Composers

Antonio Bazzini

Violin
Piano
Viola
Cello
Orchestra
Piece
Quartet
Character piece
Fantasia
Scherzo
Concerto
Étude
Sonata
Symphonic poem
Allegro
by popularity

#

2 Grandes études, Op.492 Morceaux de salon, Op.122 Morceaux de salon, Op.162 Morceaux fantastiques, Op.433 Morceaux caractéristiques, Op.453 Morceaux en Forme de Sonate, Op.443 Morceaux lyriques, Op.416 Morceaux caractéristiques, Op.346 Morceaux de salon, Op.206 Morceaux lyriques, Op.35

F

Fantasia su motivi della 'Traviata', Op.50Feuillet d'album in F majorFrancesca da Rimini, Op.77

G

Grand allegro de concert, Op.15

L

L'Absence, Op.22Le carillon d'Arras, Op.36

O

Overture to Alfieri's 'Saul'

S

Scherzo fantastique, Op.25Scherzo variato, Op.13Souvenir de Naples, Op.23String Quartet No.1String Quartet No.2, Op.75String Quartet No.3, Op.76String Quartet No.5, Op.80String Quartet No.6, Op.82String Quintet in A major

V

Violin Concerto No.3, Op.29Violin Concerto No.5, Op.42
Wikipedia
Antonio Bazzini (11 March 1818 – 10 February 1897) was an Italian violinist, composer and teacher. As a composer his most enduring work is his chamber music which has earned him a central place in the Italian instrumental renaissance of the 19th century. However, his success as a composer was overshadowed by his reputation as one of the finest concert violinists of the nineteenth century. He also contributed to a portion of Messa per Rossini, specifically the first section of II. Sequentia, Dies Irae.
Bazzini was born at Brescia. As a young boy, he was a pupil of Faustino Camisani. At 17 he was appointed organist of a church in his native town. The following year he met Paganini and became completely influenced by that master's art and style. Paganini encouraged Bazzini to begin his concert career that year and he quickly became one of the most highly regarded artists of his time. From 1841 to 1845 he lived in Germany, where he was much admired by Schumann both as a violinist and a composer, as well as by Mendelssohn (Bazzini gave the first private performance of his Violin Concerto). After a short stay in Denmark in 1845, Bazzini returned to Brescia to teach and compose. In 1846 he played in Naples and Palermo. In 1849–1850 he toured Spain and from 1852 to 1863 lived in Paris. He ended his concert career with a tour of the Netherlands in 1864.
Returning once more to Brescia, Bazzini devoted himself to composition, gradually abandoning the virtuoso opera fantasias and character-pieces, which had formed a large part of his earlier work. He composed an opera Turanda in 1867, and produced a number of dramatic cantatas, sacred works, concert overtures, and symphonic poems over the next two decades. However, his greatest success as a composer was with his chamber music compositions. In 1868, he became president of the Società dei Concerti in Brescia, and was active in promoting and composing for quartet societies in Italy. In 1873, he became composition professor at the Milan Conservatory, where he taught Catalani, Mascagni, and Puccini, and later became the director in 1882. Bazzini died in Milan on 10 February 1897.
Bazzini was one of the most highly regarded artists of his time and influenced the great opera composer Giacomo Puccini. His most enduring work is his chamber music, which is written in the classic forms of the German school and has earned him a central place in the Italian instrumental renaissance of the 19th century. Of particular note is his String Quartet No. 1, which won the Milan Quartet Society's first prize in 1864. His music is characterized by a highly virtuosic technique that is expressive without too much sentiment. Bazzini played a violin by Giuseppe Guarneri, which after his death passed to M. Soldat-Roeger.
Artists who have recorded his music include Chloë Hanslip. But several far better-known virtuoso violinists have distinguished themselves by undertaking to record his fiendishly difficult La ronde des lutins (or Dance of the Goblins, with its extended passages of rapid double stops, artificial harmonics in double stops (using all four left fingers) and left-hand pizzicato . These include Bronislaw Huberman, Jascha Heifetz, Yehudi Menuhin, David Garrett, James Ehnes, and Itzhak Perlman.