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Triple concerto

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A triple concerto (Italian: Concerto triplo, German: Tripelkonzert) is a concerto with three soloists. Such concertos have been composed from the Baroque period, including works by Corelli, Vivaldi, Bach and Telemann, to the 21st century, such as two works by Dmitri Smirnov. The most famous example is Beethoven's Triple Concerto for violin, cello and piano. His combination of solo instruments, a piano trio, was often used also in later works.

History

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Many works in the genre concerto grosso were composed for three solo instruments, including Corelli's concerti grossi, Op. 6, for a trio (concertino) of two violins and cello. 1714. Antonio Vivaldi wrote several concertos for the same combination of instruments, published for example in L'estro armonico in 1711. Based on Italian models, Johann Sebastian Bach composed concertos for multiple instruments, including his Fourth Brandenburg Concerto, BWV 1049, with solo parts for violin and two recorders, his Fifth Brandenburg Concerto, BWV 1050, featuring violin, flute and harpsichord, the Concerto, BWV 1044, for the same soloists, and two concertos for three harpsichords and string orchestra.

Georg Philipp Telemann wrote 17 concertos for three instruments, many of them for two identical woodwind instruments, such as flutes or oboes, with a different third instrument such as violin or bassoon, others for three identical instruments, such as three violins, and for three different instruments, such as flute, violin and cello, published for example in his Tafelmusik collection.

Baroque Era

See also: Concerto grosso

Arcangelo Corelli's twelve concerti grossi, Op. 6, each of them for a soloist group (concertino) consisting of two violins and cello, were published posthumously in 1714. After that publication, the concerto grosso qualification was used to indicate various types of baroque concertos with multiple soloists. Antonio Vivaldi's L'estro armonico, published in 1711, also contained a number of concertos for two violins and cello, however without concertos for multiple soloists being indicated as concerto grosso in this earlier publication. The difference in Corelli's and Vivaldi's approach towards concertos for multiple soloists, as well in style as regarding the name that was used for them, has been explained as relating to differences in music traditions in Rome (where Corelli lived) and Venice (where Vivaldi lived). This did not prevent that later music historians would often, retro-actively, describe Vivaldi's concertos for multiple instruments as concerti grossi. Whatever the naming and style differences, both Corelli and Vivaldi set two violins and a cello as the standard group of soloists for triple concertos of the first quarter of the 18th century.

Johann Sebastian Bach knew Italian concertos primarily through the Venetian composers, and thus also did not use the concerto grosso qualifier for his concertos for multiple soloists. Nonetheless also his concertos for multiple instruments were retro-actively called concerti grossi. Philipp Spitta, Bach's 19th-century biographer, qualified these extant concertos for three soloists as concerti grossi:

First movement of Bach Brandenburg No.5 BWV 1050

Section 53 of the Telemann-Werke-Verzeichnis (TWV) lists 17 concertos for three soloists and orchestra by Georg Philipp Telemann. Most of these concertos are for two identical woodwind instruments, such as flutes or oboes, with a different third instrument such as violin or bassoon. Telemann also wrote triple concertos for three identical instruments and for three different instruments: for instance, his Tafelmusik collections contain a concerto for three violins (TWV 53:F1), and one for flute, violin and cello (TWV 53:A2).

Classical and early Romantic Eras

The most popular triple concerto, commonly called Triple Concerto (Tripelkonzert), is Beethoven's Triple Concerto for violin, cello and piano. Mozart also wrote a Triple Concerto in 1776, for three pianos instead of different instruments.

Later developments

Triple concerto compositions

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See also: List of triple concertos for violin, cello, and piano

Examples of triple concertos include Johann Sebastian Bach's Triple Concerto, BWV 1044, with solo parts for violin, flute and harpsichord, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Concerto No. 7 for three pianos, Ludwig van Beethoven's Triple Concerto for violin, cello and piano, and Dmitri Smirnov's Triple Concerto No. 2 for violin, harp and double bass.

In the following table, the compositions are initially sorted by a year of composition or publication, followed by composer, title, the three instruments, the kind of orchestra, and notes, such as a link to a reference.

Triple Concertos
Year Composer Title Key Solo 1 Solo 2 Solo 3 Orchestra Notes
1721 Johann Sebastian Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 G major harpsichord violin flauto traverso strings
1721 Johann Sebastian Bach Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 D major violin recorder recorder strings and bc
1730's Johann Sebastian Bach Triple Concerto, BWV 1044 A minor violin flute harpsichord strings
1770 Antonio Salieri Concerto for Oboe, Violin and Cello D major oboe violin cello orchestra
1776 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Piano Concerto No. 7 F major piano piano piano orchestra
1804 Ludwig van Beethoven Triple Concerto C major violin cello piano orchestra
1933 Bohuslav Martinů Concertino violin cello piano string orchestra
1938 Gian Francesco Malipiero Concerto a tre violin cello piano orchestra
1977 Dmitri Smirnov Triple Concerto No. 1 saxophone piano double bass orchestra
2002 Lera Auerbach Serenade for a Melancholic Sea violin cello piano orchestra
2003 Dmitri Smirnov Triple Concerto No. 2 violin harp double bass orchestra
2016 Wolfgang Rihm Trio Concerto violin cello piano orchestra

Reception

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References

  1. ^ Spitta 1899, III: p. 143.
  2. ^ Spitta 1899, III: pp. 146149.
  3. Spitta 1899, III: pp. 142–149.
  4. Georg Philipp Telemann: Catalogue TWV – 53: Concerto pour 3 instruments solo avec orchestre at www.musiqueorguequebec.ca
  5. Barnett, Rob (June 2003). "Review of 1997 Recording of Martinů Trio Concertino". MusicWeb. Retrieved 2007-11-03.

Sources

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