Saturday, March 29, 2014


“Mario Pilati (1903–1938) was a minor figure in modern Italian music, but an attractive one nonetheless. . ..In short, the music is tuneful, charming, very much of its period, and extremely enjoyable in its unpretentious way. The performances are also expert…a welcome novelty that I can see many collectors of offbeat repertoire adding to their collections.” --ClassicsToday, October 2008

“There is enough on this CD to show that Pilati, who was very prolific, was a promising and very fine composer…. The recording is perfectly good and well balanced….Well worth investigating” --MusicWeb International (on the original Marco Polo release)



Born in Naples in 1903, Mario Pilati belonged to the generation which included such disparate personalities as Petrassi, Dallapiccola, Salviucci, Rieti, Mortari, Scelsi and Rota.

Pilati was a prolific composer of chamber, vocal and orchestral music. Like many of his contemporaries, he was drawn to the instrumental music of the past, especially that of his own country. An example of this is the Suite for Strings and Piano of 1925, which is neo-classical in style.

His other love, that of folk music, is also evident in later works, such as the Concerto for Orchestra, with its ebullient finale ‘alla tirolese’. The attractive lullaby Alla culla comes from the very end of his short life.

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