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Eugène Ysaÿe

Eugène-Auguste Ysaÿe (French: [øʒɛn iza.i]; 16 July 1858 – 12 May 1931) was a Belgian virtuoso violinist, composer, and conductor. He was regarded as "The King of the Violin", or, as Nathan Milstein put it, the "tsar".

A photograph of Eugène Ysaÿe

Legend of the Ysaÿe violin

Eugène Ysaÿe came from a background of "artisans", though a large part of his family played instruments. As violinist Arnold Steinhardt recounts, a legend was passed down through the Ysaÿe family about the first violin brought to the lineage:

It was told of a boy whom some woodcutters found in the forest and brought to the village. The boy grew up to be a blacksmith. Once, at a village festival, he astonished everyone by playing the viol beautifully. From then on the villagers took pleasure in dancing and singing to the strains of his viol. One day an illustrious stranger stopped in front of the smithy to have his horse shod. The count's servant saw the viol inside and told the young smith that he had heard a new Italian instrument played by some minstrels at the count's court. That instrument, called the violin, was much better than the viol – its tone was like the human voice and could express every feeling and passion. From that moment the young man no longer took pleasure in his viol. Day and night he was thinking of that wonderful new instrument that could express joy and sorrow and whose tones went straight to the human heart. Then he had a dream: he saw before him a young woman of indescribable beauty, not unlike his own love, Biethline. She came to him and kissed his brow. The young man awoke and looked at the wall his broken and neglected viol used to hang on and could barely believe his eyes: there, instead of the viol, was a new instrument of beautiful proportions. He put it against his shoulder and drew the bow over the strings, producing sounds that were truly divine. The violin sang in a heartwarming tone: it rejoiced and wept for happiness – and so did the musician. Thus, goes the legend, came the first violin to the Ardennes and to the Ysaÿe family.[1]

Early years

Born in Liège, Ysaÿe began violin lessons at age five with his father. He would later recognize his father's teaching as the foundation of everything he knew on his instrument, even though he went on to study with highly reputed masters. In 1867, Ysaÿe entered the Royal Conservatory of Liège to study with Désiré Heynberg, and in the process won a shared second prize with the Viotti 22nd Violin Concerto.[2] He then went on to study with Henryk Wieniawski for two years in Brussels and Henri Vieuxtemps in Paris.[2]

Studying with these teachers meant that he was part of the so-called Franco-Belgian school of violin playing, which dates back to the development of the modern violin bow by François Tourte. Qualities of this "École" included elegance, a full tone with a sense of drawing a "long" bow with no jerks, precise left hand techniques, and bowing using the whole forearm while keeping both the wrist and upper arm quiet (as opposed to Joseph Joachim's German school of wrist bowing and Leopold Auer's Russian concept of using the whole arm.)

Early career

 
Ber Zalkind. "Cartoon of Violinist Eugène Ysaÿe" (1913)

After his graduation from the Royal Conservatory of Liège, Ysaÿe was the principal violin of the Benjamin Bilse beer-hall orchestra, which later developed into the Berlin Philharmonic. Many musicians of note and influence came regularly to hear this orchestra and Ysaÿe in particular, among whom figured Joseph Joachim, Franz Liszt, Clara Schumann, and Anton Rubinstein, who asked that Ysaÿe be released from his contract to accompany him on tour.

When Ysaÿe was twenty-seven years old, he was recommended as a soloist for one of the Concerts Colonne in Paris, which was the start of his great success as a concert artist. The next year, Ysaÿe received a professorship at the Brussels Conservatoire in his native Belgium. This began his career as a teacher, which was to remain one of his main occupations after leaving the Conservatory in 1898 and into his last years. Among his notable pupils were Josef Gingold, the viola virtuoso William Primrose, the violin virtuoso Nathan Milstein (who primarily studied with Pyotr Stolyarsky), Louis Persinger, Mathieu Crickboom, Jonny Heykens, Charles Houdret, Jascha Brodsky, Oscar Shumsky, Julia Klumpke, George Enescu,[3] Oskar Back,[3] Jacques Thibaud, Aldo Ferraresi, and Nellie A. Hope.[4] (See: List of music students by teacher: T to Z#Eugène Ysaÿe.)

 
Eugène Ysaÿe in Russia, 1883

During his tenure as professor at the Conservatoire, Ysaÿe continued to tour an ever-broadening section of the world, including all of Europe, Russia, and the United States. Despite health concerns, particularly regarding the condition of his hands, Ysaÿe was at his best when performing, and many prominent composers dedicated major works to him, including Claude Debussy, Camille Saint-Saëns, César Franck, and Ernest Chausson. He arranged for violin and orchestra Saint-Saëns's Étude en forme de valse, which had originally been written for solo piano.

Mention should be made of Franck's Violin Sonata in A, written as a wedding present for Ysaÿe and his wife in 1886, which Ysaÿe played wherever he went for the rest of his life; and of Chausson's Poème, which was his response to a request for a concerto. Joseph Szigeti considered those two dedications particularly stand out in demonstrating the enormous respect in which Ysaÿe was held.

In 1886, he established the Ysaÿe Quartet, which premiered Debussy's String Quartet.

