen to. The No 4, 3rd movement, is my personal favourite. Thanks to all who were responsible. Great work Jeurissen and Roy Goodman.
Me gusta toda la musica ,clasica ,sin excepción pero instrumental memte ,el sonido de la trompa es dulce i maravilloso. Salut para todos los musicos 🌟☺️👏💐
I love both Mozart and Hadyn when it comes to the french horn. Once when I was listening to Joseph Hadyn I wondered why he sounded so much like Mozart. I learned he was Mozart's teacher. No wonder Mozart sounded so much like Haydn. He tutored Beethoven but Beethoven is so different. Probably bcs he was German. His music stirs my soul into full wakefulness Lolz.
My mom played the French Horn professionally. I grew up watching cartoons and hearing her practice all this from her bedroom. She played in the NY philharmonic and the NBC recording orchestra. In the 50s and 60s. You can still hear her on flipper reruns. Dad played 4th horn. Mom played first and soloed the concertos. She had a triple horn with a screw off bell. A Paxton. Dad was a Wagnerian Tubin specialist and did his doctorate on this at UM in the 70s.
@@jamesbobo8457, What does your UM stand for? I went to a UM where I live. It's the oldest university in the country and had a branch in Singapore which is now the outstanding National University of Singapore.
Tijdloze muziek, van een wonderkind en later een genie op muziek gebied , volgens mij wordt zo'n uitzonderlijk talent maar 1x geboren in de menselijke geschiedenis, volkomen in harmonie met het universum, een voorbeeld hoe menselijke beschaving moet klinken!
I tried to put this on to study, but I can't because I get too excited and lose concentration. Also, my solo from freshman year for solos and ensembles is in here! It is Romanza and Rondo. I got a one on it and went to state
It's not singing. The actor is reciting remarks that Mozart wrote on the score. The remarks were intended, as far as anyone knows, to poke fun at Mozart's horn soloist, Leutgeb. It's placed at the end because there is another rondo associated with the First Horn Concerto. That one may have been written by Sussmayer (using the same rondo theme) as the one Mozart wrote.
@@ProfCabbage Thank you for explaining. I did not see that explanation anywhere in the original posting, but maybe I missed it? Any idea why the concerti are out of sequence?
❤❤❤❤🎉 ik hou hiervan. Applaus voor Mozart en die dit gespeel hebben👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏🈸️💕💕💕👏👏🥰🤩😚😚😚😚😚😚😚😀🤗👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻💘💝💖💗💓💞💕💚💛🧡❤❣💌💙💜🖤💎💎💎💎💎💎🎁🥇🎁🥇🎁🥇🎁🏆🏆🏆🌞🎼🎵🎶📯📯📯📯📯📯📯📯📯📯🎧🎧🎤🎻🥁🎺Mozart zet de wereld op zen kop 🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🎺🥁🎻🎤🎧📯🎶
Why is the order out of whack? Not that concerto 1 in D (KV 412) _has_ to be first (but there's no reason why not), but why is its third movement separated and placed last, after an additional two concertos?
There are two rondos associated with this concerto. The one with the narration (with bizarre remarks Mozart wrote on the score) is one. The one generally played was arranged by Sussmayer. If there was a slow movement, it hasn't survived.
if there's one thing that irks me is back in 1768 he wrote a Trumpet concerto (he was afraid of them mind you like me almost) but i can "almost" barely find it anywhere on the web! don't give me that "oh but it's now missing" b.s or i'll delete the comment :/
I have never heard that. He would have been 12 then but Mozart was capable of anything. You're not thinking of Leopold Mozart's (really rather good) trumpet concerto at a performance of which Wolfgang fainted because the part is so high?
What HAS survived is a Mozart letter testifying to its completion. There's a few examples of Mozart compositions like a 'melodrama' Semiramis mentioned in a letter but now is gone. Manuscripts can/do get misplaced and sometimes they turn up. If you like brass sound and Mozart, look up on RUclips Mozart's orphanage(Waisenhaus) Mass K 139. The trumpet concerto was composed and performed by one of the orphans at that event.
Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!
As stated in comments already, "Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' (from the original CD) above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!" Perhaps this information should be been included in the description of the video.
