- Concertino (composition)
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A concertino (or Konzertstück) is a short concerto freer in form. It normally takes the form of a one-movement musical composition for solo instrument and orchestra, though some concertinos are written in several movements played without a pause.
Famous concertinos
Listed by composer:
- Cécile Chaminade: Concertino for Flute and Orchestra in D major
- Ferdinand David: Concertino for Trombone and Bassoon
- Lorenzo Ferrero: Three Baroque Buildings (1997) for trumpet, bassoon and string orchestra
- Ferrero: Rastrelli in Saint Petersburg (2000) for oboe and string orchestra
- Ferrero: Two Cathedrals in the South (2001) for trumpet and string orchestra
- Ferrero: Guarini, the Master (2004) for violin and string orchestra
- Leoš Janáček: Concertino for piano and chamber ensemble
- Julius Klengel: Concertino for Cello in C major
- Carl Maria von Weber: Concertino in C minor/E flat for Clarinet and Orchestra
- Weber: Concertino in E minor for Horn and Orchestra
- Weber: Konzertstück in F minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 79, J. 282 (later arranged for solo piano by Franz Liszt, S. 576a)
- Gilad Hochman: Concertino for String Orchestra and Flute Obbligato (2003). [1]
References
Concertos Types Concerto · Concertino · Concerto grosso · Concerto for orchestra · Sinfonia concertante · Ripieno concerto · Solo concerto · Student concertoBy instrument Bass oboe concerto · Bassoon concerto · Cello concerto · Clarinet concerto · Double bass concerto · Double concerto for violin and cello · English horn concerto · Flute concerto · Harmonica concerto · Harpsichord concerto · Oboe concerto · Organ concerto · Piano concerto · Timpani concerto · Triple concertos for violin, cello, and piano · Trumpet concerto · Viola concerto · Violin concertoBy composers Book:Concertos · Category:Concertos · Portal:Classical music This article about a concerto is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.