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  2. Adagio in G minor for strings and organ, also known as Adagio in Sol minore per archi e organo su due spunti tematici e su un basso numerato di Tomaso Albinoni (Mi 26), is a neo-Baroque composition often misattributed to the 18th-century Venetian composer Tomaso Albinoni.

  3. Adagio in G Minor, composition attributed to Tomaso Albinoni. Widely familiar through its frequent use in film scores, the work is slow of pace, solemn of mood, and frequently transcribed for various combinations of instruments.

    • Betsy Schwarm
  4. He is best remembered today for a work called "Adagio in G minor", attributed to him but largely written by Remo Giazotto, a 20th century musicologist and composer, who was a cataloger of the works of Albinoni.

  5. Mar 15, 2024 · But the piece is, in fact, not by Albinoni at all but by a 20 th-century Italian musicologist named Remo Giazotto. Giazotto claimed to have based the Adagio on a manuscript fragment of Albinoni’s music salvaged from the Dresden State Library shortly after its bombing in World War II.

  6. Tomaso Giovanni Albinoni was an Italian composer remembered chiefly for his instrumental music. The son of a wealthy paper merchant, Albinoni enjoyed independent means. Although he was a fully trained musician, he considered himself an amateur.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. Tomaso Albinoni: Adagio in G minor. Albinoni was a Baroque composer who had a financially rather well-cushioned life, thanks to the shares he inherited in his father’s stationery firm, which manufactured playing cards, among other things.

  8. Jul 10, 2023 · Consider Tomaso Albinoni (1671 – 1751), whose name is most often associated with a moving Adagio that he did not write. (It’s by 20th-century Italian musicologist Remo Giazotto, possibly working from a fragment by the composer.) But the real Albinoni did write some beauti.

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