In a previous post on the Italian Renaissance a CD gave the opportunity to listen to the original "Ancient Airs and Dances for Lute": here we have Respighi's transcription instead. (His grand orchestration is exemplified also in the Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor already posted →post).
Bruno Maderna, interested in the music of the past like his teacher Malipiero, made something similar with the anthology "Harmonice Musices Odhecaton", published in Venice in 1501, and with some other works of the 17th century. Luigi Dallapiccola reworked baroque music more freely in his two Tartinianas.
A hundred years earlier Giovanni Bottesini paid homage to the then dominant world of the opera with his instrumental output, quite various but still not far from that world (a new starting point was set at a later time by the most European of the Italian Romantics →# 2).
Other works of these composers are given in the CDs pictured on the left side of this post.
Ottorino Respighi (1879-1936)Antiche danze e arie per liuto. Libera trascrizione per orchestra
Ancient Airs and Dances for Lute. Free Transcription for Orchestra
Boston Symphony Orchestra
Seiji Ozawa
Deutsche Grammophon 419 886-2 (1988). Recorded 1979
[flac, cue, log, scans]
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