Piano Concerto No. 10
0 sources
Piano Concerto No. 10
Summary
Piano Concerto No. 10 is a musical work/composition[1]. It ranks in the top 5% of musical_work_composition entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (111 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Piano Concerto No. 10's instance of is recorded as musical work/composition[3].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's composer is recorded as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart[4].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's language of work or name is recorded as no linguistic content[5].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's catalog code is recorded as 365[6].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's catalog code is recorded as 316a[7].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's catalog code is recorded as 365/316a[8].
- 1779 marks the founding of Piano Concerto No. 10[9].
- Piano Concerto No. 10 was published on January 1, 1779[10].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's tonality is recorded as E-flat major[11].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's instrumentation is recorded as piano[12].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's number of parts of this work is recorded as {'unit': 'Q929848', 'amount': '+3'}[13].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's copyright status is recorded as public domain[14].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's copyright status is recorded as public domain[15].
- Piano Concerto No. 10's form of creative work is recorded as piano concerto[16].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
-
Release type: Concerto[17]
-
Genre(s): classical, concerto[18]
-
Community tags: classical, concerto[19]
-
MusicBrainz ID: f49b000a-eb6d-3341-b077-9cf9269e8f65[20]
Body
Publication
Piano Concerto No. 10 was published on January 1, 1779[10]. Its language of work or name is recorded as no linguistic content[5].
Why It Matters
Piano Concerto No. 10 ranks in the top 5% of musical_work_composition entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (111 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]