Showing posts with label violin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label violin. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

The Four Seasons

Antonio Vivaldi is a fun character in music history. He became a priest in Venice, but got out of saying mass regularly. He was able to use that status to basically coast off of while he spent most of his life writing concertos and opera. He directed an orchestra of orphan girls at the Pieta hospital, and would have them perform at church regularly. It was these girls that he wrote his concerti for, mostly. In a little historical background, apparently many of the girls were not actually orphans, but were basically the bastard children of the nobles who were abandoned. Vivaldi was also a major opera composer at the time, although his forays into that genre are not as well remembered today. Somehow, despite being decently popular in his lifetime, he ended up dying in Vienna too poor for anything but a pauper's grave.
Vivaldi was very influential in the form of the concerto, creating a style that Bach emulated soon after. His concertos, unlike those later on, were written mostly for strings, including the orchestra, although he would occasionally use bassoons or flutes and the like as soloists too. His concerti use the ritornello form that was so prominent in that time period, which basically meant that there were contrasting sections of a work where the orchestra would play a theme, and then the soloist would play a section, and then the orchestra would come in again, repeated until the end of the movement. Vivaldi's two most notable collections of concertos are his opus 3, L'estro Armonico, and his Opus 8, The Contest Between Harmony and Invention. Opus 8's first four entries are called The Four Seasons, because they are accompanied by sonnets that we think Vivaldi wrote detailing the program of the music. If you read the text, you'll actually find a lot of stuff that is very obviously corresponding to the sonnets. The concerto form at this time solidified into the standard setting of a fast movement, then a slow movement, then another fast movement. The selections today will be Spring, Fall, and Winter. My recording recommendation is of Gil Shaham and the Orpheus Orchestra, which is in my opinion the best made recording of the work, because it keeps it's baroque feel intact but is kept from every being stuffy. Also on there is a recording of Fritz Kreisler's Concerto in C, that is supposed to emulate Vivaldi. Kreisler is the most important violin player from the early 20th century, and for some unknown reason, he would frequently write music then try to perform it as if it were written by some other, long dead composer. He is still played, mostly because of his arrangements for violin and piano of things like the Devil's Trill sonata.
Here are the videos. To wit, I'm not as enamored of the performance in them as I am of the Gil Shaham recording, but they will work for now, and if you're into sand painting, I guess they'll be up your alley.



Monday, July 13, 2009

What it is

So, this is a brand new blog I'm making, and it's all going to be about cool things in classical music that I like. The focus is going to particularly be on things that I think are important in the development of music, especially things that are monumental pinnacles. However, no matter what some people who know my opinions on music think, I'm not so completely square that those are the only things I like, so I'll occasionally mix it up with modern music, or else some really old stuff like chant and organum to trace the trajectory of music a little better. I will also be posting an album recommendation or two, and maybe some anecdotes and whatnot to keep things a little interesting, so I hope you all enjoy.

My first piece is in honor of the blog's namesake, Nadezdha von Meck. She was a Russian patron of the arts most well known for financing Peter Tchaikovsky, but who also in an interesting twist of fate, hired a young Claude Debussy to tutor her daughter in music. Debussy was then fired because he wanted to marry said daughter. The first post is also in honor of my violin teacher Tiberius Klausner, who told me once that one of his proudest accomplishments was learning to play Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto. It really is a beautiful piece of music, not to mention extremely impressive to perform, so I hope you enjoy. Anyone who has heard some of Tchaikovsky's other lyrical works will know that this is a prime example of his melodic genius, because some of the passages here are almost saccharine-like. Here is a video of David Oistrakh, who is an iconic Russian performer and part of the generation of Jewish violinists that completely dominated violin performance in the mid-20th century. Unfortunately, I do not know who the orchestra is, and due to youtube size constraints, the movement is broken into two videos, but the performance is marvelous. So without further ado, part 1

and part 2

A recording recommendation I would make for this work is Isaac Stern with Eugene Ormandy. This album also features them performing the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto in E minor, which I may spend some time in a future post discussing, but is a marvelous work that you probably have heard even if you don't know it. Isaac Stern also was the subject of a documentary about his trip to perform in communist China, entitled "From Mao To Mozart" that some of you might enjoy.
Anyway, I hope this is enough for a first post, and look forward to coming back to mine the depths of music history for you soon.