version of the piece, published in 1725 by
Michel-Charles Le Cène in Amsterdam. Derivative works of these concerti include arrangements, transcriptions, covers, remixes, samples, and parodies in music — themes in theater and opera, soundtracks in films (or video games), and choreography in ballet (along with contemporary dance, figure skating, rhythmic gymnastics, synchronized swimming, etc.) — either in their entirety, single movements, or medleys. Antonio Vivaldi appears to have started this
trend of adapting music from
The Four Seasons, and since then it has expanded into many aspects of the
performing arts (as have other instrumental & vocal works by the composer). This
contest between harmony and invention (as it were) now involves various genres around the world:
1726 (or 1734) • Vivaldi re-scored the
Allegro movement from the "Spring" concerto, both as the opening
sinfonia (third movement), and chorus (adding lyrics) for his opera
Dorilla in Tempe. •
J. S. Bach used the initial motif of the first movement of the "Spring" concerto for the third movement (
aria) of his cantata
Wer weiß, wie nahe mir mein Ende? (BWV 27).
1727 (or 1730, 1731) • Vivaldi based his setting of "Gelido in ogni vena", an aria from
Metastasio's
Siroe, re di Persia libretto, on the first movement of the "Winter" concerto. Vivaldi's
Siroe, containing an aria on this text, premiered in 1727 (music lost). An aria on the "Gelido in ogni vena" text also appeared in his 1730
Argippo (music lost). In 1731, he inserted the extant version of this aria in his
Farnace when this opera was restaged in
Pavia.
1739 •
Nicolas Chédeville (France) arranged the concerti (as "Le printemps, ou Les saisons amusantes") for hurdy-gurdy or musette, violin, flute, and continuo.
1765 • The French composer
Michel Corrette composed and published a choral motet,
Laudate Dominum de Coelis, subtitled
Motet à Grand Chœur arrangé dans le Concerto de Printemps de Vivaldi. The work, for choir and orchestra, consists of the words of
Psalm 148 set to the music from the
Spring concerto with vocal soloists singing the solo concerto parts.
1775 •
Jean-Jacques Rousseau published his flute version of the "Spring" concerto.
1969 •
The Swingle Singers (France) recorded an album (
The Joy of Singing) based on the work (and that of other composers).
1970 •
Astor Piazzolla (Argentina) published
Estaciones Porteñas, "The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires"; these have been included in "eight seasons" performances, along with Vivaldi's work, by various artists.
1972 •
Moe Koffman (Canada) recorded a
jazz album of the concerti.
1976 • The New Koto Ensemble (Japan) recorded the concerti on
koto instruments.
1978 •
Michael Franks (United States) composed a vocal
serenade based on the theme of the Adagio from the "Summer" concerto. This was subsequently covered by WoongSan (Korea) in 2010.
1981 •
The Four Seasons is used in
the eponymous 1981 film, along with other Vivaldi concertos for flute.
1982 •
Patrick Gleeson (United States) recorded a "computer realization" of the concerti.
1984 •
Thomas Wilbrandt (West Germany) composed and recorded "The Electric V" (later adapted for film), which interprets Vivaldi's work with
ambient electronics, vocals, and samples of the original concerti. •
Roland Petit (France) choreographed a ballet (entitled "Les Quatre Saisons") to an
I Musici performance of Vivaldi's work.
1987 •
Ben Shedd (United States) produced a scenic tour of nature with the concerti as background music (narrated by
William Shatner).
1990 • A MIDI arrangement of the "Spring" concerto by
Passport Designs was included with
Windows 3.0.
1993 •
Jean-Pierre Rampal (France) recorded arrangements of the concerti for
flute; these were also recorded by
Jadwiga Kotnowska.
1995 •
Arnie Roth (United States) recorded "The Four Seasons Suite", including sonnets (recited by
Patrick Stewart). This may not qualify as a derivative work, depending on whether Vivaldi's translated sonnets were meant to be narrated with the music (versus being read in
Italian, or silently by the audience).
