Antonio VIVALDI (1678-1741)
Concerto in a minor, RV356 (originally for violin, Op.3/6) [7:06]
Concerto in D, RV93 (originally for lute) [9:18]
Mandolin Concerto in C, RV425 [7:36]
Largo in e minor from Concerto in C, RV443 (originally for flautino)
[3:35]
Trio Sonata in C major RV82 (originally for violin and lute)* [8:56]
The Four Seasons: Concerto in g minor RV315 ‘Summer’ (originally for
violin, Op.8/2) [10:09]
Venetian Gondolier Songs: La biondina in gondoleta** [4:36]
Venice Baroque Orchestra/Avi Avital (mandolin)
with *Mahan Esfahani (harpsichord), Ophira Zakai (lute) and Patrick
Sepec (cello); **Juan Diego Flórez (tenor)
rec. Teatro delle Voci, Treviso, Italy, September/October 2014 and Meistersaal,
Berlin, December 2014. DDD
All transcriptions by Avi Avital
**Text and translation included.
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 4794017 [51:34]
Avi Avital now does for Vivaldi what he did for Bach
in 2012 (DG 4790092). We don’t seem to have reviewed that earlier recording
of mandolin transcriptions of JSB’s keyboard concertos, but I shall
be seeking it out on the strength of its successor.
i’d just finished enjoying and reviewing Red Priest’s latest offering,
Handel in the Wind (RP012) when I turned to this series of arrangements
for mandolin of several Vivaldi concertos, only one of which, RV425,
was composed for the instrument. Famous as having been featured in
the movie Kramer vs. Kramer it’s the only one he wrote for the
instrument, but the other works included here, especially the Lute Concerto,
RV93, and the Trio Sonata for violin and lute, RV82, sound very well
in Avi Avital’s transcriptions. Even the largo from the Flautino
Concerto, RV433, seems comfortably at home on the mandolin, although
a plucked instrument doesn’t have the sustained notes of a member of
the flute/recorder family.
I enjoy the sound of the mandolin, perhaps because there was a group
called Troise and his Mandoliers who regularly performed on the steam
radio when I was growing up. In fact it appears that they played a
collection of banjos as well as mandolins, accompanied by a piano, accordion,
percussion and double-bass – picture
– and I’d probably hate their massed sound now, but it probably gave
me a taste for the members of the lute family.
The heading of the notes in the booklet is Rocking Vivaldi, but
that’s more a concept than a description of the performances. There’s
nothing like the wholesale jazzing up of Bach, Handel and Vivaldi that
Red Priest go in for.
Certainly the tempi are mostly fast and furious, but that’s not unusual
in recordings with the Venice Baroque Orchestra, and apart from the
fact that three of the four concertos are transcribed, there’s period
practice in play here too. These are bold performances, but the claim
that ‘the spirit of rock music is at the heart of [the] approach’ is
really a bit of advertising blurb. It’s unnecessary anyway, since the
days when prospective purchasers could browse the CD and booklet in
a shop are almost gone, though you can peruse the book digitally and
sample the recording from Qobuz.
I wouldn’t download the recording there, however: at £11.56 it’s more
expensive than at least one dealer is currently charging for the CD.
You can’t automatically assume that a download is going to be the economical
option.
If you want one example of Avital’s fast tempi, try the finale of RV93,
polished off in 2:03 without a hitch, with a performance from the past
by the Paul Kuentz Chamber Orchestra (DG Resonance E4295282), which
takes 2:28. The differences actually sound greater than those figures
suggest, lively as that was for its day. Actually, it’s the manner
of Avital’s performance rather than the speed which gives the impression
that he is fast and furious: Julian Bream on an RCA collection of lute
concertos by Vivaldi, Handel and Kohaut was only a fraction slower at
2:05 and a recent Naïve recording by Rolf Lislevand and a small ensemble
(Concertos for mandolin and lute: V5243, budget price – review
of earlier release) is actually a couple of seconds faster than and
just as lively as Avital.
You will have gathered that I enjoyed hearing this recording but you
may well feel that you could have done without yet another version of
Summer from The Four Seasons, even with the novelty of
the mandolin as the solo instrument. It doesn’t add greatly to the
appeal, though DG presumably thought it would be a selling point and
it’s powerfully done. Nor does the gondolier song add significantly
to the sum of things for me.
Bargain lovers should be reminded that Hyperion have a recording of
Vivaldi lute and mandolin concertos and trios on their mid-price 30th
Anniversary label (CDA30027: Paul O’Dette and the Parley of Instruments
– October
2010 Download Roundup). The CD costs around £8.50 and it can be
downloaded in mp3 and lossless sound, with pdf booklet, for £6.99 from
hyperion-records.co.uk.
Sample Avital and O’Dette in the finale of RV93 and there’s very little
difference in tempo. O’Dette plays the music straighter but equally
enjoyably. A word of warning: by one of those quirks of the recording
industry the O’Dette recording also remains on sale at full price on
CDA66160, so you need to choose the right version. The download costs
the same for both.
Whether you choose the older Hyperion recording or the new DG there’s
a great deal to enjoy here. Both are very well recorded, though the
Hyperion comes with the superior set of notes.
Brian Wilson