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1

Horez, Iulian. "16. Trumpet and Orchestra Concert in D Major by Georg Philipp Telemann in Interpretation Vision of Wynton Marsalis and Rafael Méndez." Review of Artistic Education 19, no. 1 (April 1, 2020): 134–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/rae-2020-0016.

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AbstractLike most baroque concerts, the Concerto for trumpet and orchestra in D major by Georg Philipp Telemann raises particular problems of interpretation. It is a concert written in the head register of the trumpet, with frequent references in the acute register. I should mention that the head register of a trumpet depends on its size. At a normal trumpet in and flat (and not piccolo), the acute register is from do (and flat from the first octave) to the next do ascendant. The head register continues from do2 to do3. In the trumpets in do, re, mi flat, fa, sol, the principle remains the same, with a variability depending on the size of the trumpet, except that in the acute record the other notes correspond to that of the flat, but the upper limit is generally the same.
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2

Carnovale, Norbert, Gunther Schuller, and Robert Waddell. "Concerto for Trumpet and Chamber Orchestra." Notes 43, no. 3 (March 1987): 679. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/898222.

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3

Conway, Paul. "James MacMillan premieres in Edinburgh, Glasgow and London." Tempo 68, no. 269 (June 16, 2014): 70–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298214000114.

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The concerto form is well represented in James MacMillan's output. So far, he has written three for piano, two for percussion and one each for violin, viola, cello, trumpet, oboe and clarinet. There is also threaded through his output a series of concertante works, such as A Deep but Dazzling Darkness, for violin, ensemble and tape (2003), A Scotch Bestiary, for organ and orchestra (2004) and the concertino Seraph, for trumpet and strings (2010). All share a common concern to realise fully the soloist's expressive potential.
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4

Anderson, Martin. "London, Royal Albert Hall Proms 2003." Tempo 58, no. 227 (January 2004): 55–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298204240050.

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Until the world première of Joe Duddell's Ruby on 25 July, I had yet to hear a percussion concerto which didn't trip itself up. I thought it was in the nature of the beast: the orchestra develops some material, which is then passed to the percussion, at which point all development perforce stops. Duddell (b. 1972) solved the problem by turning it on its head, and limiting the orchestral material to what the solo percussionist could handle; the downside is that he necessarily limits the expressive scope of the orchestra. Ruby – the title is simply a rhyming-slang working label that stuck: it's the final part of a trilogy of works written for the percussionist Colin Currie – opens with a vibraphone pattern that suggests a lyrical music-box and soon shows a stylistic affinity with American minimalism, which alternates with slabs of good-natured energy. The slow movement begins with tremolo marimba chords over string lines that drift aimlessly and agreeably, with a more active central section spurred by brief brass figures which trigger rising scalic patterns in the vibraphone. The initial material returns with soft-centred strings above hypnotic vibraphone figuration and is sung to a close by the rapturous sound of bowed vibraphone chords. The finale likewise deals in cheerfully mesmeric vibraphone patterns over a wash of strings and stuttering comment from horns and trumpets; the soloist then offers an improvised toccata on drum-kit backed by forceful rhythms from a near-tutti orchestra. The vibraphone resumes its jolly prattle until, seemingly having run out of things to say, the music just stops dead. Currie, supported by the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra under the functional Marin Alsop, played it with obvious commitment, and from memory – no small achievement in such motoric music.
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5

Gorbal, Y. M. "Professional Training of Military Musicians in Ukrainian Lands at the Turn of the XIX–XX Centuries." Culture of Ukraine, no. 71 (April 2, 2021): 75–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.31516/2410-5325.071.09.

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Abstract. The Armed Forces of Ukraine have strong traditions of musical bands that date back to princely and Cossack times. The task of their orchestras is to boost the morale of servicemen, to strengthen the power of the Ukrainian army by means of musical arts, as well as to perform at festive events (both at the local and the state level). However, despite the importance and diversity of creative and educational activities of the Military Orchestra Service of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, no comprehensive study of historical aspects of the functioning of music and military bands in national musicology has been conducted. The purpose of the article is to analyze the historical process of the formation of traditions of professional training of members of military musical bands at the turn of the XIX–XX centuries in the Ukrainian lands, as well as ceremonial and social functions of their concert activity. Research methodology. The overview is based on historical, structural and systemic methods. Results. Traditions of military orchestral training in Ukraine have deep historical roots and are based on multicultural principles. Traditions of performance and training in military musical bands of the Armed Forces of the independent Ukraine were formed on the basis of the three lines of continuation: princely and Cossack music­artistic formations and bands of the time of liberation movements (LUSR — Legion of Ukrainian Sich Riflemen, UIA — Ukrainian Insurgent Army), which represent their direct national line; Russian military orchestras with the participation of Ukrainian specialists; and multinational Austrian and Polish military music bands in Ukrainian territories. All of them together formed the basis on which the Ukrainian military and musical tradition was based, absorbing all the most relevant and productive aspects of the experience gained. Novelty. The activity of centers in which members were trained for existing military orchestral groups in the Ukrainian lands, as well as ways in which such training was performed, and the development of professional training of musicians were considered. Practical significance lies in the consideration of prospects for further detailed study of the functioning of separate bands, their repertoire, instruments, ceremonial and social functions, achievements of particular individuals in the field of performance, pedagogy and conducting. Conclusions. In the activity of military orchestras in the Ukrainian lands at the turn of the XIX–XX centuries we can see a combination of military­ceremonial and social palace­concert functions, wide involvement of all segments of the society in concert touring, which completely dictates the rich repertoire. From LUSR schools and guilds, professional training of musicians was gradually transformed into the activities of specialized training units at the military formations, cadet schools and trumpet schools, institutions at music societies and professional music training in conservatories.
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6

