Vivaldi is Venice’s pet composer — you can’t walk through the city without noticing numerous signs advertising Vivaldi concerts at various churches and music schools. Thus it seems appropriate to draw attention to the latest news about the discovery of one part of a flute concerto by Vivaldi thought to be lost. (Excerpt)
According to an article in the BBC,
A lost flute concerto by the composer Vivaldi has been discovered at the National Archives of Scotland.
Il Gran Mogol, which belonged to a quartet of lost concertos, has been authenticated as the work of the 18th Century Italian composer.
Southampton University research fellow Andrew Woolley found the piece among the Marquesses of Lothian’s family papers at the archives in Edinburgh.
It will receive its modern day premiere at Perth Concert Hall in January.
The other pieces of the quartet – La Francia, La Spagna and L’Inghilterro — remain lost.
Antonio Vivaldi was born in Venice in 1678. He became a priest in 1703; due to his red hair, he became known known as “Prete Rosso.” As a young man he worked as the master of violin at the orphanage and music school Ospedale della Pietà, where his works and the children’s performances began drew favorable attention. (You can still attend concerts there today.) Over the course of his life he wrote numerous pieces, both liturgical and secular, but he is best known today for his Four Seasons, which he wrote in 1725. Vivaldi died in 1741 after garnering international popularity as a composer.
Although Vivaldi’s music fell out of favor after his death and for centuries thereafter, interest was revived in the early 1900s when a collection of his works was discovered in the library of a Piedmontese boarding school and eventually purchased and donated to the Turin Library. After the war, a Venetian enthusiast established the Istituto Italiano Antonio Vivaldi, and the works began to be recorded and disseminated once again, catching the attention of modern audiences (BaroqueMusic.Org).
Other Vivaldi works have been discovered since — besides this year’s discovery, Vivaldi works have been most recently unearthed in 2004, 2005, and 2006. It’s thought that many others may exist that have yet to be found.
We plan to take students to a Vivaldi concert while in Venice, although when and where depends on the schedule once we get there. I went to a little concert in a church while I was last there in 2006, and having seen how many are offered, I’m not worried about our finding a suitable performance while we’re there. Rick Steeves advises, “There’s music most nights at Scuola San Teodoro (east side of Rialto Bridge) and San Vitale Church (north end of Accademia Bridge), among others. Consider the venue carefully. The general rule of thumb: musicians in wigs and tights offer better spectacle, musicians in black and white suits are better performers.” I admit that I love to see people in period costume, but since it’s an educational trip, we may have to sacrifice the amusing visuals and go for performance quality, instead.
Image Source: Engraved portrait of Antonio Vivaldi, 1725, François Morellon de La Cave