Jascha Heifetz made his US debut a hundred years ago. The recital sealed the 16-year-old’s reputation as an astonishing and unruffled performer, set a new bar for violin playing and led to a season full of engagements and a recording contract.
It all happened in New York 100 years ago, on 27 October 1917. On what began as a typical Saturday afternoon, an excited crowd of curious musicians and locals descended on Carnegie Hall to hear the latest virtuoso from Russia, a 16-year-old named Jascha Heifetz, the most recent in a stream of prodigies to emerge from the class of Professor Leopold Auer in Petrograd (now St Petersburg). Details of his remarkable talent had been widely reported by the American press as he and his family travelled from Russia to the US that summer. Nevertheless, without any recordings on which to base an opinion, every writer up until that point had been propagating transatlantic hearsay.
The programme started with the Vitali Chaconne with organ accompaniment. The boy lifted his Tononi to his chin, and after the opening bars of meditative accompaniment, he began to play. According to numerous accounts, even before the end of the Chaconne the audience sensed that a star had been born. Further enthusiasm ensued after each subsequent piece: Wieniawski’s Concerto no.2, Schubert’s Ave Maria, Mozart’s Menuetto (from K334), the Chopin–Wilhelmj Nocturne in D, the Beethoven–Auer ‘Chorus of Dervishes’ and ‘March orientale’ from The Ruins of Athens, Tchaikovsky’s Mélodie and the Paganini–Auer Caprice no.24. He played one encore, Tartini’s Variations on a Theme by Corelli. Pandemonium erupted after the recital, with ‘bravos shaking the walls of the auditorium’, according to the silent-film actress Dagmar Godowsky writing in 1958. Among the headlines that followed were ‘Perfect Violin Playing at Last’, ‘Boy Violinist Wins Triumph’ and ‘Enter a Genius: Jascha Heifetz’.
Denne historien er fra November 2017-utgaven av The Strad.
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Denne historien er fra November 2017-utgaven av The Strad.
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Recital For The Ages
Jascha Heifetz made his US debut a hundred years ago. The recital sealed the 16-year-old’s reputation as an astonishing and unruffled performer, set a new bar for violin playing and led to a season full of engagements and a recording contract.
I Have To Appraise You Like I should
I have to appraise you like I should With the value of top-end instruments skyrocketing, should violin appraisers require a qualification to demonstrate their expertise? Insurers, dealers and experts all give their views
Turkish Delights
Fewer than 20 years after its foundation, the Borusan Istanbul Symphony Orchestra is taking its place on the world stage. Tom Stewart finds out more as the ensemble – and two top soloists – prepare for a new season and a European tour
A Landmark Celebration
Running from 8 to 29 October, the Beijing Music Festival celebrated its 20-year milestone in 2017. Nancy Pellegrini looks at two of the event’s highlights: the ten-hour orchestral marathon and violinist Maxim Vengerov’s world premiere
Dual Inspiration
Cellist Sol Gabetta recalls the genesis of her new recording, a collaboration with mezzo-soprano Cecilia Bartoli – and how their disparate talents played offeach other
Jean-Guihen Queyras
For the French cellist, Haydn’s Concerto no.1 in C major brings back fond memories of an early tutor and a precious Rogeri cello
Freedom Of Expression
In the run-up to Germany's federal election in September, freelance music teachers are campaigning to be treated the same way as full-time professors - but the drive for recognition is proving a struggle.
‘Solo Playing Is Essential To The Identity Of The Section'
For berlin philharmonic first principal bassist matthew McDonald, the search to find his voice as a player has been inextricably entwined with the sound of the orchestra and its emphasis on individualistic playing. In converstion with Chole Cutts, he discusses the elusive processes behind his approach to his instrument.
Adventures in Repertoire
Three decades as artistic director of the Australian Chamber Orchestra have taught Richard Tognetti that necessity is the mother of invention, and invention is essential to the health of classical music. Chloe Cutts meets the Antipodean violinist in Sydney to talk commissions, modern string playing and the survival of contemporary repertoire
Luthier Borja Bernabeu
I ’ve been based in Cremona for almost 20 years; I came for a visit and just stayed on.