Bonus, Alexander. "Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Trumpet Concerto in E major, piano reduction and parts, edited by Michael Kube (Munich: G. Henle Verlag, 2009), viii+68pp. - Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Concerto for Trumpet and Orchestra in E major (Partitur Nr. 15119), and Version in E flat Major (Partitur 15118), edited by Michael Kube (Wiesbaden: Breitkopf & Härtel, 2010), iv+48pp." Nineteenth-Century Music Review 9, no. 2 (December 2012): 379–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1479409812000407.

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7

Gąsiorowska, Małgorzata. "Grażyna Bacewicz – The Polish Sappho." Musicology Today 16, no. 1 (December 31, 2019): 65–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/muso-2019-0003.

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Abstract The paper is an attempt at a synthetic presentation of the Polish composer Grażyna Bacewicz’s (1909–1969) musical output and artistic career, presented against the background of events in her personal life, and of major events in Polish and European history in the first seven decades of the 20th century. Bacewicz was called ‘the Polish Sappho’ already in the years between World Wars I and II, when there were very few women-composers capable of creating works comparable to the most eminent achievements of male composers. Her path to success in composition and as a concert soloist leads from lessons with her father, the Lithuanian Vincas Bacevičius, to studies at the Łódź and Warsaw Conservatories (violin with Józef Jarzębski, composition with Kazimierz Sikorski), and later with Nadia Boulanger at the École Normale de la Musique, as well as violin lessons with André Tourret. Her oeuvre has for many years been linked with neoclassicism, and folkloric inspirations are evident in many of her works. Her crowning achievement in the neoclassical style is the Concerto for String Orchestra of 1948, while influences from folklore can distinctly be heard in many concert pieces and small forms. The breakthrough came around 1958, under the influence of avant-garde trends present in West European music, which came to be adapted in Poland thanks to the political transformations and the rejection of socialist realism. In such pieces as Music for Strings, Trumpets and Percussion of 1958, Bacewicz transforms her previously fundamental musical components (melody, rhythm, harmony) into a qualitatively new type of sound structures, mainly focused on the coloristic aspects. Grażyna Bacewicz also applied the twelve-note technique, albeit to a limited extent, as in String Quartet No. 6 (1960). Her last work was the unfinished ballet Desire to a libretto by Mieczysław Bibrowski after Pablo Picasso’s play Le désir attrapé par la queue.
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8

Martynova, Valeriya. "Concerting oboe: timbre, technique, traditional and latest methods of playing." Problems of Interaction Between Arts, Pedagogy and the Theory and Practice of Education 50, no. 50 (October 3, 2018): 149–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.34064/khnum1-50.11.

