Great Violinists - Kreisler : Vol. 3 Brahms / Mozart / Kreisler

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JOHANNES BRAHMS / W. A. MOZART
Great Violinists - Kreisler : Vol. 3 Brahms / Mozart / Kreisler
Fritz Kreisler (violin) / London Philharmonic, Sargent, Philadelphia, Ormandy

[ Naxos Historical Great Violinists / CD ]

Release Date: Wednesday 5 June 2002

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

Classic historic recordings remastered

Friedrich 'Fritz' Kreisler was born in Vienna on 2 February 1875, the son of Sigmund Freud's family physician. His Polish father Salomon, an enthusiastic amateur, was Fritz's first leader then went on to Jacques Auber, leader of the Ringtheater orchestra. In 1882 he became the youngest student admitted to the Vienna Conservatory (studying violin with the younger Josef Hellmesberger, theory with Anton Bruckner) and made his début at Carlsbad (now Karlovy Vary) with the singer Carlotta Patti, sister of Adelina.

At ten he won the gold medal at the Conservatory, was given a three-quarter-size Amati by friends and transferred to the Paris Conservatoire (violin with Joseph Massart, composition with Léo Delibes). He met César Franck, played in the Pasdeloup Orchestra and in 1887 took a first prize in violin.

In 1888/9 Kreisler toured America with the pianist Moriz Rosenthal. He spent two years in Vienna, broadening his education; thought of following his father's profession and did two years of medical training; then did his military service. In 1896 he decided on music and, after the Court Opera Orchestra disappointment, began his career as a travelling virtuoso. He toured Russia, met Glazunov, found a wealthy sponsor and gradually advanced himself, getting to know Brahms, Joachim, Wolf and Schoenberg. In January 1898 he made his concerto début in Vienna with Bruch's G minor Concerto, conducted by Hans Richter, and a year later he had an even greater success when he played Bruch's D minor, Vieuxtemps's F sharp minor and Paganini's 'Non più? mesta' Variations for his début with the Berlin Philharmonic under Josef Rebicek. In November 1899 he was back in Berlin to play the Mendelssohn E minor Concerto under Arthur Nikisch. In 1900 he toured America and in 1902 he first appeared in London, with Richter conducting.

Kreisler's marriage to Harriet Lies in 1900 was crucial to his career, as she organized and motivated him from then on.

In 1904 he was awarded the Royal Philharmonic Society's Gold Medal, in 1911 he premiered the Elgar Concerto and by World War I, in which he was conscripted, wounded in the leg and reported killed, he was famous. He moved to the United States, giving generously to help war orphans and refugees and playing charity concerts. When America entered the war, he was sidelined as an enemy alien; the enforced rest resulted in his operetta Apple Blossoms and his String Quartet. From 1924 Kreisler made his home in Berlin but with the rise of Hitler in 1933, he refused to play in Germany any more.

His admission in 1935 that many 'baroque' pieces in his repertoire were his own compositions caused a public rumpus, as the English critic Ernest Newman took umbrage. After the Anschluss of Austria in 1938, Kreisler took French citizenship, then moved to the U.S. In 1941 he was hit by a van while crossing a New York street and was in a coma for four weeks. The accident ended his big-time career, though he remained a much-loved figure in America (taking citizenship in 1943) and did not stop playing until after the 1949/50 season. He died in New York on 29th January 1962.
- Tully Potter

Tracks:

JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
Concerto for two violins in D minor BWV 1043
01. Vivace 03:46
02. Largo ma non troppo 04:59
03. Allegro 04:59
Fritz Kreisler, violin / Efrem Zimbalist, violin
Walter B. Rogers, conductor

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
Violin Concerto No.4 in D major K.218
04. Allegro 09:28
05. Andante cantabile 08:31
06. Andante grazioso - Allegro ma non troppo 09:07
Fritz Kreisler, violin
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Malcolm Sargent, conductor

NICCOLO PAGANINI
Concerto in One Movement (arr. Kreisler)
07. Concerto In One Movement (arr. Kreisler) (Arranged From The First Movement Of Violin Concerto In D M 17:31
Fritz Kreisler, violin
Philadelphia Orchestra
Eugene Ormandy, conductor

FRITZ KREISLER
Concerto (in the style of Vivaldi) in C major
08. Allegro energetico ma non troppo 04:50
09. Andante doloroso 04:05
10. Allegro molto 02:49
Fritz Kreisler, violin
Victor String Orchestra
Donald Voorhees, conductor