Teaching and composing

As his physical ailments grew more prohibitive, Ysaÿe turned more to teaching, conducting and an early love, composition. Among his most famous works are the six Sonatas for Solo Violin op. 27, the unaccompanied Sonata for Cello, op. 28, one Sonata for Two Violins, eight Poèmes for various instruments (one or two violins, violin and cello, string quartet) and orchestra (Poème élégiaque, Poème de l'Extase, Chant d'hiver, Poème nocturne, among others), pieces for string orchestra without basses (including Poème de l'Exil), two piano trios, a string quintet, and an opera, Peter the Miner, written near the end of his life in the Walloon language.

Ysaÿe had been offered the post of music director of the New York Philharmonic in 1898, but declined it due to his busy solo performance schedule. In 1918, he accepted the music director's position with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, where he remained until 1922 and with which he made several recordings.

Finally, in 1931, suffering from the extreme ravages of diabetes that had necessitated the amputation of his left foot, Eugène Ysaÿe died in his house in Forest, Belgium, 48 Avenue Brugmann, and was interred in the Ixelles Cemetery in Brussels.

Performing career

 
Ysaÿe with violin

As a performer, Ysaÿe was compelling and highly original. Pablo Casals claimed never to have heard a violinist play in tune before Ysaÿe, and Carl Flesch called him "the most outstanding and individual violinist I have ever heard in my life."

Ysaÿe possessed a large and flexible tone, influenced by a considerable variety of vibrato — from no vibrato at all to very intense. He said, "Don't always vibrate, but always be vibrating". His modus operandi was, in his own words: "Nothing which wouldn't have for goal emotion, poetry, heart." The conductor Sir Henry Wood said, "The quality of tone was ravishingly beautiful.... He seemed to get more colour out of a violin than any of his contemporaries."[5]

Possibly the most distinctive feature of Ysaÿe's interpretations was his masterful rubato. Sir Henry Wood said, "Whenever he stole time from one note, he faithfully paid it back within four bars",[5] allowing his accompanist to maintain strict tempo under his free cantilena. Incidentally, this kind of rubato fits the description of Frédéric Chopin's rubato.

Although Ysaÿe was a great interpreter of late Romantic and early modern composers — Max Bruch, Camille Saint-Saëns, and César Franck, who said he was their greatest interpreter[citation needed] — he was admired for his Bach and Beethoven interpretations. His technique was brilliant and finely honed, and in this respect he is the first modern violinist whose technique was without the shortcomings of some earlier artists.

An international violin competition in Brussels was created in his memory: in 1951, this became the violin section of the Queen Elisabeth Music Competition.

Personal life

 
Eugène Ysaÿe's grave in Brussels (Ixelles Cemetery)[6]
 
Bust of Eugène Ysaÿe in Liège (Boulevard Piercot [fr] gardens)

Ysaÿe was married twice. His first marriage, on 28 September 1886 in Arlon, was to Louise Bourdau (from Dendermonde), with whom he had three sons and two daughters: Gabriel (1887–1961), Carry (1889–1930), Thérèse called Thésy (1890–1956), Antoine (1894–1979) and Théodore (1898–1934). César Franck presented his Violin Sonata in A to them as a gift on the morning of the wedding, and after a hurried rehearsal Ysaÿe performed the piece at the marriage celebration.[7] The sonata had its formal concert premiere in Brussels on 15 December 1886 with Franck in the audience.

After Louise's death (9 February 1924) he married a pupil of his, Jeanette Dincin (1902–1967), 44 years his junior. She was a violinist who in her teens had studied with prominent teachers such as Franz Kneisel, Leopold Auer, and Otakar Ševčík. Ysaÿe met her in 1922 while conductor of the Cincinnati Orchestra. She cared for him in his ailing years. Eugène's only request of her after he died was that she carry on her performances under his name.

His brother was pianist and composer Théo Ysaÿe (1865–1918), and his great-grandson is Marc Ysaÿe, founder-controller of radio Classic 21 and drummer of rock band Machiavel. Eugène Ysaÿe was also close friends with Queen Elisabeth of Belgium, whom he taught violin despite her lack of talent. His widow took over the royal teaching herself after his death, and the queen began the competition in his honor. His granddaughter, Nadine Ysaye Mosbaugh, was a noted concert pianist who toured Europe with José Iturbi before settling down in Canada. She also hosted and performed on a classical radio program on CKAR Radio in Huntsville, Ontario. Ysaÿe's great-grandson, Franc Mosbaugh, is a Canadian musician/singer and award-winning commercial jingle composer.

Ysaÿe was also a friend of Claude Debussy and would sometimes correspond with him by letter.[8] The two had great respect for each other and Ysaÿe was a significant supporter of the younger composer's early career. Debussy dedicated his only string quartet to the violinist, who studied the score with great care.[9] The quartet received its premiere on 29 December 1893 by the Ysaÿe Quartet at the Société Nationale in Paris, to mixed reviews. The virtuoso and the composer also corresponded during the writing of Debussy's Nocturnes.

