The Four Seasons and the rest of the concertos in Op. 8 represent Vivaldi's remarkable innovation in the field of the Baroque concerto. This detailed guide examines the work's origin and construction in a way that enables the reader to distinguish what is extraordinary about the Seasons and what constitutes the composer's customary method of 'characterising' the solo concerto. Drawing on recent research and his own expertise in the appraisal of Vivaldi's manuscripts, the author draws interesting and sometimes startling conclusions about the conception of the Seasons, the origin of their programme, the dating of the concertos and the rationale behind the collection's ritornello-form structures and aria-like slow movements. The significance of Vivaldi's idiosyncratic art is thus revealed in some of the most popular concert music of all time.
Abandoned as an infant, fourteen-year-old Anna Maria dal Violin is one of the elite musicians living in the foundling home where the "Red Priest," Antonio Vivaldi, is maestro and composer. Fiercely...
Vivaldi's Muse explores the life of Annina Girò, Antonio Vivaldi's longtime protégée. Annina first falls under the spell of the fiery and intriguing prete rosso (red-haired priest) at a young age,...
Antonio Vivaldi's music has mesmerized audiences for three hundred years.A less known story than his musical genius was the impressive figure that he was in Venetian society; the young, red-haired...
One year after shutting down the murder-for-hire outfit known as the Greenwich Global Group, retired assassin Rōnin Phythian now is pursuing justice for the victims of his crimes, while seeking...