Federico Guglielmo whittles down his ensemble LArte dellArco to just three or four players for his latest release of Vivaldis music. Unlike other Vivaldi performers, Guglielmo is keen to return to the transparency of the Prete Rossos music, stripping away the ornate embellishments that have encumbered recent recordings, allowing the fluid lines to speak for themselves. In these Violin and Trio Sonatas, Guglielmo and his fellow musicians once again establish themselves as some of the foremost interpreters of the Italians music. For the most part bright and jolly, these sonatas demand to be played with charm and joie de vivre, which LArte dellArco certainly supply in abundance. The tender lines of the slow movements are still a world away from some of the darker, more sombre sonatas of Vivaldis contemporary J.S. Bach, and they find serious expression and resonance on this CD rather than languid solemnity. It is certainly odd that these Sonatas have been overlooked in the past, with few recordings available on CD, and no recent ones by Italian musicians. Also available as part of a complete boxset of Vivaldis Opp.112 (Brilliant Classics 95200), this recording can also stand alone as an outstanding example of Vivaldis superb writing for chamber ensemble.