A Musical Joke
A Musical Joke K. 522, is a composition by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; he entered it in his Verzeichnis aller meiner Werke on 14 June 1787. Commentators have opined that the piece's purpose is satirical – that " harmonic and rhythmic gaffes serve to parody the work of incompetent composers" – though Mozart himself is not known to have revealed his actual intentions.
English name
The title A Musical Joke might be a poor rendering of the German original: Spaß does not necessarily connote the jocular, for which the word Scherz would more likely be used. A more accurate translation would be Some Musical Fun. The sometimes-mentioned nicknames Dorfmusikantensextett and Bauernsinfonie were added after Mozart's death; these names ridicule the players more than inept composers.Structure and compositional elements
The piece consists of four movements and takes about 20 minutes to perform.Compositorial comedic devices include:
- secondary dominants replacing necessary subdominant chords;
- dissonance in the horns;
- parallel fifths
- whole-tone scales in the violin's high register;
- clumsy orchestration, backing a thin melodic line with a heavy, monotonous accompaniment in the last movement;
- going to the wrong keys for a sonata-form structure ;
- starting the slow movement in the wrong key ;
- a pathetic attempt at a fugato, also in the last movement.
In popular culture
- The beginning of the fourth movement is used as the theme to the BBC's television coverage of the Horse of the Year Show.
- In series 19, episode 5 of the motoring show Top Gear, presenters Jeremy Clarkson and Richard Hammond design a car for elderly people, the Rover James. A feature of the car, a modified Fiat Multipla, is a radio that only plays the fourth movement.