Want this question answered?
Antonio Vivaldi plays flute, oboe, bassoon, cello and violin. Vivaldi already wrote more than 500 concertos and 230 of these are strings and instruments.
He did not write the following types of concertos: viola, double bass, oboe, flute, clarinet, harp, and many more instruments. The only concertos that he has written are: Bassoon Concerto, Piano Concerto, Violin Concerto, Cello Concerto.
Raoul Pleskow has written: 'Movement for oboe, violin and piano' -- subject(s): Trios (Piano, oboe, violin)
William Bergsma has written: 'Tangents, for piano solo' -- subject(s): Piano music 'Violin concerto [by] William Bergsma' -- subject(s): Concertos (Violin), Solo with piano 'First string quartet' -- subject(s): Scores and parts, String quartets 'Concerto for wind quintet' -- subject(s): Suites (Bassoon, clarinet, flute, horn, oboe)
I read somewhere it's Marcello's Oboe Concerto in D minor.
Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov wrote a concerto for oboe and band. It's not his greatest masterpiece, but it deserves a listen.
an oboe.
Alessandro Marcello
Johann Friedrich Fasch has written: 'Concerto, sol maggiore, oboe, 2 violini & basso continuo' -- subject(s): Concertos (Oboe with string orchestra), Scores
Mozart wrote this, if that's the answer you're looking for. This is his only oboe concerto. But rumour has it that he wrote five bassoon concertos, although only confirmedly exists.
Georg Druschetzky has written: 'Quartet no. 4 in F major for oboe, violin, viola and violoncello'
Mozart composed his first piano concerto before his teens. His first four compositions of the genre were rearrangements from other works. His first original concerto: concerto 5 in D, K 175 was composed in 1773 (at age 17).