70: The Concerto Grosso

 

 The recording above is of a special (Baroque) type of concerto, and, in fact, was the first one I ever listened to as I was brought home as a newborn. The Adagio that begins around 5:38 in this recording has been with me literally 99.98% of of my life at this point, so it’s safe to say I know it quite well!

What makes this (and so many other concerti by Arcangelo Corelli— the teacher of Antonio Vivaldi, by the way) a “concerto grosso” is the way in which it is written, made clearest by the visualization of the score. There are, in effect, two orchestras, not one. There is a small one “di concertino”, who are the group at the top of the score. Accompanying them— often passing the melody back and forth—is the larger group “di ripieno” (the “full” group) which most of the time also includes everyone in the smaller group.

Listen to (and watch) this performance carefully several times, both with and without the score as a visual aid. The Christmas Concerto is particularly contrapuntal, so take note of when the counterpoint is getting passed inside of an ensemble and when it is passed from one ensemble to the other.

Here is another recording where this time you can actually see the two ensembles: 

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