German composer of the late Romantic and early modern eras
Oboe Concerto D Major
The Concerto in D major for Oboe and Small Orchestra, AV 144, TrV 292, was written by Richard Strauss in 1945. It was one of the last works he composed near the end of his life, during what is often described by biographers, journalists and music critics as his "Indian summer."
The concerto consists of three interconnected movements and lasts around 25 minutes:
Allegro moderato
Andante
Vivace - Allegro
The tonal disposition of the movements is D Major, Bflat major, D major. Juergen May has observed that "it is obvious that Strauss takes as his point of departure here the Classical and early-Romantic models of his musical youth. The composer looks back to a past aesthetic from the perspective of someone who has lived through the paradigm changes of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In this sense one might call the last works of Strauss postmodern" (May 2010, page 181).[1]
As with his other late works, Strauss builds up the music from a series of small melodic ideas "which are the point of departure for the development of the entire composition" (May 2010, page 182). The concerto is built up from three main thematic elements.