Tango Seasons (Capella Gabetta)

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Antonio Vivaldi, Roberto Molinelli, Astor Piazzolla

Genre:

Orchestral

Label: Sony Classical

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 67

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: 19075 92549-2

19075 92549-2. Tango Seasons (Capella Gabetta)

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Estate Reloaded Roberto Molinelli, Composer
Andres Gabetta, Violin
Cappella Gabetta, Conductor
Roberto Molinelli, Composer
(Las) Cuatro Estaciones porteñas, 'The Four Seasons' Astor Piazzolla, Composer
Andres Gabetta, Violin
Astor Piazzolla, Composer
Cappella Gabetta, Conductor
(12) Concerti for Violin and Strings, '(Il) cimento dell'armonia e dell'inventione', Movement: Nos 1 - 4, 'The Four Seasons' Antonio Vivaldi, Composer
Andres Gabetta, Violin
Antonio Vivaldi, Composer
Cappella Gabetta, Conductor
Mario Stefano Pietrodarchi, Bandoneon
Piazzolla on Baroque period instruments? I was somewhat sceptical before slipping the CD into the player, but my doubts were quickly swept away by these swaggering, gritty accounts of the tanguero’s Four Seasons in Buenos Aires. Indeed, the strings’ bite and slightly edgy tone sounds stylistically apposite. I also find Roberto Molinelli’s well-wrought and respectful arrangements preferable to the interventionist recompositions of Leonid Desyatnikov recorded by Kremer (Nonesuch, 5/00) and others. Molinelli adds subtle polyphonic detail to bolster rhythmic momentum, and even the few neo-Baroque touches – like the brief harpsichord solo he interpolates near the beginning of ‘Winter’ – give off a faint whiff of psychedelia that’s not out of place in these works from the late ’60s.

Mario Stefano Pietrodarchi’s bandoneón serves as an anchor for the ensemble and his solos are arrestingly expressive – listen, say, to how he makes his instrument weep at 1'17" in ‘Autumn’. But the spotlight is firmly trained on Andrés Gabetta, and the Argentinian violinist really digs in, playing with a fearlessness that was a hallmark of Piazzolla’s own interpretative style. His Vivaldi is equally incendiary; and while we’re fairly inundated with high-octane, period-instrument recordings of these Op 8 concertos, Gabetta’s still feels vital. He favours very fast tempos in the outer movements, but as they have the feeling of one-to-a-bar, they don’t feel at all rushed. He can also be extremely free with the tempo, often going to extremes in order to bring the music’s imagery to life, as he does in the drunken celebration of the opening Allegro of Autumn’. What’s most remarkable, perhaps, is how fresh and spontaneous everything sounds: these may be studio recordings but they convey the frisson of a live performance. Mention must be made, too, of the excellence of the Cappella Gabetta, who follow their leader every step of the way, as well as of the marvellous physicality of the recorded sound.

Estate Reloaded, Molinelli’s rewrite of the final movement of Vivaldi’s ‘Summer’ in the tango nuevo style (with a snippet or two of Piazzolla snuck in), is a clever and satisfying encore.

Explore the world’s largest classical music catalogue on Apple Music Classical.

Included with an Apple Music subscription. Download now.

Gramophone Print

  • Print Edition

From £6.67 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Digital Club

  • Digital Edition
  • Digital Archive
  • Reviews Database
  • Full website access

From £8.75 / month

Subscribe

                              

If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.