The Eugène Ysaÿe Collection

The Eugène Ysaÿe Collection, housed in the Music Division of the Royal Library of Belgium, combines four decades of purchases with a donation made by the Ysaÿe family in 2007. An essential source for the study of musician's life and works, it includes some 700 letters and autograph scores, over 1,000 printed scores and books, abundant collection of photographs, four films, and about fifty 78 RPM and 33 RPM recordings.[10] A second collection of handwritten and printed scores is conserved in New York at the Juilliard School.[11]

Honours

List of compositions

Works for solo violin

Works for violin and piano

  • 2 Mazurkas de Salon, Op.10 (1884) [No.1 'Dans le lointain'. Tempo di Mazurka; No.2 'Mazurka'. Moderato]
  • Lointain passé, Mazurka No.3 in B minor, Op.11 (1893)
  • Poème élégiaque, Op. 12
  • Rêve d'enfant, in A-flat major, for violin and piano (or orchestra) Op.14
  • "Paganini Variations", on 24th Caprice (published 1960)
  • "Caprice after the Study in the form of a Waltz, Op. 52/6" (composed by Camille Saint-Saëns, arranged by Ysaÿe)
  • Deux célèbres Arias (composed by J.S. Bach and G.F. Handel, arranged by Ysaÿe)
  • Waltz in E minor Op.posth. [KKIVa/15] (composed by Frédéric Chopin, arranged by Ysaÿe)
  • Ballade No. 1 in G minor, Op. 23 (composed by Frédéric Chopin, arranged by Ysaÿe)
  • Légende norvégienne.[14]

Chamber works

  • Sonata for solo cello, in C minor, Op.28 (1924) [1. Grave; 2. Intermezzo; 3. In modo di Recitativo; 4. Finale. Con brio]
  • Sonata for two violins, in A minor, Op. posth. (1915) [1. Poco lento, maestoso – Allegro fermo; 2. Allegretto poco lento; 3. Finale. Allegro vivo e con fuoco)
  • String Trio No.1, Op. 33, a.k.a. "Le Chimay" (1927) [Molto lento – Allegro non troppo – Lento ben sostenuto – Allegro non-troppo – Allegro poco presto]
  • String Trio No.2, Op. 34 (1927) [Allegro assai – Lento]
  • Trio “Le Londres” for 2 violins and viola
  • String Quintet, in B minor, Op.15, for 2 violins, 2 violas and cello "à mon frère Théophile" (1894) [Grave et lent – Allegro]
  • String Quartet
  • "Paganini Variations" for String Quartet

Orchestral works

  • Brabançonne in D major, for orchestra (1918)
  • Exil, for string orchestra without double basses, Op.25 (1917)

Concertante works

  • Saltarelle carnavalesque, in A minor, for violin and orchestra (or piano) Op.11
  • Poème élégiaque (Poème No.1) in D minor, for violin and piano Op.12 (1892/3) [orchestrated by Jacques Ysaye]
  • Au rouet (Poème No.2), for violin and orchestra, Op.13
  • Chant d'hiver (Poème No.3), in B minor, for violin and orchestra (or piano), Op.15 (1902) [same music of String Quintet]
  • Méditation, for cello and orchestra, Op.16
  • Berceuse, in F minor, for violin and orchestra, Op.20
  • Extase (Poème No.4), for violin and orchestra, Op.21 (dedicated to Mischa Elman)
  • Sérénade, for cello and orchestra, Op.22
  • Les neiges d'antan (Poème No.5), for violin and orchestra, Op.23 (1911)
  • Divertimento, for violin and orchestra (or piano) Op.24 (1921) [1. Molto moderato; 2. Allegro non-troppo vivo]
  • Amitié (Poème No.6), for 2 violins and orchestra, Op.26
  • Poème nocturne (Poème No.7), for violin, cello and orchestra, Op.29
  • Harmonies du soir (Poème No.8), for string quartet and orchestra, Op.31
  • Fantasia, for violin and orchestra, Op.32
  • Violin Concerto No.8 (orchestrated by Jacques Ysaÿe) [I. Grave e lento poco mesto; II. Andante non-troppo; III. (with no tempo indication)]
  • Violin Concerto No.?, in E minor, for violin and orchestra [I. Allegro appassionato non troppo vivo][15][16]

Operas

  • Piére li houyeû (Pierre le mineur) 1931 (Original in Walloon language, perhaps the only opera composed for a libretto in that language)
The première of Piére li houyeû (the composer's only opera) took place at the Opéra de Liège on 4 March 1931, during a long evening dedicated to the composer's works, in the presence of Queen Elisabeth of Belgium who had been his pupil. Ysaÿe, very ill with diabetes, listened to the performance from his hospital room. The Queen, informed of the seriousness of Ysaÿe's condition, had organised a radio broadcast of the work and Ysaÿe addressed the audience from his room. The work was then performed in Brussels on 25 April. Ysaÿe, transported on a stretcher to a box in the theater, was able to view the performance. He died 18 days later.

The critics were appreciative but the opera did not find a place in the standard repertoire. It was performed again by Opéra Royal de Wallonie in Liege, 25 November 2006. This performance was recorded and is published by the non-profit association "Musique en Wallonie" 30 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine under the reference MEW 0884 – 0885 in a two CD set accompanied by a book containing the Walloon text and its French, Dutch and English translations, and introductory texts in French, Dutch, German and English. The story is based on an incident that occurred in 1877 during a miners' strike in the Liège region.[17] During clashes with the police, some shots were fired. The wife of a foreman rushed forward to seize a grenade which had been placed in the offices by a striker, but the grenade exploded and she was killed.

