Vivaldi: Concerti per Archi III; Concerti per Viola
d’amore.
Alessandro Tampieri, violin and viola d’amore; Accademia Bizantina conducted by
Ottavio Dantone. Naïve. $20.99 (2 CDs).
Vivaldi: Concerti per Violino VI, “La boemia.” Fabio Biondi, violin and
conducting Europa Galante. Naïve. $16.99.
Vivaldi: Concerti for Mandolin in D, RV 93, and in
C, RV 425; Trio Sonata in C, RV 82; Raffaele Calace: Concerto No. 2 for
Mandolin; Domenico Caudioso: Concerto for Mandolin. Julien Martineau,
mandolin; Concerto Italiano conducted by Rinaldo Alessandrini. Naïve. $16.99.
For nearly 20 years now, Naïve has been
proving that even the most knowledgeable classical-music lovers only thought they knew Vivaldi. Since 2000,
the label has been releasing dozens upon dozens of once-lost Vivaldi works
found at the Biblioteca Nazionale in Turin. There are nearly 60 releases so
far, with three more planned for release annually until the projected
completion of the series in 2027 – a year shy of the 350th
anniversary of Vivaldi’s birth. The sheer scope of the project is staggering,
but even more so is the sheer quality of the music. Who knew that Vivaldi did
so much, in so many fields, so well? His reputation has long rested on a mere
handful of his works, and even though The
Four Seasons violin concertos are among the most popular classical pieces
of all time, they are scarcely representative of his entire oeuvre. Vivaldi
churned out concerto after concerto, opera after opera, year after year, and
pretty much everything he produced was of enormously high quality and was
exceptionally creative by the standards of his time.
There’s the rub, as Hamlet would say. The
ways in which Vivaldi advanced music are extremely subtle and indeed often
almost inaudible to all but the best-trained ears in modern times. As wonderful
as his music is, much of it sounds the same: it is very difficult to pinpoint a
specific concerto and say that it significantly increased the range, tone or
character of instrumental playing. With Bach – who, let us remember, was an
admirer of Vivaldi, and who adapted various Vivaldi works – the assertion of
advancement comes easily. With Vivaldi, the sheer scale of his production and
the perfection with which he utilized a concerto form that he himself largely
cemented (if not invented) combine in such a way that few of his individual
works stand out. And this is scarcely the case only for his violin works, of
which there is a plethora because Vivaldi himself was a master violinist (although
one whose technique seems to have been somewhat unconventional and therefore
controversial). For instance, Vivaldi wrote some three dozen bassoon concertos,
all of them marvelous and none of them particularly distinctive compared with
any of the others.
All this makes the flood of material from
the Naïve series somewhat difficult to absorb. Except for fanatical Vivaldi
devotees, few listeners will want the complete series (which is scarcely
inexpensive). But deciding which recordings to purchase is by no means easy, at
least where the concertos are concerned. And this means that at least some
decisions may be based on the individuals and ensembles performing the material
– or on a desire to hear the specific instruments for which Vivaldi created some
of his outpouring of concerto material.
Naïve has been scrupulous in engaging
excellent period-instrument and historical-performance groups for this series,
and the two latest releases show that. The third Concerti per Archi offering features Alessandro Tampieri and the
Accademia Bizantina conducted by Ottavio Dantone, while the sixth Concerti per Violino offers Fabio Biondi
both as soloist and as conductor of Europa Galante. Fans of Tampieri and/or
Dantone and/or Biondi will be drawn to one or the other of these releases, if
not both; but there are other ways to make a selection. There are only five
surviving Vivaldi concerti for viola d’amore – RV 393-397 – and anyone
interested in them will certainly want the Tampieri/Dantone release so as to hear
just how this solo instrument, whose additional strings vibrate sympathetically
when its primary ones are played, is used by Vivaldi to produce especially
telling effects. Yet the two-CD set is actually dominated by 13 violin
concertos: RV 109, 117, 118, 126, 138, 142, 145, 152, 155, 161, 163, 165, and
167. But if there is little that is highly distinctive among this baker’s
dozen, there is a great deal that is delightful and, indeed, everything is
beautifully formed and well balanced, as Vivaldi’s music invariably is.
Listeners specifically seeking an unusual
set of Vivaldi’s violin concertos may, however, turn instead (if not in
addition) to the grouping known as La
boemia, composed while Vivaldi was being idolized in Prague in 1730-31.
These works – offered by Biondi and his ensemble in the sequence RV 282, 278,
380, 186, 288, and 330 – get particularly interesting performances, because
Biondi creates cadenzas to link movements that are in different keys. There is
some historical justification for this, but it is scarcely normal practice.
Thus, listeners looking for a more-traditional (and equally historically
accurate) approach will gravitate to Tampieri/Dantone, while those interested
in some creative interpretation and reinterpretation of the Vivaldi legacy will
be attracted to Biondi. It is through differences like these – in the context
of performances of equal excellence – that the Naïve series continues to thrive
and delight.
A different Naïve release, featuring
Julien Martineau on mandolin, approaches Vivaldi more typically by being highly
selective in what music by him it offers. Martineau and Concerto Italiano under
Rinaldo Alessandrini (who conducts from the harpsichord) select two Vivaldi
mandolin concertos and one trio sonata to display the Venetian master’s prowess
and creativity in music for Martineau’s instrument. All three pieces stand up
as well as anything in the Vivaldi series itself, showcasing the skill of
construction, beauty of form and virtuoso expectations (born of thorough
knowledge of every instrument for which he wrote) that make Vivaldi’s music
both distinguished and instantly distinguishable from other works of the same
time period. However, the main attractions on this CD, for fanciers of the
mandolin, will likely be the two works that are not by Vivaldi. The concerto in G by Vivaldi’s contemporary
Domenico Caudioso, of whom virtually nothing is known with any certainty (not
even his birth and death years), is a warm, beautifully balanced work that
explores the mandolin’s expressive potential in even more ways than Vivaldi
does in the pieces heard here. The broad first movement, charming second and
vivacious third add up to a very lovely work indeed. And then there is the
second mandolin concerto by Raffaele Calace (1863-1934), a modern mandolin
master (and luthier) who created this very extended and passionate piece in the
unlikely key of A minor. But the concerto exists without its orchestral part –
so Martineau commissioned an orchestration by Yann Ollivo for this recording.
Whatever the pluses and minuses of the accompaniment in terms of how idiomatic
and true to Calace’s period and style it is, the fact is that the concerto is a
genuine masterpiece. It takes the mandolin to depths and heights far beyond
anything envisioned by Vivaldi, Caudioso or any other composer of an earlier
era. It requires enormous skill in fingering and phrasing, and very
considerable virtuosity simply to play the material at the speed at which
Calace calls for it to be performed. This is truly a tour de force for mandolin and without a doubt the highlight of the
Martineau/Alessandrini CD. The extended first-movement cadenza, for example,
brings forth sounds of which the mandolin scarcely seems capable; indeed, it
sounds at times as if two mandolins are playing simultaneously, to very
Paganini-esque effect. And the second movement’s warmth leads to a finale in
which the sheer expressive range of the mandolin proves to be well beyond
anything that listeners will likely expect. Martineau is a highly skilled, very
sensitive performer who is beautifully supported by Alessandrini and Concerto
Italiano, and this CD as a whole is an absolute joy to hear – both for those
especially interested in Vivaldi and for those looking for some little-known
and thoroughly delightful music by other composers.
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