Birthdays of the Great

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  • Sydney Grew
    Banned
    • Mar 2007
    • 754

    Birthdays of the Great

    While having regard to the fact that "a hen is only an egg's way of making another egg" (Samuel Butler), let us here remember some significant birthdays.

    The future Head-Professor of violin-playing at the Guildhall School of Music, August Emil Daniel Ferdinand Viktor Wilhelmj, was born this day a hundred and sixty-six years ago (which is to say 1845), at Usingen, in the Duchy of Nassau, a small place just north of Francfort on the Maine. Wilhelmj developed into an able violinist at an early age; indeed his talent was so precocious that when Henriette Sontag heard him in 1852 she embraced the seven-year-old child warmly, exclaiming: "You will be the German Paganini." This was echoed in 1861 when Prince Emil von Wittgenstein sent Wilhelmj to Liszt, who was so enchanted with the child's playing of Spohr's Eighth Concerto and Ernst's "Airs Hongroises," that he sent him to David at Leibsic with the words: "Let me present to you the future Paganini! Keep an eye on him!"

    In 1865 Wilhelmj began the wandering life of a virtuoso, which led him to carry his art into more countries than almost any other artist, save, perhaps, Reményi. He first went to Switzer-land; then in 1866 to Holland, and in the summer came to London, making his début on September the seventeenth, at one of Mr. Alfred Mellon's Promenade Concerts at Covent Garden, and receiving a rapturous ovation. He was equally successful in his first appearance at a Monday Popular Concert on November the twenty-sixth following, and likewise in his début at the Crystal Palace on December the first.

    In 1875 Wilhelmj was in England again. He played at the Philharmonic Society's concert in memory of Sterndale Bennett, and occupied himself during the year in propagating the cult of Wagner in England, playing his music on all occasions, and leading orchestral performances of the German master's works. In 1876 Wilhelmj led the orchestra at Bayreuth, coming to England again in 1877. In the same year he induced Wagner to journey to London and conduct the famous festival at the Albert Hall. Wilhelmj led the violins, and organised two extra concerts on a less lavish scale on May the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth.

    In 1885 he was travelling again, and it was in this year that - at the invitation of the Sultan of Turkey - he had the unique experience of playing before the ladies of the Seraglio. Probably Wilhelmj was the only violinist to whom such a compliment had, until then, been paid. The Sultan decorated him with the order of the Medjidie, of the second class, and also presented him with some fine diamonds.

    Blasewitz, near Dresden, became Wilhelmj's home from 1886 until 1893, in which year he installed himself in London. In 1894 he was, as already noted, appointed principal violin professor at the Guildhall School of Music. He also taught privately, and although he never appeared at London concerts during the latter years of his life, Wilhelmj's massive, dignified figure, with its flowing grey hair, crowned with a wide-brimmed soft felt hat, was familiar to concert-goers as a member of the audience. He expired after a short illness at his residence, 54 Priory Road, West Hampstead, on January the twenty-second, 1908.

    The qualities that combined to make Wilhelmj one of the greatest violinists of his day may be summed up in the force of his personality, the great certainty of his technique, his rich tone, cultured rendering and splendid poise. He stood for dignity and breadth. He believed that people wanted intellectual renderings, and he aimed at an exact balance of intellect and imagination, conveying a suggestion of reserve force that was essentially majestic.

    In his later years he took an active interest in the technique of violin-making, and was a fervent patron and champion of more than one continental maker of his day. He was convinced that the secret of the Cremona makers lay in varnishing their violins whilst the backs and bellies were fixed only to the top and bottom blocks of the instruments, the final gluing taking place after the varnish was dry. His house in Avenue Road was (in 1894) a museum of modern-made violins, and he was for ever encouraging amateur violin-makers to devote themselves to the art.
  • vinteuil
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 13058

    #2
    ... it is beyond belief that Mr Grew did not also record that today is the birthday of Mr Liam Gallagher, of the beat-combo 'Oasis' - of Mr Tyler Stewart, drummer with the ensemble 'Barenaked Ladies', of Mr Philthy Animal [Philip Taylor esq], a drummer with the pleasantly (if incorrectly) umlaut-decorated "Motörhead", and of that American gentleman, Mr Leonard Cohen...
    Last edited by vinteuil; 21-09-11, 12:59.

