Henri Wieniawski Violin Concerto nr. 1 / Michael Rabin ‎(EMI 6 CD 1936 - 1972) 1991

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024
  • Sir Adrian Boult, Philharmonia Orchestra
    Violinkonzert Nr. 1 Fis-Moll, Op. 14
    Composed By - Henri Wieniawski*
    1-7 I. Allegro Moderato
    1-8 II. Preghiera (Larghetto)
    1-9 III. Rondo (Allegro Giocoso)
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Комментарии • 41

  • @andresrozsa637
    @andresrozsa637 2 года назад +11

    Most people don't realize that Rabin was a member of the very small "club" of highest-level violinists concertizing in the 1950s, thru the early 1960s. It included such folks as Heifetz, Menuhin, Francescatti, Milstein, Oistrakh, Kogan, Morini, Stern, and a few others including Rabin, who was far younger than any of the rest of them. Undoubtedly he was not getting the highest pay, but they were all appearing with the same orchestras and competing for concert dates. Thank God Rabin's recordings have survived him and he hasn't totally fallen into oblivion.

  • @AnnaKarkowskaVirtuoso
    @AnnaKarkowskaVirtuoso 3 месяца назад

    Thank you so very much for sharing this treasure! and preserving Michael Rabin out of this world mastery.!!!! This is absolutely breathtaking rendition of Wieniawski No,1 with soul & virtuosity , amazing Wieniawski's signature stiff staccato behind , fallowing Wieniawski's own motto ,, you have to risk""in virtuoso passages and just heartbreaking cantilenas!! No words can describe this performance...

  • @duggiefresh8170
    @duggiefresh8170 3 года назад +8

    Those 10ths were with vibrato! Best trills. Best staccato. Best 10ths. Best performance of this demanding F sharp minor stunner that I've ever heard.

    • @andresrozsa637
      @andresrozsa637 2 года назад +2

      Yes - there are some other good ones though. Gil Shaham's recording of this from his "student days" about 30 years ago is great. I listened to that CD a lot. I used to listen to it and think "does he find ANYTHING hard about it?!"

    • @duggiefresh8170
      @duggiefresh8170 2 года назад +2

      @@andresrozsa637 I have Gil's recording too and it is stellar. For me however, Rabin's playing sparkles a little bit more.

    • @andresrozsa637
      @andresrozsa637 2 года назад +1

      @@duggiefresh8170 This concerto is one of the hardest ones out there for the violin. I learned it awhile back and was definitely a better fiddler once I came out on the other side of it! Gil is a really good violinist but I will echo one of my old teachers - "he's no Michael Rabin."

    • @Ageless-yh7gv
      @Ageless-yh7gv 2 года назад +3

      @@andresrozsa637 Nobody, including Perlman, is Michael Rabin. Rabin is numero uno!

    • @andresrozsa637
      @andresrozsa637 Год назад

      @@Ageless-yh7gv Very true! Perlman and Rabin - they're both in a class by themselves, like Heifetz and Milstein were. Perlman - you can't help but love the guy on every level. Amazing human being, flawless violinist. Very few today know who Rabin was. Only people like us. I've mentioned him to some superlative violinists younger than myself and they're like "who?"

  • @andresrozsa637
    @andresrozsa637 2 года назад +6

    Rabin was one of the several greatest violinists to play the instrument. Wieniawski #1 has all but become forgotten over the decades. It used to be played in recitals with piano 80 years and longer ago, before sonatas and showpieces became the norm for recitals. He recorded this (I think) in the late 50s/early 60s when he was under contract with RCA (or was it EMI?) Eventually the contract ended and he didn't record as much near the end of his tragically short life.

    • @rjsullivanjr
      @rjsullivanjr Год назад +2

      This is THE standard for this concerto.

    • @andresrozsa637
      @andresrozsa637 Год назад +1

      @@rjsullivanjr This piece isn't really known outside of the violin world. Audiences generally don't know it. When it is played, it's usually played on - for instance - Sunday afternoon concert programs versus a big concerto performed on a subscription concert series of an orchestra. There are always exceptions to that rule for pieces like this I suppose but there are many concertos that never get performed, or get performed only very infrequently and this is one of them.

    • @rushwarp
      @rushwarp Год назад +2

      @@rjsullivanjr This standard will never be reached imo

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 6 лет назад +6

    Absolutely magnificent play. I have this set of 6 CD recording.

  • @abeni999
    @abeni999 2 года назад +1

    Una joya de interpretación,no hay palabras para calificar su interpretación,musicalmente lo reúne todo,excelente,bravo

  • @Ageless-yh7gv
    @Ageless-yh7gv 2 года назад +4

    When Ivan Galamian of Juilliard (who taught close to every great violinist since the mid-20th century, including Perlman) passed away, his obituary recounted that when asked by a reporter who the greatest violinist he ever taught was, he answered without a bit of hesitation --- Michael Rabin. I was fortunate enough to hear Rabin perform live at a few summer outdoor concerts at C.C.N.Y.'s Lewisohn Stadium in the '60s (I think). While the Stadium was torn down years ago, I remember to this day how floored I was by Rabin's playing. He passed away in his 30s! Think of what he could have achieved had he lived a normal life span!