1997 • The Baronics (Canada) recorded
surf guitar versions of one movement from each of the concerti. • French musician
Jacques Loussier composed and recorded, with his trio, jazz-swing interpretations of the concerti.
1998 •
The Great Kat (England/United States) recorded a
shred guitar (and violin) version of the
Presto movement from the "Summer" concerto. •
Vanessa-Mae (Singapore/Britain) recorded a
crossover version of the same movement for electric violin.
1999 • The Chinese Baroque Players recorded arrangements of the concerti for traditional
Chinese instruments. •
Petrova &
Tikhonov (Russia) performed their long program to a medley of Vivaldi's seasons to win the
European Figure Skating Championships.
2000 • Venice Harp Quartet (Italy) recorded arrangements of the concerti for
harp ensemble. • Gustavo Montesano (Argentina) recorded a
tango guitar version of the "Spring"
Allegro with the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. • Jochen Brusch (Germany) & Sven-Ingvart Mikkelsen (Denmark) recorded arrangements of the concerti for violin and
organ.
2001 •
Ferhan & Ferzan Önder (Turkish twin sisters) recorded a transcription of the concerti for two pianos by Antun Tomislav Šaban. •
Susan Osborn (United States) recorded a
new-age vocal serenade based on the "Winter"
Largo. • The Charades (Finland) recorded the
Presto from the "Summer" concerto as "Summer Twist", for surf guitar ensemble.
2003 •
Red Priest (UK) recorded arrangements of the concerti for
recorder. •
RCA Records released ''Vivaldi's Greatest Hit: The Ultimate Four Seasons'', a 23-track album containing all four violin concerti and eleven different musicians'
cover versions of selected movements. The album cover was illustrated by
MUTTS creator
Patrick McDonnell. • A
muzak version of the "Spring" concerto is heard in
The Simpsons: Hit & Run when the player is in the Stonecutter's Tunnel. •
Hayley Westenra (New Zealand) adapted the "Winter" concerto into a song titled "River of Dreams" which is sung in
English. It was recorded for her
Pure album on July 10.
2004 •
Tafelmusik (Canada) arranged a cross-cultural arts special based on the concerti, involving a Chinese pipa, Indian sarangi and Inuit throat-singing.
2005 •
Dark Moor (Spain) recorded an electric-guitar version of the
Allegro non molto movement from the "Winter" concerto; this was later integrated into the Finnish video game
Frets on Fire. ;2006 • Accentus chamber choir (France) recorded a
choral version of the "Winter" concerto.
2007 •
Celtic Woman (Ireland) recorded the "Winter"
Largo with vocals (Italian lyrics). The youngest former member,
Chloë Agnew, originally recorded it for her
Walking in the Air album which was released in 2002. • PercaDu (Israel) performed an arrangement of the
Allegro non molto movement from the "Winter" concerto, for
marimbas with chamber orchestra. •
Mauro Bigonzetti (Italy) choreographed a ballet of the concerti for a French-
Canadian dance company. •
Tim Slade (Australia) directed
4, a documentary which follows four classical violinists in their homelands (of
Tokyo; Thursday Island, New York; and
Lapland), as they relate to Vivaldi's
Four Seasons. • Seoul Metropolitan Traditional Music Orchestra performed the concerti with arrangement for Korean traditional music (
gugak) orchestra by Seong-gi Kim. It was recorded live and released with CD from Synnara Music same year.
2008 • Sveceny & Dvorak (Czech Republic) produced both an album and stage production of
world music based on the concerti. • Yves Custeau (Canada) recorded a
rock & roll "one-man band" version of the "Spring"
Allegro. •
Daisy Jopling (England/United States) recorded a violin &
hip-hop version of the
Allegro non molto movement from the "Winter" concerto, and also performs it
reggae-style. • Innesa Tymochko (Ukraine) performed her crossover version of the
Presto from the "Summer" concerto, for violin. • Wez Bolton (Isle of Man) recorded a cover version of the
Allegro non molto movement from the "Winter" concerto, based on the Japanese video game
"Beatmania" remix. •
Patrick Chan (Canada) performed his long program to a medley of the concerti to win the
Canadian Figure Skating Championships.
