K 330 through K 333 are wonder sonatas, I would suggest all of them equally. Also, maybe the a minor (the number of which escapes me); though it might be overdone, it is likely the most virtuosic of his sonatas.
K is the Kochel catalogue classification, named after the classifier of Mozart's works.
Beethovens Piano sonata in C Minor Opus No 13 (1798) Symphony No.5 in Cminor Opus No 67 (1808)
Anna Mozart played the harpsichord and the piano.
a piano player
piano
One piano.
Neither Mozart's nor Beethoven's "Piano Sonata No. 11" is a choral work.
F major.
The 'Alla Turca' movement in Mozart's Piano Sonata No.11.
Composed by Mozart.
K is the Kochel catalogue classification, named after the classifier of Mozart's works.
No, Mozart's Violin Sonata in F Major is a secular classical piece, as is most instrumental classical music.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Piano Sonata No. 11 in A Major, K.331 - Andante Grazioso
Mozart wrote 18 complete keyboard sonatas for the "piano" of his time (which was not, strictly speaking, the modern pianoforte). There is also a traditional "19th" sonata which consist of two separate works usually performed as a complete sonata. You can find all 19 of them, chronologically, in both MIDI and MP3 form at: http://www.sdrodrian.com/mozart/sonatas/
At Rosings Elizabeth plays Mozart's Piano Sonata in A Major - K331. At Pemberly, she plays and sings Mozart's Voi Che Sapete.
I'm not sure what you mean... The form of the sonata is sonata form. Or if you want to get fancy, it's First Movement Sonata-Allegro Form.
The answer is no. The Sonata for Two Pianos in D major, K. was composed for two pianos.