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Triple Concerto

 
Album Review: Triple Concerto

  • Artist: David Amram
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1977
  • Type: Live, Instrumental
  • Genre: Jazz

Review

David Amram has always been interested in a wide variety of music. For this set, he performs the three-part "Triple Concerto" and "Elegy for Violin and Orchestra," the latter featuring classical violinist Howard Weiss. Amram's goal was to combine classical, folk and world music from several countries with touches of jazz. Although the "Triple Concerto" utilizes three quintets (woodwinds, brass and jazz) and such players as baritonist Pepper Adams and altoist Jerry Dodgion (along with the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra), most of the music is really classical with touches of folk melodies. Amram (who plays piano, French horn, Pakistani flute and dumbek) does not really succeed in mixing the different idioms equally, but the results (which he called "music without walls") have their moments of interest. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Allegro con Brio David Amram David Amram Quintet (9:27)
Blues David Amram David Amram Quintet (11:00)
Rondo Alla Turca David Amram, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart David Amram Quintet (10:34)
Elegy for Violin & Orchestra David Amram David Amram Quintet (13:52)

Credits

David Amram Quintet (Performer), Jean-Pierre LeGuillou (Design), David Amram (Flute), David Amram (Piano), Matt Murman (Mastering), Paul Goodman (Engineer), David Amram (Dumbek), Al Harewood (Drums), David Amram (Pakistani Flute), Pepper Adams (Sax (Baritone)), John Randolph (Cover Photo), David Amram (French Horn), Herb Bushler (Bass), Max Wilcox (Producer)
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Wikipedia: Triple Concerto (Beethoven)
Top

Ludwig van Beethoven's Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Piano in C Major, Op. 56, more commonly known as the Triple Concerto, was composed in 1803 and later published in 1804 under Breitkopf & Hartel. The choice of the three solo instruments effectively makes this a concerto for piano trio and the only concerto Beethoven ever wrote for more than one solo instrument. A typical performance takes approximately thirty-seven minutes.

Beethoven's early biographer Anton Schindler claimed that the Triple Concerto was written for Beethoven's royal pupil, the Archduke Rudolf (Rudolf von Habsburg-Lothringen)[citation needed]. The Archduke, who became an accomplished pianist and composer under Beethoven's tutelage, was only in his mid-teens at this time, and it seems plausible that Beethoven's strategy was to create a showy but relatively easy piano part that would be backed up by two more mature and skilled soloists. However, there is no record of Rudolf ever performing the work—it was not publicly premiered until 1808, at the summer "Augarten" concerts in Vienna – and when it came to be published, the concerto bore a dedication to a different patron: Prince Lobkowitz (Franz Joseph Maximilian Fürst von Lobkowitz).

Movements

The concerto is divided into three movements:

  1. Allegro
  2. Largo (attacca)
  3. Rondo alla polacca

The first movement is broadly scaled and cast in a moderate march tempo, and includes decorative solo passage-work and leisurely repetitions, variations, and extensions of assorted themes. A common feature of this, is a dotted rhythm (short-long, short-long) that lends an air of graciousness and pomp, that is not exactly "heroic" but would have conveyed a character of fashionable dignity to contemporary listeners; and perhaps a hint of the noble "chivalric" manner that was becoming a popular element of novels, plays, operas, and pictures. (The jogging triplets that figure in much of the accompaniment also contribute to this effect.) Unusual for a concerto of this scale, the first movement begins quietly, with a gradual crescendo into the exposition, with the main theme later introduced by the soloists.

The slow movement is a large-scale introduction to the finale, which follows it without pause. The cello and violin share the melodic material of the movement between them while the piano provides a discreet accompaniment.

Dramatic repeated notes launch into the third movement, which is a polonaise (also called "polacca"), an emblem of aristocratic fashion during the Napoleonic era, which is, thus, in keeping with the character of "polite entertainment" that characterizes this concerto as a whole. The bolero-like rhythm also characteristic of the polonaise, can be heard in the central minor theme of the final movement.

In addition to the violin, cello, and piano soloists, the concerto is scored for one flute, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani, and strings.

See also

External links


 
 
Learn More
Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 4; Triple Concerto (Classical Album)
Bach: Harpsichord Concertos, Vol. 1 (Classical Album)
Donald (James) Martino (music)

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Triple Concerto (Beethoven)" Read more