2009 • Absynth Against Anguish (Romania) produced an electronic (
trance) version of the concerti. • Riccardo Arrighini (Italy) recorded the concerti for solo piano, in a jazz style. • Christophe Monniot recorded ambient-jazz interpretations of the concerti. • Christian Blind (France) recorded a surf guitar/
acid rock version of the
Allegro movement from the "Spring" concerto.
2010 • Art Color Ballet (Poland) performed their "4 elements" show to the
Presto movement from the "Summer" concerto, arranged by Hadrian Filip Tabęcki (Kameleon). •
David Garrett (Germany) recorded a crossover version of Vivaldi's winter (allegro non molto), combining classical violin with modern rock music.
2011 • Black Smith (Russia) performed the
Presto movement from the "Summer" concerto in the style of
thrash metal music (likewise, this movement has been
covered numerous times by aspiring electric guitar
virtuosos, and other
crossover musicians). • Angels (Greece) performed their crossover version of the same movement, scored for electric strings. • Szentpeteri Csilla (Hungary) performed her crossover version of the same movement, scored for piano. • Leonel Valbom (Portugal) remixed the
Presto movement from the "Summer" concerto with
VST Synths. • Tim Kliphuis (Netherlands) performed the Allegro from the "Spring" movement as a crossover of world-music styles. • Niibori Guitar Ensemble (Japan) Performed the Presto from the "Summer" movement as an arrangement for their concert at the Minato Mirai Hall on 1 June 2011
2012 • Russian violinist
Olga Kholodnaya and Argentinian drummer
Marino Colina arranged and recorded live in
Berlin a version for
violin and
drum kit. • German-born British composer
Max Richter created a postmodern and minimalist recomposition,
Recomposed by Max Richter: Vivaldi – The Four Seasons. Working with solo violinist
Daniel Hope, Richter discarded around 75 per cent of the original source material; the album is 44 minutes long. • Aura (Japan) recorded an
a cappella arrangement of the concerti, and had also performed Vivaldi's Spring chorus (from
Dorilla in Tempe) on a prior album. • Sinfonity (Spain) performed the concerti for "electric-guitar orchestra". • Bachod Chirmof (USA) produced a
MIDI recording &
animation of Vivaldi's winter (movements I & III). • Tornado Classic (Russia) performed the
Presto movement from the "Summer" concerto, with electric guitar and
slap bass. • The symphonic rock band
Trans-Siberian Orchestra used a portion of the first movement of the "Winter" concerto in their song "Dreams of Fireflies (On A Christmas Night)" on their
Dreams of Fireflies EP.
2013 •
Richard Galliano (France) recorded the concerti for accordion, as well as a few of his opera arias on the instrument. •
Vito Paternoster (Italy) recorded the concerti in the form of
sonatas for cello. • Periodic (Germany) produced a
megamix of the concerti, which incorporates
electronica with samples of a classical recording. • Steven Buchanan (USA) produced a
tetralogy of "midseasons" (slow movements and corresponding sonnets) from Vivaldi's program music. • William Harvey (USA) conducts the Afghan Youth Orchestra, the primary ensemble of Afghanistan National Institute of Music, in his composition "The Four Seasons of Afghanistan" at the Kennedy Center and Carnegie Hall.
2014 •
The Piano Guys (USA) recorded an arrangement for piano and cello, a crossover between the "Winter" concerto and "
Let it Go" from the animated film
Frozen.
2015 • Zozimo Rech and Adrianne Simioni (Brazil) recorded the concerti on electric and acoustic guitar on the Astronomusic label.
