HUMMEL: Concerto for Piano and Violin, Op. 17 / Violin Concerto
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Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778-1837) Violin Concerto Concerto for Piano and Violin Johann Nepomuk Hummel was born in Pressburg, now Bratislava, in the Slovak...
Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778-1837)
Violin Concerto Concerto for Piano and Violin
Johann Nepomuk Hummel was born in Pressburg, now
Bratislava, in the Slovak Republic, and was considered
one of Europe's finest pianist-composers. A child
prodigy, he became a pupil of Mozart at the age of eight,
the two forming a life-long friendship. His successful
debut concert as a pianist in 1787 was followed in 1788
by a four-year tour to Germany, Denmark, Scotland and
England with his father, the conductor Johannes Hummel.
On his return, Johann studied with Albrechtsberger,
Salieri and Haydn while he himself taught, performed and
composed. It was during this period that he formed a long,
stormy friendship with his great rival, Beethoven. In 1804
he was appointed Konzertmeister to Prince Nikolaus
Esterhazy at Eisenstadt, following the retirement of
Haydn, a post he retained until 1811. While at Eisenstadt
he composed several concertos, sacred works, including
five large-scale Masses, and many works for solo piano.
He also composed a number of short theatrical pieces, and
minuets and dances for orchestra.
In 1811 Johann Nepomuk returned to Vienna and
continued life as a pianist and composer, marrying a wellknown
singer, Elizabeth Rockel, with whom he had two
sons. After a brief, unhappy period as Kapellmeister in
Stuttgart, he and his family settled in Weimar, where his
main responsibilities lay in directing operas and special
events for the ducal court and he developed a close
friendship with Goethe. During the 1820s Hummel
travelled extensively, but in 1827 he returned to Vienna to
visit the dying Beethoven. He was a pall-bearer at his
funeral, and, following Beethoven's wishes, organized a
memorial concert, where he improvised on themes from
the dead composer's works, most movingly on the
Prisoners' Chorus from Fidelio. In 1830 Hummel visited
Paris and London, his first visit there for forty years, and
the climax of his playing career. Ill health in his last three
years reduced his activities, and his death in Weimar in
1837 was regarded as the passing of an era, marked in
Vienna by a performance of Mozart's Requiem.
Hummel composed about a dozen works for piano
and orchestra between 1805 and his death, over half of
which bore the title 'concerto'. There are 54 volumes of
Hummel's manuscripts in the British Library in London,
which were purchased in 1884, and amongst these is a
volume containing an incomplete Violin Concerto, bound
together with the famous Trumpet Concerto. Hummel
would have spent a great deal of time on the latter, since
he wanted to make a good impression as the new
Kapellmeister at Eisenstadt, and this was to be performed
in his first major concert for the Esterhazy family.
Therefore it is likely that he abandoned work on the Violin
Concerto, intending to take it up at a later date, and
preferred instead to compose the Concerto for Piano and
Violin. The appearance of the Violin Concerto by his great
rival Beethoven in 1806 could easily have dissuaded him
from completing his own concerto.
Although the concerto was never completed, all the
solo violin part is extant, in two different hands:
Hummel's hand, and a student's, with the short Adagio
being completely in Hummel's hand. I added orchestral
parts to several passages in the outer movements, as well
as editing the complete work and composing cadenzas for
the first and last movements. Like several concertos of the
time, it is composed for a small orchestra, without
clarinets, trumpets or timpani. The solo violin part is
certainly very virtuosic and compares interestingly with
the virtuoso nature of the composer's works for solo piano
and piano with orchestra. Historically this concerto
occupies the fascinating interim period between the
Haydn/Mozart era and the great violin works of the
German romantic composers, Mendelssohn, Bruch and
Brahms. Haydn composed three violin concertos in 1765,
and Mozart's five concertos date from 1775. The most
prolific composer in this genre was Louis Spohr, who
composed fifteen between 1803 and 1846. His second of
1804, and the third and fourth of 1805/6, are closest to
Hummel's, with Beethoven's following in 1806.
Mendelssohn's Concerto in E minor was composed in
1844, and this was followed by three concertos by Max
Bruch in 1868, 1878 and 1891, and by the Brahms
concerto in 1879.
The Concerto for Piano and Violin dates from 1804
and is in the traditional three movements, Allegro con
brio, Andante con moto and Rondo. The delightful
interplay between the two solo instruments displays less
virtuosity than Hummel employs in his solo concertos,
but nevertheless many passages are considerably florid. In
the opening movement the instruments take it in turns to
introduce melodies, with the second instrument often
developing the material, frequently introducing more
elaborate decoration. It is of particular interest that
Hummel should have composed his own cadenza in this
movement since it was often left to the soloists or to
fellow composers to add these. In the second movement
he uses one of his favourite musical forms, the theme and
variations, of which there are six, and he completes the
concerto with a playful Rondo, for which I have
composed a cadenza. In the middle section of this
movement Hummel deviates into the minor key,
producing a short episode of gravity as a contrast to the
high spirits of the original theme. This edition is based on
the original Traeg Edition, Vienna, 1805.
As would be expected, the solo violin part in the
Violin Concerto is considerably more complex and
decorated than the violin part in the Concerto for Piano
and Violin. The first movement is typically in sonata
form, although the composer varies the format by
introducing some new ideas in the final section. The slow
movement, where he uses strings only to accompany the
soloist, is a beautiful, gentle Adagio where the lyricism of
the solo violin would not be out of place in an opera. The
thematic material of the final Rondo varies from the jovial
opening theme to teasing triplet passages, lyrical music
and strident chordal music.
The world première of the Hummel/Rose Violin
Concerto was given at St John's, Smith Square, London
on 2nd June 1998, performed by Jaakko Kuusisto and the
Jupiter Orchestra, conducted by Gregory Rose.
Gregory Rose
Concerto for Piano and Violin in G major, Op. 17 (more info)
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I. Allegro con brio - 15:39
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II. Andante con moto - 11:35
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III. Rondo - 9:35
Violin Concerto (completed by G. Rose) (more info)
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I. Allegro risoluto - 15:25
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II. Adagio - 2:55
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III. Rondo - 9:08