Search the internet for photographs of Gioconda De Vito and you
                will turn up plenty of pretty glamorous images of a woman who
                was a leading artist of her era. So the fact that Naxos have
                chosen a CD cover picture of her looking more like a Home Counties
                housewife who’s just realised that she’s left her
                purse at the supermarket check-out is, at first, a little puzzling.
                Dig a little into De Vito’s life story, however, and you’ll
                begin to see why that picture isn’t so inappropriate after
                all. 
                
                This was a woman who, at the age of 54, decided that she had
                entirely fulfilled all her musical ambitions and then actually
                retired to a life of cosy domesticity in the Home Counties -
                Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, to be precise - even though the
                neighbours must have found it more than a little strange that,
                over the next 33 years until her death, she seems to have mastered
                only a rather rudimentary command of the English language. 
                
                While De Vito’s sudden withdrawal from the world of music
                may strike us as a little puzzling, it is certainly not unique.
                Rossini, after all, famously retired from composing in 1829 and
                spent the remaining 39 years of his life largely (an appropriate
                word!) cooking and eating. Similarly, Jascha Heifetz would much
                rather, in his later years, pick up a hand of cards than a violin.
                So why shouldn’t Gioconda De Vito have been equally entitled
                to call it a day with her fiddle and indulge her love of the
                wild animals to be found in the gardens of Trout Stream Cottage? 
                
                As it is, we are fortunate to have a legacy of recordings that
                is admittedly relatively small - no.3 presented here is, for
                instance, her only recording of any of Mozart’s concertos
                - but it is certainly treasurable. 
                
                The Brahms concerto was, so Tully Potter tells us in his useful
                booklet notes, Gioconda De Vito’s “major war-horse” (can
                you have such a thing as a minor war-horse?) This is the first
                of her two recordings, made with a German orchestra at the highpoint
                of that country’s fortunes in the Second World War. While
                no-one was ever to suggest that De Vito herself was politically
                suspect, the conductor on this occasion, Paul van Kempen - a
                Dutchman who chose to take German citizenship when the Nazis
                came to power and who later conducted concerts for the occupying
                German forces in the Netherlands - subsequently (and hardly surprisingly)
                experienced considerable difficulties in his career (see a 
1951
                report from 
Time magazine on a colourful riot at the
                Concertgebouw). 
                
                Recorded in a rather dry acoustic, De Vito has been placed well
                forward. Hence, though much of the orchestra’s contribution
                comes through in a slightly fuzzy and generalised way, the soloist’s
                full command of technique - and her beautiful tone (which was
                to be enhanced even more after the war when she acquired the
                famous Stradivarius 
Toscana violin) - can be heard in
                fine detail. A surprisingly virile and thrusting approach to
                the opening movement drives the music onwards with a sense of
                power and urgency, although there is also some exquisitely beautiful
                playing in the more discursive and reflective passages during
                the (Joachim) coda. The quality of the recording seems to improve
                somewhat for the 
adagio: more orchestral detail emerges
                and a better balance is established with the soloist. De Vito’s
                rapt and intensely lyrical performance benefits thereby from
                a more flattering setting. The finale is taken at a rather steadier
                pace than in many accounts and gains, thereby, a certain unaccustomed
                elegance, even if at the cost of a degree of sheer excitement
                and drama. It caps an immensely satisfying account of the whole
                work. 
                
                Recorded eight years later, De Vito’s account of Mozart’s
                G major concerto benefits from a more resonant and lively recording
                in the acoustics of EMI’s Abbey Road studio no.1. Under
                Beecham’s rather emphatic direction, the Royal Philharmonic
                Orchestra - less than three years old and, if contemporary sources
                are to be believed, still in the process of finding its feet,
                let alone establishing a distinctive identity - offers robust,
                rather than especially sensitive or subtle, support. De Vito,
                by contrast occupies a far more ethereal world and her performance,
                full of sensitivity and grace, completely transcends the orchestra’s
                limitations. The especially successful 
adagio - nearly
                eight minutes of some of the most beautiful 
legato string
                playing that you are likely to hear - offers a particularly memorable
                demonstration of both her technique and her artistry and, amid
                its apparent simplicity, conveys a degree of emotional depth
                rarely encountered in more modern recordings. 
                
                While the sonic limitations of these recordings preclude them
                from being first choice recommendations, anyone unfamiliar with
                Gioconda De Vito’s work will, I suggest, find these eye-opening
                and bargain-priced accounts of considerable interest as supplements
                to others that they may already have on their shelves. 
                
                
Rob Maynard
                
                see also review by Jonathan Woolf