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Background. Oboe as a concert instrument has passed a rather long path of evolution, on which it has been improved according the parameters of its design, the technique of virtuoso play and the requests of composer writing. The concentrate of universal capabilities of the soloing (concerting) oboe is the concerto genre, in which all these parameters are combined in an integral entire. The objective of this article is to sequentially consider the components of the concerting oboe “image”, such as timbre and articulation-and-stroke technique, including typical and latestmethods of writing and playing. The methodology of researching based on the set of such approaches to the phenomenon under study as historical-and-genetic, deductive, system-and-structural. Results. Based on the consideration of the concerting principle in its historical and stylistic dynamics, the article reveals the specifications of timbre-and-technical means characterized the oboe in various genre forms of the concert. The data on the specifics of the oboe effects found in the concert music for this instrument are also systematized. The latest methods of playing are characterized, and a refined classification of multiphonics used in modern oboe practice is proposed. It is noted that the concept of concerting style first appeared in the Baroque era, when instruments and voices in the new homophonic practice began to reach the level of soloing. At the same time, the principles of concerting manner as a dialogue in various forms of its implementation were formed, among which the form of group or collective concerting represented by the genre of concerto grosso was primary in instrumental music. Within this form, the concerting oboe stands out, and for a long time it participated in a trio of soloists who performed in this genre as concertino opposing to grosso – the mass of the rest of the orchestra. The article identifies the main specific features of the timbre and technique associated with the oboe design (double reed) and the performer’s breathing (gradual exhalation). Particular attention is paid to the oboe effects technique, as well as a set of means for sound-producing and sound-leading characterized this instrument in its comparison with others belonging to the same family (wood winds) or to others (bowed string, brass instruments). On this basis, a description of the performing means of expressiveness of the oboe is proposed, including not only the specific (timbre-and-acoustic), but also the universal components that the oboe takes over from others instruments playing with him in an ensemble or an orchestra. In particular, among such there is the vibrato technique, which came to the oboe practice from the string instruments, as well as the two main groups of effects – connected (legato and its types), divided (staccato, spiccato, martele) and the special methods of playing adapted “for the oboe”, in particular, pizzicato and “slap”. (For an oboe, the “slap” is a sharp tongue strike on the reed with a simultaneous key strike or without it, as well as a key strike without blowing air in). Among the techniques that have the specific forms of reproduction on the oboe, the article discusses tremolo of different interval volumes, to which a special fingering is adjusted; frullato (the “oral” kind with using of the “r” sound like in a trumpet, and “overtone” kind producing by a performer’s throat); glissando, existing on the oboe in two versions, labial and finger. As examples of the latest methods of playing specified to the concerting oboe practice, those are discussed that contribute to the timbre re-coloring of the same sound or the sound set that significantly expands the sound-and-color capabilities of the instrument, and promotes to the process of its further universalization. These, for example, are bisbigliando, the technique that came from the harp practice, when an oboist gets the same sound in different ways; variety kinds of multiphonics; smorzato (a slow fluctuation of sound volume), oscillato (a similar change in pitch). Also the technique of doubletone is mentioned, when the oboist sings along with playing, which allows to produce consonances (intervals and even chords) on the instrument. Conclusions. The results of the research confirm the fact that the solo concerting oboe was formed in the process of a long historical and stylistic evolution, which is reflected in the genre of concerto for oboe, where the timbre-and-technical capabilities of the instrument are most complete. The complex of technique effects as the component of musical expressiveness was especially importance in formation of the cumulative sound image of the “universal” oboe. Thus, the concerting oboe was formed in line with the general processes of the development of musical thinking, which was connected with the practice of concert style, the principle of concerting as a musical and aesthetic category. Reflecting in different genre forms the development of the concert music, collective and solo, the oboe “sound image” has acquired by now the quality of genuine universalism, while retaining its specificity, connected with the features of its performing factor. The prospects for further study of the stated topic are seen, firstly, in the concretization of the stylistics of the concert oboe on examples of works of the concert genre; it will be necessary to build a certain logic of selection of material, which should not only illustrate the historical process, but also contain characteristics of individual creative embodiments of the “image” of the oboe by composers and performers. Secondly, they may be connected with the possibilities of projection in the proposed research methodology onto the concert music for others instruments.
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9

Thomas, Gavin, Heinrich Schiff, Heinz Holliger, Hakan Hardenberger, SWF SO Baden-Baden, Michael Gielen, Saschko Gawriloff, Siegfried Palm, Alfons, and Aloys Kontarsky. "Cello Concerto, Oboe Concerto, Trumpet Concerto, Canto di speranza." Musical Times 135, no. 1812 (February 1994): 108. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1002990.

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10

Carnovale, Norbert, and Gunther Schuller. "Three Concertos: Concerto no. 1 for Horn and Orchestra. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra. Concerto for Bassoon and Orchestra." American Music 15, no. 3 (1997): 413. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3052333.

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11

Gillies, Malcolm, and David Cooper. "Bartok: Concerto for Orchestra." Music Analysis 17, no. 1 (March 1998): 91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/854373.

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12

Talbot, John. "York Bowen's Viola Concerto." Tempo 60, no. 238 (October 2006): 42–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298206260315.

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YORK BOWEN: Viola Concerto in C minor, op.25. CECIL FORSYTH: Viola Concerto in G minor. Lawrence Power (vla), BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra c. Martyn Brabbins. Hyperion CDA67546.BOWEN: Viola Concerto; Viola Sonata No.2 in F major; Melody for the C string, op.51 no.2. Doris Lederer (vla), with Czech Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra c. Paul Polivnick, Bruce Murray (pno). Centaur CRC 2786.BOWEN: Viola Concerto. WALTON: Viola Concerto in A minor. HOWELLS: Elegy for viola, string quartet and string orchestra. VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Suite for viola and orchestra (Group I). Helen Callus (vla), New Zealand Symphony Orchestra c. Marc Taddei. ASV CD DCA 1181.
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13

Driver, Paul. "Gruber's Concertos." Tempo, no. 178 (September 1991): 22–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s004029820001398x.

