Composers

Piano Concerto No. 2

Composer: Hummel Johann Nepomuk

Instruments: Piano Orchestra

Tags: Concerto

#Parts
#Arrangements

Download free scores:

Complete Score PDF 2 MB

Parts for:

AllViolinViolaTrumpetTimpaniPianoOboeFrench hornFluteClarinetCelloBassoon

Arrangements:

Other

Piano(2) (Eduard Mertke) Cello + Piano + Viola + Violin(2) (Unknown) Cello + Piano + Viola + Violin(2) (Massun, Ignacio)
Wikipedia
Johann Nepomuk Hummel's Piano Concerto No. 2 in A minor, Op. 85 was written in 1816 and published in Vienna in 1821. Unlike his earlier piano concerti, which closely followed the model of Mozart's, the A minor concerto, like the B minor Concerto, Op. 89, is written in a proto-Romantic style that anticipates the later stylistic developments of composers such as Frédéric Chopin and Felix Mendelssohn.
The piano concerto was written by Hummel as a showcase for his virtuosity at the instrument. It was written in 1816 and is scored for piano, flute, two oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani, and strings.
The work is composed in traditional three movement form. There is a solo transition in the second movement leading into the Rondo without pause.
Although Hummel's music, seen as essentially Mozartian in style, had fallen out of fashion by the 1830s, the A minor concerto nonetheless exercised considerable influence over a number of works that helped to usher in the Romantic style. Frédéric Chopin, who had played the Hummel concerti, drew from elements of the A minor concerto in his own piano concerti. Indeed, it has been suggested that Chopin's concerto is closely linked both thematically and structurally to the Hummel antecedent.
The A minor concerto da camera of Charles-Valentin Alkan has also been noted for its debt to Hummel's style of writing for the keyboard.
While generally uninterested in Hummel as a composer, Robert Schumann had made a close study of the A minor concerto in 1828 and considered it one of the works (along with the F-sharp minor piano sonata) of his "heyday". And in his own A minor concerto, Schumann makes reference to aspects of Hummel's virtuosic style.