Banda Municipale De Milano is a typo on the 1917 label for Banda Municipale Di Milano (corrected on the 1924 repress).
Originally released on Magic Notes label in 1913 (source).
A side matrix: 1866; recorded New York, NY, 1904.
B side matrix: 1867; recorded New York, NY, 1904.
(DAHR)
Ca. 1917-1918 reissue on Gold Band label:
A side matrix: 42278 on label and etched in runout. 1-A-32 stamped in label.
B side matrix: 42279 on label and etched in runout. 1-C-41 stamped in label.
Recorded ca. August 1914.
Repress:
Label printing date code: KZ (= November 1917)
Images
Number:1402905 THUMBNAIL Uploaded By:Bob1951 Description: Columbia E1352 A side label (KZ = November 1917 repress)
Number:1402906 Uploaded By:Bob1951 Description: Columbia E1352 B side label (KZ = November 1917 repress)
Number:2084288 Uploaded By:fantasista Description: Columbia E1352 A side label (1924 repress)
Number:2084289 Uploaded By:fantasista Description: Columbia E1352 B side label (1924 repress)
Number:2880260 Uploaded By:xiphophilos Description: Columbia E-1352 A side label (late 1926 repress)
Number:2880261 Uploaded By:xiphophilos Description: Columbia E-1352 B side label (late 1926 repress)
Added repress on a late 1926 Viva-tonal-style label. These patriotic songs were clearly very popular among Italian Americans since this record stayed in the catalog for 13 or more years.
Dick Spottswood, "The Columbia E-Series" (rev. 2016) lists the first issue under catalog number E1352 (matrices 1866-1 and 1867-1) as recorded by Banda Columbia in New York in 1904. Label scans are available on Discogs. Apparently, this recording was first issued years later, in 1913.
Later, both songs were recorded anew, by the Banda Municipale De Milano (matrices 42278-1 and 42279-1), apparently in Milano, Italy itself. Spottswood dates these new recordings to ca. August 1914.
The images above show a late 1917 repress on Gold Band label (Columbia Grafonola logo, 6 patents in 2 lines) with label printing date code: KZ (= November 1917), cf. M. Sherman & K. Nauck, "Note The Notes", p. 28. The label is brown rather than green to denote a repress. The company switched to light green labels for ethnic releases around 1917, but initially only new recordings received that color.
The blue Flag label is a 1924 repress with the new company name Columbia Phonograph Company; in 1925, Inc. would be added to that company name.