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Sarcasms, five pieces for piano, Op. 17 (1912–14) Visions fugitives, 20 pieces for piano, Op. 22 (1915–17) Tales of an Old Grandmother, Op. 31 (1918) Four Pieces for Piano, Op. 32 (1918) Schubert Waltzes (1920) Fantasia on Scheherazade (1926) Things in Themselves, 2 pieces for piano, Op. 45 (1928) Six Pieces for Piano, Op. 52 (1928-31)
Pages in category "Piano concertos by Sergei Prokofiev" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. P.
Piano Concerto, Op. 1 (destroyed, material partly used in the Piano Concerto No. 2) Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat, Op. 16 (1913) Piano Concerto No. 2 in E-flat, Op. 28, for left hand alone, written for Paul Wittgenstein (1924) Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Per Aspera ad Astra, Op. 32 (1927) Russian Rhapsody; Dmitry Bortniansky. Piano ...
Prokofiev's last piano concerto dates from 1932, a year after he finished the fourth piano concerto, whose solo part is for left hand only.According to the composer, he was then inspired to write another for two hands, whose intended simplicity was reflected in the desire to call it, not a concerto, but rather 'Music for Piano and Orchestra.'
Philip Marlowe Concerto (Piano Concerto No. 2) Piano Concerto No. 2 for the left hand (in C minor and E-flat major) (Bortkiewicz) Piano Concerto No. 3 "Per aspera ad astra" (Sergei Bortkiewicz) Piano Concerto No. 1 (Arthur De Greef) Piano Concerto (Delius) Piano Concerto No. 1 (Concerto capriccioso) (Théodore Dubois)
The first movement opens with an andante clarinet solo, a long, lyrical melody that the whole orchestra eventually picks up and expands. The strings begin the allegro section with a scalar passage which seems to accelerate towards an upwards glissando climax, at which point the allegro entry of the solo piano unexpectedly breaks the lyrical mood in an exuberant, harmonically fluid burst of ...
Sergei Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 4 in B-flat major for the left hand, Op. 53, was commissioned by the one-armed pianist Paul Wittgenstein and completed in 1931.. It was the only one of Prokofiev's complete piano concertos that never saw a performance during his lifetime.
Sergei Prokofiev did not manage to compose more than a few bars of his Piano Concerto No. 6 (Op. 134, sometimes Op. 133) before his death in 1953, so it is impossible to reconstruct the underlying musical ideas and complete it. [citation needed] The work is unusual in that it is scored for two pianos and a string orchestra. The other five of ...