I have read about the Schumann Violin Concerto for years, but never actually heard the piece until today. Henryk Szerying recorded it for Mercury in the early 60s and it is included in the first Mercury Big Reissue box, which I am working my way through.
The history behind this piece will probably always trump it's musical value. I'm assuming that most forumites have at least a sketchy knowledge: It was a product of Schumann's last days before his Psychotic breakdown (reportedly he heard angels dictating themes to him);
Brahms and Clara worked hard to suppress it, and succeeded for the better part of 70 years; the Violinist that was to introduce it it, Jelly d'Aryanhi (Joachim's great niece and the inspiration behind Ravel's Tzigane and some Bartok works) claimed to be receiving instructions from the Composer from the Great Beyond; and ultimately the Nazis controlled the first performance, by the distinctly non Nazi Violinist Georg Kulankempf. Someone should write a book about the history of this piece, if it hasn't already been written.
Anyway, after 2 hearings it's a pleasant enough piece, not showing any obvious signs of mental instability. I would rank it of slightly less interest than the Cello Concerto. For me it would occupy the same niche in the Composer's body of works that Dvorak's Piano Concerto occupies for that Composer--worth a listen, but paling in interest compared to Concertos that were written for other instruments by the same Composer(s).
Are there any particular recordings that others would recommend that make the best possible case for the work?
The history behind this piece will probably always trump it's musical value. I'm assuming that most forumites have at least a sketchy knowledge: It was a product of Schumann's last days before his Psychotic breakdown (reportedly he heard angels dictating themes to him);
Brahms and Clara worked hard to suppress it, and succeeded for the better part of 70 years; the Violinist that was to introduce it it, Jelly d'Aryanhi (Joachim's great niece and the inspiration behind Ravel's Tzigane and some Bartok works) claimed to be receiving instructions from the Composer from the Great Beyond; and ultimately the Nazis controlled the first performance, by the distinctly non Nazi Violinist Georg Kulankempf. Someone should write a book about the history of this piece, if it hasn't already been written.
Anyway, after 2 hearings it's a pleasant enough piece, not showing any obvious signs of mental instability. I would rank it of slightly less interest than the Cello Concerto. For me it would occupy the same niche in the Composer's body of works that Dvorak's Piano Concerto occupies for that Composer--worth a listen, but paling in interest compared to Concertos that were written for other instruments by the same Composer(s).
Are there any particular recordings that others would recommend that make the best possible case for the work?
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