It's because of how the horn was made during his time. It was a real hassle to switch between different lengths of tubing to change the pitch and thus the key. The quintessential length of tubing at the time that Mozart was writing these was the E flat tubing length, so that is what he wrote them in. Leopold Mozart, his father, also played the horn a little bit, and so Mozart probably played it just enough to learn the basics, which would have been played on E flat horn.
As stated in comments already, "Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' (from the original CD) above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!" Perhaps this information should be been included in the description of the video.
So... What does the "seccata di coglioni" which translates something like "it's drying up my balls" have to do with this? Please, listen around 1:16:11 and laugh with me! Definitely not a very respectuf ending for this immortal music.
As stated in comments already, "Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' (from the original CD) above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!" Perhaps this information should be been included in the description of the video.
As stated in comments already, "Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' (from the original CD) above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!" Perhaps this information should be been included in the description of the video.
Tracklist:
00:00:00 Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-Flat Major, KV 417: I. Allegro
00:06:29 Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-Flat Major, KV 417: II. Andante
00:09:49 Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-Flat Major, KV 417: III. Rondo: Allegro
00:13:22 Horn Concerto No. 3 in E-Flat, KV 447: I. Allegro
00:20:02 Horn Concerto No. 3 in E-Flat, KV 447: II. Romance: Larghetto
00:23:59 Horn Concerto No. 3 in E-Flat, KV 447: III. Allegro
00:27:49 Concerto movement in E Major, KV 494a: I. Allegro
00:36:51 Horn Concerto No. 1 in D Major, KV 412: I. Allegro
00:41:40 Horn Concerto No. 1 in D Major, KV 412: II. Rondo: Allegro
00:45:45 Horn Concerto in E-Flat Major, KV 370b/371: I. Allegro
00:53:06 Horn Concerto in E-Flat Major, KV 370b/371: II. Rondeau: Allegro
00:59:06 Horn Concerto No. 4 in E-Flat Major, KV 495: I. Allegro
01:06:47 Horn Concerto No. 4 in E-Flat Major, KV 495: II. Romance: Andante
01:11:13Horn Concerto No. 4 in E-Flat Major, KV 495: III. Rondo: Allegro
01:15:18 Horn Concerto No. 1 in D Major, KV 412: I. Allegro
C
Ccvccccccç
A
instablaster.
Thanks
Listening to classical music is like a journey through history. It's incredible to think that the compositions we hear today have been cherished for centuries.
The french horn is one of my favorite instruments! They are so regal and powerful. Of course I'm bias since my brother is a professional horn player in South America. So I dearly love the french horn.
. . . ah ...i see you are very proud of your brother!!!
11111111111111111111
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1
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Yet
I also LOVE the instrument. My favourites are Cello, Piano, Flute and French Horn. But all of them are just too costly for me, maybe...i could buy a flute though.
I love french horn. And I also play it, but I only have the elementary degree. PD: I'm spanish XD
@@MMBz85 degree?? Is that even needed if you have your learning FUEGO in you?
I have adored Mozart since I was a little kid. When I was 12 or 13 an aunt of mine gave me an LP from Deutch Grammophone of all of Mozart's horn concertos. I'd never heard them before. They were just love at first sight and it has never changed.
Wou nice story
@@mariosalinas1501 thank 😊 you
The diversity’s depths of Mozart’s music is immeasurable, and beyond description, and full of admiration and emotion
These masterpieces are a paramount gift to horn sound lovers
My emotion is immeasurable depths
Tokyo is full of Mozart’s enthusiasts
MOzart horn concertos are his best in cocnerto writing.
❗️👍❗️
My road trip music since I was 3 years old!
I don't know any better classical compositions than these french horn ones, plus his clarinet pieces, such a genius, so melodic and playful
surpassed only by Ein musikalischer Spaß 😌
Mozart's horn concertoes make me calm, joyful, and hopeful about life.
It is a chilly,lazy, Sunday and this music adds to the relaxing atmosphere of the day.
I love the horn.
I found in this piece the beauti of music, the light of the sun up high. My favourite concerto
素晴らしい表現ですね。
There is still something right in the world! Such marvelous music played so beautifully! Thank you for making life richer.
