am taking a concerto class in the fall, and so i bought a book by roeder entitled 'a history of the piano concerto.' in reading the twentieth century section, i found i had not heard many of them. which of the following have you heard and liked?
vaughn williams concerto for piano
(three movements played without a break-third mov't has a chromatic fugue section)
william walton's sinfonia concertante for piano and orchestra (jazz-inspired)
benjamin britten's piano concerto (four mov'ts = toccata, waltz, recitative, aria and march)
tippett's piano concerto of 1953-55 (created after listening to beethoven's fourth pc - celestia in duet in the last mov't of tippett's pc)
schoenberg piano concerto (oscar levant wrote programmatic sketch to all movt's:
life was so easy (andante) suddenly hatred broke out (allegro molto)
a grave situation was created (adagio) but life goes on (rondo)
webern's op. 24 (originally planned as a piano concerto)
so many more! copeland, and my favorite so far leroy anderson's piano concerto.