Erich
Wolfgang Korngold (1897 -1957)
Violin
Sonata in D Major, Op. 6
Piano
Quintet in E Major, Op. 15
Erich
Wolfgang Korngold was the second son of the distinguished Viennese music critic
Julius Korngold. As a child he showed remarkable precocity, and embarked on the
study of composition at the age of six. His father was on good terms with
Mahler and in 1906 the boy played by heart for him his new cantata, Gold, while
Mahler followed the score, exclaiming "A genius", as the music
continued. He advised Julius Korngold to avoid the Conservatory and allow his
son to study with Zemlinsky, Alma Mahler's former teacher and brother-in-law of
Schoenberg, while Robert Fuchs was persuaded to give him lessons in
counterpoint. The connection with Mahler continued and the Korngolds visited
him in succeeding summers when he was at Toblach. In the summer of 1909 the boy
played to Mahler a new Scherzo he had written and a Passacaglia on a theme of Zemlinsky.
Mahler advised him to add a first movement to these pieces and make of them a
sonata, the result of which was Korngold's Piano Sonata No. 1 in D minor. By
this time the boy's reputation had aroused wider interest from, among others, Engelbert
Humperdinck and Richard Strauss, Nikisch and even Weingartner. In 1910 Julius Korngold
allowed the private publication by Universal Edition of three of his son's
compositions, Der Schneemann (The Snowman), Charakterstücke zu Don Quixote
(Character Pieces based on Don Quixote) and the Piano Sonata in D minor, for
the exclusive use of musicians. The pantomime Der Schneemann was performed at
the palace of the Baroness Nienerth at a charity gala in 1910, in the original
version for two pianos. Six months later it was staged at the Court Opera
orchestrated by Zemlinsky and conducted by Franz Schalk, a performance
sanctioned by Weingartner, who had replaced Mahler at the Court Opera and whose
relationship with Julius Korngold was one of considerable hostility. In Munich,
where, with his father, he had attended the first performance of Mahler's
Eighth Symphony, Korngold played his second piano sonata in the presence of
Paul Dukas and Camille Saint-Saëns, arousing their amazement and admiration.
His Trio, Opus 1, written without the knowledge of his teacher, who had by some
been wrongly credited with a large share in the composition of Der Schneemann,
was performed at this time in Vienna by Arnold Rosé, Mahler's brother-in-law,
with Friedrich Buxbaum and Bruno Waller and in 1911 his Schauspielouvertüre and
Sinfonietta were played by the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra and later by the
Vienna Philharmonic. His one-act operas Der Ring des Polykrales and Violanta
won immediate success in Munich in 1916, under the direction of Bruno Waller,
and he later conducted them himself at the Vienna Court Opera. In 1920, the
year of his operatic triumph with Die tote Stadt, staged in Hamburg and in
Cologne, he made his début in Vienna as an orchestral conductor, embarking on a
career as conductor, pianist and composer that earned him official recognition
in Vienna.
In
1934 Korngold moved to Hollywood, where he continued an earlier association
with Max Reinhardt, with whom he had collaborated on a Berlin staging of Die Fledermaus
in 1928. In America he continued an earlier project, a film version of
Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. The annexation of Austria prevented
his return home and he remained in Hollywood, composing film-scores for some
fifteen films for Warner Brothers. For two of his film-scores, Anthony Adverse
(1936) and Robin Hood (1938), he was awarded Oscars. In the 1940s he conducted
the New York Opera Company in performances of operettas by Johann Strauss and Offenbach
and in 1943 became a naturalised American. After the war he was able to give
greater attention to compositions of another kind, with a violin concerto,
introduced to the concert public by Heifetz, a cello concerto and his Symphony
in F sharp major. He died in Hollywood in 1957.
There
is no doubt that Korngold's association with Hollywood did little to further
his reputation as a serious composer for the concert-hall or opera-house, in
spite of the obvious quality of the music he wrote for Warner Brothers. His
style, late romantic, in spite of the association of his name with that of Schoenberg
in a popular poll in Vienna in 1926, where the two were described as the
greatest composers then living there, again did little to endear him to critics
eager for some fashionable novelty of musical idiom. He summed up his own
career as first that of a prodigy, then an opera composer in Europe, followed
by a period as a movie composer. At the time of writing, 1946, he determined to
end his work as a Hollywood composer, although he had always striven to write
music for the cinema that could stand alone, independent of the film for which it
was composed.
Korngold
wrote his D major Violin Sonata, Opus 6, in 1913, when he was sixteen. It is an
attractive work, with a lyrical first movement of considerable originality and
occasional astringency, within a generally romantic texture. The second movement,
an impetuous Scherzo, has a gently contrasted Trio, and this is followed by an
expressive and rhapsodic slow movement and a graceful finale that includes
episodes of a more robust character. The Piano Quintet in E major, Opus 15, was
published by Schott in 1924. It opens with a romantically expressive first
movement that still contains the necessarily cerebral element that counterpoint
can add. This leads to a deeply felt slow movement of singular beauty, avoiding
any suggestion of commonplace sentimentality and containing material of
contrasting mood and texture, moving where Mahler had pointed. The last of the
three movements opens dramatically and proceeds to an exciting conclusion.
Ilona
Prunyi
Ilona
Prunyi was born in Debrecen in 1941 and studied at the Liszt Academy in
Budapest, distinguishing herself in the Liszt-Bartók Competition while still a
student. Her career as a concert performer was interrupted by a period of ill
health, and for personal reasons she spent ten years as a teacher at the
Academy before making her début in 1974. Since then she has appeared frequently
in solo and chamber music recitals and as a soloist with the principal
Hungarian orchestras.
András
Kiss
András
Kiss was born in Budapest in 1943 and started violin lessons at the age of six.
He studied at the Bartók Conservatory, and from 1960 at the Liszt Academy,
where his teacher was Tibor Ney. A postgraduate scholarship enabled him to
undertake further study under M. Vayman at the Leningrad Conservatory. A prize-winner
in the Leipzig International Bach Competition in 1968, András Kiss was
appointed in the same year to the staff of the Liszt Academy, where he
continues to teach. As a performer he appears regularly in Hungary and has
toured extensively in East and West Europe, the United States and Canada.
Danubius
Quartet
The
Danubius Quartet has won considerable acclaim since its establishment in 1983.
With the violinists Judit Tóth and Adél Miklós, violist Cecilia Bodolai and
cellist Ilona Wibli, and the artistic direction of the distinguished violinist Vilmos
Tátrai, the quartet won awards at Trapani, Evian and Graz in the earlier years
of its foundation, and has recorded, among other works, the String Quartet No.
1 of Reményi for Hungaroton, the complete String Quartets of Villa-Lobos for
Marco Polo and for Naxos the Mozart and Brahms Clarinet Quintets. The Danubius
Quartet has given recitals in Austria, Germany, Yugoslavia, Italy, France and
Switzerland and appeared at a number of international festivals.