    Comment

    • Chris Newman
      Late Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 2100

      #3
      If a thing is worth doing it must be done properly:

      1527 - Matthaus Ludecus, composer
      1706 - Jacob Wilhelm Lustig, composer
      1760 - Gaetano Valeri, composer
      1817 - Charles Balmer, composer
      1832 - Friedrich Wilhelm Langhans, composer
      1833 - Josef Richard Rozkosny, composer
      1843 - David Emlyn Evans, composer
      1869 - Henryk Melcer-Szczawinski, composer
      1873 - Papa Jack Laine, American musician (d. 1966)
      1882 - Alf Thorbald Hurum, composer
      1885 - Thomas Alexandrovich de Hartmann, composer
      1893 - Moses Pergament, composer
      1936 - Dickey Lee, American singer and songwriter
      1938 - Atli Heimir Sveinsson, composer
      1938 - Yuji Takahashi, composer
      1951 - Henk Hofstede, Dutch singer/guitarist/keyboardist (Nits)
      1967 - Faith Hill, American singer
      1972 - David Silveria, American drummer (KoЯn)
      1974 - Taral Hicks, American musician

      Comment

      • Roehre

        #4
        Well, that Wilhelmj guy arranged paganini's 1st violin concerto a bit: sexing up (as far as that's possible in a Paganini solo...) the solo part in the 1st mvt, and simply cut the 2nd and 3rd movements.

        An integer artist, I'd say

        Comment

        • verismissimo
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 2957

          #5
          Somewhat disappointing to note that Grew has omitted Wilhelmj's visit to Australia in 1881 - the first international virtuoso of the violin to visit those colonies. He gave fourteen concerts in Sydney, one of them with the Princes Albert and George, midshipmen on a visiting warship, in attendance. Sydney was followed by Melbourne, where his playing of Schubert's "Ave Maria" was noted for "more fervour than would have been possible, we think, had the air been breatrhed even by the human voice".

          Comment

          • EdgeleyRob
            Guest
            • Nov 2010
            • 12180

            #6
            Incidentally does anyone on here share their birthdate with any famous composers?
            Brahms and Tchaikovsky for me (Oh yes!) 7th May.

            Comment

            • Roslynmuse
              Full Member
              • Jun 2011
              • 1270

              #7
              Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View Post
              Incidentally does anyone on here share their birthdate with any famous composers?
              Brahms and Tchaikovsky for me (Oh yes!) 7th May.
              William Croft, Andre Messager and Dmitri Kabalevsky (as well as Rudyard Kipling... ...and Davy Jones of The Monkees!) (Dec 30th)

              Comment

              • Curalach

                #8
                Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View Post
                Incidentally does anyone on here share their birthdate with any famous composers?
                Erik Satie and er . . . Idi Amin and Ayatollah Khomeini !! (17 May)

                Comment

                • Petrushka
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 12388

                  #9
                  Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View Post
                  Incidentally does anyone on here share their birthdate with any famous composers?
                  Brahms and Tchaikovsky for me (Oh yes!) 7th May.
                  Igor Stravinsky was born on the same date as me (June 5) by the old Russian calender and appeared thus in the Times until quite recently. It's sctually June 17. I miss Elgar by rhree days and Richard Strauss by five. That fine chef, Simon Hopkinson, was born on the very same day as me.
                  "The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink

                  Comment

                  • Chris Newman
                    Late Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 2100

                    #10
                    OK, I'll come clean. I missed these guys on the 31st of May by a day:
                    Joseph Grimaldi, Clown, 1837
                    Wm Heath Robinson, Artist, 1872
                    Billy Mayerl, Composer, 1902
                    Clint Eastwood, Actor, 1930
                    and Shirley Verrett, Mezzo, 1931

                    whilst the following were a day late on June the 2nd:
                    The Marquis de Sade, 1746
                    Thomas Hardy, 1840
                    Edward Elgar, 1857
                    Charlie Watts, Rolling Stone 1941

                    I share a birthday on 1st of June with
                    Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury 1563
                    Felician Schwab, Composer 1611
                    Georg Muffat , composer 1611
                    Ignaz Playel, Piano maker 1757
                    Michail Glinka, Composer 1803
                    Carl Bechstein, Piano Maker 1826
                    Percy Whitlock, Composer 1903
                    Szymon Goldberg, Violinist, Conductor 1909
                    Nelson Riddle, Arranger, composer and conductor 1921
                    Marilyn Monroe, Actress 1926
                    Bob Monkhouse, Comedian 1928
                    Edward Woodward, Actor 1930
                    Gerald Scarfe, Artist 1936

                    Brian Cox, Actor 1946
                    Me 1946
                    Carol Neblett, Soprano 1946

                    Ronnie Wood, Rolling Stone 1947
                    Martin Brundle, Racing Driver 1959
                    Jason Donovan, actor 1968

                    Not a bad time of year.

                    Comment

                    • 3rd Viennese School

                      #11
                      "Incidentally does anyone on here share their birthdate with any famous composers?"


                      I do! Its my Birthday month. September 1st. Gloria Estafan.

                      3VS

                      Comment

                      • Sydney Grew
                        Banned
                        • Mar 2007
                        • 754

                        #12
                        Let us begin this time in Hastings, with a poor little orphan, Winifred Marjorie Williams, in 1907 just ten years old and quite alone in the world. Her parents, John Williams and his wife Emily, had both expired before her second birthday.

