• Q: Vivaldis L'Estate in 18th century France

    From Sebastian@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 1 01:35:21 2020
    Hello there, and a happy new year!

    I did just recently watch Céline Sciamma's film "Portrait de la jeune
    fille en feu". This beautiful film is mainly set in Brittany in 1770.
    The final scene, however, takes place somewhat later, after 1777, and
    involves a performance of Vivaldis L'Estate from the 4 seasons. We know
    it must be in 1777 or later, because the scene is set in the Théâtre Montansier in Versailles, which was inaugurated in November of that year.

    I'd like to ask how realistic that is. Would that music have been
    performed at that time in that location? Does anyone know more about the reception history of Vivaldi in France in the second half of the
    eighteenth century? Or could point me to relevant sources?

    Here's what I have learned so far:

    I know from Anthony Pryers, "Vivaldi’s Four Seasons and the
    Globalization of Musical Taste" (http://eprints.goldsmiths.ac.uk/archive/00000239/, the full version of
    the truncated form published in Musicology and Globalization:
    Proceedings of the International Congress in Shizuoka, 2002 (Tokyo:
    Academia Musica Ltd, 2004), 180-184) that the Concerts spirituels in
    Paris retained Le quattro stagioni in their repertory until 1763 with
    "Spring" being particularly popular, that in the 1770s Ducharger, a
    musician at the court of the Prince of Condé, wrote to the Prince giving
    a detailed description of the meaning of Vivaldi's "Spring", that in
    1766 Michel Corrette published his motet à grand choeur Laudate Dominum
    de coelis based on "Spring", and that in 1775 Jean-Jacques Rousseau
    arranges "Spring" for solo flute: Le printemps di Vivaldi (no
    publication date given).

    This makes it seem possible although improbable that the original form
    of L'Estate would have been performed in Versailles in 1777 or later.

    Annabel Goodman, "The Reception History of Antonio Vivaldi in Eighteenth-Century Britain and Ireland" (in Sydney Undergraduate Journal
    of Musicology, Vol. 7, December 2017) makes the point that "The idea
    that Vivaldi’s music fell out of popularity by the time of his death in
    1741 is more a reflection of the composer’s reception history in his
    native Venice than of his reception across Europe, where his music
    continued to be heard across French, German, and British cultures." She
    goes on to provide evidence that Vivaldi may have been performed in
    Britain up to ca. 1770, but no concrete evidence for later performances.

    Goodman also cites Michael Talbot, where of particular relevance is his
    article "The Golden Pippin and the Extraordinary Adventures in Britain
    and Ireland of Vivaldi’s Concerto RV 519." This article provides the
    most detailed published reception history of Vivaldi in
    eighteenth-century Britain and Ireland, but also explores non-score
    based primary
    sources such as newspaper articles and pamphlets from the eighteenth
    century. Vivaldi’s Fifth appears in the final chorus of The Golden
    Pippin, which made its debut in 1773 on the London stage.

    Also, in 1776 John Hawkin’s in "A General History of the Science and
    Practice of Music", II, Ch CLXXIX: [of Vivaldi’s Opus VIII] says that
    "...the common name of them is the Seasons. The plan of this work must
    appear very ridiculous...[but]...Opus VIII is the most applauded of
    Vivaldi’s works."

    So at that time, Vivaldi was still well-known and talked about in
    Britain. It is not impossible that his music might still have been
    performed in its original form. But would Britain's musical taste have
    had any influence on what was performed in Versailles? Probably not.

    Not that the main point of the film is about historical accuracy.
    Rather, it treats of resistance against patriarchal structures, and
    female self-empowerment through art. If this sounds somewhat dry, it
    isn't. The film is wonderful and very moving. It has won the prize for
    the best script in Cannes, and in my view would have deserved the Palme
    d'or as well.

    Only the last scene, however well played, unfortunately borders on
    Kitsch, and that is partly because the music has become such a cliché
    when it comes to illustrating emotional turbulence. I fear that this
    clichè may also have been historically inaccurate, making its use
    particulary regrettable.

    -- Sebastian

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