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    Amandine Beyer, Gli Incogniti - Vivaldi: Concerti 'Nuova Stagione' (2012) [Official Digital Download - 24bit/88.2kHz]

    Posted By: peotuvave
    Amandine Beyer, Gli Incogniti - Vivaldi: Concerti 'Nuova Stagione' (2012) [Official Digital Download - 24bit/88.2kHz]

    Amandine Beyer, Gli Incogniti - Vivaldi: Concerti 'Nuova Stagione' (2012)
    FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88.2 kHz | Digital Booklet | 1.28 GB
    Genre: Classical | Official Digital Download - Source: Qobuz

    After a recording of The Four Seasons that was awarded several distinctions (ZZT080803), Amandine Beyer and her ensemble come back to Vivaldi with a selection of concerti.

    Composer: Antonio Vivaldi
    Conductor: Amandine Beyer
    Orchestra/Ensemble: Gli Incogniti

    Reviews: The booklet notes by musicologist Olivier Fourés make it clear that to Antonio Vivaldi’s relentless experimentation and recombination of ideas, Amandine Beyer and Gli Incogniti have added some twists and turns of their own. The collection opens with a Violin Concerto, which, according to Fourés, Vivaldi’s protegé, Anna Maria, probably performed at the Pietà. In this concerto, the reconstructed organ takes on the role of a second soloist, in the first movement answering the violin’s figuration and playing with it an exuberant game of shuttlecock and battledore (Fourés suggests that the concertos for violin and organ all derived from concertos for two violins). The violin and organ, hewing a bit closer to the role of continuo instrument, interweave unaccompanied in the slow movement; the orchestra supports their bubbling passagework in the finale. Fourés assigns the Cello Concerto, RV 420, to 1710 and likens its opening to that of a cello sonata (with very light continuo support). The ensemble brings a sparkling effervescence to this movement, which includes a ground bass demonstrating Vivaldi’s ability to make formal structures dance. The group points up Vivaldi’s contrasts of consonance and dissonance, and smooth lines and jagged ones, in the slow movement; they make the finale bustle with crackling kinetic energy. According to the notes, the Flute Concerto, RV 431, represents an arrangement Vivaldi made, possibly for use in the Pietà, of the Violin Concerto, RV 208, “Il Grosso Mogul.” Manuel Granatiero plays the first movement with spittingly sharp articulation, offers an ingratiating duo with the continuo in the central Andante , which the ensemble has imported from another of Vivaldi’s concertos, RV 438, and, with only modest ornamentation, lends energy to the finale.


    In the Violin Concerto, RV 194, which, like RV 808, purports to be a first recording, Beyer gives a virtuosic account of the solo part in the first and third movements (the last in exuberant triple time)—students who have only recently cut their teeth on Vivaldi’s op. 3 should take note: There’s a lot more to come. Simpler moments of repose offer relaxation in the slow one. By comparison, the opening of the Flute Concerto, RV 440, seems sedate if not academic. Fourés relates that Vivaldi later simplified the flute part, but that Beyer and the ensemble play the original version. Granatiero gives an especially ingratiating account of the brief slow movement and its dialog between the flute and the accompaniment. The Cello Concerto, RV 403, struts onto the stage with almost cocky assurance in a crisp performance of the first movement by Marco Ceccato and the ensemble; but Vivaldi moderates this assertiveness in the slow movement, piquantly accompanied by pizzicato strings; the concerto concludes with almost tongue-in-cheek impertinence in this reading.


    Two more violin concertos bring the entire collection to a close. The first, RV 235, resembles the more virtuosic among Vivaldi’s concertos in its almost extravagantly technical solos (Fourés notes that the arpeggios with which the soloist accompanies the last appearance of the ritornello anticipates Felix Mendelssohn’s “Violin Concerto No. 2”—it seemed only a matter of time until musicologists would eventually trump composers’ own designations in this way.) The slow movement offers a melody over sustained harmonies in the upper strings undergirded by a pizzicato bass, while the finale brings a return of the pyrotechnics that illuminated the first movement. According to Fourés, the organ and violin concerto that brings the program to a close represents an adaptation of the Concerto for Two Violins, RV 517, which he believes bears a great similarity to the organ and violin concertos in its counterpoint and in the balance between soloists. It’s an effective piece in this arrangement, in all three of its movements—its serious first one, its conversational second one, and its swirling finale.


