Romantic
Baroque
Classical
Romantic
20th century
21st century
Solo repertoire
Piccolo
Alto flute
Bass flute
Reinecke Carl Heinrich Carsten
Andersen, Joachim
Boehm, Theobald
Borne, François
Caplet, André
Chaminade, Cécile
Chopin, Frédéric
Danzi, Franz Ignaz
Demersseman, Jules-Auguste Edouard
Donizetti, Gaetano
Donjon, Johannes
Doppler, Albert Franz
Fauré, Gabriel
Frühling, Carl
Ganne, Louis
Godard, Benjamin
Grandval, Clémence
Hüe, Georges Adolphe
Kuhlau, Friedrich
Mercadante, Saverio
Molique, Wilhelm Bernhard
Mouquet, Jules
Périlhou, Albert
Reinecke, Carl Heinrich Carsten
Saint-Saëns, Camille
Schubert, Franz
Schumann, Robert
Strauss, Richard
Taffanel, Claude Paul
Tulou, Jean-Louis
Wagner, Siegfried
Widor, Charles Marie Jean Albert
Ballade for flute and orchestra in D Major (Op 288)
C. Reinecke: Ballade for flute and orchestra (Op 288) is the last composition of Carl Reinecke. It was published for the first time in 1911.
SWR Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra, Berhnard Gueller (conductor), 2001, Claves records
Ballade
Münchner Rundfunkorchester, Ivan Repušić (conductor), 2019, Parlophone / Warner Classics
Ballade
Carl Reinecke (1824-1910) was a German composer and conductor. He studied and later became good friends with R. Schumann and F. Liszt and for three decades was a Musical director of the Gewandhaus Orchestra in Leipzig where he premiered J. Brahm's "A German Requiem" in 1869. He was also a professor of composition and piano at the Leipzig Conservatorium where among his students were E. Grieg, B. Harwood and E. Wintzer. The most popular composition of Reinecke is his flute sonata "Undine".