This highly virtuosic concert piece, composed in 1863, is one of the works that Saint-Saëns wrote especially for his friend Pablo de Sarasate. The great violin virtuosos of the 19th century delighted their audiences with it – first the dedicatee himself, then later, most notably, Eugène Ysaÿe. “It’s a kind of fantasy waltz in the Spanish manner, enchanting in its effect”, wrote a music critic back in 1876. Today, this work is in the repertoire of all the great violinists. The Henle Urtext edition is the first-ever critical edition of this work. The solo part has been annotated by Augustin Hadelich.
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In his brief appreciation of Pablo de Sarasate (1844 – 1908), published in October 1908 just a few weeks after his death, Camille Saint-Saëns (1835 – 1921) emphasised the importance of this great Spanish virtuoso for his own violin works. Sarasate was only fifteen years old when he first visited SaintSaëns in 1859. He asked the composer for a violin … 更多
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Camille Saint-Saëns
Saint-Saëns was one of the most multifaceted musicians of the second half of the nineteenth century in France. Regarded as a Classicist, he also wrote pieces with an Impressionist character to their sound, and one composition in quarter-tones. As a critic and essayist he was involved in the first complete editions of Rameau’s and Gluck’s works.
1835 | Born in Paris on October 9. Early comprehensive education. |
1848–52 | Studies at the Conservatoire de Paris. |
1853 | Organist at St. Merry Church in Paris. |
1853–59 | First large-scale works: Symphony No. 1, Op. 2 (1853), and No. 2, Op. 55 (1859); Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 17 (1858); Violin Concerto No. 1, Op. 20 (1859); Mass, Op. 4 (1856); he attempts to arrive at unique forms. |
1857–77 | Organist at La Madeleine in Paris. |
1861–65 | He teaches at the École de Musique Classique et Religieuse Niedermeyer. |
1871 | Founding of the Société Nationale de musique. |
1871–77 | Composition of symphonic poems “Le rouet d’Omphale” (“The Wheel of Omphale,” 1871), “Phaéton” (1873), “Danse macabre” (1874), “La jeunesse d’Hercule” (1877). |
1876 | Attends the performance of the Ring in Bayreuth. |
1877 | Performance in Weimar of his opera “Samson et Dalila.” |
1881 | Member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts. |
1883 | Performance in Paris of his opera “Henry VIII.” |
1885 | Publication of the treatise “Harmonie et mélodie.” |
1886 | Performance in London of his Organ Symphony (Symphony No. 3 in C minor): major work with thematic transformation after Liszt’s model. Composition of “The Carnival of the Animals,” the publication of which he forbade during his lifetime. |
1899 | Publication of the book “Portraits et souvenirs.” |
1900 | Cantata “Le feu celeste” in praise of electricity, for the opening of the Exposition Universelle. |
1921 | Death in Algiers on December 16. |