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Antonio VIVALDI (1678-1741) Concerti for Viola d’amore
Concerto in D Minor RV 394 [9:03]
Concerto in A Major RV 396 [9:04]
Concerto in D Major RV 392 [10:21]
Concerto in D Minor RV 393 [8:28]
Concerto in D Minor RV 395 [10:43]
Concerto in A Minor RV 397 [7:51]
Concerto in F Major RV 97 [10:23]
Concerto for viola d’amore and lute in D Minor RV 540 [11:28]*
Europa Galante
Giangiacomo Pinardi (lute)
Fabio Biondi (viola d’amore; director)
rec. 17-19 May, 2006, 11-14 January, 2004 *, Parma, Italy. DDD VIRGIN CLASSICS 3951462 [77:13]
Like all good Baroque composers, Vivaldi was a superb performer:
records exist of audiences literally fighting to hear him
play. One of Vivaldi’s favourite instruments was the viola
d’amore, a twelve-stringed invention of the mid-seventeenth
century. Typically, six or seven gut strings were played;
the lowest three usually wound. Then there was the same number
under the unfretted fingerboard; they acted as resonators.
The instrument was often tuned to the principal notes of
the tonic chord. This fact – and its rather ‘nasal’ resonance
- gave the viola d’amore a particularly sweet and soft sound – especially
when compared with that of the voila itself. Played on the
arm, the viola d’amore was almost the clavichord to the viola’s
harpsichord, if you like.
So, the eight concerti on this welcome CD from Fabio Biondi
and Europa Galante have a gentle and supple quality which
sits interestingly with Vivaldi’s driven and extrovert concerto
style. Biondi takes the viola d’amore lead and plays with
great aplomb and vigour. The instrument has sinuous, at times
almost ‘gypsy’ fruitiness - as in the largo of RV
395, for example. The temptation is to emphasise this at
the expense of the writing’s subtleties and nuances. This
is a temptation which Biondi effortlessly avoids: the allegro
of RV 396 is a good example of his subtler approach. The
exposition is unself-conscious and the pace at which Vivaldi’s
ideas are presented and developed neither obscures nor gives
undue weight to the consonance between solo instrument and
supporting players; but see below, theirs is no conventional
continuo role.
This is all to the good: Vivaldi’s own relationship with
the viola d’amore was a special one. He did not consider
it exotic, antique or a curiosity. Rather, he insisted on
teaching it to some of his ablest pupils at a time when it
was losing favour in the wider world. Biondi and his forces
have managed to reflect very well the status of the viola
d’amore for Vivaldi. The feeling of their playing is midway
between ‘every day’ and of a quiet pride in its recherché nature
by the unassuming specialist.
In fact this disc contains all of Vivaldi’s output for
the instrument except for four arias with viola d’amore obbligato.
RV 392 displays the twin characteristics of festivity and
reserve: the soloist helps to steer a careful balance between
the two moods; and does so with that apparent spontaneity
which Vivaldi achieved so well. RV 393 is more austere with
much dotted rhythm. It is full of drama – which means it
is full of contrasts. RV 394 also draws on dance - folk dance;
the ornamentation is a virtuoso’s delight. RV 395 uses court
dances; greater use is made of counterpoint and more subtle
rhythms. RV 396 is more complex still and seems to offer
yet greater opportunities for virtuosic display; its slow
movement is in sonata form. RV 397 is one of Vivaldi’s dour
and dolente works. The sorrow somehow comes from within
the music; it’s not forced, thanks to the cantabile nature
of the writing. On hearing the insistent ritornelli at
the beginning and end of this concerto, is it too fanciful
to associate such unhappiness with a certain anger on Vivaldi’s
part? Again, it’s to Biondi’s credit that such expressive,
emotive playing never swamps the music’s meaning. It is tuneful,
clear of texture and shot through with steady tempi without
losing bite for a second.
One should not be put off by this scope for virtuosity;
or refrain from approaching the music as music. Repeated
hearings of this generous CD will leave you inspired by the
variety, the understatement and the creative integrity with
which Vivaldi approached his task. This was a task which
looked forward to the more figurative style of the end of
the eighteenth century. One resource that Vivaldi used to
achieve this was to have his soloists play in concertante
style. They all perform the ritornelli as well as
the solo passages. There is thus less a sense of accompaniment;
more of a symphonic whole. RV 97 with horns and staccato
rhythms shows this nicely: full-scale drama making its impact
with orchestral tone as much as with melody and harmony.
The double concerto for viola d’amore and lute, RV 540,
was written later than the other concerti here; indeed it
was written at the very end of Vivaldi’s life. It seems to
hint at valediction and betrays perhaps tender regrets with
a wisp of nostalgia. Beautifully played here, its misty understatement
somehow draws us all the way into Vivaldi’s world and the
unfocused introversion of Venice.
So the music on this well-conceived and welcome CD is not
an oddity and should not be considered such. The playing
is ‘personal’; it approaches the intricacies required by
the music appropriately and yet acts as a quiet advocate
for this special area of Vivaldi’s concerto writing. The
liner-notes are adequate and the recording neither boxed
nor sonorous.
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