
Handel Concerto Grosso Op.3 No.6 3-6 HWV 317 D major 韓德爾 大協奏曲 ヘンデル 合奏協奏曲集 Score Sheet 譜 楽譜付き 【Kero】
【Kero】 Score Sheet 譜 樂譜 谱 乐谱 Partitura 楽譜付き
Handel Concerto Grosso Op.3
No.6 3-6 HWV 317 in D major
韓德爾 大協奏曲 作品3
韩德尔 大协奏曲 作品3
Händel 6 Concerti Grossi Op.3
ヘンデル 合奏協奏曲集 作品3
Classical music Música clásica クラッシック 古典音樂 古典音乐
#Handel #Concerto #Grosso
00:00 I Vivace
03:22 II Allegro
Handel Op.3 6 Concerti Grossi
No.1 3-1 HWV 312 in B flat major
No.2 3-2 HWV 313 in B flat major
No.3 3-3 HWV 314 in G major
No.4 3-4 HWV 315 in F major
No.5 3-5 HWV 316 in D major
No.6 3-6 HWV 317 in D major
The Concerti grossi, Op. 3, HWV 312–317, are six concerti grossi by George Frideric Handel compiled into a set and published by John Walsh in 1734. Musicologists now agree that Handel had no initial knowledge of the publishing. Instead, Walsh, seeking to take advantage of the commercial success of Corelli's Concerti grossi, Op. 6, simply combined several of Handel's already existing works and grouped them into six "concertos".
The structure of Op. 3 is somewhat unusual. The six concertos have anything between two and five movements, but only one of them contains the usual four movements. Only occasionally are the instrumental forces set in the traditional concerto grosso manner: a tutti group and a contrasting, soloistic concertino group. However, the concertos are filled with virtuoso solo passages for both the strings and the woodwinds, thus maintaining the form of the concerto grosso despite the lack of traditional contrasting forces.
The sixth and final concerto in D major has just two movements: a Vivace, the music of which is extracted from the 1723 opera Ottone; and an Allegro, which is also Handel's first published piece for organ and orchestra,[3] and is taken from the overture to the 1712 opera Il pastor fido.[4]The piece is scored for two oboes, one bassoon, strings, and continuo.[3] The Allegro of the concerto was also announced 'commercially' by Walsh as part of the forthcoming edition of Handel's Op. 4: six concertos for chamber organ (or harpsichord).
