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Variations in F minor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Andante with variations in F minor (Hoboken 17/6), also known as Un piccolo divertimento, was composed for piano by Joseph Haydn in 1793, and is among his most popular piano works. (The late British composer and pianist John McCabe, in his booklet note accompanying his boxed set of recordings of Haydn's complete solo keyboard music, was of the opinion that it was possibly inspired by the death of Maria Anna von Genzinger (1754–93, called "Marianne") [p. 23]. McCabe also says that this piece is Haydn's "most extended and most resourceful such work for the keyboard" [p. 22].) The variations here are a set of double variations, the first theme is in F minor and the second theme in F major. Two variations of each theme and an extended coda follow.

The manuscript of the Variations is owned by the Music Division of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. For the Haydn bicentennial in 2009, G. Henle Verlag published a facsimile of the manuscript.

The set was recorded on a variety of fortepianos by pianists such as Paul Badura-Skoda, Kristian Bezuidenhout, Bart van Oort, Christine Schornsheim, Alain Roudier, Gerrit Zitterbart, Yasuko Uyama-Bouvard, Bobby Mitchell, Michel Kiener, Joanna Leach, Rachel Heard and Alexandra Ivanova.

References

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  • David Ewen, Encyclopedia of Concert Music. New York; Hill and Wang, 1959.
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