Italian historical-performance specialist violinist
Frederico Guglielmo has led several different ensembles and offered various interpretive styles, as violinist and as conductor, in his approach to the violin music of the Baroque in Italy and beyond. His take on Handel's Water Music is brisk and rhythmic, but this collection of orchestral and solo violin music by the virtuoso Francesco Maria Veracini, whom the historian Charles Burney described as "capo pazzo," or crazy in the head, is a good deal quieter and more circumspect, with a small, violin-heavy ensemble that allows the wind parts to show through in the two orchestral overtures included. Compared with
Reinhard Goebel's Veracini recording with his
Musica Antiqua Köln, it's a bit hard to hear in these readings why Veracini was considered such an outrageous figure. But they're elegant on their own terms, especially in the two sonatas and one very Vivaldian concerto where
Guglielmo's solo violin is heard. He has an easy virtuosity and playfulness that brings out the unexpected turns of phrase and structure that define Veracini's music. Part of the problem for the listener in grasping the music's energy is the use of a church that entombs the music in sacred attitude. But Veracini is a composer whose music is for the most part just entering the concert scene, and Italian Baroque enthusiasts will find
Guglielmo's a distinctive approach. Notes are in German, English, and French.