Vieuxtemps, Henri

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Vieuxtemps, Henri

Violin Concerto No. 5 in A minor Op. 37 (Piano Reduction/Solo)

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Vieuxtemps, Henri

Violin Concerto No. 5 in A minor (“Le Grètry”) op. 37, 1860-61 (Piano Reduction/Solo)

Personal violinist to the Czar of Russia, featured virtuoso at the coronation of Charles XIV of Sweden, a command performance before the Sultan of Turkey, official decorations by the kings of Belgium and Sardinia: the life of Henri Vieuxtemps reads like a storybook tale of the quintessential nineteenth-century musician-hero. A prodigy of Menuhin-like precocity, Vieuxtemps began his international career at the age of thirteen with a tour of Germany that left audiences and musicians spellbound. Spending the winter of 1833/4 in Vienna, he fell in with Beethoven’s former circle and triumphed at the age of fourteen with a revival of the great master’s Violin Concerto, which had for years been woefully neglected. Schumann, in Leipzig, felt no qualms about comparing him to Paganini; and Paganini was happy to accept the comparison when he heard the boy play in London that same year (1834). Vieuxtemps’s international career was launched, and it would sustain him for the next forty years until he was unhappily incapacitated by a stroke in 1873. By that time he had toured America three times (1843/4, 1857/8, and 1870/71), served as the Czar’s violinist-in-waiting (1846-51), enjoyed the above-mentioned honors from Europe’s royalty, and was generally accepted as one of the towering musicians of the century. Berlioz, always quick with an acid pen when confronting mediocrity, summed up the opinion of his age in 1840: «Monsieur Vieuxtemps is a prodigious violinist in the strictest sense of the term. He does things I have never heard from anyone else. He affronts dangers which are frightening for the listener, but which do not disturb him in the least, certain that he will get through them safe and sound.»

Berlioz was equally convinced of Vieuxtemps’s genius as a composer, particular-ly singling out his handling of the orchestra and his deft integration of the solo instrument into a symphonic fabric – no mean praise from the composer of Harold in Italy. If a modern sensibility balks at Vieuxtemps’s large output of virtuoso music for violin and piano (a Souvenir de Amerique, say, consisting of a set of variations on «Yankee Doodle»), there is today nothing to stand in the way of an appreciation of his seven violin concertos and two cello concertos, all of which were once regarded as supreme examples of their genre. Of the violin concertos, the Fourth and Fifth are generally regarded, then as now, as his masterpieces: Berlioz called the Fourth «a magnificent symphony for orchestra with principal violin.» …

Read preface of full score / Vorwort der Partitur lesen HERE

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