Naïve's "Vivaldi Edition" is not a complete set of works (who knows how hefty that would be?), but an ongoing project devoted to recording the Vivaldi works discovered in the 1990s in the Italian National Library in Turin. This release is one of a pair, the 59th, and 60th in the series, which at the time of the album's release had been underway for two decades. Some of the performers, such as the Accademia Bizantina and its director, Ottavio Dantone, are mainstays of the series, but the emergence of a new star is often ...
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Naïve's "Vivaldi Edition" is not a complete set of works (who knows how hefty that would be?), but an ongoing project devoted to recording the Vivaldi works discovered in the 1990s in the Italian National Library in Turin. This release is one of a pair, the 59th, and 60th in the series, which at the time of the album's release had been underway for two decades. Some of the performers, such as the Accademia Bizantina and its director, Ottavio Dantone, are mainstays of the series, but the emergence of a new star is often enough to prompt new albums, and so it is here. Contralto Delphine Galou is heard on this album and its companion, Musica sacra per alto. Both are worthwhile. On this release you get secular arias and cantatas, the latter especially underrepresented in the Vivaldi discography, but with the exception of the arias from Tito Manlio, RV 738, and Il Giustino, RV 717, the operas involved are also pretty obscure. Much of the music reinforces how progressive Vivaldi was, even in the late 1710s...
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