Muziek gaat gepaard met seizoenen voor mij, en deze horen bij de herfst zoals de bladeren die van de bomen vallen in mijn Park 🍂. Laat ze maar komen die lange herfst wandelingen, en druk in het weer met bomen snoeien,en hout verzagen voor volgende winter, en weg stapelen 🪵
Geniet van de herfst mensen 👍
Concerto No.3 Larghetto was a flashback moment. Did this movement for a solo festival when I was in 10th grade So long ago.
From the time my music teacher Lt. Col. Sam Rhodes retd. introduced me to the Mozart horn concertos back in the early 1960s, I was hooked. I dearly wanted to play the French horn, but my parents couldn't afford the instrument or the lessons - back then you couldn't hire an instrument, and the school had none. It never happened, but I still love the instrument.
Listening to classical music is my greatest life support after the all sustaining Grace of God the Father!
00:23:59 Horn Concerto No. 3 in E-Flat, KV 447: III. Allegro
Masterpiece
Mozart sounds amazing in comparison with modern music and contemporan music.❤❤❤👏👏👏
Vielen Dank Herr Mozart!
I love Mozarts Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-Flat Major. Our community orchestra played it and although simple. It was enjoyable to perform!
Brilliant! I love these Horn Concertos, my favourites Master Pieces by Mozart! 💝 A pleasure listening after so long!
Thank you so much! 💜🙏💜🕉
The nice thing about these pieces is that I can whistle along with every melody in every concerto. That says something about the quality of the music; it stays with you.
There was a French horn theme going through my head, I supposed it was Mozart's. So I tried this album and lastly I found it... Of course it was the 3rd movement from the 4th concert, fortunately the rest of album was good too, lol.
Glad to hear you found it! Always a great to feeling to find something that's been going through your head
These are some of Mozart's very delightful works.Excellent for relaxation.
Yes, I agree!!!
I love the resonance of the horn. These concerti were wonderful to listen to. The No 4, 3rd movement, is my personal favourite. Thanks to all who were responsible. Great work Jeurissen and Roy Goodman.
Me gusta toda la musica ,clasica ,sin excepción pero instrumental memte ,el sonido de la trompa es dulce i maravilloso. Salut para todos los musicos 🌟☺️👏💐
Beautiful music, no stupid ads❤
It's like taking off and flying around.... Master no doubt...🙃👋👋👋🇦🇹🎶🎵🎼☮️ Thanks for sharing...
These my concert favorite.
I love both Mozart and Hadyn when it comes to the french horn.
Once when I was listening to Joseph Hadyn I wondered why he sounded so much like Mozart. I learned he was Mozart's teacher. No wonder Mozart sounded so much like Haydn.
He tutored Beethoven but Beethoven is so different. Probably bcs he was German. His music stirs my soul into full wakefulness Lolz.
My mom played the French Horn professionally. I grew up watching cartoons and hearing her practice all this from her bedroom. She played in the NY philharmonic and the NBC recording orchestra. In the 50s and 60s. You can still hear her on flipper reruns. Dad played 4th horn. Mom played first and soloed the concertos. She had a triple horn with a screw off bell. A Paxton. Dad was a Wagnerian Tubin specialist and did his doctorate on this at UM in the 70s.
@@jamesbobo8457, What does your UM stand for? I went to a UM where I live. It's the oldest university in the country and had a branch in Singapore which is now the outstanding National University of Singapore.
@@jamesbobo8457 ❗️😎❗️👍❗️😎❗️
nice good sound
very well played
❗️👍❗️😎❗️👍❗️
wait there's such things as horn concertos? epic.
Tijdloze muziek, van een wonderkind en later een genie op muziek gebied , volgens mij wordt zo'n uitzonderlijk talent maar 1x geboren in de menselijke geschiedenis, volkomen in harmonie met het universum, een voorbeeld hoe menselijke beschaving moet klinken!
Love Mozart! Such joyful compositions!
Escuchar está música, le causa gran placer a mí alma, Mozart Grande !!!
제 평생 들었던 클래식 음악중에서, 개인적으로 3대 표제음악 중 하나입니다.
