Henri Vieuxtemps: Cello Concerto No. 1 in A minor, Op. 46

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  • Опубликовано: 16 дек 2024
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    Henri Vieuxtemps (1820-1881)
    Cello Concerto No. 1 in A minor, Op. 46
    I. Allegro moderato - Allegro 0:00​
    II. Andante 14:16
    III. Finale: Allegro 21:31
    Peter Martens, cello
    Capetown Philharmonic Orchestra
    Bernhard Gueller, conductor
    Henri Vieuxtemps was born in Verviers, Belgium (then part of the Netherlands), son of a weaver and amateur violinist and violin-maker. He received his first violin instruction from his father and a local teacher and gave his first public performance at the age of six, playing a concerto by Pierre Rode. Soon he was giving concerts in various surrounding cities, including Liège and Brussels where he met the violinist Charles Auguste de Bériot, with whom he began studies. In 1829, Bériot took him to Paris where he made a successful concert debut, again with a concerto by Rode, but he had to return the next year because of the July Revolution and Bériot's marriage to his mistress Maria Malibran and departure on concert tour. Back in Brussels, Vieuxtemps continued developing his violin technique on his own, his musicianship deepened by playing with the deeply musical mezzo-soprano Pauline Viardot, Malibran's sister. A tour of Germany in 1833 brought friendship with Louis Spohr and with Robert Schumann, who compared the boy to Niccolò Paganini. During the following decade he visited various European cities, impressing with his virtuosity not only audiences but also famous musicians such as Hector Berlioz and Paganini himself, whom he encountered at his London debut in 1834. But he had aspirations of becoming a composer as well and, having already taken lessons with the respected Simon Sechter in Vienna, spent the winter of 1835-1836 studying composition with Anton Reicha in Paris. His first violin concerto, later published as Concerto No. 2, dates from this time. Vieuxtemps's Violin Concerto No. 1 was acclaimed when he played it in Saint Petersburg on his second visit in 1840 and in Paris the next year; Berlioz found it "a magnificent symphony for violin and orchestra". Based in Paris, Vieuxtemps continued to compose with great success and perform throughout Europe. With the pianist Sigismond Thalberg, he concertized in the United States. He was particularly admired in Russia where he resided permanently between 1846 and 1851 as a court musician of Tsar Nicholas I and soloist in the Imperial Theatre. He founded the violin school of the Saint Petersburg Conservatory and guided the formation of a "Russian school" of violinists. In 1871, he returned to his native country to accept a professorship at the Brussels Conservatory, where his most illustrious pupil was Eugène Ysaÿe. A paralytic stroke disabled his right arm two years later and he moved to Paris again, his violin class being taken over by Henryk Wieniawski. Although he seemed to be gradually recovering from his stroke, another one in 1879 ended his career as a violinist for good. He spent his last years in a sanatorium in Mustapha Supérieur, Algeria, where his daughter and her husband had settled, and continued to compose, though frustrated by his inability to play or, far from the musical centres of Europe, even hear his music played by others. The bulk of Vieuxtemps's compositions were for his own instrument, including seven concertos and a variety of short salon pieces, though towards the end of his life, when he had to give up the violin, he often turned to other instruments, writing two cello concertos, a viola sonata and three string quartets among other things. It is because of his seven violin concertos, however, that Vieuxtemps is generally known to audiences and musicians around the world. Through his own concertos and his advocacy of the concertos of Beethoven (he also played Beethoven's sonatas and string quartets) and Mendelssohn, he added a more classical dimension to the violin repertoire which had tended towards technically brilliant but often shallow variations and fantasies on popular operatic themes. Vieuxtemps never indulged in sheer virtuosity for its own sake, like some of his predecessors. Eugène Ysaÿe quotes him as saying "Not runs for the sake of runs - sing, sing!"

Комментарии • 6

  • @Amourtendresse
    @Amourtendresse 4 месяца назад

    Beau, intense et dramatique, puis guilleret. La palette des sentiments joliment exprimée dans cette œuvre m'a beaucoup plu. 🙏🎶❤️🎶🌹

  • @avec.abandon
    @avec.abandon 3 года назад +1

    A Fine Concerto! Thanks for sharing!

  • @АлександрЯрков-ш2з
    @АлександрЯрков-ш2з 3 года назад +1

    Bravo music concerto brilliance grandiose

  • @FilipSandecomposer
    @FilipSandecomposer 3 года назад +1

    A very nice discovery, thanks for sharing! Hope to hear this one and the second one in a concert near by soon....

    • @ericoschmitt
      @ericoschmitt Год назад

      It's a great piece and widely unknown. Most cellists don't know, most violinists neither. I discovered it in 2013 and fell in love, learned it and even played with a local community orchestra (just 1st mov). Back then I could only find one recording by Marie Hallynck. Happy to see a few more out there now! Maybe I should practice it again and actually play it...

    • @ericoschmitt
      @ericoschmitt Год назад +1

      There's one bad thing about this piece's 3rd mov is you either play it slower than you'd like, or the section from 23:12 sounds like shit, specially what comes 10 seconds later. I prefer slightly slower tbh