Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments (Stravinsky)
The Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments was written by
It was composed four years after the Symphonies of Wind Instruments, which he wrote upon his arrival in Paris after his stay in Switzerland. These two compositions are from Stravinsky's neoclassical period, and represent a departure from the composer's previous Russian style, in which he produced works such as The Rite of Spring.
This concerto numbers among many works for piano written about the same time to be played by the composer himself. This is also true of Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra (1929), his Sonata of 1924 and his Serenade in A (1925). He kept the performance rights to himself for a number of years, wanting the engagements for playing this work for himself, as well as urgently desiring to keep "incompetent or Romantic hands" from "interpreting" the piece before undiscriminating audiences.[1]
Orchestration
The concerto, as described in its name, is scored for solo
Première
The concerto debuted under Serge Koussevitzky at the Opera of Paris on 22 May 1924 under the direction of the composer, who played the piano. Koussevitzky had requested such a work of Stravinsky.
Stravinsky made his British radio debut in the British premiere of the work, on 19 June 1927, with the Wireless Symphony Orchestra (the fore-runner of the BBC Symphony Orchestra)[2] conducted by his friend and champion Edward Clark.[3]
Sources
References
- OCLC 45041572.
- ^ Foreman, Lewis; Foreman, Susan. "London: A Musical Gazetteer".[dead link]
- ^ Gareth James Thomas. "The Impact of Russian Music in England 1893-1929" (PDF).
Further reading
- Stravinsky, Igor (1960). Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments. Hawkes Pocket Scores. Vol. 724 (revised 1950 ed.). OCLC 909283445.