Duo Gelland - Vivaldi: Quattro sonate per due violini (2025)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover & Digital Booklet | Time - 45:45 minutes | 802 MB
Classical | Label: Olde Focus Recordings, Official Digital Download
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Front Cover & Digital Booklet | Time - 45:45 minutes | 802 MB
Classical | Label: Olde Focus Recordings, Official Digital Download
Antonio Vivaldi was a great violinist, as was his father, Giovanni Battista Vivaldi. It is no coincidence that Antonio Vivaldi’s first publication op. 1 in 1705 was a collection of sonatas for two violins and basso continuo. He dedicated most of his instrumental output to the violin, writing sonatas for one or two violins and concerti for up to four solo violins further writing compositions where the violin appears as a second main character alongside other instruments or voice. The violin constitutes a kind of nucleus in the art of Vivaldi congruent to his mastery of idiomatic violin technique, but he also had a deep and intimate understanding of the human voice. This enabled an ongoing original osmosis of vocal cords and bowed strings where he imbued his violin writing with the lyrical inflections and manners of a singer while at the same time expanding his vocal writing with the vocabulary of instrumental virtuosity. Back then the most daring experiments, from an instrumental as well as a formal standpoint, would usually take place in the concerto, while the sonata was the more conservative genre with close ties to Corelli’s models. However, that is not the case with this set of four sonatas for two violins, RV 68 and RV 70 in F major, RV 71 in G major and RV 77 in B flat major, “Suonate a 2 violini, da camera, da suonarsi anche senza il basso”. They were published posthumously, the manuscripts being preserved in the “Renzo Giordano” collection at the Biblioteca Nazionale in Turin. Judging by their style, the unusual choice of an optional continuo and quotes from compositions Vivaldi wrote in the 1730s, the sonatas appear to have originated later that decade.
Self-citation in Vivaldi’s times was a well established practice where you draw from your vast repertoire of motifs and musical materials to recombine and rework them into new forms. Vivaldi systematically and creatively practised this Ars Combinandi which Olivier Fourés compares to the canvases of Venetian vedutisti, such as Canaletto and Francesco Guardi. They were able to paint the same view a thousand times though always another time of day, another weather, another season, another mood. Federico Maria Sardelly explains in his “Catalogo delle concordanze musicali vivaldiane” how Vivaldi’s reuse of his own musical material is nothing like a simple copy-paste. Rather it was an intricate process of perfecting, honing, developing and adjusting his old materials for their new contexts. Such reimagining would typically take place with the original composition fresh in mind, often within a year. Characteristically an opera aria would reemerge in an instrumental piece and sonata elements would find their way into a concerto. The opposite was rarer, yet these duo sonatas are an example of exactly that; concerto materials being used in sonatas. Sonata RV 71 draws from the virtuosic Concerto for two violins RV 516 in the same key, tracing the two first movements as well as large sections of the third movement. The opening theme of Sonata RV 77 correlates with the opening of the third movement of Concerto for two violins RV 505 in C major. Sonata RV 70, the Larghetto, corresponds to the Cantabile of the solo violin concerto in E major, “l’amoroso” RV 271. Some of Vivaldi’s famous opera arias resurface in later operas, but also in a variety of instrumental works. He thus created “theatrical” concerti with motifs from an aria illustrating or underscoring the music’s drama. An example of this is the opening theme of the Sonata RV 70, which comes from the beginning of the aria “Del destin non dee lagnarsi” from the pasticco Bajazet (1735), which in turn comes from the aria “Del destin non vi lagnate” from the Olimpiade (1734).
One theory, suggested by Michael Talbot, is that these four sonatas were written for the concerts Vivaldi gave with his father on their trip to Central Europe in 1730, and that the ad libitum bass was intended for improvised performances when no cellist or harpsichordist was available. More plausibly the sonatas were written later when his father could hardly have performed them with him. The two had in fact played together many times, while his father was still at his peak, but the last years before Giovanni Battista died in 1736 he was of poor health and not active as a violinist. He was surely not able to play such technically demanding pieces anymore. It is plausible that the four sonatas were written with the young, talented violinist from the Ospedale della Pietà in mind, for example Chiara, for whom Vivaldi composed several virtuosic concerti in those years.
One novelty of these sonatas is their form, closely resembling that of the concerti for two violins. They even have three movements, thus breaking with the norm of Corelli’s suite-like four movement model, that Vivaldi usually adhered to just like Benedetto Marcello, Tommaso Albinoni and Georg Friedrich Händel. The idea of a continue line so simple that it can be omitted, suggests a desire to write instrumental duets without Leclair. The individual movements, with the exception of the Andante in Sonata RV 68, demonstrate the monothematic baroque sonatas’ typical binary form where each one of the two closely related sections is repeated and the second section presents the theme of the first section but in a different key.
