Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Clarinet Concerto Music Book, scoring: Concert Band;Soloist and Band;Score & Parts, instruments: Clarinet;Band
A good orchestral musician -- even a great orchestral musician -- does not always translate into being a great soloist when thrust to the front of the orchestra. In this recording of the Mozart "Clarinet Concerto," Bernard Walton appears as soloist with the Philharmonia Orchestra under the early ...
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Clarinet Concerto Music Book
First released in 1991 and reissued in 2004, this CD of Mozart's "Clarinet Concerto" and the "Clarinet Quintet" is fair in most regards except for the featured soloist's quirky playing. Richard Stoltzman's fans may like this disc in spite of its problems, especially if they are more interested in...
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Concerto KV622-B Flat Clarinet/Piano Music Book, instruments: Piano;Clarinet
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Adagio (From Clarinet Concerto) Music Book
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Mozart Clarinet Concerto K622 Music Book, scoring: Miniature Score, instruments: Clarinet; 68 pages
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Excerpts Clarinet Concerto ( Archive) Music Book, instruments: Clarinet 1;Clarinet 2
Mozart's Clarinet Concerto is of supreme importance as his last instrumental work. Yet there are a number of special problems surrounding the piece, since the autograph is lost and the unique...
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Mozart Clarinet Concerto In a, KV622 - Music Minus One Book/CD set, scoring: Instrumental Solo;Recorded Accompaniment, instruments: Clarinet; 38 pages
Mozart's Clarinet Concerto is of supreme importance as his last instrumental work. Yet there are a number of special problems surrounding the piece, since the autograph is lost and the unique...
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Clarinet Concerto In a Major, K. 622 Music Book, scoring: Instrumental Solo, instruments: Piano ;Woodwinds ;Clarinet ; 48 pages
All clarinettists owe an enormous debt of gratitude to 18th-century clarinet virtuoso Anton Stadler (1753-1812); because of his remarkable abilities and his friendship with Mozart, the repertory for the instrument has been infinitely enriched. The clarinetist and the composer began a musical collaboration in 1784 that culminated in Mozart's Clarinet Quintet in 1789 and the Clarinet Concerto in 1791. The Clarinet Concerto was the last major work Mozart was to complete. As Alfred Einstein writes, "the
Mozart did not make extensive use of the clarinet until comparatively late in his career, but he wrote exquisitely for the instrument, and the two scores dedicated to his friend, Anton Stadlerthe Quintet, KV581 and the Concerto, KV622are among his most beautiful works. Both, incidentally, belong to the final year of his life. The Clarinet Concerto is in the conventional three movements, with music that transcends conventionality in its remarkable sense of repose and serenity, and what Bernhard Paumgartner
Track Listing:1.Concerto for Clarinet in A major, K 622 2.Quintet for Clarinet and Strings in A major, K 581 3.Exsultate jubilate, K 165 (158a)
Mozart: Flute Concerto No. 1 / Clarinet Concerto / Concerto for Flute & Harp (Mix Album)
Mozart did not make extensive use of the clarinet until comparatively late in his career, but he wrote exquisitely for the instrument, and the two scores dedicated to his friend, Anton Stadler-the Quintet, KV581 and the Concerto, KV622-are among his most Conductor: Nayden Todorov. Soloist: Denitza Lavchieva, clarinet. Ensemble: Tempi Concertati Chamber Orchestra. Includes a high-quality printed music score (featuring both A and B-flat clarinet parts) on ivory paper; a compact disc featuring the complete
Mozart did not make extensive use of the clarinet until comparatively late in his career, but he wrote exquisitely for the instrument, and the two scores dedicated to his friend, Anton Stadlerthe Quintet, KV581 and the Concerto, KV622are among his most beautiful works. Both, incidentally, belong to the final year of his life. The Clarinet Concerto is in the conventional three movements, with music that transcends conventionality in its remarkable sense of repose and serenity, and what Bernhard Paumgartner