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The concerto evidently appeals to HK Gruber, as symphonies do not. He has so far written four works that are unambiguously in this form: ‘…aus schatten duft gewebt…’, a concerto for violin and orchestra of 1977–8; the concerto for percussion and orchestra Rough Music (Rauhetöne) of 1982–3; Nebelsteinmusik, for solo violin and string orchestra, of 1988; and the Concerto for Cello and Chamber Orchestra of 1989. Ambiguous examples of the form are his early Concerto for Orchestra (1960–64) – concertos for orchestra are by definition ambiguous – and Frankenstein!!, his ‘pan–demonium’ (rather than ‘concerto’) for baritone chansonnier and orchestra (on children's rhymes by H.C. Artmann), finalized in 1977. Then there are four works which remain in manuscript (withdrawn from circulation): Concerto No. l for flute, vibraphone, xylophone and percussion (1961); Concerto No. 2 for tenor saxophone, double bass and percussion (1961); ‘furbass’ for double bass and orchestra; and an unsatisfactory forerunner of the violin concerto, Arien (1974–5). The symphony he has not touched; and one is tempted to see in this reliance on solo/ensemble confrontation an attempt to hold together the self–splintered, all too globally diversified language of the late 20th century by an eloquent soloist's sheer persuasiveness, by musical force, so to speak, the soloist being dramatized as a kind of Atlas. In the same way Gruber's recourse to popular songs and idioms of ‘light music’ in these works can seem like a desperate attempt to find a tonal prop and sanction for a language so pervasively threatened by tone–deafness and gobbledygook.
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14

Palmer, Peter. "Swiss Cello Concertos." Tempo 60, no. 235 (January 2006): 39–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298206270049.

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URS JOSEPH FLURY: Vineta; Concerto for Cello and Orchestra; Sinfonietta for Strings. Biel Symphony Orchestra; Pierre Fournier (vlc), Vienna Volksoper Orchestra; Vienna Chamber Orchestra c. Urs Joseph Flury. Musikszene Schweiz MGB CD 6184.SCHOECK: Concerto for Cello and String Orchestra, op. 61; Suite in A flat for Strings, op. 59. Julius Berger (vlc), South West German Chamber Orchestra of Pforzheim c. Vladislav Czarnecki. ebs 6145 (www.EBSMusikproduktion.de).
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15

Swift, Richard, and Gunther Schuller. "Concerto No. 2 for Orchestra." Notes 44, no. 1 (September 1987): 153. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/941002.

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16

Svard, Lois, and Joseph Schwantner. "Concerto for Piano and Orchestra." Notes 48, no. 4 (June 1992): 1452. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/942167.

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17

Cope, David, and Henri Lazarof. "Second Concerto for Orchestra ("Icarus")." Notes 44, no. 3 (March 1988): 573. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/941544.

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18

Berrett, Joshua, William Schuman, and Leonard Bernstein. "Concerto for Violin and Orchestra." American Music 9, no. 3 (1991): 335. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3051443.

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19

Hassen, Marjorie, and Milton Babbitt. "Concerto for Piano and Orchestra." American Music 6, no. 4 (1988): 478. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3051712.

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20

Clarkson, Austin, George Rochberg, and Jacob Druckman. "Concerto for Oboe and Orchestra." American Music 7, no. 2 (1989): 232. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3052217.

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21

Burk, James M., Elliott Carter, Ursula Oppens, Michael Gielen, and David Schiff. "Piano Concerto; Variations for Orchestra." American Music 6, no. 1 (1988): 114. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3448359.

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22

Zagalsky, Leonid. "Concerto for Democrats with Orchestra." Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 49, no. 1 (January 1993): 14–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00963402.1993.11456296.

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23

Davies, Benjamin K. "Joan Guinjoan concertos." Tempo 59, no. 234 (September 21, 2005): 56–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298205220326.

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JOAN GUINJOAN: Concerto for clarinet and orchestra; Concerto for piano and orchestra; Música per a violoncel i orquestra. Joan Enric Lluna (cl), David Abramovitz (pno), Lluís Claret (vlc). Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya, c. Ernest Martínez Izquierdo. Harmonia Mundi HMI 987056.
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24

Conway, Paul. "Civic Hall, Stratford-Upon-Avon: John McCabe's Trumpet Concerto ‘La Primavera’." Tempo 67, no. 263 (January 2013): 89–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298212001489.

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Although John McCabe's Rainforest II, of 1987, is in effect a chamber concerto for trumpet and 11 strings, his extensive body of concertante works has lacked an official trumpet concerto. La Primavera, which had its première on 15 June 2012, now happily fills that gap. The subtitle derives from McCabe's consideration of two aspects of the approach of Spring: the vitality of burgeoning growth and the flowering of the new or refreshed life as it expands.
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25

Carnovale, Norbert, and Ellen Taaffe Zwilich. "Concerto for Trumpet and Five Players, 1984." Notes 44, no. 4 (June 1988): 832. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/941062.

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26

Rakochi, Vadym. "Mutual Influence of The Orchestra and Concerto Principle in The 16th – First Half of The 17th Centuries." Часопис Національної музичної академії України ім.П.І.Чайковського, no. 1(50) (March 18, 2021): 49–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.31318/2414-052x.1(50).2021.233112.

