Recitative has also sometimes been used to refer to parts of purely instrumental works which resemble vocal recitatives, in terms of their musical style. In an instrumental recitative, one instrument (or group of instruments) are given the melody line (akin to the role of the singer) and another instrument (or group of instruments) are given the accompaniment role. One of the earliest examples is found in the slow movement of
Vivaldi's
violin concerto in D, RV 208, which is marked "Recitative".
C. P. E. Bach included instrumental recitative in his "Prussian" piano sonatas of 1742, composed at
Frederick the Great's court in Berlin. In 1761,
Joseph Haydn took his post at
Esterhazy Palace and soon after composed his
Symphony No. 7 ("Le Midi") in concertante style (i.e. with soloists). In the second movement of that work, the violinist is the soloist in an instrumental recitative.
Ludwig van Beethoven used the instrumental recitative in at least three works, including
Piano Sonata No. 17 (
The Tempest),
Piano Sonata No. 31, and in the opening section of the Finale of his
Ninth Symphony. Here, Beethoven inscribed on the score (in French) "In the manner of a recitative, but
in tempo." Leon Plantinga argues that the second movement of Beethoven's
Fourth Piano Concerto is also an instrumental recitative, although Owen Jander interprets it as a dialogue. Other
Romantic music era composers to employ instrumental recitative include
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (who composed a lyrical, virtuosic recitative for solo violin with
harp accompaniment to represent the
title character in his orchestral
Scheherazade) and
Hector Berlioz (whose
choral symphony Roméo et Juliette contains a
trombone recitative as part of its Introduction).
Arnold Schoenberg labeled the last of his
Five Pieces for Orchestra, Op. 16, as "
Das obligate Rezitativ", and also composed a piece for
organ,
Variations on a Recitative, Op. 40. Other examples of instrumental recitative in twentieth century music include the third movement of
Douglas Moore's
Quintet for Clarinet and Strings (1946), the first of
Richard Rodney Bennett's
Five Impromptus for
guitar (1968), the opening section of the last movement of
Benjamin Britten's
String Quartet No. 3 (1975), and the second of
William Bolcom's
12 New Etudes for Piano (1977–86). == The tropes of recitative ==