Prokofiev
Medkue
Gershwin Piano Concerto was created in 1982.
There is no such concerto. Mozart wrote several piano concertos in C major, among which the famous KV 467 (Piano conc. no 21). KV 333 is a piano sonata in B flat major.
Edvard Grieg
I would say they hold equal popularity, in terms of how often they are performed in concerts. Both are young works, composed within a year of each other. The first to be completed was the F minor Concerto (Marked as No 2). This was started in 1829 at the age of 19 and was not completed until March of 1830. Chopin had by then started a second Piano concerto, in E Minor. Due to problems with manuscripts and errors on behalf of the publishers, the 2nd, E Minor Concerto was published out of chronological order as No 1. It follows that when the F Minor concerto was ready to be published, it became the 2nd Piano Concerto, even though it was composed first. There was apparently no effort to change the status quo and so this numbering remains, confusingly, to this day! So, what we know as the Piano Concerto No 1 in E minor Opus 11, was composed after what we know as the Piano Concerto No 2 in F Minor Opus 22. Both are very beautiful works and both have much to recommend them.
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.
generally considered romantic classical music. Mostly piano music: many sonatas, a piano concerto, also four symphonies.
Piano, flute, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 French horns, and strings.
The introductory song to Bernard Pivot's show "Apostrophes" was a musical adaptation of Erik Satie's Gymnopédie No. 1, performed by French composer and pianist Gabriel Fauré.
David Lean's Brief Encounter (1945).
Choral symphony is the most famous symphony by Beethoven. From the concerto genre, he composed the phenomenal Emperor Concerto. Hammerklavier (Op 106) is the most technically demanding sonata for the piano by Beethoven.