By Oliver Condy

Published: Thursday, 25 January 2024 at 16:45 PM


From the thrilling, raw energy of virtuosic concertos to the tenderest chamber miniatures, the violin rules the roost. One moment the violin can be a dazzling solo instrument with ego to match; or it can blend beautifully with other instruments to create magical textures. But what about its music? We’re here to choose the best violin music of all time.

There’s nothing the violin can’t do. It can swing with jazz groups, cavort with riotous folk bands and, on its own, express melancholy like no other instrument can. No wonder composers have reserved some of their best melodies for the instrument.

The violin’s pedigree is impressive – violins as we know them today were being made 500 years ago – and a golden age spanned decades during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Even today, violin makers, or luthiers as they’re known, puzzle over the craftsmanship of Antonio Stradivari whose Stradivarius violins are still regarded as the very finest.

But which masterpieces should you head for to hear the violin at its very best? We’ve brought together a collection of ten contrasting works to give you a picture of the violin in all its guises. Here are, in our opinion, the best pieces of violin music ever written.

Best violin music of all time

Vaughan Williams: The Lark Ascending (1914)

Is there a better instrument to imitate the flutterings and swoopings of a bird? Vaughan Williams’s beautiful pastoral masterpiece The Lark Ascending complements a sumptuous orchestral accompaniment with a virtuosic violin part that takes the violin right up to the stratosphere. The composer makes the most of its emotional potential with poignant folk-song style melodies. Simply put: the English countryside in music.

Recommended recording: Tasmin Little, BBC Philharmonic/ Andrew Davis (Chandos CHAN10796)