I very much liked Richard Tognetti’s Mozart violin 
    concertos (see 
review) 
    so, despite minor qualms about tackling yet another Vivaldi’s 
Four 
    Seasons I reckoned that, if I was going to do my honest reviewer’s 
    minimum quota of one 
Four Seasons a year, it might as well be this 
    one.
    
    Much as your Classical era composers only needed to add a few new features 
    to the framework of the idiom of their time to make their pieces individual 
    and special, so performers today only need to introduce small variations to 
    make hyper-familiar repertoire their own in each new recording. Tognetti doesn’t 
    go in for extra special effects unlike the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment 
    (
review) 
    and the birdsong in 
La Primavera is strings only, and very effective 
    they are too with added little flageolet timbres in that first movement. Basses 
    dig deep and stamp the mud from their metaphorical feet at one stage, and 
    there is great fun to be had alongside the expected refinement and technical 
    wizardry from the soloist. The barking dog of the 
Largo is nicely 
    gruff but also in proportion, the atmosphere of gently rustling leaves nicely 
    placed as a texture over which the solo line can rise with gentle expression. 
    The dancing quality of the 
Allegro is truly uplifting.
    
    
L’Estate really has all of that languishing heat radiating 
    from this performance, those descending lines in the opening sliding down 
    like melting cheese. Tognetti makes part of his solo sound like a braying 
    donkey, anticipating storms to come which are portrayed with suitable wildness 
    from the orchestra. The contrast between ‘weary limbs’ and ‘lightening’ 
    in the second movement is powerful, and the final arrival of that storm is 
    tremendous, strings articulating sharply to make sure we hear rattling hailstones 
    as well as thunder and wind.
    
    
L’Autumno sets off at a brisk pace, but is still full of nuanced 
    dynamic and keenly observed phrasing. The 
Adagio molto turns into 
    a bit of a harpsichord concerto, the player remorselessly noodling around 
    the harmonies in the sustained strings in a way I’d rather wish they 
    didn’t, certainly if ‘sweetest sleep’ is what we’re 
    after. The final 
Allegro is suitably sturdy, with plenty of rhythmic 
    accent and some percussive effects to help portray the ‘horns, guns 
    and dogs.’ 
L’Inverno opens with some remarkable sounds, 
    the organ taking over from the harpsichord to add to the drama with very short 
    repeated notes underpinning the shivering strings. The central 
Largo 
    is swift and groovy, crackling firewood allowing us to forget the miserable 
    weather outside. Slip-sliding on the ice in the final 
Allegro, and 
    the musicians give a real impression of peril, toying with the rhythms for 
    the choppy cracking of the freeze – or is it the breaking of bones? 
    Either way this is a terrific performance with a recording to match.
    
    We are given a generous selection of fillers chosen in part for their similarity 
    to 
The Four Seasons. These start with the 
Largo from the 
    
Concerto in D major RV 226, which is comparable to the central movement 
    of 
Winter. The 
Grave from 
RV 562 is another very 
    atmospheric slow movement, the rhapsodic solo part of which is relished by 
    Tognetti.
    There is also the complete 
Concerto in B minor, RV 580 for four violins, 
    strings and continuo, which is at least as well known in J.S. Bach’s 
    arrangement for harpsichord and strings 
BWV 1065. This and the 
Concerto 
    in A minor RV 356 are both from 
L’estro armonico, Vivaldi’s 
    excellent 
Op. 3 and they receive very fine performances here.
    
    The final work is a strikingly theatrical score, played with gusto by the 
    Australian Chamber Orchestra, the 
Sinfonia or overture from Vivaldi’s 
    opera 
La verità in cimento or ‘Truth in contention’. 
    These brief three movements are full of refreshing harmonic surprise and a 
    stunning close to this substantial programme, and yes, I do like the way the 
    final bass note is allowed its full decay – around 8 seconds if my ears 
    don’t deceive me.
    
    Only you will know if this 
Four Seasons will be a requirement for 
    your music library, but with fabulous performances and BIS’s state of 
    the art recording I would say it has to be one of the top choices in a fiercely 
    competitive market. If you are new to this music then you are in for a treat, 
    and if you haven’t treated yourself to a new one lately, this is worth 
    more than just a punt. The booklet tells us that Richard Tognetti was made 
    an Australian National Living Treasure in 1999, and that’s the way I 
    feel about this release – it is indeed one to treasure.
    
    
Dominy Clements