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I think by movements you may mean phrases, though I'm not sure.
Thank you for sharing! Yes, this is a beginning, and a promising one at that. I think, however, that there are a few things you're going to want to tweak before moving on with the rest of it.
First off, in the baroque style, you always want to be on the lookout for unwanted dissonances. Take the first beat of measure 5, for example. The Ab in your oboe clashes as a minor 9th (aka a minor second) with the G in the piano part. I understand that the Ab is a non-harmonic tone, but in baroque music you don't want the nonharmonic tone and the actual harmonic tone to sound at the same time. (Or, if the previous two sentences were gibberish to you, just play the measure without the G and you'll hear what I mean.)
Also, you set up this really nice texture in the piano part at the beginning, but then you drop it for block chords starting at bar 5, chords in a configuration that you wouldn't see in Baroque music.
At bar 3, it would be more traditional to see B-naturals instead of B-flats so that you get a nice V-I progression. (Very Baroque.)
I think in general you just need to keep plugging on through, and try to stick to the harmonic style with which you started in the piano. Those first few bars are good writing, so you want to keep that up!
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Michael Alfera
Pianist, Composer, Musician (and eventually, Conductor)
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