Thema da capo: Another Look at Mozart’s Embellishments
This article provides a new analysis, appraisal and aesthetic examination of Mozart’s notated melodic embellishments. Whereas previous studies of Mozartean embellishment (including those undertaken by Frederick Neumann in the 1980s and Robert Levin in the 1990s) tend to focus on the local, individual gestures that make up the composer’s vocabulary, this study examines broader issues in Mozart’s art of embellishment – in particular, the larger-scale characteristics of his written embellishment models, including the rate at which figuration accumulates and the structural layout of that figuration within and between individual phrases. I then explore the aesthetic resonances of melodic embellishment in Mozart’s oeuvre, touching upon topics including the relationship of embellishment to a movement’s affect, the relationship of embellishment to the compositional persona encoded in a work, the use of embellishment to depict improvisation in operas, and the aesthetic of digressiveness in the composer’s melodies.
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