  • L’avièrge di pièr (La vierge de pierre) – not completed, not performed

A complete list of available orchestral works, including concerto works, is available on the Symphony Orchestra Library Center.[18]

Selected discography

 
Eugène Ysaÿe

[Released on CD, Sony Classical MHK 62337, 1996]

Camille de Creus,[19] piano accompaniment

  • R. Wagner: Prize Song from Die Meistersinger Von Nürnberg, recorded 1 Feb.1912
  • E. Chabrier: Pièce pittoresque No.10 from Scherzo-Valse, recorded 20 Dec.1912
  • R. Schumann: Abendlied, Op.85, No.12 by Schumann, recorded 24 Dec.1912
  • H. Wieniawski: Obertass, Mazurka Op.19, No.1 in G major, recorded 26 Dec.1912
  • H. Wieniawski: Dudziarz, Mazurka Op.19, No.2 in D major, recorded 26 Dec.1912
  • G. Fauré: Berceuse Op.16, recorded 27 Dec.1912
  • F. Mendelssohn: Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in E minor Op.64 (III: Allegro molto vivace), recorded 27 Dec.1912
  • H. Vieuxtemps: Rondino Op.32, No.2, recorded 30 Dec.1912
  • J. Brahms: Hungarian Dance No.5, in F-sharp minor (arr. Joachim), recorded 30 Dec.1912
  • F. Kreisler: Caprice Viennois, Op.2, recorded 30 Dec.1912
  • R. Wagner: Albumblatt in C major, recorded 30 Dec.1912
  • E. Ysaÿe: Lointain passé, Mazurka No.3 in B minor Op.11, recorded 1 Feb.1913
  • E. Ysaÿe: Rêve d'Enfant Op.14, recorded 1 Feb.1913
  • A. Dvořák: Humoresque in G-flat major Op.101, No.7 (arr. Kreisler), recorded 9 Mar.1914
  • F. Schubert: Ave Maria D.839, recorded 9 Mar.1914
  • E. Chabrier: Marche Joyeuse, recorded 30 Nov.1919

Conducting the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, recorded 28 Nov 1919

References

  1. ^ Arnold Steinhardt, Violin Dreams (Mariner Books 2008), pp. 33, 34.
  2. ^ a b Stokes, Frederick A. (2006) [1919]. "Eugène Ysaye". In Martens, Frederick H. (ed.). Violin Mastery (Revised ed.). Mineloa, New York: Dover Publications. pp. 1–7. ISBN 978-0-486-45041-4.
  3. ^ a b Masin, Gwendolyn Carolina Helena (2012). 'Violin Teaching in the New Millennium: In Search of the Lost Instructions of Great Masters - an Examination of Similarities and Differences Between Schools of Playing and How These Have Evolved, or Remembering the Future of Violin Performance' (doctoral thesis). Trinity College Dublin.
  4. ^ "MISS NELLIE A. HOPE". The Saint Paul Globe. 3 July 1904. p. 40. Retrieved 30 June 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ a b Sir Henry Wood, My Life of Music (Victor Gollancz 1938), pp171, 173.
  6. ^ the text on the front side of the tomb stone reads: Monument érigé par le Comité National Belge de la Société des Auteurs Compositeurs et Editeurs de Musique. Which translates into: Monument erected by the Belgian National Committee of the Society of authors, composers and music publishers.
  7. ^ "Classical Net – Composers – Ysaÿe". Classical Net.
  8. ^ Weintraub, Stanley. 2001. Whistler: a biography (New York: Da Capo Press). ISBN 978-0-306-80971-2. p, 351
  9. ^ Seroff, Victor. Debussy; Musician of France. New York: Putnam, 1956, 117
  10. ^ "Fonds Eugène Ysaÿe". kbr.be. 24 June 2016.
  11. ^ "Juilliard School, Eugène Ysaÿe Collection". juilliard.edu.
  12. ^ Handelsblad (Het) 09-05-1900
  13. ^ RD of 14.11.1919
  14. ^ This work, written by Ysaÿe during a tour of Norway in the Spring of 1882, was discovered in 2013 by the Music Division of the Royal Library of Belgium. It was performed for the first time since the 19th century by the violinist Marc Bouchkov and the pianist Georgiy Dubko on 17 October 2014 in the 2014–15 season of the Royal Library's concert series "Musical Treasures of the Royal Library of Belgium"
  15. ^ Channel, The Violin (18 February 2020). "NEW MUSIC TUESDAY | VC Artist Nikita Boriso-Glebsky – Ysaye Violin Concerto [RECENT DISCOVERY]". The World's Leading Classical Music News Source. Est 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  16. ^ Ysaÿe, rediscovered concerto - Music Chapel Festival, archived from the original on 12 December 2021, retrieved 4 May 2020
  17. ^ "Ysaÿe: Pier Li Houyeu". prestoclassical.co.uk.
  18. ^ "Eugène Ysaÿe: an inventory of the available orchestra materials" (PDF). Orchestralibrary.com. Retrieved 27 April 2019.
  19. ^ De Creus (aka: Creus, Decreus), Camille Leo Ernest Jules (born: 23 Sep 1876, Paris, France – died: 26 Sep 1939, Fontainebleau, France), pianist and composer.
  • Slonimsky, Nicolas (2001). Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians (Centennial ed.). New York: Schirmer Books. ISBN 0-02-865525-7.[permanent dead link]
  • Ginsburg, Dr. Lev (1980). Ysaÿe (English, Edited by Dr. H.R. Axelrod, translated from Russian by X. M. Danko ed.). Neptune City, New Jersey: Paganiniana Productions, Inc.

