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Antonio Vivaldi - Concerto No. 3 in F major, Op. 8, RV 293, "Autumn" (L'autunno), from "The Four Seasons"

“Autumn” by Nicolas Poussin, reflecting the rural imagery and seasonal symbolism echoed in Vivaldi’s concerto. The Sonnet I. Allegro The peasants celebrate with songs and dances The pleasure of a rich harvest; And, fired by Bacchus’ liquor, Many end their revelry in sleep. II. Adagio molto All are made to forget their cares and to sing and dance By the gentle air, tempered with pleasure, And by the season which invites so many To enjoy sweet slumber. III. Allegro At dawn the hunters set out, With horns and dogs and guns. The beast flees, and they follow its trail; Terrified and weary of the great noise Of guns and dogs, wounded, it struggles And, harried, dies. The Four Seasons is a cycle of four violin concertos , each offering a vivid musical portrayal of a season of the year. Autumn ( L’autunno ) is the third concerto , written in F major and published in 1725 as part of Il cimento dell’armonia e dell’inventione , Op. 8. In this concerto, Antonio Vivaldi depic...

Vivaldi - Introduction

Portrait of Antonio Vivaldi, the Venetian composer who transformed the Baroque concerto. The music of Antonio Vivaldi radiates vitality and physical presence. Its sounds breathe the air of the Mediterranean, capturing an exuberant joy of life that erupts in spontaneous excitement and pure aesthetic pleasure. Listening to Vivaldi reveals a richness of color that seems closer to painting than to abstract musical construction. His output—astonishing both in scale and variety—impresses through the inexhaustible freshness of its inspiration. Even when working within the dominant formal framework of his time, the tripartite concerto structure of allegro–adagio–allegro , Vivaldi never sounds constrained. On the contrary, he reinvigorates the form from within. The traditional concerto grosso became, in his hands, something entirely new. Vivaldi reshaped it into a forward-looking model that anticipated the symphonic idiom, allowing for the clear emergence of the soloist’s personality. He ima...

Vivaldi - Concerto for Strings in A Major, RV 158

During the Baroque era, European musical language gradually shifted from the equal polyphonic weave of the Renaissance toward a system grounded in tonal hierarchy and structural clarity. The establishment of basso continuo and the increasing emphasis on contrast did not merely represent technical developments; they signaled a new conception of musical architecture, in which tension unfolds through departure and return. Within this evolving aesthetic, the concerto became a field of formal precision. Antonio Vivaldi played a decisive role in shaping the three-movement fast–slow–fast structure and in consolidating the ritornello principle as an architectural foundation. Dramatic momentum arises not from thematic complexity, but from the alternation between stable recurring sections and episodes that explore new tonal areas. The Concerto for Strings in A Major, RV 158 is a characteristic concerto ripieno . There is no soloist; intensity emerges from the collective force of the string e...

Vivaldi - “Summer” (from Four Seasons), Violin concerto in G minor, Op.8, No. 2

Vivaldi’s Summer evokes suffocating heat and the sudden violence of storms, where nature turns oppressive and destructive. Among the four concertos of The Four Seasons , Summer stands as the most intense and dramatic. In this work, Antonio Vivaldi transforms nature into a living force, oppressive and threatening rather than benign. The concerto follows an accompanying sonnet—traditionally attributed to the composer himself—which guides the listener through heat, exhaustion, fear, and finally devastation. I. Allegro non molto "Under a hard season, fired up by the sun Languishes man, languishes the flock and burns the pine We hear the cuckoo’s voice; then sweet songs of the turtle dove and finch are heard. Soft breezes stir the air but threatening the North Wind sweeps them suddenly aside. The shepherd trembles, fearing violent storms and his fate." The opening movement unfolds beneath a merciless sun. The music conveys heaviness and fatigue through restrained motion and har...

Antonio Vivaldi – Symphony in C Major

In the Baroque era, the term “sinfonia” referred to a short instrumental composition, typically functioning as an introduction to an opera, cantata, or suite. Rather than an autonomous concert work, it served as a prelude to drama , preparing the listener’s ear and attention. During the 18th century, this form gradually evolved into what would later become the classical orchestral symphony. Antonio Vivaldi adopts the term sinfonia to describe a concise work for string orchestra, structured in three loosely connected movements . Though modest in scale, the piece reveals Vivaldi’s instinctive sense of contrast, gesture, and theatrical effect. Movements: I. Allegro molto The opening Allegro molto bursts forth with vigorous string writing , immediately commanding attention. The assertive violin figures and driving rhythm create a sense of urgency and brilliance. This bold opening may well have been a deliberate strategy by Vivaldi—to silence the audience and assert control over the mu...

Vivaldi – “Spring” (La primavera) from The Four Seasons, Concerto No. 1 in E major, Op. 8, RV 269

A vision of spring: Nicolas Poussin’s pastoral landscape echoes the renewal, light, and harmony found in Vivaldi’s La primavera . Spring ( La primavera ) opens Antonio Vivaldi ’s celebrated cycle The Four Seasons and stands as one of the earliest and most vivid examples of programmatic music. Each movement is closely linked to an accompanying sonnet—very likely written by Vivaldi himself—which guides the listener through a sequence of natural images and human scenes associated with the arrival of spring. I. Allegro “Springtime is upon us. The birds celebrate her return with festive song, and murmuring streams are softly caressed by the breezes. Thunderstorms, those heralds of Spring, roar, casting their dark mantle over heaven. Then they die away to silence, and the birds take up their charming songs once more.” The opening Allegro bursts forth with brightness and joy. A fresh, buoyant theme introduces the season, while solo violin and orchestral violins imitate birdsong through...