Johannes Brahms
The Violin Concerto in D major was composed by Johannes Brahms in 1878 and first performed in Leipzig, Germany. In the Romantic period1825 - 1900. composers wrote concertoA piece for an orchestra with a soloist, in three movements for a range of solo instruments, however, piano and violin were by far the most popular. The soloist was accompanied by a large orchestra whereby elements of melody, harmonyThe arrangement of two or more pitches sounding together to create chords. and dynamicsThe volume of the music. created highly expressive and dramatic pieces of music.
Violin Concerto in D major
Brahms composed this piece for his friend and renowned violinist, Joseph Joachim. Many critics at the time claimed the music Brahms had written was too difficult as it included rapid broken chordNotes of the chord played separately.聽, scaleA series of pitches, ascending and descending in a set pattern. and double stoppingOn a stringed instrument playing two strings at once, plucked or bowed..Yet, Brahms knew that Joachim was capable of playing it.
It was intended that a concerto would give the soloist a chance to shine as a virtuosoA highly skilled performer.. This concerto features a cadenzaVirtuosic solo passage. at the end of the first movement, however, Brahms was one of the last composers to permit the soloist to improvise or create their own. Soloists started to create cadenzas that were too long and this led composers to notate their cadenzas. This change allowed composers to have control over the musical material performed.
The concerto is made up of three movements and follows the typical structureThe organisation of musical sections to create contrast, development and order in an overall form, eg verse-chorus. of fast-slow-fast. The first movement is much longer than would have been heard in the Classical period1750 - 1825. . had started to expand the symphonic form to allow time to develop musical ideas. Brahms was inspired by such emerging symphonic drama and adapted it for his violin concerto. He included an orchestral introduction in this work where many of the themes were introduced before the violin solo entered.
The first movement is written in sonata formA popular structure from the Classical period consisting of an exposition, development and recapitulation. and as shown in the table, each section has a purpose.
Exposition | Development | Recapitulation |
The themes are introduced | Musical ideas are transformed by reusing and changing ideas from the exposition | The theme is restated, usually in a different key |
Exposition | The themes are introduced |
---|---|
Development | Musical ideas are transformed by reusing and changing ideas from the exposition |
Recapitulation | The theme is restated, usually in a different key |
The structure of the last movement is rondoA music structure that continually returns to the A section, eg A-B-A-C-A. form. This is a structure where a section of music keeps returning, and is similar to how a chorus would be repeated numerous times in a pop musicMusic which has general appeal and is often linked to styles of the 1950s. Driven by a strong rhythmic element. song of modern times.