THOMAS GOULD ON MAX RICHTER'S RECOMPOSED
Britten Sinfonia leader and director Thomas Gould gives an insight into performing Richter's recomposition of Vivaldi's Four Seasons.
Playing The Four Seasons Recomposed really requires the soloist to be two violinists in one: on the one hand playing the original Vivaldi elements with appropriate awareness of Baroque style and taste, but also taking flight over the massed strings in the more filmic sections in a much less classical way.
There’s a huge opportunity to put one’s own stamp on the music as Richter hasn’t been overly prescriptive with his markings. All this makes it an unusually fun piece in the violin repertoire.
Since the record-breaking 2014 release of the original Vivaldi Recomposed album, I’m aware of at least two further studio recordings of the work, and its use in numerous film and tv soundtracks and commercials.
It’s pretty rare for new music to have this kind of reach and penetration into the playlists we listen to and music that reaches us in our living rooms, so the piece’s success and enduring popularity speak for themselves.
I’ve played the solo part twice before (once to a sold-out Barbican with Britten Sinfonia for the Sound Unbound Festival) and played in the orchestra once, but this is my first time directing the piece from the violin.
It will be a chance to put a bit more of my own stamp on the interpretation, and working without a conductor is something we love to do at Britten Sinfonia because it engages all the players that bit more.