Also, Concerto in F
for Three Violins; Part: Passacaglia. Anne Akiko Meyers, violin; David Lockington,
English Chamber Orchestra. eOne EOM-CD-7790.
What? Another one? Yet another Seasons? Wait for it: The last time I reviewed a disc from American
concert violinist Anne Akiko Meyers it was The
Bach Album, which contained the equally ubiquitous Bach violin concertos. I
found the performances so good, I continue to recommend them in my “Basic
Classical Collection on Compact Disc.” Now we have her renditions of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, accompanied by Maestro
David Lockington and the celebrated English Chamber Orchestra, and the
performances are almost as delightful as her Bach. While the music may be
shopworn from overuse, Ms. Meyer does them up in a lively and refreshing style.
Before commenting on the interpretations, though, there’s
an interesting note about the violin she uses for the recording. Ms. Meyers
usually performs on a variety of Stradivari, ones she either owns or has access
to use. This time, however, she uses the 1741 Vieuxtemps Guarneri del Gesu,
built, coincidentally, in the year of Vivaldi’s death. In 2013 an anonymous
buyer purchased the instrument for an unsurpassed amount of over $16,000,000
and announced that he would allow Meyers lifetime use of the instrument. Not
only do connoisseurs consider it one of the finest violins in the world, no one
has ever used it in the studio before; it makes its commercial recording debut
here.
Anyway, back to the Italian violinist and composer Antonio
Vivaldi (1678-1741). Although he wrote hundreds of pieces of music, folks
probably recognize him best for The Four Seasons, the little three-movement
tone poems with their chirping birds, galumphing horses, barking dogs, dripping
icicles, and howling winds. The composer meant them to accompany descriptive
sonnets, making up the first four concertos of a longer work he wrote in 1723
titled Il cimento dell'armonia e dell'inventione
(The Contest between Harmony and
Invention). Most people hardly remember the other concertos in the set.
Under Ms. Meyer, the familiar Spring concerto is appropriately cheerful, made even more so due to
the violinist not overdoing anything in the piece. You won't find any
exaggerated tempos (although hers are quick and spirited in a refined manner);
no unusual dynamic contrasts; no extraordinary slowing down or speeding up for
dramatic effect. Ms. Meyers keeps everything moving along at a fairly
conventional, though stimulating pace. It's probably the way most listeners
want their Seasons--enjoyably
colorful and invigorating, without being annoyingly different just for the sake
of being different. The Largo, with
its meadows and fields, sounds properly peaceful, yet it never lags. And the
final Allegro capers along
cheerfully.
Throughout all of the music, Ms. Meyers's violin sounds
exquisitely gorgeous in tone and playing, and Maestro Lockington's
accompaniment with the ECO is precise and agreeable.
Summer gets an
even more highly characterized reading than Spring,
with the season's heat oppressive, the birds chatty, the wind picking up
nicely, and the threat of storm just a tad menacing. When the summer storm does
arrive, it does so in a whirlwind of energy. Very invigorating.
Ms. Meyer begins Autumn
a touch too energetically for my taste, but to each his own. The music soon
enough slips away into a fitting, if not altogether traditional-sounding
slumber. Then, the closing hunt goes well, if, oddly, a bit less animated than
I would have expected.
Winter has
always been my favorite segment of the Seasons,
with its icicles and frozen landscape, its hurrying to warmth, its delectable Largo by the hearth, and its final hints
of ice and chill outside. It's here that Ms. Meyers and company outdo
themselves in musical representation. As listeners, we should see and feel
these surroundings, and we do.
Coupled with The
Four Seasons are Vivaldi's Concerto
for Three Violins in F major, RV551, which makes a handy companion piece.
What is more out of the way is Arvo Part's Passacaglia,
which the composer wrote in 2003 for violin and piano and later arranged for
violin and orchestra as we find it here. It's true the music of the Baroque
period inspired Part to write the piece, yet it remains a curious choice to
complement the Vivaldi. Yet complement the Vivaldi it does, especially as it
directly follows his Winter concerto.
The two have a surprisingly lot in common, as Ms. Meyers points out in her
reading.
Producer Susan Napodano DelGiorno and engineer Phil
Rowlands recorded the music for Entertainment One at Henry Wood Hall, London,
in 2013. The sound is pretty typical of today's better digital recordings. It's
ultraclean and clear, a little bright and forward, with a somewhat glossy sheen
on the strings. What appears to be a harpsichord sounds, for reasons unknown,
so far in the background it's practically in another room. Ms. Meyers's violin
shows up in the foreground, not distractingly forward but close enough to
remind us whose show this is. Midrange transparency is OK, as are ambient
bloom, frequency extremes, and overall dynamics. Not bad sound; just adequate
for the occasion.
Finally, a couple of minor carps among all these otherwise
lovely goings on: First, either Ms. Meyers or her producers appear to insist
upon not providing track times; they didn’t do it on The Bach Album, and they don’t do it here. I don’t know why they
exclude timings; maybe they don’t think listeners care. Well, at least they
provide a few good program notes on the composers and their music. I also
didn't care much for the way the booklet folds out a foot-and-a-half long,
making it difficult to hold. Nor did I like the idea of their printing the
booklet in white text on a dark-gray background, making it even harder to read.
Luckily, it doesn't diminish one's appreciation for the performances.
JJP
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
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