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Sheet music $5.95

Original

Concerto for Flute in D major. Johann Christian Bach. Flute Solo sheet music. Horn sheet music. Piano and Keyboard sheet music.

Translation

Concerto for Flute in D major. Johann Christian Bach. Flute Solo sheet music. Horn sheet music. Piano and Keyboard sheet music.

Original

Concerto for Flute in D major. Flotenkonzert in D. Composed by Johann Christian Bach. 1735-1782. Edited by Ulrich Leisinger. For solo flute, 2 horns, strings, basso continuo. D-Dur. D major. Score available separately - see item CA.3840400. Cello. double bass part. Language. all languages. Composed 1768. Warb C 79. 12 pages. Duration 20 minutes. Published by Carus Verlag. CA.3840414. ISBN M-007-05453-3. With Language. all languages. Johann Christian Bach was-as his father before him-only very seldom satisfied with the compositions that he put down on paper. Thus did this concerto too undergo many corrections. revisions by the composer and today consists of three movements of similar length. Although they were initially handed down separately at different locations, the motivic relationship as well as the melodic and figurative references among themselves clearly reveals the common identity of the three movements. Not only the final rondo is characterized by highly virtuoso passages, but both the slow, second movement as well as the introductory movement testify to youngest Bach son's compositional greatness, whose works later generations unjustly let almost fall into desuetude.

Translation

Concerto for Flute in D major. Flotenkonzert in D. Composed by Johann Christian Bach. 1735-1782. Edited by Ulrich Leisinger. For solo flute, 2 horns, strings, continuo. D-Dur. D major. Score available separately - see item CA.3840400. Cello. double bass part. Language. all languages. Composed 1768. Warb C 79. 12 pages. Duration 20 minutes. Published by Carus Verlag. CA.3840414. ISBN M-007-05453-3. With Language. all languages. Johann Christian Bach was-as his father before him-only very seldom satisfied with the compositions that he put down on paper. Thus did this concerto too undergo many corrections. revisions by the composer and today consists of three movements of similar length. Although they were initially handed down separately at different locations, the motivic relationship as well as the melodic and figurative references among themselves clearly reveals the common identity of the three movements. Not only the final rondo is characterized by highly virtuoso passages, but both the slow, second movement as well as the introductory movement testify to youngest Bach son's compositional greatness, whose works later generations unjustly let almost fall into desuetude.