멋진 연주 감사합니다 ^^
I tried to put this on to study, but I can't because I get too excited and lose concentration. Also, my solo from freshman year for solos and ensembles is in here! It is Romanza and Rondo. I got a one on it and went to state
This is real helpful for my collage audition
아름다운 연주곡 잘 들었습니다~감사합니다~🎵🎻📯🎺🌿🍀☘🌹🌹☘🍀🌿❤❤
if i could only read emoji
❗️👍❗️😎❗️👍❗️
Here they are : ❗️👍❗️😎❗️🎯❗️😎❗️👍❗️❤️
buenísimo, amo estos conciertos.
I love Mozart's rench horn cpncerts.
wow so so so enjoyable.... I love the horns. see how they are oozing out of my woofer speakers.
played the song at 53.00, Not easy, I had to practice a lot for solo ensemble contest back in 2004. What a tough piece!
Siempre he querido aprender me el concierto 1 pero no ha sido fácil 😢
Why are the movements and concerti out of sequence? And why is there singing in the last segment (which starts at 1:15:18)?
It's not singing. The actor is reciting remarks that Mozart wrote on the score. The remarks were intended, as far as anyone knows, to poke fun at Mozart's horn soloist, Leutgeb. It's placed at the end because there is another rondo associated with the First Horn Concerto. That one may have been written by Sussmayer (using the same rondo theme) as the one Mozart wrote.
@@ProfCabbage Thank you for explaining. I did not see that explanation anywhere in the original posting, but maybe I missed it?
Any idea why the concerti are out of sequence?
Mozart ha scritto musica d una bellezza suprema
Meraviglioso 👏👏👏 bravo!!
NÃO SEI COMO ALGUÉM PODE DAR DESLIKE NUMAS MARAVILHAS DESSAS!!!!!!
Funkeiros, roqueiros e gente que só ouve barulho.
GROSS - Schreiben ist SCHREIEN im Netz ❗️😎❗️
briliantissimo
The best tankyou mozart
Hello....Bravo se escucha muy bien. Bye
If I pay for the service does that stop commercial interruptions?
Yes
Grande.
can you just make the album with 1-2-3-4?
❤❤❤❤🎉 ik hou hiervan. Applaus voor Mozart en die dit gespeel hebben👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏🈸️💕💕💕👏👏🥰🤩😚😚😚😚😚😚😚😀🤗👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻💘💝💖💗💓💞💕💚💛🧡❤❣💌💙💜🖤💎💎💎💎💎💎🎁🥇🎁🥇🎁🥇🎁🏆🏆🏆🌞🎼🎵🎶📯📯📯📯📯📯📯📯📯📯🎧🎧🎤🎻🥁🎺Mozart zet de wereld op zen kop 🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🙃🎺🥁🎻🎤🎧📯🎶
MUSIC FUL OF YOY AND BRILLIANCE
the rondo of no1 in D is very different from the standard one
and in the 3rd mvmt of no4 it misses out about bars 110-115
1:16:12 Sorprendente per chi conosce l'Italiano e... Non conosce Mozart!
1:16:12 Shocking for those who do know Italian and... Do not know Mozart!
😁
Why is the order out of whack? Not that concerto 1 in D (KV 412) _has_ to be first (but there's no reason why not), but why is its third movement separated and placed last, after an additional two concertos?
There are two rondos associated with this concerto. The one with the narration (with bizarre remarks Mozart wrote on the score) is one. The one generally played was arranged by Sussmayer. If there was a slow movement, it hasn't survived.
I would like to change 4 horn concerts plus 1 bassoon concerto against ONE excellent cello concerto from you, Mr. Mozart. Deal ?
Can we just trade all hip-hop against a few more pieces from Mozart? Cello and Horn, both beautiful instruments.
Great
if there's one thing that irks me is back in 1768 he wrote a Trumpet concerto (he was afraid of them mind you like me almost) but i can "almost" barely find it anywhere on the web! don't give me that "oh but it's now missing" b.s or i'll delete the comment :/
Me parece que concierto que está antes del concierto rondó no es de Mozart, por favor corríjanme..
I have never heard that. He would have been 12 then but Mozart was capable of anything. You're not thinking of Leopold Mozart's (really rather good) trumpet concerto at a performance of which Wolfgang fainted because the part is so high?
What HAS survived is a Mozart letter testifying to its completion. There's a few examples of Mozart compositions like a 'melodrama' Semiramis mentioned in a letter but now is gone. Manuscripts can/do get misplaced and sometimes they turn up. If you like brass sound and Mozart, look up on RUclips Mozart's orphanage(Waisenhaus) Mass K 139. The trumpet concerto was composed and performed by one of the orphans at that event.
