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Violin Mastery - FRITZ KREISLER - Part 2

Bloged in FRITZ KREISLER by Dan Monday June 23, 2008

HOW KREISLER CAME TO COMPOSE AND ARRANGE

He said: “I began to compose and arrange as a young man. I wanted to create a repertory for myself, to be able to express through my medium, the violin, a great deal of beautiful music that had first to be adapted for the instrument. What I composed and arranged was for my own use, reflected my own musical tastes and preferences. In fact, it was not till years after that I even thought of publishing the pieces I had composed and arranged. For I was very diffident as to the outcome of such a step. I have never written anything with the commercial idea of making it ‘playable.’ And I have always felt that anything done in a cold-blooded way for purely mercenary considerations somehow cannot be good. It cannot represent an artist’s best.”

AT THE VIENNA CONSERVATORY

In reply to another query Mr. Kreisler reverted to the days when as a boy he studied at the Vienna Conservatory. “I was only seven when I attended the Conservatory and was much more interested in playing in the park, where my boy friends would be waiting for me, than in taking lessons on the violin. And yet some of the most lasting musical impressions of my life were gathered there. Not so much as regards study itself, as with respect to the good music I heard. Some very great men played at the Conservatory when I was a pupil. There were Joachim, Sarasate in his prime, Hellmesberger, and Rubinstein, whom I heard play the first time he came to Vienna. I really believe that hearing Joachim and Rubinstein play was a greater event in my life and did more for me than five years of study!”

“Of course you do not regard technic as the main essential of the concert violinist’s equipment?” I asked him. “Decidedly not. Sincerity and personality are the first main essentials. Technical equipment is something which should be taken for granted. The virtuoso of the type of Ole Bull, let us say, has disappeared. The ’stunt’ player of a former day with a repertory of three or four bravura pieces was not far above the average music-hall ‘artist.’ The modern virtuoso, the true concert artist, is not worthy of the title unless his art is the outcome of a completely unified nature.

Violin Mastery
Talks with Master Violinists and Teachers
by Frederick H. Martens
Published 1919

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