External links

eugène, ysaÿe, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2012, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, e. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Eugene Auguste Ysaye French oʒɛn iza i 16 July 1858 12 May 1931 was a Belgian virtuoso violinist composer and conductor He was regarded as The King of the Violin or as Nathan Milstein put it the tsar A photograph of Eugene Ysaye Contents 1 Legend of the Ysaye violin 2 Early years 3 Early career 4 Teaching and composing 5 Performing career 6 Personal life 7 The Eugene Ysaye Collection 8 Honours 9 List of compositions 9 1 Works for solo violin 9 2 Works for violin and piano 9 3 Chamber works 9 4 Orchestral works 9 5 Concertante works 9 6 Operas 10 Selected discography 10 1 Camille de Creus 19 piano accompaniment 10 2 Conducting the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra recorded 28 Nov 1919 11 References 12 External linksLegend of the Ysaye violin EditEugene Ysaye came from a background of artisans though a large part of his family played instruments As violinist Arnold Steinhardt recounts a legend was passed down through the Ysaye family about the first violin brought to the lineage It was told of a boy whom some woodcutters found in the forest and brought to the village The boy grew up to be a blacksmith Once at a village festival he astonished everyone by playing the viol beautifully From then on the villagers took pleasure in dancing and singing to the strains of his viol One day an illustrious stranger stopped in front of the smithy to have his horse shod The count s servant saw the viol inside and told the young smith that he had heard a new Italian instrument played by some minstrels at the count s court That instrument called the violin was much better than the viol its tone was like the human voice and could express every feeling and passion From that moment the young man no longer took pleasure in his viol Day and night he was thinking of that wonderful new instrument that could express joy and sorrow and whose tones went straight to the human heart Then he had a dream he saw before him a young woman of indescribable beauty not unlike his own love Biethline She came to him and kissed his brow The young man awoke and looked at the wall his broken and neglected viol used to hang on and could barely believe his eyes there instead of the viol was a new instrument of beautiful proportions He put it against his shoulder and drew the bow over the strings producing sounds that were truly divine The violin sang in a heartwarming tone it rejoiced and wept for happiness and so did the musician Thus goes the legend came the first violin to the Ardennes and to the Ysaye family 1 Early years EditBorn in Liege Ysaye began violin lessons at age five with his father He would later recognize his father s teaching as the foundation of everything he knew on his instrument even though he went on to study with highly reputed masters In 1867 Ysaye entered the Royal Conservatory of Liege to study with Desire Heynberg and in the process won a shared second prize with the Viotti 22nd Violin Concerto 2 He then went on to study with Henryk Wieniawski for two years in Brussels and Henri Vieuxtemps in Paris 2 Studying with these teachers meant that he was part of the so called Franco Belgian school of violin playing which dates back to the development of the modern violin bow by Francois Tourte Qualities of this Ecole included elegance a full tone with a sense of drawing a long bow with no jerks precise left hand techniques and bowing using the whole forearm while keeping both the wrist and upper arm quiet as opposed to Joseph Joachim s German school of wrist bowing and Leopold Auer s Russian concept of using the whole arm Early career Edit Ber Zalkind Cartoon of Violinist Eugene Ysaye 1913 After his graduation from the Royal Conservatory of Liege Ysaye was the principal violin of the Benjamin Bilse beer hall orchestra which later developed into the Berlin Philharmonic Many musicians of note and influence came regularly to hear this orchestra and Ysaye in particular among whom figured Joseph Joachim Franz Liszt Clara Schumann and Anton Rubinstein who asked that Ysaye be released from his contract to accompany him on tour When Ysaye was twenty seven years old he was recommended as a soloist for one of the Concerts Colonne in Paris which was the start of his great success as a concert artist The next year Ysaye received a professorship at the Brussels Conservatoire in his native Belgium This began his career as a teacher which was to remain one of his main occupations after leaving the Conservatory in 1898 and into his last years Among his notable pupils were Josef Gingold the viola virtuoso William Primrose the violin virtuoso Nathan Milstein who primarily studied with Pyotr Stolyarsky Louis Persinger Mathieu Crickboom Jonny Heykens Charles Houdret Jascha Brodsky Oscar Shumsky Julia Klumpke George Enescu 3 Oskar Back 3 Jacques Thibaud Aldo Ferraresi and Nellie A Hope 4 See List of music students by teacher T to Z Eugene Ysaye Eugene Ysaye in Russia 1883 During his tenure as professor at the Conservatoire Ysaye continued to tour an ever broadening section of the world including all of Europe Russia and the United States Despite health concerns particularly regarding the condition of his hands Ysaye was at his best when performing and many prominent composers dedicated major works to him including Claude