The album contains premiere recordings of three works by
Dominick Argento, the Minnesota Orchestra's Composer Laureate.
Casa Guidi was composed in response to a request from the Minnesota Orchestra to write a work for Frederica von Stade to perform with them. Argento chose
Elizabeth Barrett Browning's letters as a suitable text after happening upon her home while visiting Florence. (Von Stade had suggested that he might set something by
Robert Frost, a favourite poet of hers, but he preferred working with prose rather than verse because of the greater freedom that it afforded him.) The song cycle is scored for a
mezzo-soprano and a large orchestra, comprising triple woodwinds, three trumpets, four horns, three trombones, a tuba, strings and a large percussion section, as well as a
mandolin, a harp, a piano and chimes playing offstage. It was first performed by von Stade and the Minnesota Orchestra under the direction of Sir
Neville Marriner in Minneapolis on 28 September 1983, with repeat performances in
Carnegie Hall later in the same season and in Minneapolis in 1996.
Capriccio for Clarinet and Orchestra was commissioned by the
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra for their principal clarinetist, George Silfies, and was first performed by them under the direction of
Leonard Slatkin in the
Powell Symphony Hall, Saint Louis on 16 May 1986.. Its first Minneapolis performance was by Joseph Longo and the Minnesota Orchestra, again under Slatkin, on 17 July 1986.
In Praise of Music was commissioned by the Minnesota Orchestra to commemorate the seventy-fifth anniversary of the orchestra's founding, and was first performed by them under the direction of
Stanislaw Skrowaczewski in Minneapolis on 23 and 24 September 1977. ==Recording==