Henryk Wieniawski (1835 - 1880) Souvenir de Moscou, Op. 6 Capriccio-Valse, Op. 7 Variations on an original thème (Thème original varie), Op. 15 Polonaise...
Henryk Wieniawski (1835 - 1880)
Souvenir de Moscou, Op. 6
Capriccio-Valse, Op. 7
Variations on an original thème (Thème original varie), Op.
15
Polonaise brillante No.1, Op. 4
Russian Carnival (Le carnaval russe), Op. 11
Gigue, Op. 23
Saltarello (arr. Lenehan)
Mazurka, Op. 19, No.2,
Village Fiddler (Le menetrier)
Mazurka, Op. 19, No.1, Obertass
Mazurka, Op. 12, No.2, Polish Song (Chanson polonaise)
Mazurka, Kujawiak
Legende, Op. 17
Scherzo-tarantelle, Op. 16
The Polish violinist Henryk Wieniawski was born in Lublin in
1835 and had his early training in his native country, before his admission at the age of
eight to the Paris Conservatoire, where he entered the class of Massart, with whom he
continued to study after completing his course. In 1848 he travelled to St. Petersburg,
where his performances made an excellent impression on Vieuxtemps, the court violinist.
The following year he returned to the Paris Conservatoire to acquire the necessary skills
for composition. By the age of fifteen he was able to embark on a full career as a
virtuoso, accompanied by his younger brother Jozef, two years his junior, who, like his
mother and his maternal uncle, had become a very considerable pianist.
Between 1851 and 1853 the Wieniawskis were in Russia, giving
concert after concert. Henryk Wieniawski had already turned his attention to composition,
with a Grand caprice fantastique in 1847 and
an Allegro de sonate the following year in
collaboration with his brother. By 1853 he had written some fourteen compositions for
violin and piano and violin and orchestra. Of these the first Violin Concerto won particular favour and secured his
welcome in Germany, after he had played the concerto with the Gewandhaus Orchestra in
Leipzig. In London he played with the Beethoven Quartet Society, together with the cellist
Piatti, Joachim and Ernst, and in 1860 married the niece of the Irish pianist and composer
George Osborne. Performance in Paris with Anton Rubinstein led to an invitation to move to
Russia, where he served as court violinist and for some years as professor of the violin
at the Conservatory that Rubinstein had established in St. Petersburg. It was with the
orchestra under the latter's direction that Wieniawski gave the first performance of his
second Violin Concerto in St. Petersburg in 1862.
In 1872 Wieniawski left Russia, resuming his career as a
virtuoso, initially in partnership with Rubinstein. From 1875 to 1877 he taught at the
Brussels Conservatory, where he succeeded Vieuxtemps,
and during this period and thereafter continued his performing career, now with
deteriorating health. In Russia again he set out on a concert-tour with Tchaikovsky's
one-time inamorata Desiree Artôt, but this
was interrupted by a break-down in health and a brief attempt at convalescence at the
house of Tchaikovsky's patroness Nadezhda von Meck. He died in Moscow on the last day of
March, 1880, at the age of forty-four.
Wieniawski's Souvenir de
Moscou, originally written for violin and orchestra, was composed in 1853.
Starting with a flourish, the work allows the violin an exhibition of virtuosity, before
the lyrical melody at the heart of the piece is heard. The violinist then provides an
ornamented running accompaniment to the theme, in which harmonics are intermingled. This
leads to a rapid and very Russian dance, the melody in artificial harmonics and a
brilliant conclusion.
The E major Capriccio-Valse
was written in 1852 and is introduced by the piano, which the violin interrupts with
interjected recitative, before the waltz-sequence starts. Again considerable use is made
of harmonics, double-stopping and other technical devices, although the lyricism of the
work prevails throughout and is never sacrificed to mere technical display.
The theme of the Theme and
Variations is first stated in multiple stops by the violinist and then, with
accompaniment, in the higher register of the instrument. A brilliant cadenza links this to
the cheerful following variation, and a further quicker cross-string version of the theme.
