To the time-honored categories of mainstream and historically informed performances of Baroque works we now must add a third. More and more often, performers who've become famous in traditional Classical-Romantic repertory are venturing not only into music of the Baroque, but also of Baroque bows, A-415 tunings, gut strings, ornamentation treatises, and all the other details with which modern players try to approximate a Baroque sound world. Even
Yo-Yo Ma has hit the sales charts by teaming with
Ton Koopman for a couple of volumes of
Vivaldi's music, and now the adventurous Russian-born violinist
Viktoria Mullova is out with a
Vivaldi concerto disc of her own.
Does
Viktoria Mullova "get it"? The answer generally is yes. She passes the first test with
Vivaldi, which is to realize that there's no reason to record the same handful of concertos over again; the
Vivaldi catalog is full of marvels ready for wider exposure.
Mullova offers five concertos here (for a rather parsimonious 53 minutes of music in total), including the Concerto in B minor for four violins, RV 580, very familiar especially in its four-harpsichord arrangement by
Bach, but also including the little-recorded "Grosso Mogul" Concerto in D major, RV 208. The title of this work refers to an Indian potentate, but the reason for the designation is unknown. There is no hint of Indian influence, but whatever the occasion was, it called forth from
Vivaldi a prime specimen of his big, spacious idiom, easily construed as royal. The violin part taxes any player, but
Mullova, playing a 1723 Stradivarius with a Baroque bow, spins out long, shimmering threads from even the roughest passages. Throughout, her style is precise, exacting, marked by notable endurance, and a bit severe, just like her picture on the cover. Another remarkable piece is the abrupt miniature Concerto in D major, RV 234, known as "L'Inquietudine," "unease."
Mullova's edgy sound works perfectly here. She is backed by
Il Giardino Armonico, an orchestra of period-instrument players. Onyx's sound doesn't match up to the recording feats that other European labels -- Naïve, Alpha, MDG -- accomplished around the same time;
Mullova's violin has a bit of a tendency to get lost in the texture. And there is no virtue in proclaiming, as
Mullova does here, that she hasn't consulted Baroque instructional sources. There are all kinds of residencies and camps for this sort of thing, where one can hear the likes of
Rachel Podger adding the improvisational dimension of this music back in. Nevertheless, this is a brisk, bracing disc that will interest fans of the edgy
Mullova and anyone else looking for a traditional violinist as a guide while exploring the Baroque.