Mitsuko Uchida plays piano and Jeffrey Tate conducts the Mozarteum Orchestra in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 9 “Jeunehomme”, in E flat major, K. 271.
A Saltzburg Festival performance, recorded in the Mozarteum, Saltzburg, 1989
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart composed this concerto in Salzburg, 1777. Though only 21 years old, he displayed great maturity and originality in
what is regarded by many as his first great masterpiece.
It was composed for a Mlle. Jeunehomme, of whom very little is known (such as–her first name!). But she must have been a very
fine pianist to be able to perform this! The mix of dramatic and intense emotions, some seemingly mad and anguished with parts of
joy and happiness suggest (one romantically feels) that Mlle. Jeunehomme must have been quite a handful for the young Mozart.
1. Allegro, in E flat major and common (C) time
2. Andantino, in C minor and 3/4 time
3. Rondo (Presto), in E flat major and 2/2 time
Dawn Chan notes:
Renowned pianist Alfred Brendel has referred to Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 9, known as the Jeunehomme, as a “wonder of the world,” going so far as to assert that Mozart “did not surpass this piece in the later piano concertos.”
update–
thanks to Laemmerhirt, I moved past my old sources and got some new info!
Christopher H. Gibbs wrote in 2005:
WHAT’S IN A NAME?
Countless beloved pieces of so-called classical music have a nickname, often one not given by the composer. Mozart would have no idea what the “Jupiter” Symphony is, Beethoven the “Emperor” Concerto or “Moonlight” Sonata, or Schubert the “Unfinished” Symphony. The names sometimes come from savvy publishers who know they can improve sales, or from impresarios, critics, or performers. The case of the Concerto we hear today is particularly interesting, and only recently explained. Little is known of the genesis or first performance of the E-flat Concerto. Twentieth-century accounts usually stated that Mozart composed it for a French keyboard virtuoso named Mademoiselle Jeunehomme, who visited Salzburg in the winter of 1777. Nothing else was known, not even the woman’s first name.
Last year, the Viennese musicologist Michael Lorenz, a specialist in the music of Mozart’s and Schubert’s time and a brilliant archival detective, figured out the mystery. The nickname was coined by the French scholars Théodore de Wyzewa and Georges de Saint-Foix in their classic early-20th-century study of the composer. As Lorenz explains, “Since one of their favorite names for Mozart was ‘jeune homme’ (young man), they presented this person as ‘Mademoiselle Jeunehomme.’”
In a September 1778 letter Mozart wrote to his father, he referred to three recent concertos, “one for the jenomy [K. 271], litzau [K. 246], and one in B-flat [K. 238]” that he was selling to a publisher. Leopold later called the first pianist “Madame genomai.” (Spellings were often variable and phonetic at the time.) Lorenz has identified her as Victoire Jenamy, born in Strasbourg in 1749 and married to a rich merchant, Joseph Jenamy, in 1768. Victoire was the daughter of the celebrated dancer and choreographer Jean Georges Noverre (1727-1810), who was a good friend of Mozart’s. He had choreographed a 1772 Milan production of Mozart’s opera Lucio Silla and later commissioned the ballet Les Petits Riens for Paris. Although we still know little about Victoire Jenamy—she does not appear to have been a professional musician, though clearly Mozart admired her playing—Mozart’s first great piano concerto can now rightly be called by its proper name: “Jenamy.”
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Tags: Alfred Brendel, Intense Emotions, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
someone tell me who is this mozart i was getting some sunshine in adrar near mali
I cannot believe that such venomous arguments appear on here.
What a call.
you mean the conductor, i presume.
I didn’t know that Yoko Ono plays piano!
Would like to see her playing Imagine with John!!
(just kidding)
lol very nice haha
but the composer looks a NERRDD , repects tho
talk about getting into it
OMG angel at piano I don´t deserve it….
Mitsuko Uchida is so fucking ugly. She needs a facelift before facing the public next time.
Oh and the pianist does a wonderful job!
That was a spectacular. Did you know if you listen to mozart’s music while doing school work it strengthens the cells that connect the two halves of your brain and you will do 60% better where if you listened to like rock while doing work it still helps but only by 20%. Mozart is more calming to the brain and has a lot more different pitches.
Mozart’s work is so inspiring. I wonder if he knew that he would become one of the most famous composers when he was younger. Him and Beethoven anyway.
mozart’s music sounds so crisp and clean with this playing; i like the way the piano entered with a light, clean trill
Does it get any better than watching a lovely Japanese woman, playing Mozart with a superb orchestra, in Mozart’s home city?
No, it doesn’t! I have Ms. Uchida’s performance of K. 331 on cd, and have long wished to be able to *watch* her as she weaves her magic — thank you!
long live mozart
The Woman on the piano is weird, she gets a little emotional in his piece:S
Aaahh the piano – a most challenging instrument which prompts failed musicians everywhere to log on to their youtubes and cast flames of censure incessantly upon other such failed musicians in a cesspool of tragic proportions…
You are the very model of a true dumbshit.
Yes, you deserve that! :E
this is super gay!
She may be a good pianist, but her face is soooooo ugly!!! She looks like a man dressed in woman’s clothes… Sorry …..
wferrier on radioparadise wrote<
In Mozarts time musicians were considered craftsmen and expected to work with set musical phrases. Thats how it was donethe same was true of all his contemporaries and immediate predecessors. This is the actual definition of the classical era in music! This fact is well known. Mozart isnt respected for originality, he is known for taking those phrases and mixing and matching them in such a way that surpassed everyone before him, and many after.
Mr Fingers Amnesia
check also Mr Fingers Amnesia on youtube