Debussy Camille Saint Saens Cesar Franck and Ernest Chausson He arranged for violin and orchestra Saint Saens s Etude en forme de valse which had originally been written for solo piano Mention should be made of Franck s Violin Sonata in A written as a wedding present for Ysaye and his wife in 1886 which Ysaye played wherever he went for the rest of his life and of Chausson s Poeme which was his response to a request for a concerto Joseph Szigeti considered those two dedications particularly stand out in demonstrating the enormous respect in which Ysaye was held In 1886 he established the Ysaye Quartet which premiered Debussy s String Quartet Teaching and composing EditAs his physical ailments grew more prohibitive Ysaye turned more to teaching conducting and an early love composition Among his most famous works are the six Sonatas for Solo Violin op 27 the unaccompanied Sonata for Cello op 28 one Sonata for Two Violins eight Poemes for various instruments one or two violins violin and cello string quartet and orchestra Poeme elegiaque Poeme de l Extase Chant d hiver Poeme nocturne among others pieces for string orchestra without basses including Poeme de l Exil two piano trios a string quintet and an opera Peter the Miner written near the end of his life in the Walloon language Ysaye had been offered the post of music director of the New York Philharmonic in 1898 but declined it due to his busy solo performance schedule In 1918 he accepted the music director s position with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra where he remained until 1922 and with which he made several recordings Finally in 1931 suffering from the extreme ravages of diabetes that had necessitated the amputation of his left foot Eugene Ysaye died in his house in Forest Belgium 48 Avenue Brugmann and was interred in the Ixelles Cemetery in Brussels Performing career Edit Ysaye with violin As a performer Ysaye was compelling and highly original Pablo Casals claimed never to have heard a violinist play in tune before Ysaye and Carl Flesch called him the most outstanding and individual violinist I have ever heard in my life Ysaye possessed a large and flexible tone influenced by a considerable variety of vibrato from no vibrato at all to very intense He said Don t always vibrate but always be vibrating His modus operandi was in his own words Nothing which wouldn t have for goal emotion poetry heart The conductor Sir Henry Wood said The quality of tone was ravishingly beautiful He seemed to get more colour out of a violin than any of his contemporaries 5 Possibly the most distinctive feature of Ysaye s interpretations was his masterful rubato Sir Henry Wood said Whenever he stole time from one note he faithfully paid it back within four bars 5 allowing his accompanist to maintain strict tempo under his free cantilena Incidentally this kind of rubato fits the description of Frederic Chopin s rubato Although Ysaye was a great interpreter of late Romantic and early modern composers Max Bruch Camille Saint Saens and Cesar Franck who said he was their greatest interpreter citation needed he was admired for his Bach and Beethoven interpretations His technique was brilliant and finely honed and in this respect he is the first modern violinist whose technique was without the shortcomings of some earlier artists An international violin competition in Brussels was created in his memory in 1951 this became the violin section of the Queen Elisabeth Music Competition Personal life Edit Eugene Ysaye s grave in Brussels Ixelles Cemetery 6 Bust of Eugene Ysaye in Liege Boulevard Piercot fr gardens Ysaye was married twice His first marriage on 28 September 1886 in Arlon was to Louise Bourdau from Dendermonde with whom he had three sons and two daughters Gabriel 1887 1961 Carry 1889 1930 Therese called Thesy 1890 1956 Antoine 1894 1979 and Theodore 1898 1934 Cesar Franck presented his Violin Sonata in A to them as a gift on the morning of the wedding and after a hurried rehearsal Ysaye performed the piece at the marriage celebration 7 The sonata had its formal concert premiere in Brussels on 15 December 1886 with Franck in the audience After Louise s death 9 February 1924 he married a pupil of his Jeanette Dincin 1902 1967 44 years his junior She was a violinist who in her teens had studied with prominent teachers such as Franz Kneisel Leopold Auer and Otakar Sevcik Ysaye met her in 1922 while conductor of the Cincinnati Orchestra She cared for him in his ailing years Eugene s only request of her after he died was that she carry on her performances under his name His brother was pianist and composer Theo Ysaye 1865 1918 and his great grandson is Marc Ysaye founder controller of radio Classic 21 and drummer of rock band Machiavel Eugene Ysaye was also close friends with Queen Elisabeth of Belgium whom he taught violin despite her lack of talent His widow took over the royal teaching herself after his death and the queen began the competition in his honor His granddaughter Nadine Ysaye Mosbaugh was a noted concert pianist who toured Europe with Jose Iturbi before settling down in Canada She also hosted and performed on a classical radio program on CKAR Radio in Huntsville Ontario Ysaye s great grandson Franc Mosbaugh is a Canadian musician singer and award winning commercial jingle composer Ysaye was also a friend of Claude Debussy and would sometimes correspond with him by letter 8 The two had great respect for each other and