Antonio Vivaldi was a 17th and 18th century composer who’s become one of the most renowned figures in European classical music. Vivaldi Browser Community. Here’s why you'll definitely want to sign up. With a Vivaldi account you can synchronise your Vivaldi browser data, participate in forum discussions, get a free webmail account ([email protected]), and host a blog on Vivaldi.net (YourUsername.vivaldi.net).
op4, 'La Stravaganza'
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La stravaganza (The Eccentricity), Op. 4, is a set of concertos written by Antonio Vivaldi in 1712–1713. The set was first published in 1716 in Amsterdam and was dedicated to Venetian nobleman Vettor Delfino,[1] who had been a violin student of Vivaldi's.[2] All of the concertos are scored for solo violin, strings, and basso continuo; however, some movements require extra soloists (such as a second violin and/or cello solo).
List of concerti[edit]
These works are laid out in the following movements:
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 1 in B-flat major, RV 383a:
- Largo e cantabile
- Allegro
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 2 in E minor, RV 279:
- Allegro
- Largo
- Allegro
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 3 in G major, RV 301:
- Allegro
- Largo
- Allegro assai
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 4 in A minor, RV 357:
- Allegro
- Grave e sempre piano
- Allegro
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 5 in A major, RV 347:
- Allegro
- Largo
- Allegro (moderato)
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 6 in G minor, RV 316a:
- Allegro
- Largo
- Allegro
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 7 in C major, RV 185:
- Largo
- Allegro (molto)
- Largo
- Allegro
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 8 in D minor, RV 249:
- Allegro – Adagio – Presto – Adagio
- Allegro
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 9 in F major, RV 284:
- Allegro
- Largo
- Allegro
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 10 in C minor, RV 196:
- Spiritoso
- Adagio
- Allegro
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 11 in D major, RV 204:
- Allegro
- Largo
- Allegro assai
La Stravaganza, Op.4, Concerto No. 12 in G major, RV 298:
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- Spiritoso e non presto
- Largo
- Allegro
Notable Recordings[edit]
- Vivaldi: La Stravaganza (12 Violin Concertos, Op. 4), Zino Vinnikov (Violin & Music Director), Soloists' Ensemble of the St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, September 2014.[3][4][5]
- Vivaldi, La Stravaganza, Rachel Podger (Violin), Channel Classics, 2003, CCS SA 19503. This recording won the Gramophone Award for Best Baroque Recording of 2003.[6][7]
References[edit]
- ^Heller, Karl (1997). Antonio Vivaldi: The Red Priest of Venice. Amadeus Press. p. 68. ISBN978-1-57467-015-8.
- ^Michael Talbot, Vivaldi (London: J.M. Dent & Sons, Ltd, 1978), 71.
- ^'Zino Vinnikov'. Spotify. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
- ^'Zino Vinnikov & Soloists' Ensemble of the St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra: Vivaldi: La Stravaganza (12 Violin Concertos, Op. 4) - Music on Google Play'. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
- ^♫ Vivaldi: La Stravaganza (12 Violin Concertos, Op. 4) - Zino Vinnikov. Listen @cdbaby, retrieved 22 November 2017CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^'Gramophone - November 2003'. www.exacteditions.com. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
- ^'Linn Records'. www.linnrecords.com. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
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Vivaldi
La tempesta di mare ('The Storm at Sea'), a flute concerto in F Major (RV 433; P. 261), is the first of Six Flute Concertos, Op. 10 by Antonio Vivaldi, published in the late 1720s. La tempesta di mare may also refer to two earlier versions of the same concerto, RV 98, a concerto da camera (chamber concerto) featuring the flute, from which Vivaldi derived the concerto grosso RV 570.
La tempesta di mare may also refer to the violin concerto with the same name published in the same 1725 edition as the Four Seasons: this is however a different composition than the three flute concerto variants.
History[edit]
Vivaldi helped to bring the concerto to a mainstream form, not only by expanding on ritornello form, but by emphasizing the slow movements of concertos, which were in a two part binary form. Solo instruments that Vivaldi wrote concertos for include violin, bassoon, cello, oboe, viola d'amore, flute and mandolin.[1] He also wrote ensemble concertos (concerto grosso and/or chamber concerto), where three or more soloists participate, which number over 30 written. Vivaldi had an extensive influence on the concerto genre, helping to pioneer the structure, expanding the boundaries of the genre, and showing that any instrument could have a concerto.[citation needed]
Vivaldi's contemporaries and predecessors such as Purcell, Bach and Handel featured the flute (traverso and/or recorder) significantly in their works.[2] RV 433 was conceived as a concerto for transverse flute in D.[3] The first publication of the concerto, included as No. 1 in Vivaldi's Op. 10, VI Concerti a Flauto Traverso, was around 1728 in Amsterdam, by Michel-Charles Le Cène. The La tempesta di mare name for the concerto is given in the score.[4]
Giving a musical impression of a storm was a popular theme in baroque music. For instance operas like Marin Marais' Alcyone contained famous storm scenes. Telemann wrote a secular cantata La Tempesta (The Storm), TWV 20:42, after an Italian libretto by Metastasio. Vivaldi wrote several tempesta di mare concertos.[5] Two variants of RV 433, RV 98 and RV 570, are in the chamber concerto and concerto grosso format respectively.[6] RV 98 is scored for flute, oboe, violin, bassoon, and continuo, from which Vivaldi created the RV 570 concerto grosso by adding orchestral violins to reinforce the solo oboe and violin, and a viola part doubling the bass at the upper octave.[7][8][9][10] An unrelated tempesta di mare concerto, a violin concerto in E♭ major, RV 253, is included as No. 5 in Vivaldi's Op. 8 Il cimento dell'armonia e dell'inventione.[9][11]The Four Seasons, the first four concertos of that collection, also include a few musical depictions of stormy weather.
