La campanella, final movement of the Violin Concerto No. 2 in B Minor, Op. 7, by Italian composer and violinist Niccolò Paganini, renowned for its intricate and technically demanding solo passages and for the bell-like effects featured in both the solo and orchestral parts. The movement derives its nickname from those bell-like sounds, which evoke the imagery of the Italian folk song—also known as “La campanella”—upon which the movement is based. Completed in 1826, the concerto premiered in its entirety the following year at La Scala, in Milan, with the composer himself as soloist.
Most of Paganini’s compositions were one-movement solo violin showpieces (caprices) and various pieces of chamber music. The vibrant rondo La campanella—with its flashy finger work, numerous double-stops (bowing more than one string at once), and constantly bouncing bow—was such a crowd pleaser that Paganini often chose to perform it, too, as a stand-alone showpiece, detached from the multi-movement concerto context.
The artistry Paganini showed in the performance and composition of La campanella and other pieces like it drew praise from many of his peers, including composers Robert Schumann and Frédéric Chopin, as well as from Gioachino Rossini, who once said, “I wept the first time I heard Paganini play.” Hungarian composer and piano virtuoso Franz Liszt was so impressed by La campanella that he adapted it for solo piano performance and incorporated bell-like effects into one of his own piano concerti. Other composers and arrangers followed suit, and by the 21st century La campanella had become a popular display piece across the classical music repertoire, with transcriptions available for solo instruments such as guitar, flute, and alto saxophone as well as for instrumental ensembles such as concert band.