38 Beautiful and Easy Student Concertos for Violin (free sheet music!)

by | Oct 17, 2017 | 26 comments

My top 3 easy violin concertos as a violin teacher

Develop your musicality and technique with the most beautiful violin student concertos or enjoy listening to them

Scroll down to see my full list with 38 easy violin concertos in the first position including free violin sheet music.

After 1 or 2 years of violin lessons, you probably finished your first beginner method book and you can start playing easy concertos.

Student concertos for violin are composed in a way that you can play them in the first position with very basic technique, but they have beautiful melodic lines.

In a beginner method book you play short pieces and often children’s songs and folk tunes. I student concerto is a lot longer and you’ll be practicing it for a while before you can perform it. Practicing them you’ll improve your playing technique on the violin and your musicality and expression in making music.

For adults it’s often a relief when they can finally play a beautiful classical piece instead of the sometimes childish tunes for their beginner books.

Student concertos and concertinos are ideal to play in a violin student’s concert.

My young and adult violin students love performing them.

The student concertos I mention in this article are often played by my students in my violin studio. In a student performance they can make a big impression when accompanied by a pianist. After hard practice it’s great to play them for family and friends.

Student concertos have, just as usual classical violin concertos, three movements: a first movement with a beautiful melody, a more romantic and slow second movement and an impressive third movement.

Are you reading this and are you not up to playing a student concerto? Then just enjoy the recordings and practice hard… who knows how quickly you can play them!

1) Concertino in G major opus 11 by Ferdinand Küchler

I think about everybody who plays the violin, has played this piece in the past. It’s often the first concerto you’ll play. It’s very simple and a good first step in playing longer pieces after your first method book. When played very stalwartly with beautiful phrasing, you can make a big impression on your audience.

When can you start playing this concertino?

When you know the high and low second finger and therefore can play the G major two octave scale on the violin, you can start practicing this concerto. There are some other fingerings, but not many, so you can learn them while studying this piece. Everything is in the first position.

Sheet music

Click here to download the sheet music with the violin part and the piano accompaniment.

Would you like to learn to play this piece?

I’ve made extensive instruction video violin lessons for this concert in my online violin studio, the Violin Lounge Academy. Click here to check it out and enroll!

Join my FREE beginner violin course

I take you from scratch step by step to your first violin concerto including 40 videos, sheet music and violin tabs.

2) Concerto in b minor opus 35 by Oscar Rieding

Beautiful melodic lines and a flashing third movement characterize this concerto. The third movement makes me think about a gypsy party. My students tend to start playing this concerto after Küchler opus 11. It’s all in first position, but it’s a bit harder. The minor key might be something you have to get used to and there are a bit more alterations (changes in finger positions between high and low).

When can you start playing this concerto?

This concerto is a bit more difficult than Küchler opus 11 or the Indian Concerto by Perlman (also nice!), so I would advice to study this concerto when you’ve already played a student concerto before. It’s all first position, but the intonation (hitting the right notes and playing in tune) is a bit more difficult and there are some more alterations.

When you are learning from a part two or three from a violin method book like Sassmanshaus, you can start playing this concerto.

With this concerto you can improve fluency in your bowing technique, phrasing (making musical sentences) and musicality in general.

Sheet music

Click here to download the sheet music with the violin part and the piano accompaniment.

Would you like to learn to play this piece?

I’ve made extensive instruction video violin lessons for this concert in my online violin studio, the Violin Lounge Academy. Click here to check it out and enroll!

Hi! I'm Zlata

Classical violinist helping you overcome technical struggles and play with feeling by improving your bow technique.

3) Concertino in the style of Mozart by Hans Millies

Are you learning to play the violin for about two years and do you love Mozart? You’ll definitely enjoy practicing and playing this concertino by Millies. It has the sparkly and transparent character of Mozart’s music. This concertino is a great preparation to playing Mozart’s violin sonata’s and violin concerto’s later on.

When can you start playing this concerto?

This concerto is a bit more difficult than Küchler opus 11 or the Indian Concerto by Perlman (also nice!), so I would advice to study this concerto when you’ve already played a student concerto before. It’s all first position, but the intonation (hitting the right notes and playing in tune) is a bit more difficult. Also the intonation is very ‘open’ just like the real Mozart (open means that people can hear it right away when you’re just a little off… this is because of the way it’s composed). Also there are some more difficulties in terms of rhythm and bowing technique.

With this concertino you can develop clarity in your bowing technique (and learn spiccato), trills and playing in tune. It’ll prepare you to play real works of Mozart like his violin sonata’s and violin concerto’s. You can already learn the playing technique necessary to playing works from the classical era.

Just like the ‘real’ Mozart it’s not very hard to play this concertino for 80%, but if you really want to play it cleanly and musically, it’ll cost you some effort.

Fun detail: this concertino has a real cadenza! You’ll feel like a real concert violinist.

Sheet music

Click here to download the sheet music.

Complete 38 easy 1st position student concertos

You’ll never be bored with this complete list of violin concertinos that are also in the first position and easy to play for beginner violinists.

Click here to download the FREE sheet music for ALL of these student violin concertos.

