Performance · Other credits

Vittorio Negri

Vittorio Negri is credited on 693 releases across 144 albums tracked on Gatefold, active 1956–2026 — the collector-built map of who actually made the music.

693

Pressings credited

144

Albums

8

Decades active

7

In collections

Biography

Vittorio Negri (October 16, 1923 - April 9, 1998) was an Italian conductor, record producer, and musicologist. Negri was born in Milan. He initially studied at the Milan Conservatory, then at the Salzburg Mozarteum, where he became assistant conductor under Bernhard Paumgartner in 1952. He initially worked on critical editions for I Musici, but took a position with Philips in the late 1950s as a record producer. He became a prolific producer for Philips's classical music department and recorded copiously for them as conductor of the Berlin Chamber Orchestra and the Dresden Staatskapelle. He devoted much of his recording energies to Vivaldi, while continuing to work on musicological projects; he surfaced a lost work of Cimarosa's, the Requiem in G Minor, and subsequently performed and recorded it. In the 1980s he led a chamber orchestra in Perugia, having primarily given up producing. He was the founder of the Italian Society of Musicology. His significant studies and publishing of critical editions, especially in the Baroque repertoire, led to him gaining a large reputation. His edition of Corelli's Concerti grossi, Op. 6 was revised and recorded by I Musici and received critical acclaim.

Bio from Wikipedia

Credited work

693 releases · 144 albums · active 1956–2026

  • Performance · 508
  • Other credits · 304
  • Production · 141
  • Engineering · 42

Studios: Wembley Town Hall · Concertgebouw, Amsterdam · Walthamstow Assembly Hall · Théâtre de Vevey

Discography

Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Frequent collaborators

Around the web

See who really made the music.

Gatefold maps every producer, engineer, and player across your shelf — the credits no one else surfaces.

Start your shelf →

Free forever. Works with 10 records or 10,000.