Composers of Clarinet-violin-piano Trios
(This is an incomplete list.)
- Joan Albert Amargós
- Alexander Arutiunian
- Béla Bartók
- Contrasts for clarinet, violin, and piano (1938) Sz. 111, BB 116
- Alban Berg
- Adagio, violin, clarinet and piano, arranged 1956 (arrangement of Kammerkonzert mvm 2)
- William Bolcom
- Trio for clarinet, violin, and piano (1994)
- Jane Brockman
- Nibiru Trio for clarinet, violin, and piano (1999)
- Lemuria Trio for clarinet, violin, and piano (2007)
- John Craton
- Sonate pour violon, clarinet & piano, “Trois petites filles” (2003)
- Gustavo Díaz-Jerez
- Exedrae, (2012)
- Donald Erb
- Sunlit Peaks and Dark Valleys
- John Harbison
- Variations (1982)
- Stephen Hartke
- The Horse with the Lavender Eye (1997)
- Douglas Knehans
- rive (2002)
- Jeffrey Harrington
- Alan Hovhaness
- Trio Lake Samish, Op.415 (1988)
- Nikos Ioakeim
- Metamorphoses (2005)
- Charles Ives
- Largo for Violin, Clarinet and Piano (1934?)
- Aram Khachaturian
- Trio for Clarinet, Violin and Piano (1932)
- Ernst Krenek
- Trio, Op. 108 (1946)
- Edward Manukyan
- Trio for clarinet, violin and piano (2007)
- Gian Carlo Menotti
- Trio for Clarinet, Violin and Piano (1996)
- Darius Milhaud
- Suite for clarinet, violin and piano Op.157b (1936)
- Denis Pousseur
- Le Silence du Futur for clarinet, violin and piano (1992/93)
- Manel Ribera
- Ned Rorem
- End of Summer
- Peter Scholes
- Island Songs, clarinet trio (1995)
- Peter Sculthorpe
- Dream Tracks
- Juan Maria Solare
- Pensierosa (milonga para tres) (2003)
- Greek tales (an inmanent ballet in five scenes with posmodern tangos) (2008)
- Hypnosis (in another room) (2004)
- Rick Sowash
- Franklin Stover
- Trialog, for violin, clarinet, piano (2011)
- Igor Stravinsky
- Histoire du soldat (1918)
- Johann Baptist Vanhal
- Trio in E flat, Op. 20, No. 5
Read more about this topic: Clarinet-violin-piano Trio
Famous quotes containing the word composers:
“More significant than the fact that poets write abstrusely, painters paint abstractly, and composers compose unintelligible music is that people should admire what they cannot understand; indeed, admire that which has no meaning or principle.”
—Eric Hoffer (19021983)