You can purchase most tickets directly from the concert hall the concert will take place in. Third part ticket sellers like TicketMaster will also be a good option for finding a ticket.
Tchaikovsky only wrote one violin concerto: Violin Concerto in D Major.
he wrote one for violin. violin concerto in D major op. 61.
Beethoven wwrote just one violin concerto: the Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61, written in 1806.
There are many violin concertos in the key of e-minor, but the most famous by far was written by Felix Mendelssohn. His e-minor concerto is one of the standards of the violin repertoire.
Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto in D Major (Op. 35) is one of his most famous works and arguably one of the most famous violin concertos of all time. It is considered among the most technically difficult of the great violin concertos. It was first played in 1881 in Vienna by Adolph Brodsky (with Hans Richter conducting). Critical reception at the time was mixed, but today it is a cornerstone piece of the violin repertoire.
The piano and the violin were the most popular solo instruments used in the concerto of classical period. The violin was one of the most popular for the baroque period, and the increase in popularity of the piano caused that this instrument replaced the former. See http://au.encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.aspx?refid=761553032
Tchaikovsky wrote just one violin concerto, but also wrote several short pieces for violin and orchestra, such as the Sérénade Mélancolique.
Bach- Concerto in E major Mendelssohn- Violin concerto in E minor mvt 1 or 3 Tchaikovsky- Violin concerto in D major mvt 1 or 3 Brahms- Violin Concerto in D major Beethoven- Violin concerto in D major Wieniawski- Scherzo-tarentella Beethoven- Romance in F or G major Much more than these
The Enigma Variations, a Cello Concerto and a Violin Concerto, and Salut d'Amor, and one more I almost forgot. Just a little nothing called the Pomp and Circumstance Marches.
The conductor, if there is one; otherwise, the soloist (in a concerto) or the leader of the orchestra (=the leader of the first violin section) will set the tempo.
History has remembered him with such titles as "Founder of Modern Violin Technique," the "World's First Great Violinist," and the "Father of the Concerto Grosso."
He wrote 5 piano concerti aswell as 2 piano concerti during his youth, one violin concerto which he later transcribed for piano and orchestra and he composed one 'triple' concerto for piano, violin and cello. He wrote a number of pieces for solo instrument and orchestra and an oboe concerto which was lost by publishers in the 1840's.