  • Beer, Op.47
  • Beer, Op.81
  • Brown, Op.10
  • Brown, Op.11
  • Brown, Op.13
  • Essek, Op.4
  • Huber, Op.7
  • Huber, Op.8
  • Huber, Op.11
  • Huber, Op.30 (2 vln)
  • Huber, Op.36
  • Járdányi
  • Jockisch, Op.6
  • Küchler, Op.11
  • Küchler, Op.14
  • Mendelssohn, L., Op.213
  • Millies, Style of Mozart
  • Mokrý, in G major
  • Portnoff, Op.9
  • Portnoff, Op.13
  • Portnoff, Op.18
  • Rago
  • Rieding, Op.34
  • Rieding, Op.35
  • Rieding, Op.36
  • Röntgen, Op.85
  • Röntgen, Op.88
  • Sartorio, in C major
  • Sartorio, in F major
  • Schmidt, Op.54
  • Seitz, Op.13
  • Seitz, Op.22
  • Sitt, Op.93
  • Söchting, Op.95 (2 vln)
  • Söchting, Op.138 No.1
  • Szerémi, Op.63
  • Veit, Op.25 (open strings)
  • Yanshinov, Op.35

Ready for the next level?

If you’re already introduced to position play, check out these intermediate concertos.

What’s your favorite easy violin student concerto?

Did this article fill you with nostalgia thinking back to the early years of your violin playing? Or has this article inspired you to start playing your first student concerto? Or did you just sit back and enjoy listening to the recordings? Do you have another easy violin student concerto you can recommend to others? Share it in the comments below. I’m looking forward reading your response to this article.

26 Comments

  1. Julia

    Hi, thank you for these beautiful concerts sharing with other teachers/students. May I also have the piano part of Millies concerto? Thanks a lot!

    Reply
    • Alan youngman Knights

      As a composer and arranger I find there is a lot of skill in writing a progressive musical piece for beginners to want to learn more about music while learning basic bowing technics. Playing in first position is a challenge as it requires maximum crossing of strings. I think to get a clean string crossing is more challenging than position changing. In England third position is introduced at grade 2?

      Reply
      • Zlata

        Certainly! It’s quite an accomplishment how these composers managed to make beautiful pieces with limited technical possibilities. I’m in Holland and here we don’t use the grade system, so I can’t answer your question.

  2. Carlos

    Are there dedicated videos/files for viola students at the lounge?
    Or do viola students have to use the violin videos and adapt them for their needs?

    Reply
  3. Valerie Edwards

    Thanks for the uploads. I have a student string orchestra and would love to give them the opportunity to experience playing a concerto. Would you happen to have the orchestra sheet music as opposed to the piano accompaniment?

    Reply
    • Violinist Zlata Brouwer

      Unfortunately I don’t have them, but perhaps they’re available somewhere on the internet… or perhaps someone in your orchestra can make an arrangement for you.

      Reply
  4. Hiral D.

    thank you for sharing those. It really helped me!!!!

    Reply
  5. Amy Spaulding

    Hi Zlata! Thanks for this great article. It’s helped me with my teaching. Can you tell me who is performing in the recordings you have here? Is it you? Is there a way to share the recording with students or for me to buy the recordings? I really like the style, vibrato, phrasing, etc. Thank you!!

    Reply
    • Violinist Zlata Brouwer

      Great to read that, Amy, the recordings are embedded YouTube videos, so you can simply click the title and go to the channel they are on. Probably there you can contact the person who uploaded them. You can share them freely with your students.

      Reply
  6. Tarmo Riutta

    Hi,

    One way to motivate young students is to update those 100 year old student concertos to our time. On my bandcamp https://innoviolin.bandcamp.com/ there are some, and more is on the way coming! I find it really fascinating that so old stuff can be translated to pop-style.

    Reply
  7. Giorgia Gianna

    Is it possible to download the piano part of Millies’s concert without the violin in order to allow students to play with the accompaniment without overlapping the violin? I am referring to recorded music not to score. I bought the book with cd but the execution is not of the whole piece but of single detached sections. Thank you!

    Reply
  8. Bianca

    Thank you for this generous gift to those of us who will be beginners forever it seems. Bless you and yours.

    Reply
    • Zlata

      Happy playing, Bianca!

      Reply
  9. Sumit Bagga

    This is a great list of student concertos! I’m a violin teacher and I love finding easy concertos for my students to play. Thanks for compiling this list!

    Reply
    • Zlata

      Glad it’s helpful 🙂

      Reply
  10. hannah

    I can’t tell you how helpful this is. I’ve been looking for something like this to freshen up my library.

    Thank you!

    Reply
    • Zlata

      Happy to help!

      Reply
  11. Yesnospin

    This is a great list of student concertos! I’m a violin teacher and I love finding easy concertos for my students to play. Thanks for compiling this list!

    Reply
    • Zlata

      Happy it’s helpful for you and your students 🙂

      Reply
  12. sachiyo yoshimoto

    Hello Zlata,
    I would like to purchase the PIANO ACCOMPANIMENT for Concertino No. 1 Op. 63 by Gustave Szerémi.
    I am having difficulty finding the PIANO ACCOMPANIMENT. I hope you can help!
    Thank you.

    Sincerely,
    Sachiyo Yoshimoto

    Reply
    • Zlata

      Hmm, can’t seem to find it, sorry!

      Reply

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