According to Federico Maria Sardelli the chamber concerto version of La tempesta di mare, RV 98, was possibly written for Ignazio Sieber, during the time in which he worked with the composer at the Ospedale della Pietà from 1713 to 1716.[3] This means that this version of the concerto may have been the earliest flute concerto ever composed, and also the first flute piece to include the problematic high F6.[7] Sardelli's conclusions, if correct, would overturn 'the received scholarly view that, rather than writing for the recorder in the first two or three decades of the eighteenth century, then switching over to the flute, Vivaldi already preferred the flute in the 1710s and did not start writing for the recorder until the early 1720s'.[12]
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Structure[edit]
The movements of the concerto are:
Reception[edit]
RV 433 is not among the five concertos Vivaldi composed for the recorder (RV 441–445). Being one of the 14 concertos Vivaldi wrote for traverso (including one for two traversos), the concerto is nonetheless often performed as a recorder concerto, like many of these other traverso concertos. Thus it is for instance included in Dan Laurin's Recorder Concertos CD.[13] There are dozens of recordings of the concerto, performed on the traverso as well as the recorder, for instance by Jean-Pierre Rampal in the 1960s,[14] by Frans Brüggen and by Barthold Kuijken with La Petite Bande.[15]
References[edit]
- ^Sadie, Stanley 'Vivaldi, Antonio' in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London: 1980, pp. 31-45
- ^Sadie, Stanley, 'Recorder' in The New Grove Dictionary of Musical Instruments. London: 1984. pp. 205-215
- ^ abSardelli 2007, 138
- ^(score:) Le Cène & c.1728.
- ^Talbot, Michael. 'Dictionary' p. 183 in The Vivaldi Compendium. Boydell Press, 2011. ISBN9781843836704
- ^(score:) Dover 2002, p. 172.
- ^ abPowell 2008, 121
- ^Selfridge-Field 1978, 336
- ^ abTalbot 2001, Work-List
- ^Talbot 2004, 1021
- ^Talbot 1993, p. 121.
- ^Lasocki 2008, 496
- ^Dan Laurin and Drottningholm Baroque Ensemble. Antonio Vivaldi: Recorder Concertos. Bis, 1994
- ^Jean-Pierre Rampal with I Solisti Veneti conducted by Claudio Scimone. 'No. 1 in F major, P. 261: La tempesta di mare' in Antonio Vivaldi: The complete flute concertos. New York: CBS Masterworks, 1967. OCLC42524796
- ^Concert voor fluit en strijkorkest RV.433, op.10, nr.1 in F gr.t., 'La tempesta di mare' at www.muziekweb.nl
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Sources[edit]
Score editions
![Vivaldi browser deutsch Vivaldi browser deutsch](https://tomplay.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Vivaldi_Spring_1%20-%20.png)
![Vivaldi Vivaldi](/uploads/1/1/1/8/111830457/662904148.jpg)
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- Le Cène c.1728: Vivaldi, AntonioVI Concerti a Flauto Traverso ..., Op. 10. Amsterdam: Michel-Charles Le Cène, c.1728. OCLC658705889
- Dover 2002: Vivaldi, Antonio. Six Flute Concertos Op. 10, in Full Score: With Related Concertos for Other Wind Instruments, edited by Eleanor Selfridge-Field. New York: Dover, 2002. ISBN9780486422435.
Other
- Lasocki, David. 'Vivaldi's Music for Flute and Recorder. By Federico Maria Sardelli. Translated by Michael Talbot. Burlington, VT: Ashgate in association with Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi/Fondazione 'Giorgio Cini', 2007. [xxii, 336 p. ISBN9780754637141'. [Review] Notes, second series, 64, no. 3 (March 2008): 496–98.
- Powell, Ardal. 'Vivaldi's Flutes: Federico Maria Sardelli, Vivaldi's Music for Flute and Recorder, trans. by Michael Talbot (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007)'. Early Music 36, no. 1 (February 2008): 120–22.
- Sardelli, Federico Maria. Vivaldi's Music for Flute and Recorder, translated by Michael Talbot. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd, 2007. ISBN075463714X.
- Selfridge-Field, Eleanor. 'Vivaldi's Esoteric Instruments'. Early Music 6, no. 3 (July 1978): 332–38.
- Talbot, Michael. Vivaldi, second edition. Master Musicians Series. London: J. M. Dent and Sons, 1993. Reprinted in paperback, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2000.
- Talbot, Michael. 'Vivaldi, Antonio (Lucio)' in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001.
- Talbot, Michael. 'Antonio Vivaldi. Six Flute Concertos, Op. 10, in Full Score: With Related Concertos for Other Wind Instruments. Edited with an introduction by Eleanor Selfridge-Field. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, c2002. Introd., p. vii-ix; facsim. reprod., 1 p.; score, p. 1–166; the Dover edition, p. 169–76. ISBN0-486-42243-7'. Notes, second series 60, no. 4 (June 2004): 1021–24.
External links[edit]
Vivaldi Deutsch
- Recording by the San Francisco Early Music Ensemble, Voices of Music, with Hanneke van Proosdij on the recorder (official YouTube channel)
- Flute Concerto in F major, RV 433: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
Vivaldi Four Seasons Deutsche Grammophon
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