These four sonatas treat the two violins as equals, with a continuous interchange of the same material, in playful chiasmus, where the order of musical cells is reversed, as well as in imitative counterpoint and in passage work where the violins move parallelly. The ever changing flow of the dialogue with a hint of “competitiveness” offers rich thematic, tonal and rhythmic variation and lyrical glimpses sounding like echos of opera arias. Antonio Vivaldi’s writing, in spite of its orderly structure, is strikingly inventive and versatile. The parts jump across two or three strings in large intervals employing bariolage techniques and many different means of creating subtle contrasts in dynamics and articulation. The ornamentation is varied and increases the virtuosic character in the fast movements while taking on an intensely expressive character in the slow movements. These sonatas appear denser than the concerti for two violins which partly is a consequence of incorporating bass fragments in a kind of virtual counterpoint making it possible to follow the harmonic patterns. The virtuosic interweaving of the two lines is freed of the basso continuo’s rhythmic-harmonic framework, yet flowing with great freedom and ease, highlighting an instrumental dialogue full of contrast and wit.
Each one of the slow movements has a very different vocal, arioso character. The expressive, almost pleading theme of the Andante of Sonata RV 68 comes with long progressions of ascending and descending scales, interrupted by short moaning phrases. Sonata RV 70, the slow movement, sings a cantabile melody with an introspective character rich in ornamentation and bold vocal contrasts called chiaroscuro. Once the second part starts the music suddenly turns into four-part harmony with simultaneous double stops. The intimate yet heavier character of the Larghetto in B minor of Sonata RV 71 is marked from the very first bars by its dotted rhythm, its wide intervals and the delicate passages played together by the violins. The pace is mournful in the Andante of Sonata RV 77, the violins constantly switching roles in an increasingly dense and embellished interplay.
The fast movements, on the other hand, seem to be the ideal setup for daring experiments like in the finale of Sonata RV 68, where instrumental figures in wide intervals create a texture that coagulates into very fast sequences with parallel thirds, intentionally leaving long pauses in the bass line. The opening Allegro of Sonata RV 70 with its nervous bowing and abundant use of double and triple stops also offers surprises, such as a brief passage of empty fifths and pedal D, almost the echo of a bagpipe. In the stomping dance steps characterising the final movement, Allegro molto, of the same sonata, the material consists of repeated notes and arpeggios, to which rapid semiquavers in parallel thirds, again, are added as well as trills and hammering figures. The sudden thematic shifts of the Allegri of Sonata RV 77 generate a fanciful, somewhat bewildered atmosphere exploding into pyrotechnic effects. The virtuosic potential of the two violins is exploited to the full in the Sonata in G major RV 71, where the writing appears more whimsical and less contrapuntal, full of abrupt motivic gestures. In the first Allegro the two voices respond to each other like echoes, with little overlapping, wide leaps and sharp dynamic contrasts. The third movement, Allegro molto, is based on the brilliant interweaving of arpeggios and rapidly descending scales leading into a relaxed melody in the second violin enveloped by the ample resonant arpeggios of the first violin, an enchanting conclusion, the pedal D giving it a musette-like flavour. In short, the music in these sonatas is richly imaginative, with an “inspiration” and an “inventiveness” that seem to dominate the balance of “harmony”. This is music capable of surprising the listener with the unexpected turns of its themes and unusual phrase structures. In its very concentrated form evoking a vast range of emotions from exuberantly gesturing capriciousness to melancholic, introverted singing, it already looks beyond Baroque aesthetics, at times prefiguring the “gallant” style.
