Louis Spohr (1784-1859) Violin Concerto No. 7 in E Minor, Op. 38 Violin Concerto No. 12 in A, Op. 79 (Concertino No. 1) Great, lengthy, pedantic,...
Louis Spohr
(1784-1859)
Violin Concerto No. 7
in E Minor, Op. 38
Violin Concerto No. 12
in A, Op. 79 (Concertino No. 1)
Great, lengthy,
pedantic, sentimental Spohr, was Richard Wagner's verdict on the great composer
and violinist who had taken lodgings with his mother in Dresden. Spohr himself
was to be more generous to a composer whose work he encouraged, writing to
Wagner after performances of The Flying Dutchman to recommend, however, fewer
difficult figurations for the strings, less brass, less modulation, and the
development of more pleasant-sounding harmonies and melodies, notions that
accord well enough with his own musical language.
Louis Spohr was born
in Brunswick in 1784, the son of a doctor. Shortly after his birth the family
moved to Seesen, where Spohr had his first music lessons, with the
encouragement of his parents, both keen amateurs. His early promise recognized,
he returned to Brunswick, where he studied the violin and general music theory,
embarking on an unsuccessful concert tour to Hamburg in 1799. In the same year
he was appointed chamber musician to the Duke of Brunswick, on whose generous
patronage he was to continue to depend in the following years.
In 1802 Spohr became a
pupil of the Mannheim violinist Franz Eck, a musician whose father, a
horn-player, had worked with Mozart. Eck toured Germany with his young pupil
and went with him to Russia, where Eck was to remain as court violinist until
madness led to his return to his brother in Nancy - the Eck brothers had both
been obliged to leave Munich after amatory complications outlined in Spohr's
memoirs. The following year Spohr was again in Brunswick, influenced strongly
by the performance of Viotti's favourite pupil, the French violinist Pierre
Rode, whom he was to imitate in his own playing.
In succeeding years
Spohr travelled as a virtuoso, giving concerts with his wife, the harpist
Dorette Scheidler, whom he had married in 1806, and developing his abilities as
a composer and as a conductor. He spent from 1805 and 1812 as Konzertmeister in
Gotha, directed music at the Theater an der Wien in Vienna from 1813 to 1815,
and the opera at Frankfurt-am-Main from 1817 until 1819, resigning from this
last position after disagreement with the management over artistic policy.
In 1821 Spohr was in
Dresden. A year later, through the good offices of Weber, he signed a contract
as Kapellmeister at Kassel, a position that had been occupied by Heinrich
Schutz two hundred years before, and that had been offered to Beethoven when
Hesse was under the rule of Napoleon's brother. Spohr was employed by the new
Prince-Elector Wilhelm II and later in his long career in Westphalia by the
Elector's co-regent and successor Wilhelm III, and succeeded in raising the
Kassel opera to a high level of distinction, before his retirement in 1857,
staging performances of his own very successful operas and of Wagner's
music-dramas, and conducting a wide repertoire that included the revived works
of J.S. Bach, as well as undertaking concert tours abroad.
During his career
Spohr occupied a position of the highest esteem, honoured for his achievements
as a violinist, as a composer and as a conductor. The first of these roles was
strengthened by the publication in 1831 of his violin method, while his
distinguished work as a conductor had brought the early novelty of the use of a
baton, something that had caused initial alarm and apprehension among
orchestral players accustomed only to occasional direction from the
Konzertmeister's violin bow, a less damaging weapon, or from the keyboard.
As a composer Spohr
wrote a number of operas, of which the most successful were Faust
(1813), Zemire und Azor (1819) and Jessonda (1823), ten
symphonies, a wide variety of chamber music, choral works, songs and virtuoso
pieces for the violin, and fifteen violin concertos, these last serving as a
vehicle for his own synthesis of French style with the legacy of his beloved
Mozart, a composer he had idolised since his early lessons with Eck.
The seventh of Spohr's
violin concertos, written in 1814, is among the most characteristic,
demonstrating a strong dramatic sense, a relatively conservative retention of
classical form and a command of the contemporary technical possibilities of the
violin. The work opens with an orchestral exposition, introducing the thematic
material that is to form the basis of the display of virtuosity that follows
the entry of the soloist. The slow movement is a fine example of the lyrical
aspect of Spohr's genius, unexpected in its shifts of key. It is capped by a
final rondo that is a further example of Spohr's own technical mastery of the
violin as a player and as a composer.
The twelfth of Spohr's
fifteen violin concertos, the first of his three concertinos, was written in
1828. It opens with a movement in which the soloist is allowed a rhapsodic
rôle, before the emergence of a snatch of operatic melody. The orchestra
introduces the second movement, to which the first has served as a brief
prelude, the violin appearing once again as some operatic diva, leading the way
to the final Alla polacca, a vigorous dance that still allows technical display
as part of what is essentially a simple enough musical structure. The concerto
serves as an admirable exercise for the principles of playing to be outlined in
the Grand Violin School published three years later.
Takako Nishizaki
Takako Nishizaki is
one of Japan's finest violinists. After studying with her father, Shinji
Nishizaki, she became the first student of Shinichi Suzuki, the creator of the
famous Suzuki Method of violin teaching for children. Subsequently she went to
Japan's famous Toho School of Music, and to the Juilliard School in the United
States, where she studied with Joseph Fuchs.
Takako Nishizaki is
one of the most frequently recorded violinists in the world today. She has
recorded ten volumes of her complete Fritz Kreisler Edition, many
contemporary Chinese violin concertos, among them the Concerto by Du
Ming-xin, dedicated to her, and a growing number of rare, previously unrecorded
violin concertos. For Naxos she has recorded Vivaldi's Four Seasons,
Mozart's Violin Concertos, Sonatas by Mozart and Beethoven and
the Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Bruch and Brahms Concertos.
Philharmonic Chamber
Orchestra, Bratislava
The Philharmonic
Chamber Orchestra, Bratislava is a chamber orchestra consisting of the best
players of the Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra. It originated in 1983 on the
incentive of the musicians, who apart from playing in a large symphonic
orchestra felt an urgent need to assert themselves more intensively and
individually. They have an opportunity fully to employ their pent up creative
energy and ambitions in the chamber ensemble, presenting itself as a body of
highly skilled chamber musicians. Many of them perform as soloists and have
become famous to audiences both at home and abroad. The ensemble does not have
a permanent conductor, but concerned in their further artistic development, the
musicians cooperate intermittently with several conductors. Currently the
orchestra focuses its attention on work in the recording studio.
Libor Pesek
Libor Pesek was born
in 1933 and studied conducting at the Prague Academy of Musical Arts, later
appearing at home and abroad with his own ensembles. For nine years he directed
orchestras at Leeuwarden and Enschede in Holland and was for many years
principal conductor of the Pardubice State Orchestra. After achieving
considerable success as music director of the Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra in
Bratislava, in 1982 he moved to Prague to become conductor of the Czech
Philharmonic Orchestra. In 1988 he was appointed Principal Conductor of the
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra.