Organ concerto


An organ concerto is a piece of music, an instrumental concerto for a pipe organ soloist with an orchestra. The form first evolves in the 18th century, when composers including Antonio Vivaldi, Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frideric Handel wrote organ concertos with small orchestras, and with solo parts which rarely call for the organ pedal board. During the Classical period the organ concerto became popular in many places, especially in Bavaria, Austria and Bohemia, reaching a position of being almost an integral part of the church music tradition of jubilus character. From the Romantic era fewer works are known. Finally, there are some 20th- and 21st-century examples, of which the concerto by Francis Poulenc has entered the basic repertoire, and is quite frequently played.
The organ concerto form is not usually taken to include orchestral works that call for an organ used as an extra orchestral section, examples of which include the Third Symphony of Camille Saint-Saëns, Gustav Holst's The Planets or Richard Strauss's Also sprach Zarathustra. See also: List of organ symphonies.

Composers of organ concertos

Antonio Vivaldi (1678–1741)

There is no clearly named "organ concerto" by Bach, but several cantata movements contain extensive obbligato organ parts. Versions of six of these cantata movements had a later incarnation in the two harpsichord concertos BWV 1052 and 1053. Cantata 35 contains two instrumental Sinfonias with organ solo, the first of which agrees with the fragmentary keyboard concerto BWV 1059. A recording of a reconstruction of this as an organ concerto was made by Ton Koopman.
Bach's admiration for Antonio Vivaldi and the Italian style led to several transcriptions of instrumental concertos for solo organ, without an orchestra:
BWVkeysourcemovements
592G majorJohann Ernst of Saxe-Weimar: Violin Concerto a 8Allegro, Grave, Presto
593A minorVivaldi: Concerto for two violins, Op. 3 No. 8 Allegro, Adagio, Allegro
594C majorVivaldi: Grosso Mogul violin concerto Allegro, Recitativ: Adagio, Allegro – Cadenza – Allegro
595C majorJohann Ernst of Saxe-Weimar: lost ConcertoUses the first movement only.
596D minorVivaldi: Concerto for two violins, Op. 3 No. 11 Allegro, Grave, Fuga, Largo e spiccato, Allegro
597E-flat major, Gigue

George Frideric Handel (1685–1759)

Handel wrote organ concertos as interludes for his oratorios—playing the organ part himself while directing the orchestra. Some are arrangements of his earlier works, or of works by other composers. For more details see the list of Handel's concertos. Many alternatives exist, so it is difficult to precisely number his organ concertos, however it is generally accepted that he wrote 16:
  1. HWV 289 – Op. 4 No. 1 in G minor: larghetto, allegro, adagio, andante
  2. HWV 290 – Op. 4 No. 2 in B-flat major: tempo ordinario, allegro, adagio, allegro ma non troppo
  3. HWV 291 – Op. 4 No. 3 in G minor: adagio, allegro, adagio, allegro
  4. HWV 292 – Op. 4 No. 4 in F major: allegro, andante, adagio, allegro
  5. HWV 293 – Op. 4 No. 5 in F major: larghetto, allegro, alla siciliana, presto
  6. HWV 294 – Op. 4 No. 6 in B-flat major: andante, allegro, larghetto, allegro moderato
  7. HWV 306 – Op. 7 No. 1 in B-flat major: andante, allegro, largo, adagio, allegro
  8. HWV 307 – Op. 7 No. 2 in A major: overture, tempo ordinario, tempo ordinario II, allegro
  9. HWV 308 – Op. 7 No. 3 in B-flat major: allegro, fuga, spiritoso, minuets 1 & 2
  10. HWV 309 – Op. 7 No. 4 in D minor: adagio, allegro, adagio, allegro
  11. HWV 310 – Op. 7 No. 5 in G minor: allegro ma non troppo, adagio, andante, minuet, gavotte
  12. HWV 311 – Op. 7 No. 6 in B-flat major: pomposo, adagio, tempo ordinario
  13. HWV 295a – F major : largo, allegro, larghetto, allegro
  14. :HWV 295b – second version: larghetto, allegro, larghetto, allegro
  15. HWV 296a – A major : largo e staccato, organo ad libitum: fuga – allegro, andante, grave, allegro
  16. :HWV 296b – second version, Pasticcio Konzert: andante, adagio, grave, andante allegro, a tempo ordinario
  17. HWV 304 – D minor : andante, organo ad libitum: adagio – fuga, allegro
  18. HWV 305a – F major : concerto, allegro, andante, andante allegro
  19. :HWV 305b – second version: overture, allegro, andante, andante allegro
Organ concertos arranged from Concerti Grossi, Op.6:
  1. HWV 297 – D minor, after HWV 328: overture, air, allegro, allegro, allegro moderato
  2. HWV 298 – G major, after HWV 319: a tempo giusto, allegro, adagio, allegro, allegro
  3. HWV 299 – D major, after HWV 323 : larghetto e staccato, allegro, presto, largo, allegro, minuet un poco larghetto
  4. HWV 300 – G minor, after HWV 324 : largo e affettuoso, a tempo giusto, musette larghetto, allegro, allegro

    Gregor Joseph Werner (1693–1766)

The Austrian composer Gregor Joseph Werner wrote a concerto in B-flat major for organ, 2 chalumeaux and string orchestra, dated 1753: AllegroLargoTempo di menuet, as well as other concertos for organ and string or chamber orchestra. Besides these he wrote a pastorella in D major for organ and string orchestra: AndanteLarghettoAllegro.

