For violin, piano and orchestra
Double Concerto
For Violin, Piano and Orchestra
A large-scale double concerto in three movements, placing violin and piano in dialogue with orchestra: lyric, devotional and virtuosic forces held in a single dramatic architecture.
World Premiere
13 December 2006. Liederhalle, Stuttgart — Vadim Gluzman, violin; Angela Yoffe, piano; Radio-Sinfonieorchester Stuttgart; Andrey Boreyko, conductor.
Form
Three movements. Moderato · Chorale (Andante religioso) · Vivace.
Scoring
Violin, piano and orchestra. Two solo voices set against a full orchestral body.
Movements
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I. Moderato
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II. Chorale (Andante religioso)
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III. Vivace
Work Information
II. Chorale (Andante religioso)
III. Vivace
Abbreviations PDF
The Work
Double Concerto for Violin, Piano and Orchestra, Op. 40 places two solo instruments in a shared dramatic field. The violin and piano do not merely alternate as soloists; they form a dual presence, sometimes in dialogue, sometimes in tension, sometimes absorbed into the larger orchestral architecture.
The concerto unfolds in three movements. The opening Moderato establishes the work’s serious and spacious character. The central Chorale, marked Andante religioso, turns inward toward a devotional space, while the final Vivace releases the accumulated energy into motion.
Written in 1997 and premiered in Stuttgart in 2006, the concerto belongs to Auerbach’s early orchestral catalogue yet already shows her attraction to large formal structures, sacred or ritualized slow movements, and instrumental identities that behave almost like dramatic characters.
- Two Soloists Violin and piano share the concerto’s dramatic center.
- Chorale The second movement creates a religious, inwardly suspended space.
- Orchestral Dialogue The solo instruments are framed by a full orchestral body with vivid percussion color.
Publisher and Materials
Published by Boosey & Hawkes / Sikorski. This work is available from Boosey & Hawkes / Sikorski for the world. Score and rental materials are available through Zinfonia.