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The interaction between the evolution of the orchestra and the concerto at the end of the late 16th — first half of the 17th centuries has been considered. Three levels of interaction are revealed. The first one is the basso continuo. There is little attention paid to the importance of this technique for the formation of the orchestra: the impact on the formation of instrumentalists’ collectives through the appearance of a homophonic way of presentation; combining different forces of sound of instruments; strengthening the bass line as a solid foundation for the entire vertical structure. The second level is the concerto principle. It is emphasized that during the 16th century the concerto meant ―ensemble‖ of any configuration. The strengthening of the instrumental component in the works of M. Uccellini, I. Baccusi, A. and J. Gabrieli, A. Banchieri had an impact on the transformation of the concerto principle. Initially, the principle appeared through the opposition of pitches and density of texture, eventually extends to the comparison of instrumental, mixed vocal-instrumental and vocal groups, thus stimulating contrast in the middle of an instrumental groups such as ensemble and orchestra. The third level of the interaction is embodied in the genre of madrigal (C. Monteverdi). It seems that the release of instruments, the diversification of their functions, the rejection of the permanent exact duplications and the increased role of the timbre obviously require an instrumental body as a stable structure for the implementation of all above mentioned. The development of musical instruments, the diversification of their functions, the use of sinfonia and ritornellos in the choral composition became a driven force for the modification of the concerto principle resulted in the intensification of the competitive origin in the orchestra with each decade. All the above encourages to revise the depth of interaction between the orchestra and concerto. The orchestra as an organized and multi-instrumental collective, designed to exhibit music beyond the church or theatrical genres, becomes the institutional basis for the embodiment of the concerto principle in a particular genre of the instrumental concerto.
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Quinn, Peter. "Pēteris Vasks's Violin Concerto." Tempo 59, no. 233 (June 21, 2005): 82–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298205280257.

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Sills, David L., and Krzysztof Penderecki. "Concerto per viola ed orchestra, 1983." Notes 46, no. 1 (September 1989): 230. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/940777.

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Rakochi, Vadim. "Genesis of the Concerto for Orchestra." Journal of History Culture and Art Research 9, no. 1 (March 28, 2020): 273. http://dx.doi.org/10.7596/taksad.v9i1.2435.

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30

Cochran, Alfred W., Donald Martino, and Charles Wuorinen. "Concerto for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra." Notes 49, no. 1 (September 1992): 361. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/897263.

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31

Griscom, Richard, Robert Suderburg, and Michael Bookspan. "Concerto; For Solo Percussionist and Orchestra." Notes 42, no. 4 (June 1986): 861. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/897817.

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32

Berrett, Joshua, and Lukas Foss. "Renaissance Concerto for Flute and Orchestra." American Music 10, no. 2 (1992): 232. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3051730.

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Hewett, Ivan, BBC SO, and Oliver Knussen. "Robin Holloway: Second Concerto for Orchestra." Musical Times 135, no. 1815 (May 1994): 301. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1003184.

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34

Anderson, Martin. "Lindberg, Concerto for Orchestra, Barbican, London." Tempo 58, no. 227 (January 2004): 60–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298204260053.

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There would hardly seem to be a composer better placed to write a concerto for orchestra than Magnus Lindberg: his complete mastery of orchestral texture – demonstrated in a string of modern classics, Joy (1989–90), Arena (1994–95), Feria (1997) and Cantigas (1998–99) among them – makes it a wonder he hasn't tackled the genre before now. Indeed, he quietly billed the magnificent Aura (1994–95) as a concerto for orchestra, although in reality it's as good a symphony as anyone has written this past half-century – my suspicion is that the label allowed him to dodge the issue.
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35

Lawless, Patrick, and Amnon Wolman. "Concerto for Piano, Pianos and Orchestra." Computer Music Journal 15, no. 2 (1991): 72. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3680918.

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36

Sproston, Darren. "Thematicism in Gerhard's Concerto for Orchestra." Tempo, no. 184 (March 1993): 18–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s004029820000262x.

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The Concerto for Orchestra has probably been the most performed of Roberto Gerhard's works since its triumphant première at the 1965 Cheltenham Festival. Yet it is one of the most difficult for the listener to come to terms with, owing in part to its apparent ‘athematicism’. Any thematic aspect seems at first totally subordinated to the surface play of extreme textural and colouristic invention.
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37

Horez, Iulian. "16. Sinfonia Avanti Il Barcheggio by Alessandro Stradella in Interpretations of the Trumpeters Iulian Horez and Miroslav Kejmar." Review of Artistic Education 21, no. 1 (June 1, 2021): 133–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/rae-2021-0016.

