Aiwendil Posted Wednesday at 02:03 AM Posted Wednesday at 02:03 AM This is my first attempt (excluding some best-forgotten teenage stuff) at writing a concerto. The style is my own blend of Classical and some early Romanticism and perhaps a dash of Baroque, but I wrote for the modern valve trumpet. Admittedly, the tessitura may be a bit high, frequently going up to the 8th and occasionally the 9th harmonic. Any comments or feedback would be most appreciated! MP3 Play / pause JavaScript is required. 0:00 0:00 volume > next menu I. Molto allegro II. Adagio III. Allegro > next PDF I. Molto allegroII. AdagioIII. AllegroCadenzas 2 Quote
Uhor Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago So far it is very lovely in its Mozartian/early Beethoven ways. Perhaps the first movement I would not have made as long but tell that to the Eroica Symphony!. I'm also a sucker for lightweight farewell finales, it lifts the spirit. 1 Quote
PeterthePapercomPoser Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Hi @Aiwendil! Surely, an accomplished classical Trumpet Concerto! It's both melodically satisfactory while providing the soloist an ample challenge and virtuosity. The cadenzas are well written as well! Not to mention they sound humanized rather than mechanical and metronomic. Cadenza writing is its own beast and getting a good rendering of a cadenza from a computer program is all-the-more difficult, but I think you accomplished it! Perhaps your 2nd movement could have been more challenging for the soloist, but that might have detracted from its great, stately solemnity. I think the 3rd movement is probably my favorite. It makes for a really great finale to the whole concerto. On 12/16/2025 at 6:03 PM, Aiwendil said: Admittedly, the tessitura may be a bit high, frequently going up to the 8th and occasionally the 9th harmonic. I played Trumpet for a short time before switching to French Horn and for me those high concert C's would definitely be too demanding. But the instrument is a higher C Trumpet so it possibly might be more feasible than on a Bb Trumpet. Also, it seems you do not exceed the high concert C anywhere, so it seems all-the-more practical. A professional virtuoso should definitely be able to play it, as I'm sure you well know. Great job and thanks for sharing! Quote
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