                        She had only two advantages - she was legitimate, and her teeth were good.

                        But one day she had the most amazing stroke of luck. A kind old German gentleman turned up - he was seventy-two at the time - saying that he was a distant relative of her mother. This was a Herr Klindworth. Poor little Winifred was essentially adopted by him, was persuaded to change her name to Winifred Klindworth, and before long she found herself whisked off to meet his friends at Bayreuth. What joy!

                        Now Klindworth was a musical man of the Tschaicoffsci kind, as was also his friend Siegfried Wagner; yet the latter was self-contradictorily anxious that the famous line be continued and heirs produced. Who better suited to that task then than little Winifred? Just the thing! So at eighteen she was duly united with Siegfried, and despite everything they contrived to produce four children.

                        After Siegried's expiry in 1930, the well-known socialistic politician Hilter, for whom Winifred had been working as translator, proposed marriage; but she rejected that opportunity, possibly realizing that at bottom he was something of an Austrian-style ratbag. This view did not however prevent her in later years from using in the course of general conversation the expression "U.S.A.," signifying "unser seliger Adolf," when she wished to refer to him. ("Unser seliger" means "our blessed." The information in this paragraph comes from the interesting - if understandably hysterical - book of her grand-son, Gottfried Wagner, entitled in English "Twilight of the Wagners.")

                        But anyway, this contribution is really intended to be about the kind old gentleman, Carl Klindworth, born in Hanover a hundred and eighty-one years ago to-day in 1830. Almost the chief passion of his youth was to arrange and play operatic scores for the keyboard. Unable to afford violin studies with Spohr, at the age of seventeen he took up a position as conductor of a travelling theatre company, an experience which taught him much about the art of arrangement. "I had to be very alert in adapting the instrumentation to my limited resources," he said.

                        In 1852 Klindworth met the omnipresent Liszt, who invited Klindworth to Weimar as his pupil; there with Dionys Pruckner and other fellow students he formed a Society the chief function of which was "to pave the way for the Music of the Future."

                        But in 1854 he suddenly removed to London where he remained for fourteen years, appearing as pianist and conductor. His first appearance was at one of Ella's "Musical Winter Evenings" on March the thirtieth, 1854, and he played Henselt's concerto at the Kew Philharmonic concert on July the fourth, 1855. The Musical Times commented upon the "beautiful touch and the fine expression of this young artist." He mounted in 1861 a performance of Anton Rubinstein’s massive "Ocean" Symphony, conducted by himelf, but the British public accorded it only a lukewarm reception. Indeed that is an attitude which continues to this day, as I do not recall ever having heard a single one of Rubinstein's six symphonies and ten string quartettes!

                        In April 1855 Klindworth met Wagner, who had sought him out at the suggestion of Liszt. Wagner was struck by Klindworth's physical appearance: "If the fellow had a tenor voice I should almost certainly kidnap him," he wrote, "because he meets every requirement for my Siegfried, especially with regards to physique." That remark sheds a certain light upon the significance of the opera does it not? This meeting was regarded by Klindworth as the second great turning-point in his career, for Wagner entrusted him with the task of preparing piano scores of the Ring, a work which occupied him for many years.

                        When the Moscow Conservatory was founded, its director Nikolay Rubinstein invited Klindworth to join the piano faculty in 1868, a position he held for fourteen years. His association with Wagner in no way prevented him from forming a friendship with Tschaicoffscy! In Moscow he completed work on the Ring arrangement, but was famously obliged to make a second version of Act Two of "Night Falls on the Gods," because the Russian post-office mistakenly sent the first one to Beirut.

                        Following the death of Rubinstein in 1882, Klindworth returned to Germany and became the conductor both of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra (sharing this position with Joachim and Wüllner) and of the Wagner Society in Potsdam, where he introduced Bruckner’s Seventh Symphony.

                        Klindworth's original compositions include Twenty-Four Studies in all the major and minor keys, a very difficult and effective Polonaise Fantaisie for pianoforte, and an Elementary Piano-Forte Primer. Among his best-known editions are Bach's Wohltemperirte Clavier (1894), Beethoven's thirty-two piano-forte sonatas, and the complete works of Chopin (1878), beyond all praise for his rare insight into the text and the minute care bestowed upon the presentation of it.

                        Comment

                        • mercia
                          Full Member
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 8920

                          #13
                          a musical man of the Tschaicoffsci kind
                          oh dear, not another homosexualist

                          Comment

                          • mercia
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 8920

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Sydney Grew View Post
                            an Austrian-style ratbag
                            the very worst kind [of ratbag], do we not agree?
                            Last edited by mercia; 25-09-11, 12:19.

                            Comment

                            • Ventilhorn

                              #15
                              Originally posted by mercia View Post
                              the very worst kind, do we not agree?
                              re: Message #12

                              A totally unnecessary bit of muck-raking. Do we not agree?

                              VH

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