Denner of Nüremberg, used in this recording). I believe, nevertheless, that there are analogies with German instruments of the same period (hence the copies of instruments by J.C. One is even more in the dark, trying to imagine how the flauto / flautino of Vivaldi’s Venice must have sounded. Except for the solo passage, the range of the soloist is f” to f””, corresponding exactly to that of a sopranino recorder. Although in different places the compass extends below the recorder’s range (the first tutti in the first movement of the concerto in C major, the introductory tutti in the third movement of the A minor concerto, and one solo passage in the A minor), these are in fact misleading. Musicologists have tried to prove, often by questionable arguments, that it must have been a flageolet – an instrument, however, which was never mentioned at the time. The exact meaning of flautino has long been a mystery. Vivaldi wrote six recorder concertos in all, three each for flauto and flautino. 10 was printed in 1729/30 – see the Introduction. This also helps to provide a rough date for the pieces here: the three recorder works were probably written soon after 1723, and certainly before Op.
Thoughts of how to increase sales of his music (by having both recorder and flute able to play the same pieces) came as easily to Vivaldi as to his contemporary (and even more, modern) publishers. 10, the compass never goes below that of the recorder. It is no coincidence, either, that as in the rest of the flute concertos in Vivaldi’s Op. The explanation must be that the far less-exposed solo line was intended for the flute, and was never meant originally for the recorder. Listening to these four concertos, one is struck by the singularity of the G minor concerto, “La Notte”, on account of the demands made on the soloist. This does not disguise the fact that the occurrence of extremely rapid broken chords in Vivaldi’s music owed more to his violin technique than to any thought for the sorely taxed fingers and tongue of the recorder player! Virtuosity in this context did not have a negative connotation, but revealed Vivaldi’s intimate knowledge of the possibilities inherent in the recorder. Thus, while he deliberately made use of the flute’s advantages in cantabile playing, a wealth of dynamic shadings, it was in his pieces for recorder that an almost excessive element of virtuosity comes to the fore.
Nor was the difference one of nomenclature only: Vivaldi made a clear distinction between the two in the texture and structure of his work.
Vivaldi, however, used precise terminology to distinguish between the recorder ( flauto and flautino) and the flute ( flauto traverso). Both examples confirm, through common acceptance of a single meaning for an indefinite term, how widely used each instrument must have been. (In England at the same time the expression used was “common flute”.) By 1750, however, the abbreviated and – by 1978 standards – imprecise word flauto had come to mean the transverse flute, or what is now the familiar silver (or silver-plate) Boehm Flute.
In 1700 the term flauto was generally understood to mean a recorder – specially a treble recorder, if no further details were given. Connect to your account and refresh the page to listen to the complete album