Antonio Vivaldi was a great Italian composer and violinist during the Baroque period,and an important representative figure of Baroque music moving towards classical music.Concertos,as the most important music genre of the Baroque period,were originally meant as "connected",but later meant "confrontation" and "competition",demonstrating the comparative relationship between soloists and bands.Throughout his life,Vivaldi wrote a wide range of subjects,mainly concertos.He composed nearly 500 concertos,of which 220 were mainly violin concertos.The Inspiration of Harmony "is the earliest violin concerto collection published by Vivaldi,consisting of twelve pieces.The object of this article is the eighth piece in the concerto collection,RV522,written for two violin solos and bands.This concerto is compact and exquisite,with each movement having its own subtleties.Due to the size of the paper,only the first movement of the work will be analyzed.Performing performance analysis helps performers familiarize themselves with the structure of the work,accurately grasp the style of the work,deepen their understanding of the work,and timely summarize reasonable performance and training methods that are suitable for them.This article will first start with Baroque music and the Baroque violin,and combine historical background to introduce "The Inspiration of Harmony" and the comparison between Baroque violin and modern violin.Secondly,the creative characteristics of the work,namely the musical structure,will be analyzed,and the performance strength,speed,bowing,and syntax will be analyzed based on one’s own playing experience.The author will also analyze the cooperation between the vocal parts in this piece from the perspective of vocal coordination based on their own experience in chamber music performance.Finally,summarize the characteristics and musical personality of Vivaldi’s works,deepen our understanding of Baroque music,strengthen our understanding of chamber music,and ultimately achieve the best performance in actual performance. |