The Four Seasons for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 8, Nos. 1-4
Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)
THE STORY
Published in 1725, Vivaldi’s set of violin concertos The Four Seasons imaginatively gives musical expression to each season of the year. Inspired by landscape paintings by Italian artist Marco Ricci, the concertos were published together with a set of sonnets—likely written by Vivaldi himself—that describe specific aspects of each season evoked by the music; it is uncertain whether the sonnets were written to accompany the music or vice-versa. Each concerto is in three movements, following a slow-fast-slow structure; likewise, each sonnet is broken into three sections.
With very literal musical depictions of the poetry, The Four Seasons is one of the earliest examples of “program music”—music that is meant to describe an extra-musical element. Vivaldi even wrote some of the lines of poetry and specific instructions directly into the score—for example, “play like a barking dog” in the viola part of the final movement of “Autumn,” which evokes a hunting scene
LISTEN FOR
INSTRUMENTATION
Solo violin; strings, continuo