Almost 8.000 scores from the mid-1700s to the end of the 20th century — not just opera, but also chamber music and symphonic music. The oldest are Il Ciro riconosciuto by Niccolò Jommelli of 1744 and 24 Capricci by Niccolò Paganini; among the most recent are scores by Luigi Nono (e. g. his major work of musical theater Prometeo, 1984) and Franco Donatoni (e. g. his arrangement of Bach’s Kunst der Fuge for orchestra, 1992). There are also a large number of “romances” that are still performed in Italy today, by Francesco Paolo Tosti and others, arrangements, and a range of works for musical education.
Score | Description | ID | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Concerto in re minore per fagotto, archi e cembalo, F. VIII n 15
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07034
|
||
Concerto in Re maggiore per violino, archi e cembalo, F. I n 19
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07035
|
4/1949 | |
Concerto in Fa maggiore per la solennità di San Lorenzo, per violino, archi e cembalo. F. I n 20
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07037
|
4/1949 | |
Concerto in mi minore per fagotto, archi e cembalo, F. VIII n 6
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07038
|
||
Concerto in la minore per fagotto, archi e cembalo, F. VIII n 7
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07041
|
||
Concerto in Sib maggiore per oboe, violino, archi e cembalo, F. XII n 16
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07043
|
||
Concerto in re minore per violino, archi e cembalo, F. I n 21
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07045
|
||
Concerto in Fa maggiore per violino, archi e cembalo, F. I n 17
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07046
|
||
Concerto in sol minore per violino, archi e cembalo, F. I n 16
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07048
|
||
Concerto in Re maggiore per due violini, liuto, e b.c., F. XII n 15
Antonio Vivaldi |
PART07050
|
1/1949 |