Giovanni
Battista Viotti: Violin Concertos Nos. 1-29 (complete). Franco Mezzena, violin, with Viotti Chamber Orchestra
conducted by Luciano Borin (Nos. 1, 2, 8, 11, 12, 19); Franco Mezzena, violin
and conducting Symphonia Perusina (Nos. 3-7, 9, 10, 13-18, 20, 22-28); Franco
Mezzena, violin and conducting Orchestra da Camera Milano Classica (Nos. 21 and
29). Dynamic. $50.99 (10 CDs).
The importance of Giovanni Battista Viotti (1755-1824) in the history of
the violin can scarcely be overstated, and the significance of Franco Mezzena’s
thorough and beautifully played exploration of all 29 of Viotti’s completed
violin concertos should be a foregone conclusion. But somehow both Viotti and
Mezzena have undeservedly remained on the periphery of their respective
contributions – an unjustifiable dual neglect that will hopefully be corrected
thanks to Dynamic’s excellent 10-CD re-release of Mezzena’s exploration of
Viotti, originally made available in 2005 and consisting of performances from
1990 through 2004.
Viotti, who personally knew Haydn and Beethoven, was an important
influence on violinists whose names are much better known than his, including
Paganini and Rodolphe Kreutzer. Viotti is likely comparatively neglected because he had few pupils of
his own – and it was those he did have who in turn taught others whose fame has
endured, making Viotti important more or less in a secondhand manner. In terms
of violin composition and technique, though, Viotti has remained a firsthand
influence, even if later violinists did not know of him directly. This is
partly because Viotti’s music had a direct impact on the compositions of
others, including Beethoven, and partly because Viotti’s works became the
foundation of the 19th-century French violin school. His concertos
span the time period from the galant
style to almost-Romanticism, making him musically something of a transitional
figure – one reason his works, like those of Hummel and F.X. Mozart, tend to be
neglected. But the lyricism, thematic beauty, sureness of structure and
extensive exploration of performance techniques in Viotti’s concertos make them
quite wonderful to hear, and having Mezzena’s survey of them again available is
an unalloyed pleasure.
The only Viotti concertos that are still played with any regularity are
Nos. 22 in A minor and 23 in G, and they are among his less-challenging works
to perform, because of the composer’s own history. Like Haydn, Viotti wrote
music for Parisian audiences and later for British ones; Haydn’s last
symphonies and Viotti’s final violin concertos were all created for English
audiences and were designed for the larger orchestras in vogue in Great Britain
in the 1790s and thereafter. In Viotti’s case, though, there was another factor
at play: he was a composer/performer, and his skill in the latter role had
diminished over time, so he made fewer demands of himself (and consequently of
other violinists) in his last nine concertos. He designated Nos. 21-29
differently, too, giving them letters (starting with A) to distinguish them
from the earlier works created more for Parisian taste. And these circumstances
have contributed to Viotti’s not-so-benign neglect, since the two concertos most
likely to be heard from time to time today are frequently performed by student
violinists – advanced ones, to be sure, but branding these as “student” works
makes them less appealing to virtuoso professional players.
Yet there is so much that is absolutely wonderful in Viotti’s violin
concertos that it is a tremendous shame for them to be so infrequently heard,
and a tremendous pleasure to have the Mezzena cycle available again. The
performances are excellent throughout, the recorded sound is very fine, the
orchestral playing is first-rate, and the insightful exploration of the music
is of the highest quality. This is not to say, however, that the assemblage of
material is flawless. It would be reasonable to expect the concertos to be
presented in chronological order and, in particular, the last nine concertos to
be grouped, but that is not the case. The presentation of the works is a
complete mishmash: the first two CDs include Nos. 8, 11 and 12, in that order,
and 19, 1 and 2, in that sequence –
and the rest of the discs are similarly mixed up. There is no rhyme or reason
for this. Those first two CDs, dating to 1990 and 1991, are the only ones
featuring a conductor other than Mezzena himself; discs 3-9 (from 1996 to 2002)
then have Mezzena leading one ensemble, and disc 10 (from 2004) has him
conducting another. All the orchestras are more than adequate, and with
Viotti’s concertos assigning a very prominent role to the soloist while tending
to downplay the accompaniment, matters are handled with aplomb by everyone
involved.
It is certainly true that Viotti’s violin concertos, like Vivaldi’s,
have elements of predictability and of the formulaic about them. Although
Viotti’s vary in length from 16 minutes to almost 32, all are in three movements;
in every case, the first movement is the longest and the slow second movement the
shortest; and every third movement is brightly upbeat and jaunty (often
designated rondò, complete with
accent, or rondeau). Structurally,
almost all start with a two-to-three-minute tutti
prior to the introduction of the solo violin. And all the concertos thoroughly
explore multiple performance techniques – legato, staccato, spiccato, double
stopping and others – within a framework of remarkably pleasant tunefulness
that makes these pieces a pleasure to hear and carries them well beyond the
realm of études.
Despite the works’ similarities on certain levels, there are elements of
differentiation among the concertos – beyond the circumstances of composition
of the finale nine – that keep them interesting. Three of them – Nos. 16, 25
and 27 – have slow introductions to the first movement, with No. 16 being
particularly intriguing because in addition to that unusual-for-Viotti opening,
it is in a minor key (E minor). Actually, Viotti’s relatively high frequency of
use of minor keys is one of his concertos’ distinguishing characteristics: in
addition to No. 16, Nos. 14, 17, 18, 19, 22, 24, 28 and 29 are all in the
minor. None of them plumbs significant emotional depth, but all have an
attractively darker flavor than the major-key concertos and are high points of
Mezzena’s cycle.
All in all, it is as churlish to nitpick Viotti’s assured craftsmanship as it is to complain about the less-than-optimal presentation sequence of his concertos in this survey. It is to be hoped that the re-release will draw new attention to Viotti not only because of his historical significance but also because his concertos are poised, elegant, and constructed with a sure hand both for their playability and for the enjoyment they bring to listeners. Interestingly, portions of three additional, incomplete Viotti violin concertos have recently been found – two movements of each – so this Mezzena compilation is not, strictly speaking, 100% complete. But that too is nitpicking: this is a highly worthwhile set of performances by any standard, and both Viotti himself and Mezzena as his advocate richly deserve as much attention as this recording can bring to both of them.
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