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Abstract Alessandro Stradella is a lesser-known composer in trumpet works. However, the Sinfonia avanti il Barcheggio is of great beauty and is written perfectly trumpet. The original is composed for trumpet in C, but the key of D major in which the concerto played with trumpet in C is written poses the biggest tuning problems. For this reason, I recommend for this concert a trumpet in A. The tuning will be much better, it will be played in F major, the natural notes of the trumpet will be used a lot (C, E, G).
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38

Joković, Jelena. "The trumpet in a woman's hand in contemporary Serbian traditional and popular music: The case of the "Danijela" trumpet orchestra from Arilje." New Sound 53, no. 1 (2019): 171–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/newso1901171j.

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Trumpet orchestra "Danijela" belongs to the type of mixed gender orchestra, in which the women is the leader in men surroundings. This orchestra today mainly plays musical arrangements of the popular music, from folk to pop and rock, jazz and Latin. Danijela and her orchestra do not try to copy already existing interpretation, but they are doing their best to give to their music their personal touch in different musical securements, whether formally or in arrangements. Danijela, herself says that there are not essential difference between male and female trumpet orchestra, all, actually, depends on the personal impact. This personal impact is due to the musical education which helped Danijela's orchestra to, especially in harmony and articulation add its style to already existing interpretation. Regarding the performing of tracks which belong, by its style, to the repertoire of southeast Serbia, it is notable, especially in the aspect of articulation and ornaments marching to the style definitions of the trumpet music in West Serbia, which is general equal for all trumpet orchestras in West Serbia, which play the repertoire of the other trumpet places especially southeast Serbia. This ensemble takes part in most different kind of media, which promotes, not only this orchestra, but also the idea of women's leadership, and the fact, also that the women (in this case a young girl) can play the instrument which up to recently, was considered to be only for men. At the very end, we may conclude that today in Serbia there is no more radical difference in gender regarding musical instruments, the epithet 'male' or 'female' is not explicit any more, as it was before when men had priority. Of course, the prejudices still exist, but they are not any more so important and they are easily overcome, especially if performers get good critics from the audience for their work, no matter what instrument is in question.
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39

Johns, Donald, and Benjamin Lees. "Concerto for Brass Choir and Orchestra (1983)." Notes 48, no. 3 (March 1992): 1095. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/941753.

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40

Meckna, Michael, and Ned Rorem. "Piano Concerto for Left Hand and Orchestra." American Music 16, no. 3 (1998): 365. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3052649.

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41

Mauskapf, Michael. "Collective Virtuosity in Bartók's Concerto for Orchestra." Journal of Musicological Research 30, no. 4 (October 2011): 267–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01411896.2011.614167.

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42

Stein, Robert. "CORIGLIANO ROUSE HIGDON." Tempo 58, no. 230 (October 2004): 87–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298204300331.

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CORIGLIANO: Symphony No. 2; The Mannheim Rocket. Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra c. John Storgårds. Ondine ODE10392ROUSE: Violin Concerto1; Rapture; Der gerettete Alberich2. 1Cho-Liang Lin (vln), 2Evelyn Glennie (perc), Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra c. Leif Segerstam. Ondine ODE10162HIGDON: Concerto for Orchestra; City Scape. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra c. Robert Spano. Telarc. CD80620 (Super Audio version SACD60620)
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43

Broad, Leah. "Harrison Birtwistle Responses: Sweet disorder and the carefully careless for piano and orchestra, Royal Festival Hall, London." Tempo 69, no. 272 (April 2015): 61–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298214001041.

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2014, Sir Harrison Birtwistle's 80th birthday year, witnessed a plethora of events celebrating his music, from the Barbican's ‘Birtwistle at 80’ series to the ‘In Broken Images’ concerts at the Southbank Centre. Included in the latter was the UK premiere of his new concerto for piano and orchestra, Responses: Sweet disorder and the carefully careless, performed on 6 December 2014 by Pierre-Laurent Aimard and the London Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Vladimir Jurowski. Birtwistle describes the concerto as addressing the problem of ‘the relationship between the piano and the orchestra’, with the subtitle (taken from essays by architect Robert Maxwell) expressing the ‘essence’ of his composition.
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Litvyshchenko, O. V. "Directions of concertmaster activity of Oleksandr Nazarenko." Problems of Interaction Between Arts, Pedagogy and the Theory and Practice of Education 57, no. 57 (March 10, 2020): 246–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.34064/khnum1-57.15.

