You are currently viewing  Sheet Music      Change department

Home   >   Departments   >   Sheet Music   >   Strings   >   Double Bass Duet   >   Passione Amorosa


Passione Amorosa

Cover photograph
See larger image
Price £17.50

In Preparation

Only available for SOLO TUNING

Bottesini's Passione Amorosa is originally for 2 double basses and piano and the three contrasting movements last around ten minutes, offering an opera-like scena for two soloists which is an ideal as a concert opener or finale. There are aspects of virtuosity and lyricism throughout, with a simple and supportive accompaniment and is a fun work which demonstrates the virtuosity of the solo double basses.

This edition for 2 double basses and piano has a new accompaniment by the eminent composer and film conductor Ernest Irving (1878-1953). Composed for Victor and Roy Watson to play in their joint recitals, it reimagines Bottesini's accompaniment, bringing a new aspect to this much loved work in the solo repertoire.

"How he bewildered us by playing all sorts of melodies in flute like harmonics, as though he had a hundred nightingales caged in his double bass... I never wearied of his consummate grace and finish, his fatal precision, his heavenly tone, his fine taste. One sometimes yearned for a touch of human imperfection, but he was like a dead shot; he never missed what he aimed at, and he never aimed at less than perfection." [H.Haweis, 1888]

Giovanni Bottesini was called the 'Paganini of the Double Bass' and was the finest double bass soloist of the 19th-century. He was born in Crema (Lombardy) on 24 December 1821 and studied at the double bass at the Milan Conservatoire with Luigi Rossi, alongside harmony and composition with Nicola Vaccai (1790-1848) and Francesco Basili (1767-1850). His remarkable career as a soloist began in 1839 and lasted fifty years, taking him to every corner of the world. From Italy, his travels took him to Cuba (1846), USA (1847), England (annually from 1849), Egypt, Ireland, France, Germany, Russia, Mexico, Spain, Belgium, Monte carlo and many other countries throughout a long and distinguished career.

Bottesini was also famous as a composer writing at least 13 operas (Cristoforo Colombo, 1847 / Il diavolo della notte, 1856 / Ali Baba, 1871 / Ero e Leandro, 1879), a Messa da Requiem (1880) and an oratorio, The Garden of Olivet (1887 - first performed at the Norwich Festival), works for orchestra, 11 string quartets, string quintets, songs and many virtuoso works for double bass. As a conductor he is remembered primarily for directing the first performance of Verdi's Aida in Cairo in 1871, but was also a repsected composer of Italian opera, including seasons in Mexico, Paris, Palermo, Barcelona, London, Buenos Aires and Parma.

Bottesini's music for double bass is still at the heart of the solo repertoire into the 21st-century, even though his orchestral and operatic music has generally fallen from favour, but his Elegia for double bass and piano is one of the most recorded works of the 20th-century.

Giovanni Bottesini died in Parma on 7 July 1889.

Cat No. RM572
Supplier Code RM572
ComposersGiovanni Bottesini
Ernest Irving
EditorDavid Heyes
CategoriesDouble Bass Duet
Two Double Basses & Piano
PublisherRecital Music
Difficulty level8, Advanced
ISMN 979-0-57045-572-0
EAN-13 9790570455720
Weight 183 grams
Availability In Preparation
You can shop online here or
call the shop on 020 8693 9879
10am to 5:30pm Monday to Saturday, we will always answer unless already on the phone!