Domenico Scarlatti
Domenico Scarlatti wrote 555 single-movement keyboard sonatas, mostly in binary form, that combine Iberian guitar idioms, daring harmonic shifts, and a feisty I…
Public-domain piano works by composers from the Italian tradition. 1 composers, 80 scores — drawn from the IMSLP / Petrucci Music Library and free to download, study, perform, and re-engrave.
Italian keyboard music is dominated, in the public-domain era, by the towering figure of Domenico Scarlatti and his 555 keyboard sonatas — a body of work without parallel for sheer concentrated invention. The Italian operatic tradition also fed into keyboard transcription and song-without-words traditions across Europe.
National traditions in keyboard music are real but slippery — composers travelled, studied abroad, taught one another, and absorbed influences across borders constantly. What we call a national style is more often a centre of gravity than a closed system: a shared set of conventions, a common pool of teachers, a particular relationship to the dance music and song repertoire of a region.
The composers below represent the Italian contribution to the public-domain piano canon. Browse each composer's complete works list, performance context, and downloadable PDF score editions through the links provided. Every score linked from these pages is sourced from the IMSLP / Petrucci Music Library and is free to download, study, perform, record, and re-engrave under public-domain status.
Reading the keyboard literature through the lens of national tradition is one of several useful ways to navigate three centuries of repertoire. It complements — rather than replaces — the chronological view (by era and decade), the technical view (by difficulty), the formal view (by sonata, prelude, étude, etc.), and the harmonic view (by key signature). Each lens reveals a different facet of the same musical material; experienced pianists move freely between them depending on what they are looking for.
Domenico Scarlatti wrote 555 single-movement keyboard sonatas, mostly in binary form, that combine Iberian guitar idioms, daring harmonic shifts, and a feisty I…