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Robert Schumann composed one piano concerto, the Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54, which was completed in 1845. This work is widely regarded as one of the most significant piano concertos of the Romantic era. While he wrote other orchestral works, the A minor concerto remains his sole piano concerto.
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.
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.
Mendelssohn Piano concerto
Three
Gershwin Piano Concerto was created in 1982.
Hancock was recognized as a "Jazz Master" by the National Endowment for the Arts in 2004. His bio on the NEA website states: "Herbie Hancock's talent as a pianist was evident when, at age 11, he performed Mozart's D Major Piano Concerto with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra."
Sergei Rachmaninoff. The correct title of the piece is Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30.
You'll have to be more specific. He wrote a Symphony No. 3, a Piano Concerto No. 3, a Piano Sonata No. 3, and the list goes on.
The Emperor Concerto was written by Ludwig van Beethoven. Originally titled Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-flat major, it was Beethoven's Fifth piano concerto, and written between 1809 and 1811.
32 Beethoven actually wrote 38 piano sonatas, although 6 of them are without Opus numbers (WoO). True but no.33, 34 and 35 had ' to the Archbishop elector of Cologne Maxim. Frederick' and no. 36 had 'to Eleonore von Breuning' written next to them in brackets in my book.
Three. The most famous concert is the first one, in Bb minor, op. 23; the second is in G major, op. 44; the last one, op. 75, consists only in one movement, so it's thought that it's incomplete. It was based on sketches for a symphony in Eb Major which would have been his sixth, but which Tchaikovsky abandoned.