The wealth of ideas contained in these sonatas, and the instrumental textures as they are notated, offer great freedom of interpretational approaches well beyond the choice of performing them with or without basso continuo. This becomes evident when you listen to the quite different unaccompanied performances on the record market, for example those by Catherine Mackintosh and Elizabeth Wallfisch (Chandos), Chiara Banchini and Véronique Méjean (Harmonia mundi), Maria Krestinskaya and Evgeny Sviridov (ERP), and Enrico Onofri and Lina Tur Bonet (Pan Classics). The reading offered by Duo Gelland is also very personal drawing inspiration from the free and rhapsodic style of Roy Goodman, but also from early 18th century Venetian painting, from the play of colour and chiaroscuro, and from the body language of artists such as Sebastiano Ricci, Giovanni Battista Piazzetta and Giambattista Tiepolo. In interpreting these sonatas, arranged on the CD according to character or “brightness”, placing at the extremes those with a more terse and light character (RV 71, RV 68), Cecilia and Martin Gelland demonstrate a perfect symbiosis, the result of a mature collaboration of over 25 years. However, although the material circulating between the two instrumental parts is always the same, the result is not simple repetition, but rather a confrontation or exchange between two different personas, an intimate dialogue achieved by accentuating the expressive characters, the “speaking” inflections, like in the Andante of Sonata RV 68 or emphasizing the dynamic fluctuations like in Sonata RV 71, the figures sometimes seeming to fade, getting highlighted or subtly absorbed and in the Allegro of Sonata RV 70 exploring dry, detached sonorities and an almost improvisatory freedom in the corresponding Larghetto. The great speed of execution in the Allegri brings out the virtuosic elements while the sound without vibrato highlights the rich chromatic nuances. All of that contributes to making this interpretation particularly vivid and electrifying, seeming to flash contemporary intuition into the flow of melodic energy.
Tracklist:
01 Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71_ I. Allegro
02 Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71_ II. Larghetto
03 Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71_ III. Allegro
04 Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70_ I. Allegro
05 Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70_ II. Larghetto
06 Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70_ III. Allegro molto
07 Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77_ I. Allegro
08 Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77_ II. Andante
09 Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77_ III. Allegro
10 Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68_ I. Allegro
11 Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68_ II. Andante
12 Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68_ III. Allegro
foobar2000 v2.24.1 / DR Meter v0.7
log date: 2025-09-19 11:38:24
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Analyzed: Duo Gelland / Vivaldi: Quattro sonate per due violini
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DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR15 -3.28 dBFS -24.51 dBFS 3:51 01-Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71: I. Allegro
DR14 -6.47 dBFS -25.60 dBFS 3:45 02-Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71: II. Larghetto
DR15 -4.32 dBFS -23.93 dBFS 4:02 03-Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71: III. Allegro
DR15 -3.50 dBFS -23.38 dBFS 3:22 04-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70: I. Allegro
DR14 -4.99 dBFS -26.42 dBFS 4:28 05-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70: II. Larghetto
DR14 -4.46 dBFS -23.61 dBFS 3:28 06-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70: III. Allegro molto
DR15 -3.95 dBFS -23.17 dBFS 4:30 07-Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77: I. Allegro
DR15 -7.05 dBFS -27.61 dBFS 6:21 08-Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77: II. Andante
DR13 -4.94 dBFS -22.94 dBFS 2:55 09-Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77: III. Allegro
DR14 -2.40 dBFS -22.82 dBFS 3:30 10-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68: I. Allegro
DR12 -6.22 dBFS -24.98 dBFS 2:26 11-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68: II. Andante
DR13 -4.76 dBFS -23.02 dBFS 3:07 12-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68: III. Allegro
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of tracks: 12
Official DR value: DR14
Samplerate: 96000 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 2430 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================
log date: 2025-09-19 11:38:24
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: Duo Gelland / Vivaldi: Quattro sonate per due violini
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR15 -3.28 dBFS -24.51 dBFS 3:51 01-Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71: I. Allegro
DR14 -6.47 dBFS -25.60 dBFS 3:45 02-Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71: II. Larghetto
DR15 -4.32 dBFS -23.93 dBFS 4:02 03-Trio Sonata in G Major, RV 71: III. Allegro
DR15 -3.50 dBFS -23.38 dBFS 3:22 04-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70: I. Allegro
DR14 -4.99 dBFS -26.42 dBFS 4:28 05-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70: II. Larghetto
DR14 -4.46 dBFS -23.61 dBFS 3:28 06-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 70: III. Allegro molto
DR15 -3.95 dBFS -23.17 dBFS 4:30 07-Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77: I. Allegro
DR15 -7.05 dBFS -27.61 dBFS 6:21 08-Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77: II. Andante
DR13 -4.94 dBFS -22.94 dBFS 2:55 09-Trio Sonata in B-Flat Major, RV 77: III. Allegro
DR14 -2.40 dBFS -22.82 dBFS 3:30 10-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68: I. Allegro
DR12 -6.22 dBFS -24.98 dBFS 2:26 11-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68: II. Andante
DR13 -4.76 dBFS -23.02 dBFS 3:07 12-Trio Sonata in F Major, RV 68: III. Allegro
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of tracks: 12
Official DR value: DR14
Samplerate: 96000 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 2430 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================
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