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The Violin Concerto in E major, BWV 1042, is a violin concerto by Johann Sebastian Bach. It is based on the three-movement Venetian concerto model, albeit with a few unusual features; each movement has "un-Italian characteristics". [1] The piece has three movements: Allegro, meter of , in ritornello form in E major; Adagio, meter of 3
The first movement bears a strong resemblance to the music of period composers such as J. N. Hummel, John Field, or Friedrich Kalkbrenner. The second theme is in A-flat major (the dominant major enharmonic to G-sharp) rather than the expected E major. The second movement, in A major, anticipates the stylistic idiom of the music of Frédéric ...
Johann Ernst of Saxe-Weimar: Violin Concerto in C major , first movement, and/or BWV 984/1 596: D minor: organ: Vivaldi, Op. 3 No. 11: Concerto in D minor for two violins, cello and strings, RV 565 972: D major: harpsichord Vivaldi, Op. 3 No. 9: Violin Concerto in D major, RV 230; BWV 972a 972a: D major: harpsichord
The typical three-movement structure, a slow movement (e.g., lento or adagio) preceded and followed by fast movements (e.g., presto or allegro), became a standard from the early 18th century. The concerto originated as a genre of vocal music in the late 16th century: the instrumental variant appeared around a century later, when Italians such ...
Starting with Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3, several works in the key of C minor began to have slow movements in E major, three examples of which are Johannes Brahms' First Symphony and Piano Quartet No. 3, and Sergei Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2. Johann Nepomuk Hummel composed a Trumpet Concerto in E major.
In the 19th century, Henry Litolff blurred the boundary between piano concerto and symphony in his five works entitled Concerto Symphonique, and Ferruccio Busoni added a male choir in the last movement of his hour-long concerto. Wilhelm Furtwängler wrote his Symphonic Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, which lasts more than one hour, in 1924 ...
Violin Concerto No. 3 in E major, MS 50 (ca. 1826–30) Violin Concerto No. 4 in D minor, MS 60 (ca. 1829–30) Violin Concerto No. 5 in A minor, MS 78 (1830) Violin Concerto No. 6 in E minor, Op. posth., MS 75—probably the first to be written; only the solo part survives; Giovanni Battista Pergolesi. Violin Concerto in B flat major; Manuel M ...
Schubert's String Quartet D.87 (1813) [all movements in E-flat major] Paganini's Violin Concerto in E minor (ca. 1815) [all movements in E minor / major] Schubert's Piano Sonata No.7 in D ♭ (D.567/568) (1st version, 1817) [all movements in D-flat major or c-sharp minor] Beethoven's Piano Sonata Op. 109 (1820) [all movements in E major or e minor]