By Charlotte Smith

Published: Tuesday, 14 November 2023 at 15:08 PM



Here’s a guide to the Sinfonia Concertante, Mozart’s lively, sometimes sorrowful, always beautiful concertante work for violin, viola and orchestra. We’ve also got, towards the end of the piece, a selection of the work’s best recordings.

When did Mozart write the Sinfonia Concertante?

Though only in his early 20s when he wrote his Sinfonia Concertante K364, Mozart already had a very substantial number of works already on his CV. These include nine of his 27 piano concertos, all five of his violin concertos, more than 30 symphonies and a huge body of chamber music and solo keyboard works. And while big-hitters such as The Marriage of Figaro and Don Giovanni were yet to come, opera featured strongly too. He was also well travelled, having toured Europe widely as a performer from childhood onwards – something that inevitably gave the Salzburg-born composer a certain Wanderlust

In September of 1777, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, then aged just 21, embarked on a journey to Mannheim by way of Munich and Augsburg in search of gainful employment, accompanied by his mother, Maria Anna. Mozart had recently been released from the services of Hieronymus Colloredo, the Archbishop of Salzburg, whose unpopular attempts to modernise court music practices had long been despised by his father, Leopold.

Despite concerted efforts to curry favour with the great and the good, however, the young composer’s offer of services met refusals in all three cities, and so in February 1778 his father commanded that he travel to Paris, again with his mother in tow.

When did Mozart’s mother die?

The trip was to be a tragic one. In June, Mozart’s mother fell ill and notwithstanding the attentions of doctors, she died on 3 July – an outcome for which a grieving Leopold chose to blame his son in a series of accusatory letters, describing him as idle and careless. A month later, Leopold wrote again to Mozart to inform him that the archbishop was offering the post of court organist in Salzburg and an increase in salary.

Despite the favourable conditions, the offer must have seemed a backwards step to the ambitious young musician, for he dallied for several months, again in Mannheim and Munich, before finally returning to Salzburg in January 1779. Among his new duties were playing in the cathedral, at court and in the chapel, training the choirboys and composing for the court and the cathedral.

Although Mozart did compose several substantial works for the archbishop, including the ‘Coronation’ Mass K317 and Missa solemnis, K337, it seems that his extra-curricular output was a source of dissatisfaction for Colloredo, who in 1782 appointed Michael Haydn to the post instead. Among the works that Mozart composed between 1779 and ’82 were the Concerto for two pianos, K365, the Symphonies K318, 319 and 338, the ‘Posthorn’ Serenade, and the Sinfonia Concertante for violin and viola, K364.