The Avison Ensemble - Vivaldi - International Record Review
01 January 2012
International Record ReviewMarc Rochester
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If
Pavlo Beznosiuk and his Avison Ensemble are to make any impact at all in the
saturated market of period-performance Seasons, there will need to be
something very distinctive or special about this set.
True,
they make for unusually dramatic lightning bolts and a particularly noisily
snoring goatherd in 'Spring', the heat is particularly withering in 'Summer',
the peasant dance with an almost aromatic rusticity in 'Autumn' - helped by the
reduction of the continuo to a single double bass to add a faintly comical air
to the first movement violin solos - and the icicles have a tantalizingly
brittle quality while Beznosiuk himself shivers with remarkable energy in
'Winter'. Taken overall, this is a Season which mostly keeps dramatic
overstatement in check while maintaining a sense of decorum, and is
distinguished only by the quality of the playing rather than by any insightful
interpretative originality.
However,
this is, of course, far more than just another recording of The Four
Seasons.
It
is a recording of the complete Op.8 Concertos - 'The Contest Between Harmony
and Invention', as most of us translate the title (although in his supplementary
booklet note, Beznosiuk gets himself rather bogged down in a semantic argument
about the precise translation if the Italian collective title) - and as soon as
we have moved away from the Seasons the Avison Ensemble flexes its
muscles in some superlative playing. With Beznosiuk's violin chattering away,
'La Tempesta di Mare' breaks out in waves of virtuosity and splashes of musical
brilliance which is less a vivid musical portrait of a rough sea than a
powerful display of superlative playing.
So
it continues throughout the set, with this excellent UK based ensemble showing
why it is rapidly gaining respect as one of the finest period-instrument bands
of our time, mercifully bereft of novelty factor or proselytizing zeal and
offering up performances which are as entertaining, compelling and colourful as
they are authoritative and polished,. Among the more impressive moments is the
richly nuanced opening movement of the Sixth Concerto ('Il Piacere'), with
Beznosiuk making the journey up to his register with the rest of the ensemble
in distinctly active support. Here is music which seems almost to live and
breathe, so natural is the collective phrasing and dynamic shading.
This
sound is good, although the Cambridge church in which it was recorded is
perhaps a trifle boomy when it comes to dealing with the lower strings and,
while white print on a green background makes for a distinctly user-unfriendly
booklet, if you can overcome the inevitable eye strain, it is full of
interesting and useful writing from both Beznosiuk and Simon Fleming. A very
impressive addition to the discography of this fine group, even if it does not
always offer much that is distinctive in the field of recordings of Vivaldi's
most famous music.

Related Links
Pavlo Beznosiuk
The Avison Ensemble
Vivaldi: Concerti Opus 8