Friday night’s performance by Europa Galante offered a long-awaited opportunity to hear some of the most colorful performers on today’s early-music scene. The orchestra’s appealing program, played on Baroque period instruments, made it easy to see why director-violinist Fabio Biondi’s exploration of unfamiliar repertoire and his imaginative rethinking of venerable warhorses like Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons have drawn such a popular following.
Although often mentioned in the same breath with the equally colorful Andrew Manze, Biondi is a much more understated performer. Manze’s quicksilver imagination really keeps audiences on the edge of their seats, occasionally nervously wondering whether the violinist will fly out of control while navigating his more daring twists and turns. Biondi, on the other hand, plays with great aplomb, and on Friday, his self-assured demeanor sometimes masked the improvisatory excitement of his equally bold flights of fancy. Once considered mavericks, both performers are now respected authorities in the early-music world, and their success has done much to encourage young musicians to question and push beyond the more literalist orthodoxies that the pioneers of earlier generations established.
Les Nations, an allusion to Couperin’s famous collection of sonatas. The suite is actually a kind of anthology that Biondi assembled from short pieces by various composers, each “movement” representing a different national style.
The most intriguing aspect of the collection was the fact that the title of each movement promised a portrait of a particular culture foreign to the individual composer: French culture from the Italian Baldassare Galuppi, Spanish from the Austrian Muffat, Chinese from the Frenchman Andre Campra, and so on. In practice, however, the differences were subtle, and it was not always clear just what qualities the composers would have considered characteristic for each particular national style.
Europa Galante
In Friday’s concert, Biondi and his orchestra seemed to have difficulty adapting to the venue’s somewhat unusual acoustics. Although Berkeley’s First Congregational Church is one of the best, most pleasantly reverberant performance spaces in the East Bay, especially for early string instruments, it poses challenges for performers unfamiliar with its idiosyncrasies. The main problem is that the sound seems much “drier” for the performers onstage than it actually is in the hall, which can lead them to shy away from the crisper, shorter articulations that are such important expressive tools in much of this repertoire. As a result, the shape of individual lines was sometimes indistinct, wafting in and out of focus, and textures in the orchestra were often rather muddy, especially in the continuo group. The above reservations notwithstanding, it was a thoroughly enjoyable evening. The program, titled “France, Italy, and England: Connections and Exchanges” in an attempt to illustrate crosscultural influences during the Baroque, opened with an appealingly multicultural little suite, titled