Vivaldi 522



“In 1711, Etienne Roger, the Amsterdam publisher, brought out what was to become the most influential music publication of the first half of the 18th century: Vivaldi’s L’estro armonico, Op. 3,” writes Michael Talbot, biographer of Antonio Vivaldi. Certainly, these 12 concertos for one, two, three, or four violins became widely known during their first years of publication. J.S. Bach knew them, and he transcribed six of them for organ or keyboard, one of which is this A-minor Concerto for two violins, strings, and basso continuo.

Vivaldi’s fast movements are famous for dash and verve, and the opening Allegro of this work is no exception. Add to that the catchiness of the themes, and you have the recipe that has fascinated listeners from J.S. Bach to our time. In the solo parts, Vivaldi gives us just the right balance between beauty and virtuosic display.

Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Vivaldi: The Four Seasons; Violin Concertos RV. 522, 565, 516 at Amazon.com. Read honest and unbiased product reviews from our users. This page lists all sheet music of Concerto, Op. 8 'Con due Violini obligati', RV 522 by Antonio Vivaldi (1678–1741).

Vivaldi Rv 522 Sheet Music

The Larghetto, too, is quintessentially Vivaldi. Like bookends, the full orchestra’s statements at the beginning and end enclose the soloists’ vocal-inspired melodiousness. The “bookends” consist merely of a brief bass line, which becomes a repeated cycle over which the soloists spin out free variations.

In the Presto finale, orchestra and soloists work together closely to give us a movement based on a multi-part ritornello theme. It all fits tightly together, with snippets of the theme launching brilliant passages from the soloists, until the close — which will leave many of us hungry for more.

Vivaldi 522

“In 1711, Etienne Roger, the Amsterdam publisher, brought out what was to become the most influential music publication of the first half of the 18th century: Vivaldi’s L’estro armonico, Op. 3,” writes Michael Talbot, biographer of Antonio Vivaldi. Certainly, these 12 concertos for one, two, three, or four violins became widely known during their first years of publication. J.S. Bach knew them, and he transcribed six of them for organ or keyboard, one of which is this A-minor Concerto for two violins, strings, and basso continuo.

Vivaldi’s fast movements are famous for dash and verve, and the opening Allegro of this work is no exception. Add to that the catchiness of the themes, and you have the recipe that has fascinated listeners from J.S. Bach to our time. In the solo parts, Vivaldi gives us just the right balance between beauty and virtuosic display.

Vivaldi 522

The Larghetto, too, is quintessentially Vivaldi. Like bookends, the full orchestra’s statements at the beginning and end enclose the soloists’ vocal-inspired melodiousness. The “bookends” consist merely of a brief bass line, which becomes a repeated cycle over which the soloists spin out free variations.

Vivaldi Concerto Rv 522

In the Presto finale, orchestra and soloists work together closely to give us a movement based on a multi-part ritornello theme. It all fits tightly together, with snippets of the theme launching brilliant passages from the soloists, until the close — which will leave many of us hungry for more.