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Formulation of the problem. At the current stage, concertmaster activity as a kind of performing art requires a comprehensive study to justificatе the artistic effectiveness of the artist. Thereby, there was a need for research of the concertmaster activity of Oleksandr Nazarenko (Professor of the Department of Ukrainian Folk Instruments in I. P. Kotlyarevsky Kharkiv National University of Arts), in order to characterize his performing skills. This article is about the instrumental work of a accordionist, which is an organic component of the activities of art institutions in a variety of forms of work with the listener. The nuances of the instrumental accompaniment of a vocal composition (and not only) in conditions of genre and style diversity of the musical life of Kharkiv were the peculiarity of fruitful activity of the musician for many years. Is there a connection between this form of creative activity (at first glance, simple and not the most important) and other manifestations of the academic professional development of a musician? The answer to this question is the relevance of the topic of the article, devoted to the characteristics of O. Nazarenko’s concertmaster activity. The lack of a special study of the stylistic aspects of his concertmaster’s activity drove a necessitaty to take note to the biographical facts of the artist’s life in order to generalize the components of his performing skills. Analysis of the latest publications on the topic. O. Nazarenko’s compositional work for accordion is presented in the researches of Kharkiv accordionists and musicologists Y. Dyachenko (2012), M. Plushenko (2017), I. Snedkova (2016), A. Sagittarius (2018).However, these authors did not address the problem of concertmaster activity of O. Nazarenko, which was an important part of his professional growth as a model for the young generation of accordionists, drawing attention to this aspect of his performing arts. The object of research is the musical activity of O. Nazarenko; subject – concertmaster component of the artist’s creative universalism. The purpose of the article is to comprehensively research the process of evolution of the concertmaster’s activity of the famous Kharkiv accordionist Oleksandr Nazarenko. The research methodology is based on a complex of historical, genre-style and system approaches. Presenting of the main material. His acquaintance with concertmaster’s skill and it’s mastering O. Nazarenko began quite early – during the third year in B. Lyatoshynsky Kharkiv Music School (1955). Working with artists, he went with concerts to small factories, factory workshops (during breaks in the “red corners”), dormitories and clubs, where were held 40-minute meetings, where O. Nazarenko was accompanying dancers and vocalists. While studying at the Kharkiv Conservatory (1957–1962), he toured with a student team, where he was accompanying the instruments of the folk orchestra (domra, balalaika), symphony orchestra (violin, cello) and vocal performances. O. Nazarenko strived for performing activity, and therefore he chose the direction of creative work as a soloist-accordionist of the Kharkiv Regional Philharmonic (1962–1967), where together with solo performances he began professional concertmaster activity, working in various genres (vocal, dance and original). After graduating from the conservatory, O. Nazarenko paid much attention to the technique of reading from a sheet of works for piano, studied professional accompaniment to soloists, gained experience in concertmaster’s work to learn the new repertoire with artists. At the Department of Folk Instruments, students and teachers competed with each other in better technique of reading from a sheet, transposition into any key, play a tune by ear, improvisation, and skillfully translation the piano texture into accordion. According to the professor’s words, in order not to lose his performance skill during the tour and to maintain the technical level, he tried to practice even on a bus. He played accordion technical exercises with ready-made chords and fragments from masterpiece works (G. Diniku “Romanian round dance”, introduction to the opera “Ruslan” by M. Glinka); always worked on the plastic of his right hand. Most often, the acquaintance with the musical text took place during the move or a short time before the concert. Soloists-vocalists gave piano notes and indicated in what key they were comfortable to sing. Thus, the accordionist had to analyse the texture without an instrument, sing the melody in the required key with his inner ear, and transpose the musical material. O. Nazarenko tried to enrich the instrumental accompaniment with texture (counterpoint, melodic undertones) in order to move away from the primitive form (bass-chord support). The intention to complicate the accordion part made O. Nazarenko to improve his skills constantly in the selection of means of expression, intonation, the search for timbre diversity, all means which create true artistic values. Accompanying the soloists, the artist paid special attention to the thinning of the sound, imitating stringed instruments. While accompanying a group of brass instruments of a symphony orchestra (trumpet, trombone), he tried to convey the effect of “spaciousness”, equalling the techniques of sound production of brass instruments. Thus, performing a popular song of the Great Patriotic War “At Nameless Height”, O. Nazarenko imitated the replicas of the trumpet signal, and in the song “Buchenwald’s alarm” his performance gained maximum tension, sharpening and concentration in the transmission of bells. The world-famous song for the musical of the same name “Hello, Dolly” accompanied by O. Nazarenko gained a swing accent due to the alternation of the first and fourth parts of the bar and bright intonation. The material for accompaniment in the original genres (acrobats, jugglers, tightrope walkers, illusionists) was Latin American tunes (“Malagenya”, rumba “Valencia”), music for movies (“Serenade of the Sunny Valley”), personal improvisations. Between 1967 and 1987, the Union of Composers of Ukraine had author’s concerts-meetings, where among soloists were present the artists from the Philharmonic, the Opera House and teachers from the Institute of Arts. Well-known composers of Kharkiv such as G. Finarovsky, O. Zhuk, T. Kravtsov, F. Bogdanov, I. Kovach, N. Yukhnovska, O. Litvinov, G. Faintukh, V. Zolotukhin selected the soloists and completed the concert program. In general, during the whole period devoted to concertmaster’s activity, O. Nazarenko performed with more than a hundred soloists-vocalists of academic (bass, baritone, soprano, mezzo-soprano) and folk singing, as well as with numerous instrumentalists. Conclusions. Fruitful work on improving his own professionalism made the master a famous concertmaster-accordionist of Kharkiv. Collaboration with talented artists filled the emotional and intellectual state of the young musician, a rich palette of genres allowed the musician to think more widely and go beyond academism. The variety in the choice of means of expression enriched the technique of reading from a sheet, transposing and transition a piano works into an accordion. The expansion of the dramatic functions of the accordion accompaniment, the arsenal of means of expression contributed to the formation of a new type of ensemble based on the cocreation (equality / subordination) of its participants. This determined the active role of the accordionist concertmaster at all stages of the development of the interpretation plan: from the search for a key idea to its implementation on the concert stage. Working as an accompanist influenced not only his performing skills, but also Nazarenko’s work as a composer. Thanks to the personality of O. Nazarenko, the concertmaster activity of a whole generation of accordionists reached a qualitatively new professional level, and the profession of accompanist became popular among the younger generations working in this complex performance format.
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45

