Vivaldi: The Four Seasons (Orquesta Reino de Aragón)

🎧 Follow the Orchestra on Spotify: 🍎 iTunes & Apple Music: 💻 Facebook: 💿 Order “The Four Seasons“ (Vinyl) on Amazon! 🌺 USA: IT: ​ DE: ​ FR: ​ ES: UK: These tracks are available for sync licensing in web video productions, corporate videos, films, ads and music compilations. For business inquiries and licensing please contact info@ 👉 The HalidonMusic Sync Licensing platform is now live at 📧 Subscribe to our newsletter and get a 50% discount for 10 days: ☕ If you like what we do and would like to support us, you can now buy us a coffee: Donations will go towards keeping the YouTube channel going and funding new recording sessions with our amazing team of artists. Thank you! 🙏 Antonio Vivaldi The Four Seasons Violin: Gabor Szabo Orquesta Reino de Aragón Conductor: Ricardo Casero 00:00 Violin Concerto No. 1 in E Major, RV 269 “Spring“ I. Allegro II. Largo e pianissimo sempre III. Allegro pastorale 10:28 Violin Concerto No. 2 in G Minor, RV 315 “Summer“ I. Allegro non molto II. Adagio e piano - Presto e forte III. Presto 21:29 Violin Concerto No. 3 in F Major, RV 293 “Autumn“ I. Allegro II. Adagio molto III. Allegro 33:15 Violin Concerto No. 4 in F Minor, RV 297 “Winter“ I. Allegro non molto II. Largo III. Allegro --- The Four Seasons (Italian: Le quattro stagioni) is a group of four violin concerti by Italian composer Antonio Vivaldi, each of which gives musical expression to a season of the year. These were composed around 1718−1720, when Vivaldi was the court chapel master in Mantua. They were published in 1725 in Amsterdam, together with eight additional concerti, as Il cimento dell’armonia e dell’inventione (The Contest Between Harmony and Invention). The Four Seasons is the best known of Vivaldi’s works. Though three of the concerti are wholly original, the first, “Spring“, borrows patterns from a sinfonia in the first act of Vivaldi’s contemporaneous opera Il Giustino. The inspiration for the concertos is not the countryside around Mantua, as initially supposed, where Vivaldi was living at the time, since according to Karl Heller they could have been written as early as 1716–1717, while Vivaldi was engaged with the court of Mantua only in 1718. They were a revolution in musical conception: in them Vivaldi represented flowing creeks, singing birds (of different species, each specifically characterized), a shepherd and his barking dog, buzzing flies, storms, drunken dancers, hunting parties from both the hunters’ and the prey’s point of view, frozen landscapes, and warm winter fires. Unusual for the period, Vivaldi published the concerti with accompanying sonnets (possibly written by the composer himself) that elucidated what it was in the spirit of each season that his music was intended to evoke. The concerti therefore stand as one of the earliest and most detailed examples of what would come to be called program music—in other words, music with a narrative element. Vivaldi took great pains to relate his music to the texts of the poems, translating the poetic lines themselves directly into the music on the page. For example, in the middle section of “Spring“, when the goatherd sleeps, his barking dog can be heard in the viola section. The music is elsewhere similarly evocative of other natural sounds. Vivaldi divided each concerto into three movements (fast–slow–fast), and, likewise, each linked sonnet into three sections. (Source: Wikipedia) #vivaldi #thefourseasons #baroquemusic
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