Ysaye was a significant supporter of the younger composer s early career Debussy dedicated his only string quartet to the violinist who studied the score with great care 9 The quartet received its premiere on 29 December 1893 by the Ysaye Quartet at the Societe Nationale in Paris to mixed reviews The virtuoso and the composer also corresponded during the writing of Debussy s Nocturnes The Eugene Ysaye Collection EditThe Eugene Ysaye Collection housed in the Music Division of the Royal Library of Belgium combines four decades of purchases with a donation made by the Ysaye family in 2007 An essential source for the study of musician s life and works it includes some 700 letters and autograph scores over 1 000 printed scores and books abundant collection of photographs four films and about fifty 78 RPM and 33 RPM recordings 10 A second collection of handwritten and printed scores is conserved in New York at the Juilliard School 11 Honours Edit1900 Officer in the Order of Leopold 12 1919 Commander of the Order of Leopold 13 List of compositions EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items May 2009 Works for solo violin Edit 6 Sonatas for solo violin Op 27 each dedicated to a different famous violinist and written in their corresponding styles Sonata No 1 Joseph Szigeti Sonata No 2 Jacques Thibaud Sonata No 3 Georges Enescu Sonata No 4 Fritz Kreisler Sonata No 5 Mathieu Crickboom Sonata No 6 Manuel Quiroga 10 Preludes Exercises for violin Op 35 Etude posthume Cadenza for Beethoven Violin Concerto Op 61 1st mov 1888 89 Cadenza for Mozart Violin Concerto K 216 1st 2nd and 3rd mov Cadenza for Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto Op 35 1st mov Cadenza for Brahms Violin Concerto Op 77 1st mov Works for violin and piano Edit 2 Mazurkas de Salon Op 10 1884 No 1 Dans le lointain Tempo di Mazurka No 2 Mazurka Moderato Lointain passe Mazurka No 3 in B minor Op 11 1893 Poeme elegiaque Op 12 Reve d enfant in A flat major for violin and piano or orchestra Op 14 Paganini Variations on 24th Caprice published 1960 Caprice after the Study in the form of a Waltz Op 52 6 composed by Camille Saint Saens arranged by Ysaye Deux celebres Arias composed by J S Bach and G F Handel arranged by Ysaye Waltz in E minor Op posth KKIVa 15 composed by Frederic Chopin arranged by Ysaye Ballade No 1 in G minor Op 23 composed by Frederic Chopin arranged by Ysaye Legende norvegienne 14 Chamber works Edit Sonata for solo cello in C minor Op 28 1924 1 Grave 2 Intermezzo 3 In modo di Recitativo 4 Finale Con brio Sonata for two violins in A minor Op posth 1915 1 Poco lento maestoso Allegro fermo 2 Allegretto poco lento 3 Finale Allegro vivo e con fuoco String Trio No 1 Op 33 a k a Le Chimay 1927 Molto lento Allegro non troppo Lento ben sostenuto Allegro non troppo Allegro poco presto String Trio No 2 Op 34 1927 Allegro assai Lento Trio Le Londres for 2 violins and viola String Quintet in B minor Op 15 for 2 violins 2 violas and cello a mon frere Theophile 1894 Grave et lent Allegro String Quartet Paganini Variations for String QuartetOrchestral works Edit Brabanconne in D major for orchestra 1918 Exil for string orchestra without double basses Op 25 1917 Concertante works Edit Saltarelle carnavalesque in A minor for violin and orchestra or piano Op 11 Poeme elegiaque Poeme No 1 in D minor for violin and piano Op 12 1892 3 orchestrated by Jacques Ysaye Au rouet Poeme No 2 for violin and orchestra Op 13 Chant d hiver Poeme No 3 in B minor for violin and orchestra or piano Op 15 1902 same music of String Quintet Meditation for cello and orchestra Op 16 Berceuse in F minor for violin and orchestra Op 20 Extase Poeme No 4 for violin and orchestra Op 21 dedicated to Mischa Elman Serenade for cello and orchestra Op 22 Les neiges d antan Poeme No 5 for violin and orchestra Op 23 1911 Divertimento for violin and orchestra or piano Op 24 1921 1 Molto moderato 2 Allegro non troppo vivo Amitie Poeme No 6 for 2 violins and orchestra Op 26 Poeme nocturne Poeme No 7 for violin cello and orchestra Op 29 Harmonies du soir Poeme No 8 for string quartet and orchestra Op 31 Fantasia for violin and orchestra Op 32 Violin Concerto No 8 orchestrated by Jacques Ysaye I Grave e lento poco mesto II Andante non troppo III with no tempo indication Violin Concerto No in E minor for violin and orchestra I Allegro appassionato non troppo vivo 15 16 Operas Edit Piere li houyeu Pierre le mineur 1931 Original in Walloon language perhaps the only opera composed for a libretto in that language The premiere of Piere li houyeu the composer s only opera took place at the Opera de Liege on 4 March 1931 during a long evening dedicated to the composer s works in the presence of Queen Elisabeth of Belgium who had been his pupil Ysaye very ill with diabetes listened to the performance from his hospital room The Queen informed of the seriousness of Ysaye s condition had organised a radio broadcast of the work and Ysaye addressed the audience from his room The work was then performed in Brussels on 25 April Ysaye transported on a stretcher to a box in the theater was able to view the performance He died 18 days later The critics were appreciative but the opera did not find a place in the standard repertoire It was performed again by Opera Royal de Wallonie in Liege 25 November 2006 This performance was recorded and is published by the non profit association Musique en Wallonie Archived 30 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine