Composers

Giuseppe Martucci

Piano
Cello
Violin
Orchestra
Voice
Viola
Mixed chorus
Piece
Dance
Capriccio
Étude
Sonata
Fugue
Nocturne
Romance
Scherzo
Fantasia
by popularity

#

2 Caprices, Op.802 Fugues, Op.282 Nocturnes, Op.702 Pezzi, Op.732 Piano Pieces, Op.772 Romances, Op.723 Pezzi, Op.493 Pezzi, Op.613 Pezzi, Op.643 Pezzi, Op.653 Pezzi, Op.693 Pezzi, Op.823 Pezzi, Op.833 Pieces, Op.333 Romanze, Op.273 Scherzi, Op.533 Stücke, Op.673 Valzer, Op.464 Piano Pieces from Boccherini4 Piano Pieces, Op.316 Pezzi, Op.447 Pezzi, Op.43

A

Agitato, Op.7Allegro appassionato, Op.13Andante e Polka di Concerto, Op.5

B

Barcarola No.1, Op.20Barcarola No.2, Op.30

C

Capriccio di Concerto, Op.24Capriccio e Serenata, Op.57Capriccio in forma di studio, Op.26Capriccio No.1, Op.2Capriccio No.2, Op.3Capriccio No.3, Op.12Capriccio No.4, Op.15Capriccio, Op.39Cello Sonata, Op.52

F

Fantasia on Verdi's 'La forza del destino'Fantasia, Op.51Foglie sparse, Op.60Fuga, Op.14Fughetta a 2 parti, Op.18

I

Impromptu-Fantaisie, Op.56Improvviso, Op.17

L

La Canzone dei Ricordi, Op.68b

M

Mazurka di Concerto, Op.4Mazurka, Op.35Melodia No.1, Op.16Melodia No.2, Op.21Melodia No.3Minuetto e Tempo di Gavotta, Op.55Momento musicale e minuettoMoto perpetuo, Op.63

N

Notturnini, Op.42Notturno, Op.25Novella, Op.50

P

Pensiero musicale, Op.10Piano Concerto No.2, Op.66Piano Quintet, Op.45Piano Sonata, Op.34Piano Trio No.1, Op.59Piano Trio No.2, Op.62Polacca No.2, Op.48Polacca, Op.19

R

Romanza facile

S

SamuelScherzino, Op.29Scherzo, Op.23Sei Pezzi, Op.38Sonata facile, Op.41Studio caratteristico, Op.54Studio da Concerto, Op.9Studio per il metodo di Lebert e Stark, Op.47Symphony No.1 in D minor, Op.75Symphony No.2 in F major, Op.81

T

Tarantella, Op.6Tema con variazioni, Op.58Tempo di Mazurka, Op.11Trèfle à quatre feuilles, Op.74

V

Violin Sonata, Op.22
Wikipedia
Giuseppe Martucci (Italian pronunciation: [dʒuˈzɛppe marˈtuttʃi]; Capua, 6 January 1856 – Naples, 1 June 1909) was an Italian composer, conductor, pianist and teacher. As a composer and teacher he was influential in reviving Italian interest in non-operatic music. As a conductor he helped to introduce Wagner's operas to Italy and also gave important early concerts of English music there.
Martucci was born at Capua, in Campania. He learned the basics of music from his father, Gaetano, who played the trumpet. A child prodigy, he played in public on the piano when only eight years old. From the age of 11, he was a student at the Naples Conservatory, on the recommendation of professor Beniamino Cesi, the latter being a former student of Sigismond Thalberg. From Paolo Serrao, Martucci acquired his initial training in composition; his own composition students later on, when he worked and taught at Bologna, included Ottorino Respighi.
He died in Naples in 1909. His son Paolo, born in Naples in 1883, also became a pianist of note, briefly teaching at the Cincinnati Conservatory.
Martucci's career as an international pianist commenced with a tour through Germany, France and England in 1875, at the age of 19. He was appointed piano professor at the Naples Conservatory in 1880, and moved to Bologna in 1886, replacing Luigi Mancinelli at the Bologna Conservatory; in 1902 he returned for the last time to Naples, as director of the Royal Conservatory of Music.
It was in 1881 that Martucci made his first conducting appearance. One of the earliest Italian musicians to admire Wagner, Martucci introduced some of Wagner's output to Italy. He led, for example, the first Italian performance of Tristan und Isolde in 1888 in Bologna. Nor did his enthusiasm for foreign composers end with Wagner's work. As well as performing Charles Villiers Stanford's 3rd ("Irish") Symphony in Bologna in 1898, he conducted one of the rare concerts of all-British orchestral music on the European continent in the later nineteenth century. What is more, he included music by Brahms, Lalo, Goldmark and others in his programmes.
Martucci began as a composer at the age of 16, with short piano works. He wrote no operas, which was unusual among Italian composers of his generation, but instead concentrated on instrumental music and songs, producing also an oratorio, Samuel.
Martucci was championed by Arturo Toscanini during much of the latter's career. The NBC Symphony Orchestra performed a number of Martucci's orchestral works in 1938, 1940, 1941, 1946, and 1953; although the performances were preserved on transcription discs, none was approved for commercial release by Toscanini. All of these performances have been given unofficial release in recent years, on LP as well as CD format. NBC musical director Samuel Chotzinoff, in his 1956 book "Toscanini—An Intimate Portrait", said that every time the Maestro proposed scheduling Martucci's works, certain orchestra members and NBC authorities objected, but the conductor was not to be deterred. Some Toscanini biographers (including Mortimer Frank and Harvey Sachs) have questioned the merit of the compositions, speculating that Toscanini may have performed them out of a sense of duty.
Gian Francesco Malipiero said of Martucci's second symphony (1904) that it was "the beginning of the renaissance of non-operatic Italian music." Martucci was an instrumentalist pur sang, taking absolute music as his highest goal.
In 1989 Francesco d'Avalos tried to start a revival of Martucci's music by recording four CDs with major works including the two piano concertos, two symphonies, and La canzone dei ricordi. These discs were distributed by ASV Records and later by Brilliant Classics.
In 2009, to mark the centenary of Martucci's death, Naxos Records released a series of CDs devoted to his orchestral music, featuring the Symphony Orchestra of Rome conducted by Francesco La Vecchia. In 2011 Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra featured Martucci's Nocturne, Op. 70, No. 1 during the orchestra's tour of Europe.