TALBOT, MICHAEL. "WILLIAM BATES AND HIS CONCERTOS IN TEN PARTS, OP. 2: AN ENTERPRISING EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY COMPOSER AND AN UNRECOGNIZED ORCHESTRAL SUBGENRE EMPLOYING HORNS." Eighteenth Century Music 14, no. 2 (August 30, 2017): 235–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1478570617000069.

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ABSTRACTWilliam Bates, who died in 1778, was a prolific and, in his day, successful composer of stage music and concert songs performed in London in the 1760s and 1770s; but a scarcity of biographical information and uncertainties over his position vis-à-vis the new style introduced in the early 1760s by J. C. Bach and others have tended to disadvantage him in modern commentary. New facts about his life and background together with a recently discovered sale catalogue reveal him to have been a cultivated man of wide interests, with a sympathy for the ‘ancient’ style. His most substantial musical contribution, as regards its potential for modern revival, is a remarkable set of six concertos for strings with oboes, bassoons and horns (plus, in two concertos, trumpets and timpani) published in 1762. These concertos, related in style to contemporary overtures to stage works but making much greater use of concertante writing, form a high point in a peculiarly British tradition of concertos employing French horns. The cult of the horn in Georgian Britain that nourished this tradition is the subject of extended discussion.
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Head, Raymond. "John Foulds." Tempo 59, no. 232 (April 2005): 52–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298205230152.

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FOULDS: Three Mantras op. 61b3; Lyra Celtica, Concerto for voice and orchestra op. 501; Apotheosis (Elegy) for violin and orchestra op. 182; Mirage op. 20. 1Susan Bickley (mezzo), 2Daniel Hope (vln), 3City of Birmingham Youth Chorus, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra c. Sakari Oramo. Warner Classics 2564 61525-2.
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47

Kruglik, V. L. "Folk-instrumental bases musical style of Vadim D. Bibergan." Vestnik of Saint Petersburg State University of Culture, no. 2 (31) (June 2017): 126–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.30725/2619-0303-2017-2-126-129.

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In the article, the example of «Concerto for gusli with the orchestra» discusses Bibergan’s principles of work with musical material, shows color of gusli, discusses their potential as a solo instrument, and in collaboration with the orchestra. Also attention is paid to timbre and texture characteristics of an orchestra of Russian folk instruments
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48

Young, Toby. "BBC Proms 2014: Gabriel Prokofiev and Brett Dean." Tempo 69, no. 271 (January 2015): 74–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298214000692.

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A traditional four-movement violin concerto might seem a departure from the grime-influenced crossover language of the composer of the infamous Concerto for Turntables (given its Proms premiere in 2011). However, in many ways Gabriel Prokofiev's first Violin Concerto, commissioned by the BBC for Daniel Hope and the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra, is a highly satisfactory step in the composer's artistic trajectory.
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Mottershead, Tim. "Manchester, Bridgewater Hall: Concertos by Hakola and Broström." Tempo 67, no. 265 (July 2013): 75–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298213000508.

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Given that the BBC Philharmonic had taken the courageous step to perform not one but two substantial premières on 1 February, one might have expected enticing potboilers to make up the rest of the menu. However, the remainder of the programme was devoted to Stravinsky's Petrushka (admittedly his most colourful ballet) along with his austere Symphonies of Wind Instruments. The concert was given a novel twist in that the first half (Symphonies of Wind Instruments and Hakola Violin Concerto) was directed by visiting guest conductor Håkan Hardenberger with John Storgårds as soloist; whilst in the second half (Broström Trumpet Concerto and Petrushka) Storgårds donned his more familiar guise as Principal Guest Conductor, with Hardenberger in his better-known role as trumpet soloist.
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50

Kim, Kyunh Eun. "The Meaning of ‘Concerto’ in “Concerto for Orchestra Op. 38” by Paul Hindemith." Journal of Music and Theory 36 (June 30, 2021): 39–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.36364/jmt.36.2.

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