Flute Concerto in A minor Wq 166 piano reduction by Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach Flute Solo - Sheet Music

By Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach

The concertos in A minor, B flat major and A major constitute a small but amazingly flexible group in Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach's work catalogue. They were written as violoncello concertos between 1750 and 1753, and have all been transmitted in alternative versions as flute and harpsichord concertos as well. C. P. E. Bach wrote the Cello Concerto in A minor Wq 170 at the Berlin court of King Frederick the Great. The flute version Wq 166 was probably written shortly thereafter, even if the only surviving source dates from after the composer's death. We can see how interchangeable the solo instruments were through the amazing circumstance that editor Ulrich Leisinger was able to draw upon the version for harpsichord solo Wq 26 for this new edition. The cadenzas to the first and second movements proved to be easily adaptable to the flute, which should inspire soloists to create their own versions.A variable solo concerto in A minor

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Details

Instrument:
Piano Flute Solo
Genres:
Classical Period
Composers:
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
ISBN:
9790004487457
Format:
Reduction
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Concerto
Artist:
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
Usages:
School and Community
Number of Pages:
56
Size:
9 x 12 inches
Shipping Weight:
0.64 pounds

Flute, piano

SKU: BR.MR-2195A

Piano reduction. Composed by Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach. Edited by Ulrich Leisinger. Solo instruments; stapled. Musica Rara.

A variable solo concerto in A minor

Solo concerto; Early classical. Piano reduction. 56 pages. Duration 25'.

ISBN 9790004487457. 9 x 12 inches.

The concertos in A minor, B flat major and A major constitute a small but amazingly flexible group in Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach's work catalogue. They were written as violoncello concertos between 1750 and 1753, and have all been transmitted in alternative versions as flute and harpsichord concertos as well. C. P. E. Bach wrote the Cello Concerto in A minor Wq 170 at the Berlin court of King Frederick the Great. The flute version Wq 166 was probably written shortly thereafter, even if the only surviving source dates from after the composer's death. We can see how interchangeable the solo instruments were through the amazing circumstance that editor Ulrich Leisinger was able to draw upon the version for harpsichord solo Wq 26 for this new edition. The cadenzas to the first and second movements proved to be easily adaptable to the flute, which should inspire soloists to create their own versions.

A variable solo concerto in A minor.