The next variation, unaccompanied, makes use of left-hand pizzicato, before, with added
accompaniment using the lower register of the violin. Double-stopping marks the next
treatment of the material, with passages of artificial harmonics. A gentle return to the
earlier version of the theme leads to further lyrical exploration of the material and a
dance-like variation, played largely off the string and culminating in a brilliant
conclusion.
The Polonaise,
the Polish dance that had made its way from village to ball-room and thence, with the help
of composers like Chopin, to the fashionable salon and to the concert-hall, provides an
opportunity for virtuoso violin treatment, evidence, if any were needed, of Wieniawski's
native origins. Le carnaval russe evokes the
spirit of Russia, where he achieved his first and greatest successes and where he ended
his career. Dating from the early 1850s and published in Leipzig in 1854, the Russian
Carnival allows the violinist-composer to exploit relatively simple thematic material with
all the technical virtuosity at his command, including astonishing feats of left-hand
pizzicato and the favourite contemporary virtuoso device of accompanying a melody on one
string with a tremolo on the string below.
The Gigue in E minor
was published posthumously and follows a theme of Baroque contour if not Baroque rhythm
with an embellished version of the material. The Saltarello,
the rapid Neapolitan dance, originally for two violins, offers an opportunity for feats of
agility and perpetual motion. To this the four Mazurkas, written in 1853 and 1860, provide
a contrast. The first of the group allows the Polish village fiddler a moment of
preparation before he launches into the dance. The mazurka encompasses certain varieties
of rhythm, within the general form of the dance. These rhythms include that of the
obertass and the kujawiak, reflected in two of the four Wieniawski Mazurkas, while the Polish Song has a more obviously
vocal element about it, a reminder that the mazurka was in origin a dance song.
Wieniawski dedicated his Legende, written in 1860, the year of
his marriage, to his wife Isabella Hampton. The musical contents of the work match its
characteristically romantic title, as the tale unfolds. To this the Tarantelle makes a
lively and brilliant contrast, aversion of an Italian dance, the rapidity of which has
been suggested either as the result of or remedy for the bite of the tarantula spider,
although a purely geographical derivation might seem more probable.
Marat Bisengaliev
Marat Bisengaliev 'Nas born in Alma-Ata in Kazakhstan in 1962
and began to learn the violin at the age of six, graduating from the Alma-Ata Conservatory
in 1984 with a first prize. He went on to study at the Tchaikovsky Conservatory in Moscow
with Boris Belinky and Valerie Klimov. Having made his concerto debut at the age of nine
in Alma-Ata, Bisengaliev continued to perform as a soloist throughout Eastern Europe and
also served as Artistic Director of the Kazakhstan Chamber Orchestra, before settling in
1989 in England. In 1991 Bisengaliev won first prize in the International Nicanor Zabaleta
Competition, also receiving the special virtuoso prize for the most outstanding
performance of the competition. He earlier was a prize winner in 1988 at the Leipzig
International Bach Competition. He made his concerto debut in England playing the
Beethoven concerto with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, followed by a London performance
of the Tchaikovsky concerto. He has appeared as a soloist with major orchestras in Russia,
England, Germany, Poland and the former Republic of Czechoslovakia. His recordings include
concertos issued by Melodiya, Naxos and Marco Polo and he has been three times the subject
of a Central Soviet Television documentary, most recently in 1992.
John Lenehan
John Lenehan has earned an international reputation both for
his work as solo pianist and with leading chamber music groups of his generation. Together
with such well known musicians as Nigel Kennedy and Julian Lloyd Webber he has appeared in
major concert venues around the world and has been a frequent broadcaster and recording
artist.
John Lenehan's solo performances have received extremely
enthusiastic response from the critics and reviewing his London recital of works by the
French virtuoso composer Charles Valentin Alkan, The Times remarked "John Lenehan's
masterly recital rightly drew gasps and cheers". Among his recent recordings has been
a disc of music by Erik Satie and his recitals show a refreshingly wide range of
repertoire often including music in a lighter vein.