Gallery of Italian Composers

  • Author Author Classicalfan626
  • Create date Create date
  • Last update Updated
  • Blog entry read time Blog entry read time 1 min read
Italian composers gallery.webp

Introduction​

A list of selected pictures of real and invented Italian composers, from the list found here.

Renaissance (c1370-c1600)​

Born 1340-1374​

Luciano Marrone, 1380 Giovanni Rizzuti, 1382 Antonio Scordato, 1387 Bartolomeo Scorpione, 1388 Zaccaria Gallo, 1399 Giuseppe Palombo, 1401 Andrea Giardino, 1405 Giovanni Marino, 1419

Born 1384-1453​

Antonio Troppoli, 1424 Tomaso Squalacci, 1438 Angelo Bravo, 1446 Giuseppe Falco, 1467 Francesco Leonetti, 1477 Paolo Maffei, 1480 Filippo Morelli, 1487 Achille Rizzo, 1493

Born 1475-1566​

Claudio Galati, 1517
Enrico Patrucco, 1533
Pietro Sciarrino, 1544 Gioseffo Zarlino, 1557 Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, 1563 Angelo Catalano, 1574 Vincenzo Chieffo, 1582 Carlo Gesualdo, 1599

Baroque (c1600-c1760)​

Born 1545-1579​

Giovanni Fioranelli, 1600 Giulio Caccini, 1601 Giovanni Gabrieli, 1602 Francesco Lazzaro, 1607 Claudio Monteverdi, 1612 Cesare Gervasoni, 1621

Born 1582-1611​

Gregorio Allegri, 1625 Girolamo Frescobaldi, 1626 Carlo Folino, 1635 Francesco Cavalli, 1642 Giacomo Carissimi, 1645 Pietro Natale, 1650

Born 1624-1671​

Antonio Conticello, 1665 Nicola Favazzini, 1677 Tomaso Buccheri, 1688 Arcangelo Corelli, 1694 Alessandro Scarlatti, 1701 Tomaso Albinoni, 1713

Born 1678-1710​

Antonio Vivaldi, 1717 Domenico Cardillo, 1724 Domenico Scarlatti, 1727 Giuseppe Tartini, 1732 Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, 1733 Francesco Guadagnello, 1736

Classical era (c1730-c1820)​

Born 1700-1736​

Giovanni Battista Sammartini, 1746 Antonio Macaluso, 1756 Francesco Cassolini, 1760Agostino Quarantini, 1766 Giuseppe Baronetto, 1775 Giovanni Olivetti, 1779

Born 1743-1760​

Luigi Boccherini, 1784 Pietro Torianelli, 1787 Domenico Cimarosa, 1789 Muzio Clementi, 1790 Giuseppe Lardaro, 1790 Luigi Cherubini, 1805

Romantic (c1800-c1910)​

Born 1771-1810​

Vincenzo Abbiati, 1810 Francesco Labrioli, 1813 Giuseppe Gregorino, 1818 Niccolo Paganini, 1823 Gioacchino Rossini, 1827 Gaetano Donizetti, 1835 Giuseppe Scalzoni, 1845 Antonio Lettieri, 1848

Born 1811-1858​

Giuseppe Toscano, 1852 Giuseppe Verdi, 1855 Giacomo Episcopo, 1866 Amilcare Ponchielli, 1875 Nicola Costigliola, 1883 Giacomo Laurini, 1894 Giuseppe Martucci, 1896 Giacomo Puccini, 1900

Modern and Contemporary (c1880-????)​

Born 1862-1882​

Niccolo Pompieri, 1902 Vittorio Campanelli, 1904 Emilio Oliviero, 1909 Orlando Stamato, 1916 Ottorino Respighi, 1919 Gian Francesco Malipiero, 1922

Born 1883-1901​

Alfredo Casella, 1924 Pietro Cabalini, 1926 Giuseppe Zaboglio, 1930 Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, 1933 Mario Graffeo, 1937 Giuseppe Gualtieri, 1941

Born 1904-1925​

Luigi Dallapiccola, 1946 Nino Rota, 1950 Gian Carlo Menotti, 1952 Armando Bartolucci, 1957 Luigi Nono, 1962 Luciano Berio, 1964

Born 1927-1954​

Nicola Rigoli, 1967 Francesco Raimondi, 1972 Carlo Domico, 1976 Pietro LaPadula, 1983 Roberto Carfini, 1987 Danilo Gemmino, 1995
  • Like
Reactions: JudasTitor

Comments

@JudasTitor - Alright, I just created something with Suno. The best of four examples/arrangements in my opinion can be found here.

I intended this to be an Italian madrigal in a Renaissance music style of the classical genre, in the style of an actual Italian Renaissance composer like Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina. It's not strictly in the classical genre since it sounds like it borrows some elements commonly found in popular music, most notably syncopation. Do you want me to look up an actual Renaissance madrigal?

But in the least, I gave it a good try! Thanks for the suggestion! :)
 
@JudasTitor - Alright, I just created something with Suno. The best of four examples/arrangements in my opinion can be found here.

I intended this to be an Italian madrigal in a Renaissance music style of the classical genre, in the style of an actual Italian Renaissance composer like Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina. It's not strictly in the classical genre since it sounds like it borrows some elements commonly found in popular music, most notably syncopation. Do you want me to look up an actual Renaissance madrigal?

But in the least, I gave it a good try! Thanks for the suggestion! :)
Please do. You will need unique material to play in the event that we are on mission in the past.
 
Sounds good Miestro! Will this cover fly in 1561 Bavaria? You and I need to recover some "exotic" tech.
 

Attachments

  • 1000012581.webp
    1000012581.webp
    45.9 KB · Views: 20
  • 1000012580.webp
    1000012580.webp
    83.9 KB · Views: 18
  • 1000012582.webp
    1000012582.webp
    40.6 KB · Views: 20

Blog entry information

Author
Classicalfan626
Read time
1 min read
Views
452
Comments
7
Last update
Back
Top