Johann Adolf Hasse (1699–1783)

The German composer Johann Adolf Hasse wrote six concertos for organ and orchestra, published in London ca 1743.

Michel Corrette (1707–1795)

The French organist-composer Michel Corrette wrote six concertos.
The German composer Marianus Königsperger wrote six concertos and two pastorellas for organ and string orchestra, with two trumpets or horns ad libitum, Op. 18.

Georg von Reutter (1708–1772)

The Austrian composer Georg von Reutter wrote a concerto in F major for organ and string orchestra.

Thomas Arne (1710–1778)

The English composer Thomas Arne composed six concertos.
The German composer Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach wrote several concertos for keyboard instrument, including the following:
The Austrian composer Georg Christoph Wagenseil wrote several concertos for organ and string orchestra, of which six were published in London in 1761 and another set of six also in London by Welcker ca 1765.

Johann Georg Zechner (1716–1778)

The Austrian composer Johann Georg Zechner wrote at least four concertos for keyboard instrument and orchestra; either one of them or another work in F major is recorded by Franz Haselböck and Capella Academica Wien, conducted by Eduard Melkus, as an organ concerto: AllegroAdagioPresto.

Joseph Anton Xaver Auffmann (ca 1720–1773 or later)

The German composer Joseph Anton Xaver Auffmann wrote at least three concertos for organ and chamber orchestra, Op. 1.

Antonio Soler (1729–1783)

The Spanish composer Antonio Soler wrote six concertos for two organs :
The Czech composer František Xaver Brixi wrote at least six concertos for organ and chamber orchestra, e.g.:
The Austrian composer Joseph Haydn wrote at least three concertos for organ:
Besides these, several of his keyboard concertos are performed with organ. There are also works attributed him, dubiously or spuriously:
The Austrian composer Johann Georg Albrechtsberger wrote a concerto in B-flat major for organ and string orchestra, dated 1762, and published as volume 1 in Musica rinata series.

Michael Haydn (1737–1806)

The Austrian composer Michael Haydn wrote concerto MH 41 in C major for viola and organ with orchestra, dated 19 December 1761.

Sir William Herschel (1738–1822)

The German-born English astronomer and composer Sir William Herschel wrote at least two concertos for organ and orchestra:
The Czech-born Austrian composer Johann Baptist Waṅhal wrote at least nine organ concertos, which are only known from the inventory of the composer's estate. Concerto Bryan F1 in F major for harpsichord or piano and orchestra, composed no later than 1786, is edited and published in 1973 as an organ concerto in Diletto musicale series.

Marian Paradeiser (1747–1775)

The Austrian composer Marian Paradeiser wrote a concertino for organ, violin, violoncello and orchestra; a manuscript of this work is kept in the library of the Melk Abbey in Melk, Austria.

Antonio Salieri (1750–1825)

Italian-born Austrian composer Antonio Salieri wrote an organ concerto in C major in 1773. Manuscript of this work is in the collections of the National Library of Austria. An edition, by J.S. Hettrick, in published in Vienna in 1981.

Karel Blažej Kopřiva (1756–1785)

The Czech composer Karel Blažej Kopřiva wrote at least eight concertos for organ and orchestra, but only the one in E-flat major for organ and chamber orchestra, with movements Allegro moderatoAdagioAllegro di giusto, is known to have survived.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)

The Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote several Epistle sonatas, of which six are for solo organ and strings or solo organ and orchestra:
A Central-European composer Balthasar Anton Pfeyll composed at least one concerto in D major for organ and chamber orchestra : Allegro .

Matteo Andruzzi (fl. 1785)

The Italian composer Matteo Andruzzi wrote at least one concerto in C major for organ and orchestra.

Skitner

An unrecognised Central-European composer called Skitner wrote at last one concerto in D major for organ and chamber orchestra, dated before 1802: Allegro Allegro assai.

Matthew Camidge (1764–1844)

The English composer Matthew Camidge wrote six concertos, Op. 13, for solo organ, published in London tentatively in 1815, with a note that "The author in this work has endeavoured to imitate the particular style of music which has been so long admired namely that of Handel & Corelli".

Josef Gabriel Rheinberger (1839–1901)

The Liechtenstein-born German composer Josef Gabriel Rheinberger wrote two concertos for organ and orchestra:
Félix-Alexandre Guilmant Alexandre Guilmant, wrote two of his organ sonatas in two versions , one as a symphony for organ and orchestra: