violinfiddler Posted August 16, 2007 Posted August 16, 2007 *yawn* Anyway, Ioanna, keep me informed of your progress. Quote
ioanna302 Posted August 16, 2007 Author Posted August 16, 2007 *yawn*Anyway, Ioanna, keep me informed of your progress. thanks alot everyone! you really helped. Quote
gollum69 Posted January 16, 2008 Posted January 16, 2008 I know the time for this has long gone. But I'd think that if one is looking to play a violin concerto, Vivaldi would be the FIRST place to look. Quote
Daniel Posted January 17, 2008 Posted January 17, 2008 *Speaks stiffly from behind a mask* Play Salieri. And of course the implication is play my violin concerto. :laugh: Quote
exist Posted January 17, 2008 Posted January 17, 2008 You should consider Carl Nielsen's Violin Concerto. It is not very well known, at least not as known as it deserves to be, but none the less extremely good and, I believe, technically challenging. EDIT: Ah, OK, I see this advice is a bit "overdue" ;) Quote
Romanticist Posted January 17, 2008 Posted January 17, 2008 There are 2 really nice ones by Bach- I'm preferential to the E-major one.Handel's Sonata a Cinque may be permissable as a violin concerto, although it leans more towards the side of a concerto grosso. There's a Beethoven one, a buttload by Vivaldi, and Mendelssohn's is one that I am preferential to also. Those are all the major solo ones I can think of. Have the sheet music to that one very fun baroque piece to play, it is a little on the intermediate side, but a joy and happy piece to play! Quote
Alan Posted January 17, 2008 Posted January 17, 2008 My favorite concerto is Tchai's violin concerto (#2?). If I could play anything, that would be the one thing that I would want to play on the Violin. :D Quote
Romanticist Posted January 18, 2008 Posted January 18, 2008 My favorite concerto is Tchai's violin concerto (#2?). If I could play anything, that would be the one thing that I would want to play on the Violin. :D His second violin concerto eh? I'm really not a fan of tchaikovsky's violin concertos I love the finale of the swan lake though, perhaps the greatest finale of a ballet of all time! Quote
M_is_D Posted January 18, 2008 Posted January 18, 2008 Tchaikovsky only wrote ONE violin concerto. Quote
Romanticist Posted January 18, 2008 Posted January 18, 2008 Well excuse me, I must have been listening to snippets of the same one MisD, do you have a proffered composer for violin concertos? Quote
M_is_D Posted January 18, 2008 Posted January 18, 2008 A single one? Not really. I love many. Vivaldi and Bach have nice pleasant ones, although the brilliant stuff really begins at Mozart IMO. The Beethoven is absolutely amazing, and I also adore Mendelssohn's, Paganini's (I've heard 1, 2, 4 and 5) Bruch's 1st, Wieniawski's 2nd (which I'm playing), Tchaikovsky's, Brahms', Sibelius' and so forth. It's really impossible to choose. Quote
Romanticist Posted January 18, 2008 Posted January 18, 2008 A single one? Not really. I love many. Vivaldi and Bach have nice pleasant ones, although the brilliant stuff really begins at Mozart IMO. The Beethoven is absolutely amazing, and I also adore Mendelssohn's, Paganini's (I've heard 1, 2, 4 and 5) Bruch's 1st, Wieniawski's 2nd (which I'm playing), Tchaikovsky's, Brahms', Sibelius' and so forth. It's really impossible to choose. Love bruch's first I think its in the top five if not 3 Quote
M_is_D Posted January 19, 2008 Posted January 19, 2008 I've had the enormous pleasure of playing it. Except breaking down the 3rd movement bar by bar, note by note: that wasn't much fun, although it was necessary. Quote
Kije of Prokofiev Posted January 20, 2008 Posted January 20, 2008 I'm surprised no one has mentioned Bartok who wrote a lot of stuff for Violin, although I'm not sure how difficult it is. I believe Prokofiev wrote a couple concerti for violin, Nielsen wrote one and of course there is Berio's violin sequenza but from what it looks like, like all of his sequenzas, it looks like a royal pain in the donkey. Good luck. Quote
gollum69 Posted March 7, 2008 Posted March 7, 2008 Try Vivaldi's RV 298 in G Major. I guarantee you'll like playing it. The third movement is gonna give your fingers a good workout! In my opinion, it's one of his gems. (It's from his Opus 4) Quote
ioanna302 Posted October 21, 2008 Author Posted October 21, 2008 hello after a long time! well i played wieniawsky after all but my teacher promised me to let me play barber this year (in our conservatorie they don't like modern composers that much but i'll step my foot down!) You have been very very helpful, thanx a lot! P.s. I started studying devil's trill and i found that paganini's caprice n.6 helps a lot for the trill part. What do you think about this sonata? Quote
ioanna302 Posted October 28, 2008 Author Posted October 28, 2008 i know, where I study there's a "know it or snob it" philosophy and in addition they dislike every composer is not from europe Quote
ioanna302 Posted October 28, 2008 Author Posted October 28, 2008 narrow-minded i'd say but ... scallopes is ok too Quote
Qmwne235 Posted November 3, 2008 Posted November 3, 2008 And if the OP is far beyond Bruch and Mendelssohn, Czardas won't be a very great challenge. Quote
ioanna302 Posted November 3, 2008 Author Posted November 3, 2008 And if the OP is far beyond Bruch and Mendelssohn, Czardas won't ba a very great challenge. that's true. My teacher now suggests prokofiev 1 or 2, haven't decided yet Quote
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