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Clarinet Concerto in A major, K.622 Zimbler Sinfonietta 1950, DL 7500 Mozart Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet in A major, K.581 Fine Arts Quartet 1951, DL 9600 Mozart Trio for Piano, Clarinet and Viola in E ♭ major, K.498 "Kegelstatt" Trio Lillian Fuchs, viola, Mieczyslaw Horszowski, piano 1950, DL 9543 Porter-Brown
Eschewing the large classical concerto form, Nielsen has cast the Clarinet Concerto in one continuous movement. It begins with a firm Allegretto un poco, relieved by a somewhat more songful second theme. There is much stormy strife between the soloist and the orchestra and between the two principal competing keys.
A clarinet concerto is a concerto for clarinet; that is, a musical composition for solo clarinet together with a large ensemble (such as an orchestra or concert band). Albert Rice has identified a work by Giuseppe Antonio Paganelli as possibly the earliest known concerto for solo clarinet; its score appears to be titled "Concerto per il Clareto ...
The Clarinet Concerto ends with a fairly elaborate coda in C major that finishes off with a clarinet glissando – or "smear" in jazz lingo." The piece is written in a very unusual form. The two movements are played back-to-back, linked by a clarinet cadenza .
Mozart: Clarinet Concerto / Quintet; Birchall: Concerto: Robin O'Neill, Philharmonia Orchestra and Wigmore Soloists 2022 [3] [54] Clarinet Trios: Mozart, Schumann, Bruch, Stravinsky: Isabelle van Keulen and Michael McHale [55] Arnold: Clarinet Concerto No. 1 / Philharmonic Concerto / Divertimento No. 2 / Etc. Rumon Gamba and BBC Philharmonic ...
The Clarinet Concerto was also written for a member of the Copenhagen Wind Quintet, Aage Oxenvad. Nielsen stretches the capacities of instrument and player to the utmost; the concerto has just one continuous movement and contains a struggle between the soloist and the orchestra and between the two principal competing keys, F major and E major.
The classical composer Leopold Koželuch left around 400 compositions. Among these there are about thirty symphonies, twenty-two piano concertos, including a concerto for piano four-hands, arguably one of the best examples of this rare genre, two clarinet concertos, twenty-four violin sonatas, sixty-three piano trios, six string quartets, two oratorios (one of which, Moses in Ägypten, has ...
The Clarinet Concerto is a composition for solo clarinet and orchestra by the Finnish composer Magnus Lindberg.It was written for the Finnish clarinetist Kari Kriikku.The piece was given its world premiere in Finlandia Hall, Helsinki, on September 14, 2002 by Kari Kriikku and the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Jukka-Pekka Saraste. [1]