The very last movement in the video - is there supposed to be talking during the music, or is that dubbed in on accident?
Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!
@@seanfielding8209 fascinating. Thank you.
@@seanfielding8209 Thank you, I thought it was the devil.
@@seanfielding8209 WOW!! LOVE IT!! Thanks for the info!!
@@seanfielding8209 great info thank you! thought I was going insane
I’m a French horn player too
bello... ma scusate: la fine? cos'è una presa in giro?
Why continuo harpsichord?
I'm wondering as well. But I prefer it over piano so I'm not complaining.
❤
1:11:13 when you find the classical song you heard in a RUclips video but don’t know what it’s called 😍
Such a beautiful song, the lyrics are the best part imo
Flanders and Swann
1:17:21 what's up with the talking in this part?
As stated in comments already, "Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' (from the original CD) above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!" Perhaps this information should be been included in the description of the video.
@@Ozpeter Oh wow I had no idea! Thank you for your reply. That's very interesting!
@jk-zg8lz I know a certain amount about it because I was the recording engineer for the original CD, back in the 1990's 😄
❤🙏❤
What on earth is going on here? 1:16:48
These are the comments that Mozart wrote in the score, insulting the horn player!
@@Ozpeter haha ok - that s awesome
1:15:29 Same here
❤️💕❤️💕
1:19:22
Why are they all in E flat major
He's one of the greatest composers to ever live let the man do what he wants
@@rilke1791 Yeah I know lol im not critizicing I just find it funny that mozart made almost all of his horn concertos in Eb
It's because of how the horn was made during his time. It was a real hassle to switch between different lengths of tubing to change the pitch and thus the key. The quintessential length of tubing at the time that Mozart was writing these was the E flat tubing length, so that is what he wrote them in. Leopold Mozart, his father, also played the horn a little bit, and so Mozart probably played it just enough to learn the basics, which would have been played on E flat horn.
They aren't. The first concerto is in D. Horn concerti from the period are generally in D, E flat, or E.
Interpret : MOZART ❗️🤣❗️ Vs the desciption ❗️🤣❗️
01:11:13
Is it still copyright if I used music created and owned by people who have been long dead?
Why so many comercial?
Is It always a French horn?
Biz müzik dinliyorsak bunlar ne ya? 👏👏👏
bop
Ottimo il testo finale ... 🤣🤣🤣🤣
una vera chicca
Alfajores virgo.
hallo allohaahojho
😊 🎀
Pasta! Pasta! xD
😐
@@SVG4ever bruh sorry i thought you were refering to mozart as italian as a joke imma delete my cimment
@@giocosovelasco no problem
He says Basta not Pasta, idiot
He says Basta not Pasta
Coslada.
A RAT IS RULLITT.
!
Don't need the comments over the recording. Good bye!
So why such an idiotic comment!
As stated in comments already, "Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' (from the original CD) above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!" Perhaps this information should be been included in the description of the video.
So... What does the "seccata di coglioni" which translates something like "it's drying up my balls" have to do with this?
Please, listen around 1:16:11 and laugh with me!
Definitely not a very respectuf ending for this immortal music.
As stated in comments already, "Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' (from the original CD) above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!" Perhaps this information should be been included in the description of the video.
QUITEN ESTOS ANUNCIOS SON UNA PLAGA, A NADIE BENEFICIA
Moze
Nothing too special about it.
Mozart makes the most beautiful music sound simple. That's pure genious.
brillant corniste mais qui zappe les gammes prévues en détaché //// c est prendre moins de risque c est sur mais ce n est pas très correct !!! dommage
1:16:12
As stated in comments already, "Mozart wrote these concerti for his friend, hornist Joseph Leutgeb. The 'liner notes' (from the original CD) above refer to the way he teased Leutgeb, and among horn players, the best known teasing are his remarks in the margins of the original score for this movement, egging the soloist to speed up, calling him an ass, and so on. Great idea to repeat this movement at the end (see the 'serious' version at 36:51) with a voice booming out Mozart's admonitions to Leutgeb in the original Italian at the appropriate spots!" Perhaps this information should be been included in the description of the video.