    In clear recorded sound that nevertheless captures the reverberation of the Church of S. Pedro de Rates in Portugal, Gli Incognati has given a striking account of how much the composer could make of the addition of a few non-violinists (with strings alone, he could conjure more varied textures than many later orchestrators could extract from a full, expanded romantic orchestra). Recommended.

    Tracklisting:

    Concerto for violin and organ rv 808 *
    1. Allegro
    2. Largo
    3. Allegro
    Concerto for cello rv 420
    4. Andante
    5. Adagio
    6. Allegro
    Concerto for flute rv 431
    7. Allegro
    8. Andante [rv 438]
    9. Allegro
    Concerto for violin rv 194 *
    10. Allegro mà poco
    11. Largo
    12. Allegro
    Concerto for flute rv 440
    13. Allegro non molto
    14. Larghetto
    15. Allegro
    Concerto for cello rv 403
    16. Allegro
    17. Andante e spiritoso
    18. Allegro
    Concerto for violin rv 235
    19. Allegro non molto
    20. Adagio
    21. Allegro
    Concerto for violin and organ, after rv 517
    22. Allegro
    23. Andante
    24. Allegro

    * - World premiere recording

    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    Analyzed: Ensemble Gli Incogniti, Amandine Beyer / Antonio Vivaldi : Concerti « Nuova Stagione »
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

    DR Peak RMS Duration Track
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    DR13 -0.89 dB -18.42 dB 4:17 01-Concerto for Violin and Organ in C Major, RV 808: I. Allegro
    DR10 -7.03 dB -20.51 dB 2:41 02-II. Largo
    DR13 -2.09 dB -19.19 dB 3:43 03-III. Allegro
    DR13 -1.80 dB -17.16 dB 3:56 04-Concerto for Cello in A Minor, RV 420: I. Andante
    DR13 -0.60 dB -18.95 dB 3:18 05-II. Adagio
    DR12 -3.80 dB -19.13 dB 3:39 06-III. Allegro
    DR13 -2.32 dB -19.51 dB 2:37 07-Concerto for Traverso in E Minor, RV 431: I. Allegro
    DR12 -4.04 dB -20.36 dB 2:42 08-II. Andante
    DR13 -1.20 dB -19.12 dB 2:21 09-III. Allegro
    DR13 -0.24 dB -18.08 dB 3:58 10-Concerto for Violin in C Major, RV 194: I. Allegro mà poco
    DR13 -3.78 dB -23.51 dB 2:23 11-II. Largo
    DR13 -3.17 dB -19.13 dB 2:15 12-III. Allegro
    DR13 -1.37 dB -18.61 dB 2:53 13-Concerto for Traverso in A Minor, RV 440: I. Allegro non molto
    DR12 -6.19 dB -22.59 dB 2:14 14-II. Larghetto
    DR13 -1.41 dB -19.33 dB 3:05 15-III. Allegro
    DR14 -2.43 dB -19.93 dB 2:54 16-Concerto for Cello in D Major, RV 403: I. Allegro
    DR12 -8.34 dB -25.09 dB 2:11 17-II. Andante e spiritoso
    DR16 -0.33 dB -20.02 dB 2:30 18-III. Allegro
    DR13 -1.16 dB -18.87 dB 4:30 19-Concerto for Violin in D Minor, RV 235: I. Allegro non molto
    DR15 -3.63 dB -23.13 dB 3:31 20-II. Adagio
    DR14 -0.93 dB -19.35 dB 3:37 21-III. Allegro
    DR12 -1.82 dB -18.40 dB 3:29 22-Concerto for Violin and Organ in G Minor, After RV 517: I. Allegro
    DR11 -4.70 dB -20.94 dB 1:56 23-II. Andante
    DR12 -0.14 dB -15.91 dB 3:07 24-III. Allegro
    ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

    Number of tracks: 24
    Official DR value: DR13

    Samplerate: 88200 Hz
    Channels: 2
    Bits per sample: 24
    Bitrate: 2526 kbps
    Codec: FLAC
    ================================================================================


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