Concerti for Piano and Orchestra
John Adams: Century Rolls (1996)
{Duration: 28-30' } {Solo pf, piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, english horn, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 3 horns, 3 trumpets, 2 trombones, timpani, perc (vibraphone, chimes, glockenspiel, marimba, xylophone, woodblock, bongo), hp, cel, str.} {Boosey + Hawkes}
George Antheil: First Piano Concerto (1922)
{ 28' Piano; 2+pic.222/2331/timp.3perc/cel.2hp/str }
George Antheil: Second Piano Concerto (1926)
{ 16' Piano; 2(2pic).020/3201/str }
{Schirmer}
George Antheil: A Jazz Symphony (2 versions)
A Jazz Symphony (1925 version) (1925) 12' EWM
{originally written for Paul Whiteman }
{022.ssx+asx+tsx.0/0331/2perc/2bjo([gtr]).3pf(1st=solo)/str }
{Rental material}
A Jazz Symphony (ensemble version) (arr. 1999) 12' EWM
{arr. by Milton Phibbs } { Piano; 1(pic).1.1.ssx.1/1110/2perc/bjo/db ...Schirmer Rental material }
Quoting Joplin and Stravinsky and calling upon the trumpeter to employ “all the tricks of the trade,” Antheil creates a wholly original and inimitable musical score that once and for all marries jazz to the concert orchestra. “Out-Gershwins Gershwin”
Beethoven: Concerti 1, 3 & 5.
Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue
Ruth Loman: Concerto for percussion and piano
{Piano Solo, 8 percussionists}
Mozart: Piano Concerto number 23.
Frank J. Oteri: “Last Minute Piano Concerto”*
{Piano Solo, large orchestra. Duration 1'}
Poulenc: Double Piano Concerto
Prokofiev: Concerti 1 & 3
Ravel: G major
Erwin Schulhoff: Concerto in Eb
{Piano, large chamber orchestra. Schott}
Dmitri Shostakovitch: Piano and Trumpet Concerto
Paul Staicu: “5-minute Piano Concerto”*
{Piano Solo, chamber orchestra)
Igor Stravinsky: Concerto for piano and winds
Duke Ellington: New World A-Comin' (1945) 10' GS (2 versions)
arrangement by Maurice Peress
Piano; 2(pic)22+bcl.2/4431/timp.perc/hp/str [+ dance band]
Rental material
arrangement by Luther Henderson
edited by Jeff Tyzik; Ellington piano transcription by John Nyerges
22+ca.3+bcl.2/4431/timp.2perc.pf.jazz bass/str (vn div a 3)
Rental material: Ellington's landmark jazz score, in which the great composer and pianist visualized a world without war, greed, and categorization, swings with a virtuoso solo piano part and lush orchestral scoring.
*works written for Mr. Livingston