Rossini composed his six string sonatas while staying in
Ravenna during the summer of 1804. He was 12 years old at the time and was living in the home of the amateur
double bass enthusiast Agostini Triossi. Triossi's influence was likely the reason why the double bass is featured prominently in the sonatas. According to Rossini himself, the sonatas were: With the exception of a single song, the six string sonatas are considered Rossini's earliest compositions. Though the music presents weaknesses and deficiencies, the sonatas are still considered remarkable works for a composer of such young age and inexperience. In 1826, five of the six string sonatas (excluding Sonata No. 3) were first published by
Casa Ricordi in
Milan as standard
string quartets. A further transposition for
wind instruments is dated 1828/1829. However, the whereabouts of the sonatas eventually became a mystery, and scholars assumed that were destroyed. In 1942, the sonatas published by Ricordi were rediscovered, and in 1954, Rossini's original score was found in the
Library of Congress in
Washington, D.C. == Sonatas ==