Joseph Haydn's Keyboard Concerto No. 11 in D major (Hob. XVIII/11) was written between 1780 and 1783, and published in 1784. It was originally composed for harpsichord or fortepiano and scored for an orchestra in a relatively undeveloped galant style evident in his early works, and has a lively Hungarian Rondo finale. On the other hand, being a somewhat later composition, it also shows more similarities to Mozart's piano concertos than do Haydn's other keyboard concertos. Haydn and Mozart had probably become acquainted by 1784, which may explain the Mozartian influences that are discernible in the work. It consists of three movements:

Date of composition 1780 (1779-1780)
First published 1784
Type Concerto
Tonality D Major
Catalogue Hob. XVIII:11
Approx. duration 15 minutes
Instruments Harpsichord - or piano
Orchestra
In listings Famous Works
Links
Autotranslations beta Joseph Haydn: Concerto pour keyboard n°11 en ré majeur, Hob. XVIII:11
Franz Joseph Haydn: Concerto per keyboard n. 11 in re maggiore, Hob. XVIII:11
Joseph Haydn: Konzert Nr. 11 für Tasteninstrument D-dur, Hob. XVIII:11