2016 • In April, violist
David Aaron Carpenter recorded the concerti, arranged for
viola and released with an arrangement of
Piazzolla's
Estaciones Porteñas and
The Four Seasons of Manhattan by Alexey Shor. • Canadian choreographer
Crystal Pite premiered her ballet based on the concerti, ''
The Seasons' Canon'', with the
Paris Opera Ballet at the
Palais Garnier before bringing it to the
Royal Ballet in London.
2019 • "For Seasons" is a recomposition of Vivaldi's concertos using algorithms to portray climate change from 1725 to 2019. Recomposed by the creative studio Kling Klang Klong, arranged by Simone Candotto and performed in November 2019 by the
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, under the direction of
Alan Gilbert. •
Portrait of a Lady on Fire used
La Serenissima's Four Seasons as part of their film soundtrack. • Winter is used in
John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum during the assault in the Continental by Zero and his students
2021 • Ballet Arizona performed original choreography by artistic director Ib Andersen in an outdoor performance set against the lush Southwest landscape of the Desert Botanical Gardens. • "The [Uncertain] Four Seasons" is a reworking of Vivaldi's original, by both human composers and AI algorithms based on climate predictions for the year 2050. Each performance is modified to fit the climatic predictions for the location of performance. The project includes a multi-orchestra, streamed event planned for November 1, 2021, in connection with the
United Nations Climate Change conference held in Glasgow, Scotland. It was inspired by the 2019 performance, "For Seasons." •
ATEEZ incorporated the "Summer" concerto into their cover of
iKON's "Rhythm Ta" on
Kingdom: Legendary War.
2022 • The Brazilian telenovela
Quanto Mais Vida, Melhor! covered the "Summer" concerto for a special sequence where the four main characters "switch bodies". For the scene, the compositions also had different rhythms involving rock, classical music, pop, and samba, respectively. • Vivaldi and Italian Baroque specialists,
La Serenissima (UK), "Winter" from the Manchester version of The Four Seasons was sampled in a
Beats by Dre advertisement. • The eponymous heroine of
Wednesday plays Winter at the cello. (episode 3)
2023 • A song "A Dramatic Irony" contains sampled elements mainly from Winter and parts of Summer can be heard in Kafka's character introduction trailer from the game
Honkai: Star Rail.
2024 • As part of
The Poetic Edda, and EP released by American
deathcore bands
Disembodied Tyrant and
Synestia, the song
Winter was used and melded with the deathcore style.
2025 • Commissioned to the mark the 300-year anniversary of the publication of the original concerti, 'A Season to Sing' is a choral reimagining of the work for SATB or upper voice choir by
Joanna Forbes L'Estrange and published by the
Royal School of Church Music. The work sets the melodies to seasonal texts from
the Bible, poetry, and L'Estrange's own texts. •
The Four Seasons is featured again in the Netflix series
The Four Seasons based on the 1981 film. • "VIVA!", a song performed by
Chiemi Tanaka and
Moeka Koizumi as their respective characters from the anime franchise
Love Live! Nijigasaki High School Idol Club, is a re-arrangement of Spring. Vivaldi is credited as the song's composer, his first registered full composer credit since 1739's
Feraspe (currently lost opera). • In December 2025
Opera Philadelphia staged an opera adaptation,
The Seasons, at the
Kimmel Center which expanded the work around the theme of
climate change; crafting a
pastiche by combing opera arias by Vivaldi with the complete music from
The Four Seasons. It was conceptualized by the work's librettist, the playwright
Sarah Ruhl, and Opera Philadelphia director,
Anthony Roth Costanzo. The opera was directed by Zack Winokur; choreographed by
Pam Tanowitz; conducted by Corrado Rovaris; and starred Costanzo as The Poet, Abigail Raiford as the Farmer,
Kangmin Justin Kim as the Painter, Whitney Morrison as the Performing Artist, John Mburu as The Cosmic Weatherman, and Megan Moore as The Choreographer. There were also several dancers featured in the production. ==References==