    • @andresrozsa637
      @andresrozsa637 2 года назад +3

      He was one of the greatest to play the instrument. You were lucky to have heard him. Thankfully he did leave behind a lot of recordings for us to enjoy. About 35 years ago when I was a little kid, one of my uncles gave me a tape recording of an album that was originally released in the 1950s called "The Magic Bow". I'd never heard of Rabin before this. I was hoping he was still alive, and then I went for a lesson with my teacher...who like Rabin also studied with Galamian (my teacher studied with him even before Rabin was his pupil!) My teacher pointed over to the wall and said, "You see that picture there? That's Rabin - and you see, he even autographed it to me!" I'd seen the picture before but thought it was just some violinist. But when I asked if he was still alive, the response was "No, he died quite a few years ago now at a very young age." There was no Google or RUclips in those days (late 1980s) so I couldn't look him up. I was heartbroken!! But ever since, I have tried to find and listen to all of his recordings.

    • @rushwarp
      @rushwarp Год назад +1

      @@andresrozsa637 When I was a little kid I studied at Julliard for a bit and I can unequivocally say that Rabin is the greatest violinist of all time. He is to violin what Evgeniy Kissin is to piano. Untouchable.

    • @andresrozsa637
      @andresrozsa637 Год назад +2

      @@rushwarp Yeah, too bad Rabin died so young. I've been listening to him since I myself was a little kid in 1989. Yes, he is untouchable. He wanted to be friends with Heifetz but I think Heifetz saw him as too much of a competitor; after all, they were both out there concertizing actively at that time, in the 50s (Heifetz retired in the 60s but Rabin kept going.) Rabin said he wanted to grow up to play like Heifetz but he surpassed him. He was FAR more musical and had a much better tone. With all due respect to the incomparable Heifetz Kissin...well, I'll keep my mouth closed about him but one of my teachers said, "He's a complete flyweight. There is nothing to his playing. He hits all the notes and nothing more." The teacher said the same thing about his friend Martha Argerich. Anyway you're lucky to have studied at Juilliard...were you there at the same time Rabin was there studying with Galamian? I heard that as Rabin got older and concertized/recorded less and less, he took on some students but not many, he referred most to Dorothy Delay at Juilliard (not sure why he did that; she's known as the greatest teacher in the history of the violin but I've heard and read so much to the contrary including from those I've known who studied with her.) Thank you!

    • @rushwarp
      @rushwarp Год назад +1

      @@andresrozsa637 They were saying the same thing about Rabin that your teacher said about Kissin. That he hits all the notes but is not musical and lacks touch. The reason for that imo is both of them have perfect timing which appears mechanical to certain listeners. A little like Glen Gould. But underneath that is so much more. Go check out Kissin. :)

    • @BenjiOrthopedic
      @BenjiOrthopedic Год назад +1

      @@rushwarp I have checked out his recordings. To me he's just not much different than about 50 other pianists. Ditto for his friend Martha Argerich, in fact. They're both very good, but Kissin especially is no legend. Argerich is also not a heartwarming pianist at all. I also encountered someone who had to have dinner with her one time many years ago and said that she was "impossible." Don't get me wrong, both have gotten extremely wealthy off of their virtuoso piano playing. Then again, there are other classical artists who have too - I could probably name 20 right now - but it's hard to think of them as anything more than mediocre musicians who, as I say, hit all the notes and nothing more.

  • @jorgeluisguzmangarcia.7181
    @jorgeluisguzmangarcia.7181 6 лет назад +2

    Increíble... A mi punto de vista esta es la mejor interpretación del concerto 1 de Wieniawski, felicidades

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 3 года назад +8

    Too bad Kogan did not record this great concerto. I'd very much love to listen to his interpretation.

    • @arashkeyani2578
      @arashkeyani2578 3 года назад

      And heifetz

    • @violintegral
      @violintegral 2 года назад

      @@arashkeyani2578 I know for a fact Heifetz learned it, but I'm unsure if he ever performed it. It's such a risky and technically demanding piece, and since Heifetz had a reputation of sheer technical perfection, he wouldn't want to jeopardize that in any way. That could be a reason he never recorded it, along with the fact that it's not as musically mature as Wieniawski's second concerto.

    • @andresrozsa637
      @andresrozsa637 2 года назад +1

      Yes it is too bad. He may have recorded it and it was just never released outside the former USSR. A lot from the old days was lost!

    • @user-iy1go8tr7i
      @user-iy1go8tr7i Год назад

      @@violintegral Heifetz is very good at short technical pieces, like his hora Staccato recording is impeccable. I would prolly take others for Concertos and what not (I'm not saying Heifetz is bad at concertos in any way tho)

    • @Ageless-yh7gv
      @Ageless-yh7gv Год назад

      I never understood the big fuss over Heifetz. He was a good violinist --- but too "cold" for me. I mean many others are as technically proficient as he was, but with more soul. I've felt that way since childhood. Perlman, however, has got it all. And somehow, as impossible as it seems, he just keeps getting better ---- albeit a smidge at a time these days. Perlman and Rabin are the best, w/Milstein right up there.

  • @kelamuni
    @kelamuni 4 года назад +2

    when recorded?

  • @canman5060
    @canman5060 3 года назад +4

    Gil Shaham can equal this performance.

    • @duggiefresh8170
      @duggiefresh8170 3 года назад +9

      Not quite. Rabin is in his own class. Gil is great though.

    • @mbwilson2625
      @mbwilson2625 Год назад +1

      Not quite.

  • @violinbuff3782
    @violinbuff3782 8 месяцев назад

    Such a magnificent player, and I am told by his friends he was a great but fragile and sensitive human being! In such a troubled world today..what a great thing to have such beauty showing the possibility of human beings at their very finest! Eric Shumsky