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Martucci's set of nocturnes in his Opus 70, with the first arranged for orchestra by the composer. Performed by the Orchestra Filarmonica della Scala. Conductor - Riccardo Muti. Piano - Alberto Miodini 00:00 - I. Nocturne No. 1 7:20 - II. Nocturne No. 2 Giuseppe Martucci was an Italian composer, conductor, pianist and teacher. Sometimes called "the Italian Brahms", Martucci was notable among Italian composers of the era in that he dedicated his entire career to absolute music, and wrote no operas. 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. In 2011 Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra featured Martucci's Nocturne Op 70 during the orchestra's tour of Europe, as seen from the Chicago Tribune: "...But when musicians arrived, they found a curve ball in the schedule: Instead of the Verdi, they'd be rehearsing a piece that many (if not most) of them didn't know: Giuseppe Martucci's "Nocturne, Op. 70, No. 1." Muti explained to the musicians and guests from the sister-city program between Lucerne and Chicago that Martucci was a superlative composer, conductor and pianist of the late 19th and early 20th Centuries whose work became overshadowed in part because Italian music at the time was dominated by opera from composers such as Puccini. Muti said Mahler's final program as a conductor included a Martucci piece, and in the early 1930s famed conductor Arturuo Toscanini was supposed to conduct a memorial concert for him in Bologna, but Italian fascists demanded that he perform the fascist anthem at the beginning, Toscanini refused repeatedly and wound up being intercepted by thugs at the auditorium's doors and beaten, fleeing the country soon after. The concert, Muti said, never happened." As before, this midi was transcribed from the score and will contain some errors.