Concerto for Orchestra
Music Sound
Concerto for Orchestra
Although a
concerto is usually a piece of
music for
one or more solo
instruments pitted against an
orchestra, several
composers have written works with the apparently contradictory title
Concerto for Orchestra. This title is usually chosen to
emphasise soloistic and virtuosic treatment of the instruments of the
orchestra.
For the distinction between the Concerto for Orchestra and the
Sinfonia Concertante genres (or:
forms):
see
sinfonia concertante
The best known Concerto for Orchestra is the one by
Béla
Bartók (1943), although the title had been used several times before.
Concertos for Orchestra (in chronological order)
Concerto for Orchestra, Opus 38 by Paul Hindemith (1925)
Concerto for Orchestra by Walter Piston (1933), which is based in part on
Hindemith's work
Concerto for Orchestra by Zoltán Kodály (1939)
Concerto for Orchestra by Béla Bartók (1943)
Concerto for String Orchestra by Alan Rawsthorne (1949)
Concerto for Orchestra by Witold Lutosławski (1950-54)
Concerto for Orchestra by Michael Tippett (1962-63)
Concerto for Orchestra by Roberto Gerhard (1965)
Concerto for Orchestra by Elliott Carter (1969)
Concerto for Orchestra by Roger Sessions (1979-81), which won him the
Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1982
Concerto for Orchestra by Leonard Bernstein (1986-89), which is also known
as "Jubilee Games" for orchestra and baritone
Boston Concerto by Elliott Carter (2002)
Concerto for Orchestra by Jennifer Higdon (2002).
Concerto for Orchestra by Magnus Lindberg (2003).
Goffredo Petrassi made the concerto for orchestra something of a speciality,
writing eight of them since the 1930s.
Home | Up | Sinfonia concertante | Concerto grosso | Concerto for Orchestra | Piano concerto | Viola concerto | Violin concerto | Violoncello concerto | Concertino | Clarinet concerto | Harpsichord concerto
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