This website is using cookies. By continuing to browse the site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Find out more.

Classical

Baroque

Classical

Romantic

20th century

21st century

Solo repertoire

Piccolo

Alto flute

Bass flute

Beethoven Ludwig van

Beethoven, Ludwig van

Devienne, François

Gluck, Christoph Willibald

Graf, Friedrich Hartmann

Grétry, André Ernest Modeste

Haydn, Franz Joseph

Hoffmeister, Franz Anton

Hummel, Johann Nepomuk

Jadin, Louis-Emmanuel

Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus

Müller, August Eberhard

Reicha, Josef

Romberg, Bernhard

Rosetti, Francesco Antonio

Schwindel, Friedrich

Stamitz, Anton

Stamitz, Carl Philipp

Sonata for flute and piano in B-flat Major

By Beethoven Ludwig van

L. van Beethoven: Sonata for flute and keyboard in B-flat Major was written around 1790 and was found after Beethoven's death among his papers. The sonata is attributed to him although manuscript was not in Beethoven's writing. The attribution is mostly based on a fact that Beethoven would not have retained the work in his papers unless he had some personal connection with the composition. The sonata was published for the first time only in 1906. 

James Galway

Phillip Moll (piano), 1990, BMG Music

1. Allegro moderato

00:00
YouTube icon

James Galway

Phillip Moll (piano), 1990, BMG Music

2. Polonaise

00:00
YouTube icon

James Galway

Phillip Moll (piano), 1990, BMG Music

3. Largo

00:00
YouTube icon

James Galway

Phillip Moll (piano), 1990, BMG Music

4. Allegretto molto

00:00
YouTube icon

Juliette Hurel

Hélène Couvert (piano), 2013, naïve

1. Allegro moderato

00:00
YouTube icon

Juliette Hurel

Hélène Couvert (piano), 2013, naïve

2. Polonaise

00:00
YouTube icon

Juliette Hurel

Hélène Couvert (piano), 2013, naïve

3. Largo

00:00
YouTube icon

Juliette Hurel

Hélène Couvert (piano), 2013, naïve

4. Allegretto molto

00:00
YouTube icon

Robert Stallman

Erika Nickrenz (piano), live performance at the Marblehead Summer Music Festival 1996

1. Allegro moderato, 2. Polonaise, 3. Largo, 4. Allegretto molto

00:00
YouTube icon

Beethoven Ludwig van

Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) was a German composer, regarded as one of the most important composers of classical period.
Inspired by works of Schiller, Goethe, Kant and ideals of the French Revolution, he was passionate about expressing values of freedom, humanism and dignity of the individual, laying ground for Romanticism.
Born in Bonn, in a musical family of Flemish origin, Beethoven early acquired piano skills. His musical mentor, court organist   C.G.Neefe was a person of high ideals and broad cultural interests, making young Beethoven as his assistant and court organist at the age of 12. He gradually acquired pupils of influential aristocrats that eventually, with a personal endorsement of J.Haydn, helped him to move to Vienna to study piano with W.A.Mozart, and composition with J.Haydn. Soon he acquired reputation as piano virtuoso and received notable commissions to compose, gradually leading to his first symphony in 1800.

The first decade of the 19th century was not only very prolific period of writing symphonies, concertos, quartets, and overall acclaim, but marked the beginning of his heroic struggle against encroaching deafness. Last eight years of his life he deafness became total, using conversation books to be able to communicate with others. Beethoven used sketchbooks to continue to compose, often complimenting notes with comments. His reputation and published works allowed him to maintain the freedom, being able to support himself without need to have any official position and obligations. Thus he continued to work until his last years, not only managing to finish his last large-scale work, the Ninth Symphony in 1824, but compose three string quartets as well, on commission of knyaz Golitsyn.