Vivaldi, Antonio
(1678-1741), Italian composer and violinist, the most influential of his
age.
Vivaldi was born March 4, 1678, in Venice, and was trained by his father,
a violinist at Saint Mark's Cathedral. Ordained a priest in 1703, Vivaldi
began teaching that year at the Ospedale della Pietà, a conservatory
for orphaned girls. He was associated with the Pietà, usually as
music director, until 1740, training the students, composing concertos
and oratorios for weekly concerts, and meanwhile establishing an international
reputation. From 1713 on, Vivaldi was also active as an opera composer
and producer in Venice and traveled to Rome, Mantua, and elsewhere to oversee
performances of his operas. In about 1740 he accepted a position at the
court of Emperor Charles VI in Vienna. He died in Vienna on July 28, 1741.
Compositions
Vivaldi's works include more than 500 concertos and over 70 sonatas;
about 45 operas; and religious music, including the oratorio Juditha Triumphans
(1716), the Gloria in D (1708), masses, and motets. His instrumental sonatas
are more conservative than his concertos, and his religious music often
reflects the operatic style of the day as well as the alternation of full
group and soloists that he helped establish in the concerto. His most famous
and somewhat younger contemporary, J. S. Bach, studied Vivaldi's work during
his formative years, and some of Vivaldi's violin concertos and sonatas
exist only as transcriptions, mostly for harpsichord, made by Bach.
Influence of Concertos
Vivaldi's concertos provided a model for this genre throughout Europe,
affecting the style even of his older contemporaries. Over 300 of his concertos
are solo concertos (220 for violin, others for bassoon, cello, oboe, and
flute). Others are concerti grossi, 25 for two solo violins and 32 for
three or more instruments. A few are ripieno concertos (for orchestra without
soloists).
Vivaldi was the first composer who consistently used the ritornello
form that became standard for the fast movements of concertos. The ritornello
was a section that recurred in different keys and was played by the full
orchestra. It alternated with soloist-dominated sections (episodes) that
in his works were often virtuosic in character. He virtually established
the three-movement format for the concerto and was among the first to introduce
cadenzas for soloists. His opus 8 concertos entitled The Four Seasons are
early examples of orchestral program music. Like much of his music, they
are marked by vigorous rhythms and strong contrasts.
"Vivaldi, Antonio," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1996 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.