A cursory glance through Nino Rota’s credits as a composer of 
                great film music scores reveals him to be the very centre of the 
                European film-making tradition: The Glass Mountain (1949), 
                La dolce vita (1960), Il Gattopardo (1963), 8½ 
                (1963), Romeo and Juliet (1968), The Godfather, Parts 
                I & II (1972 and 1974), Amarcord (1973) and Death 
                on the Nile (1978), to name just a few of more than 150. This 
                is even more remarkable when one learns that the great Italian 
                film-maker Federico Fellini employed Rota to write the score to every film he made from the time 
                of their first collaboration on Lo sceicco blanco (The 
                White Sheik) in 1952 until Rota’s death in April 1979 caused The Orchestra Rehearsal 
                to be his last film score. Rota also wrote notable music for directors such as Zeffirelli, 
                Visconti and Coppola, for whose film The Godfather, Part II 
                Rota’s score won an Oscar.
                   
                  Rota had studied 
                    at the Malan Conservatorio with Ildebrando Pizzetti, with 
                    whose music Rota’s works share 
                    a wonderful post-Romantic sweep and richness. Rota made no distinctions 
                    between his music for film and that for the concert hall or 
                    theatre. There is a fair amount of cross-fertilisation between 
                    Rota’s symphonic 
                    works and those for film. The Sinfonia sopra una canzone 
                    d’amore which opens this attractive CD was written in 
                    1947, although only orchestrated and performed as late as 
                    1972. Rota ‘borrowed’ three of the Sinfonia’s four movements 
                    in film scores for The Glass Mountain and Il Gattopardo.
                   
                  The Sinfonia sopra una Canzone d’Amore could be 
                    described as a neo-classical symphony. It is certainly cast 
                    in a very traditional mould. There’s a relaxed sonata-form 
                    movement whose main theme curiously reminded me of Smetana’s 
                    Vltava. This is followed by a rustic scherzo-like movement. 
                    A beautiful Andante sostenuto forms the heart of the 
                    symphony and is a testament to Rota’s remarkable melodic and harmonic gifts. After this 
                    comes a slightly uneasy finale.
                   
                  Rather lighter in character and perhaps more recognisable 
                    to those familiar with Rota’s film music is the Concerto-Soirée for Piano 
                    and Orchestra. The CD booklet gives the date of composition 
                    as 1958 but other sources – including the official Nino Rota 
                    website – give it as 1961-62. The booklet also claims the 
                    piece to be “one of the most demanding pieces of piano literature 
                    of our century”. Surely not the piece I was listening to! 
                    I checked the original Italian text by Albert Erlöser and 
                    found a mistranslation of the Italian word impegnativi, 
                    which means ‘demanding of attention’ or, simply, ‘important’ 
                    perhaps, although I’m not sure that claim is valid 
                    either. What we have in essence is a 20-minute, five-movement 
                    divertimento for piano and orchestra full of attractive and 
                    idiomatic writing. The beautiful Romanza third movement 
                    later found its way into the score for the 1966 ballet La 
                    Strada, itself based largely on music from the 1954 Fellini 
                    film. Music from the final Can-can – a rather darker 
                    movement than one might expect from such a title – is to be 
                    found in the score to the film 8½.
                   
                  The pianist Benedetto Lupo, winner of the bronze medal 
                    in the 1988 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, was 
                    mentored by Rota as a young 
                    student and so one would expect him to offer a unique insight 
                    into this music. He certainly plays with great fluidity and 
                    panache and is perfectly accompanied by the Sicilian Orchestra 
                    under a rather noisy conductor 
                    Massimo de Bernart who seems prone to grunting in a way I 
                    found annoying on repeated listenings. The 1991 recording 
                    sounds slightly studio-bound to my ears but is fine enough. 
                    A shame that Arts decided not to fill the CD further; 49 minutes 
                    is rather short measure and there are plenty of other works 
                    that could have been added to further the cause of Rota’s concert music. 
                  Derek Warby 
                  
              see also Review 
                by Bob Briggs