•
Charles-Valentin Alkan: five for solo piano •
Anton Stepanovich Arensky: two nocturnes for piano, each part of a set: No. 1 from Six Pieces, Op. 5 (1884); No. 3 from
Twenty-four Characteristic Pieces, Op. 36 (1894); a nocturne for two pianos, no. 8 from Variations (Suite No. 3), Op. 33 •
Arno Babajanyan: his nocturne, a lyrical piece in
easy listening genre and a song performed by
Muslim Magomayev, is one of his most popular works •
Mily Balakirev: 3 for solo piano •
Samuel Barber: the last of Four Songs, for voice and piano, Op. 13 (1938–40) is titled "Nocturne" (to a text by Frederic Prokosch), and this song also exists in a version with orchestra;
Nocturne (Homage to John Field), for piano, Op. 33 (1959) •
William Basinski: Nocturnes •
Arnold Bax: Nocturnes, for soprano and orchestra (1911) •
Jackson Berkey: 24 Nocturnes for solo piano and Four Nocturnes for Orchestra •
Georges Bizet:
Premier nocturne en fa majeur Op. 2 and Nocturne in D major. •
Alexander Borodin: his
String Quartet No. 2 third movement
Notturno contains one of his most popular melodies (1881) •
Lili Boulanger:
Nocturne pour violon et piano (1911) •
Benjamin Britten: Nocturne, from
On This Island, Op. 11 •
Frédéric Chopin:
21 for solo piano, 1 spurious •
Carl Czerny: 17 for solo piano •
Claude Debussy:
3 for orchestra and choir, one for solo piano •
Norman Dello Joio: Two Nocturnes, for piano (E major, F major, 1946) •
Antonin Dvořák:
Nocturne in B for string orchestra (1883) •
Roger Evernden: 10 Nocturnes for solo piano (2019) •
Gabriel Fauré:
13 for solo piano •
John Field: originator of the piano nocturne, wrote
18 of them •
Irving Fine: Notturno, for strings and harp (1950–51) •
Mikhail Glinka: three nocturnes: E-flat major, "La Separation" in F minor, "Le Regret" (lost) •
Louis Moreau Gottschalk: four for piano solo, "Pensée poétique" (1852–53), "Solitude" (1856), "Murmures Eoliens" (1860), "La chute des feuilles" (1860) •
Edvard Grieg: the fourth piece of his
Lyric Pieces, Op 54 is a nocturne •
Arthur Honegger: Nocturne for orchestra (1936, partly based on music from ballet
Sémiramis) •
Vasily Kalinnikov: Nocturne in F minor, for piano (1894) •
Jan Kalivoda: Six Nocturnes for Viola and Piano, op. 186 •
Friedrich Kalkbrenner: 4 nocturnes for solo piano •
Kevin Keller: 10 nocturnes for piano and treatments •
Ignace Leybach: now known only for his Fifth Nocturne •
Lowell Liebermann: 11 for solo piano and Nocturne for Orchestra •
Malcolm Lipkin: Eight Nocturnes for solo piano (1987-2006) •
Franz Liszt: one for solo piano entitled
En rêve ('In a dream' or 'While dreaming'), another for solo piano entitled
Pensées ('Thoughts'), plus his collection of three
Liebesträume (Love Dreams), a series of three Notturnos, of which no.3 is the most famous, Les cloches de Genève: Nocturne (The Bells of Geneva: Nocturne) in B major •
Sergei Lyapunov: Nocturne, for solo piano, in D-flat major, op. 8 •
Donald Martino: Notturno, for six instrumentalists (1973, winner of the 1974
Pulitzer Prize for Music) •
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy: wrote the
incidental music, for
William Shakespeare's play, ''
A Midsummer Night's Dream'' •
Johann Kaspar Mertz: 3 Nocturnes for Guitar, opus 4. •
Ernest John Moeran: Nocturne, for baritone, chorus, and orchestra (1934, text by Robert Nichols) •
Andrzej Panufnik: Nocturne for orchestra (1947, rev. 1955) •
Francis Poulenc:
eight for solo piano (1929) •
Almeida Prado: 14 nocturnes for solo piano (1985-1991) •
Sergei Rachmaninoff: three for solo piano (1887–1888) and one Op. 10 No. 1 from
Morceaux de Salon (1894) •
Ottorino Respighi: one piano nocturne as part of his Six Piano Pieces R.44 (1904) •
Erik Satie: five for solo piano (1919) •
Maria Schneider: Nocturne, on her album
Allégresse (2000) •
Clara Schumann (Clara Josephine Wieck): Nocturne in F major Op.6 No.2 from
Soirées Musicales (1819–1896) •
Robert Schumann: four
Nachtstücke •
Alexander Scriabin: four nocturnes, including one written for the left hand only (opus 9, 1894) •
Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji: over 30 for solo piano •
Franz Strauss: Nocturno, Op. 7 for horn (1864) •
Maria Agata Szymanowska: Nocturne in B-flat and Nocturne
Le Murmure •
Alexandre Tansman: Four Nocturnes, for piano (1952) •
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky: Nocturne (No. 4 of Six Pieces, Op. 19) (1873), and Tchaikovsky's arrangement for cello with small orchestra for Anatoly Brandukov, from a transcription for Wilhelm Fitzenhagen (1888) •
Sigismond Thalberg: 7 nocturnes for piano (Opp. 16, 21, 28, 51 and 1 without op. number) •
Edgard Varèse:
Nocturnal, for soprano, bass, chorus, and small orchestra (text from Anaïs Nin:
The House of Incest, 1961), and
Nocturnal II (Nuit), for soprano, flute, oboe, clarinet, 1 or 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, percussion, and double bass (text from Anaïs Nin:
The House of Incest, 1961–65) •
Ralph Vaughan Williams: Three Nocturnes, for baritone, semi-chorus, and orchestra (text by Walt Whitman, 1908); "nocturne", the first of
Three Poems by Walt Whitman (1925) •
Heitor Villa-Lobos: Nocturne for solo piano, from Hommage à Chopin (1947) ==Popular music==