Opus number


Opus, from the Latin word opus meaning "work", is usually used in the sense of "a work of art". In this sense the plural of opus, "opera", is used to refer to the genre of music drama.

Since about the 17th century, many composers, such as Ludwig van Beethoven, have identified their musical works by opus numbers. This is abbreviated "Op."; the plural is "Opp." Through about 1800, these were normally assigned by publishers who published groups of like works together, usually in sets of 3, 6, or 12. They consequently often have little relationship to chronological order of composition, even when this may be determined. Those works that did not happen to get published at the time lack opus numbers. Also, gaps and duplications in the numbering sequences, especially when multiple publishers are involved, are frequent. Some examples of this are discussed below under individual composers. Many opus numbers, such as those of Mozart, are so useless and so adequately replaced by catalogs that they are no longer used to identify the works at all. The multiple-set opus numbers best-known today are those of the string quartets of Joseph Haydn. Haydn's Op. 76, for instance, consists of six quartets, known individually as Op. 76 No. 1, etc., while his Op. 74 consists of three quartets, similarly identified.

Starting about 1800, especially with the works of Beethoven, opus numbers tended to be assigned by the composer and were more usually applied to individual works (though later composers often continued to assign opus numbers to sets, especially of short piano pieces and songs). Gradually the connection between opus number and publication has been lost, and many composers since 1900 have given opus numbers to works that are not necessarily published at all. Consequently opus numbers, when present, are a better guide to chronology of composition, though they are not always reliable. Beethoven was very selective in his early years about which works he assigned opus numbers to, omitting numbers even on some works he sent for publication. (Many in this category have since his death been assigned numbers labeled "WoO", standing for "Werk ohne Opuszahl" or "work without an opus number.") However, in later years he published some very early works with higher opus numbers, and some works published posthumously were also given opus numbers.

The practice of posthumous opus numbers, sometimes but not always labeled "Op. posth.", is most striking in the case of Felix Mendelssohn. Subsequent to his death, many works were published by his heirs with opus numbers. For example, Mendelssohn published in his lifetime three symphonies, numbers 1-3, with the opus numbers 11, 52, and 56. Two symphonies composed between No. 1 and No. 2, but withdrawn by the composer, the "Italian" and the "Reformation", were published after his death and called No. 4 and No. 5 respectively, with the opus numbers 90 and 107.

Some composers, such as Cesar Franck and Bela Bartok, used opus numbers early in their careers but soon dropped them; others, such as Carl Nielsen and Paul Hindemith, were inconsistent about using them. Others, however, have been strict and conscientious, most notably Serge Prokofiev, who habitually assigned opus numbers to works before beginning to compose them, thus leaving some fragmentary or planned works with opus numbers on his death, and even assigning new opus numbers to revised works; thus his Symphony No. 4 is both Op. 47 and Op. 112, and his Piano Sonata No. 5 is both Op. 38 and Op. 135, depending on the edition.

Because of the problems of using opus numbers to identify works particularly for composers from the baroque and classical eras, and the absence and scattered use of opus numbers by composers of all eras, many composers' works have been definitely cataloged by individual scholars, and in such cases their works may be unambiguously referred to by their thematic catalog abbreviations.

See also