Notes
The desire to compose modern music inspired by or in imitation of the baroque and classical styles was adopted by many composers in the first half of the twentieth century. Vittorio Rieti (1898 - 1994), who probably absorbed neo-classicism from Stravinsky in Paris, embraced it with all the passion of his youth and of the period, but unlike his contemporaries, Rieti never let go of it. He continued to write in this mode throughout his life, long after most composers had abandoned or transformed the style. Rieti never lost his fondness for the harpsichord. Six of his eight compositions for the instrument appear on this recording, spanning the entirety of his compositional life: one of the earliest, the Sonata all'Antica (1946); three pieces from the 1960s - the Concertino for Flute, Viola, Cello, Harp and Harpsichord (1963), the Pastorale e Fughetta for Flute, Viola and Harpsichord (1966), and the Sonata Breve for Violin and Harpsichord (1967); and his last two compositions for harpsichord, written when he was in his eighties: The Variations on Two Cantigas de Santa Maria (1978), and the Triptych for Two Harpsichords (1982).