Edouard Lalo (1823 -
1892)
Symphonie espagnole, Op. 21
Pablo
Sarasate (1844 - 1908)
Zigeunerweisen, Op. 20
Camille
Saint-Saëns (1835 - 1921)
Havanaise, Op. 83
Maurice
Ravel (1875 - 1937)
Tzigane, rapsodie de concert
Edouard
Lalo's Symphonie espagnole is among the most
popular works in the violinist's repertoire. Lalo's name may be Spanish but his family had
established themselves in northern France in the 16th century .The composer was born in
Lille in 1823, son of a father who had served in Napoleon's armies. Early training at
Lille Conservatoire in violin and cello was followed, at the age of sixteen, by a brief
period of study in Paris with the violinist and conductor Habeneck and private lessons in
composition. In Paris, in independence of his father, who disapproved of his son's choice
of career, he earned a living as a violinist and as a teacher, while writing music that
did not achieve the success he needed. From the 1850s he was particularly involved in
performance as viola-player in the Armingaud Quartet, and later in his own quartet,
ensembles that re-introduced to the French public the classical quartet repertoire of
Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.
It
was not until the 1870s that Lalo began to make an impression as a composer, with the
performance of his Violin Concerto in 1874
by Pablo Sarasate, to whom the Symphonie espagnole
of the same year was dedicated. This was followed by other orchestral compositions,
including the successful Cello Concerto and
a series of works for solo violin and orchestra. Still greater success came at last in
1888 with the production of his opera Le roi d'Ys
at the Opéra-Comique, after a series of
earlier operatic disappointments. He died in 1892.
Symphonie espagnole is a symphony only in
name. The mood of the work is established at the start with the brief orchestral
introduction, followed by the entry of the soloist and the characteristic Spanish rhythms
of the principal theme. The second scherzando
movement, with its contrasting central section, is followed by a characteristically
Spanish Intermezzo and a lyrically moving
slower movement that grows in intensity with its idiomatically Spanish turns of phrase.
The work ends with a final Rondo of bright
elegance and charm in which there is ample opportunity for virtuoso display.
The
Spanish violinist Pablo Sarasate studied in Paris and at the age of fifteen started on a
concert career that was to bring him fame throughout Europe and the Americas. Composers
who wrote for him include Bruch, and his fellow-violinists Joachim and Wienawski. For his
own use he wrote a number of works for violin of which his Gypsy piece, Zigeunerweisen, Opus 20, was published in Leipzig in
1878.
Camille
Saint-Saëns, a composer whose life spans a vast period, from the age of Schumann and
Mendelssohn to that of Ravel and Debussy, and whose works embrace every conceivable genre,
wrote two of his violin concertos for Sarasate, as well as the very Spanish Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso. The same Spanish
element informs the well known Havanaise,
written in 1887.
Having
left the Paris Conservatoire in 1895, Ravel returned two years later to study with Gabriel
Fauré. He nevertheless failed to win any prize for composition, an achievement that was
obligatory for the continuance of studies. His attempts to win the Prix de Rome in
successive years brought no result, while he was at the same time winning considerable
success outside the academic world. This success continued, while the scandal of his
ultimate failure to win the Prix de Rome in 1904 led to the resignation of the Director of
the Conservatoire and his replacement by Fauré, a composer of more progressive
tendencies. In the years after the 1914 - 1918 war, during which he served as a driver,
Ravel moved out of Paris. His compositions of this period include a violin sonata, a sonata
for violin and cello in memory of Debussy and the famous >Tzigane, written in 1924 for the Hungarian violinist
Jelly d'Aranyi, whose own improvised additions the composer added to the completed work.
Ravel reportedly remarked that he had no idea w hat she was doing, as she played the
piece, but he liked it. The Tzigane remains
a show-piece of the violin repertoire, whether in the version for violin and orchestra or
in its original form, for violin and piano, designed by the composer to test the musical
and technical ability of any performer and later described by one of Ravel's friends as a
violinist's minefield. The work captures the spirit of gypsy improvisation, its art
successfully concealing art.
Marat
Bisengaliev
Marat
Bisengaliev was 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 début 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 début 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.
The
Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra of Katowice (PNRSO)
The
Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra of Katowice (PNRSO) was founded in 1945, soon
after the end of the World War II, by the eminent Polish conductor Witold Rowicki. The
PNRSO replaced the Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra which had existed from 1934 to 1939 in
Warsaw, under the direction of another outstanding artist, Grzegorz Fitelberg. In 1947
Grzegorz Fitelberg returned to Poland and became artistic director of the PNRSO. He was
followed by a series of distinguished Polish conductors - Jan Krenz, Bohdan Wodiezko,
Kazimierz Kord, Tadeusz Strugala, Jerzy Maksymiuk, Stanislaw Wislocki and, since 1983,
Antoni Wit. The orchestra has appeared with conductors and soloists of the greatest
distinction and has recorded for Polskie Nagrania and many international record labels.
For Naxos, the PNRSO will record the complete symphonies of Tchaikovsky and Mahler.
Johannes
Wildner
Johannes
Wildner was born in the Austrian resort of Mürzzuschlag in 1956 and studied violin and
conducting, taking his diploma at the Vienna Musikhochschule and proceeding to a doctorate
in musicology. A member of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, he has toured widely as
leader of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra's Johann Strauss Ensemble and of the Vienna Mozart
Academy. As a conductor he has directed the Orchestra Sinfonica dell'Emilia Romagna Arturo
Toscanini, the Budapest State Opera Orchestra, the Silesian Philharmonic, the Malmö
Symphony Orchestra, the Dresden Philharmonic and others. He has recorded works by
Schumann, Wagner and Mozart for Naxos and is one of the main conductors in the Marco Polo
Johann Strauss II complete edition.