under the reference MEW 0884 0885 in a two CD set accompanied by a book containing the Walloon text and its French Dutch and English translations and introductory texts in French Dutch German and English The story is based on an incident that occurred in 1877 during a miners strike in the Liege region 17 During clashes with the police some shots were fired The wife of a foreman rushed forward to seize a grenade which had been placed in the offices by a striker but the grenade exploded and she was killed L avierge di pier La vierge de pierre not completed not performedA complete list of available orchestral works including concerto works is available on the Symphony Orchestra Library Center 18 Selected discography Edit Eugene Ysaye Released on CD Sony Classical MHK 62337 1996 Camille de Creus 19 piano accompaniment Edit R Wagner Prize Song from Die Meistersinger Von Nurnberg recorded 1 Feb 1912 E Chabrier Piece pittoresque No 10 from Scherzo Valse recorded 20 Dec 1912 R Schumann Abendlied Op 85 No 12 by Schumann recorded 24 Dec 1912 H Wieniawski Obertass Mazurka Op 19 No 1 in G major recorded 26 Dec 1912 H Wieniawski Dudziarz Mazurka Op 19 No 2 in D major recorded 26 Dec 1912 G Faure Berceuse Op 16 recorded 27 Dec 1912 F Mendelssohn Concerto for Violin and Orchestra in E minor Op 64 III Allegro molto vivace recorded 27 Dec 1912 H Vieuxtemps Rondino Op 32 No 2 recorded 30 Dec 1912 J Brahms Hungarian Dance No 5 in F sharp minor arr Joachim recorded 30 Dec 1912 F Kreisler Caprice Viennois Op 2 recorded 30 Dec 1912 R Wagner Albumblatt in C major recorded 30 Dec 1912 E Ysaye Lointain passe Mazurka No 3 in B minor Op 11 recorded 1 Feb 1913 E Ysaye Reve d Enfant Op 14 recorded 1 Feb 1913 A Dvorak Humoresque in G flat major Op 101 No 7 arr Kreisler recorded 9 Mar 1914 F Schubert Ave Maria D 839 recorded 9 Mar 1914 E Chabrier Marche Joyeuse recorded 30 Nov 1919Conducting the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra recorded 28 Nov 1919 Edit L Delibes Intermezzo from Naila Pas Des Fleurs Grande Valse Aime Maillart Overture to Les Dragons De Villars J Massenet Navarraise from Le Cid by Massenet Eduard Lassen Festival Overture E Chabrier Marche Joyeuse N Rimsky Korsakov Scheherazade J Offenbach Orpheus in Hades Biography portalReferences Edit Arnold Steinhardt Violin Dreams Mariner Books 2008 pp 33 34 a b Stokes Frederick A 2006 1919 Eugene Ysaye In Martens Frederick H ed Violin Mastery Revised ed Mineloa New York Dover Publications pp 1 7 ISBN 978 0 486 45041 4 a b Masin Gwendolyn Carolina Helena 2012 Violin Teaching in the New Millennium In Search of the Lost Instructions of Great Masters an Examination of Similarities and Differences Between Schools of Playing and How These Have Evolved or Remembering the Future of Violin Performance doctoral thesis Trinity College Dublin MISS NELLIE A HOPE The Saint Paul Globe 3 July 1904 p 40 Retrieved 30 June 2022 via Newspapers com a b Sir Henry Wood My Life of Music Victor Gollancz 1938 pp171 173 the text on the front side of the tomb stone reads Monument erige par le Comite National Belge de la Societe des Auteurs Compositeurs et Editeurs de Musique Which translates into Monument erected by the Belgian National Committee of the Society of authors composers and music publishers Classical Net Composers Ysaye Classical Net Weintraub Stanley 2001 Whistler a biography New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 80971 2 p 351 Seroff Victor Debussy Musician of France New York Putnam 1956 117 Fonds Eugene Ysaye kbr be 24 June 2016 Juilliard School Eugene Ysaye Collection juilliard edu Handelsblad Het 09 05 1900 RD of 14 11 1919 This work written by Ysaye during a tour of Norway in the Spring of 1882 was discovered in 2013 by the Music Division of the Royal Library of Belgium It was performed for the first time since the 19th century by the violinist Marc Bouchkov and the pianist Georgiy Dubko on 17 October 2014 in the 2014 15 season of the Royal Library s concert series Musical Treasures of the Royal Library of Belgium Channel The Violin 18 February 2020 NEW MUSIC TUESDAY VC Artist Nikita Boriso Glebsky Ysaye Violin Concerto RECENT DISCOVERY The World s Leading Classical Music News Source Est 2009 Retrieved 4 May 2020 Ysaye rediscovered concerto Music Chapel Festival archived from the original on 12 December 2021 retrieved 4 May 2020 Ysaye Pier Li Houyeu prestoclassical co uk Eugene Ysaye an inventory of the available orchestra materials PDF Orchestralibrary com Retrieved 27 April 2019 De Creus aka Creus Decreus Camille Leo Ernest Jules born 23 Sep 1876 Paris France died 26 Sep 1939 Fontainebleau France pianist and composer Slonimsky Nicolas 2001 Baker s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians Centennial ed New York Schirmer Books ISBN 0 02 865525 7 permanent dead link Ginsburg Dr Lev 1980 Ysaye English Edited by Dr H R Axelrod translated from Russian by X M Danko ed Neptune City New Jersey Paganiniana Productions Inc External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eugene Ysaye Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Eugene Ysaye Eugene Ysaye at AllMusic Eugene Ysaye biography at the Classical Composers Database Free scores by Eugene Ysaye at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Violinists of the Early Twentieth Century Eugene Ysaye portrait of Ysaye North American Theatre Online Alexander Street Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eugene Ysaye amp oldid 1141300313, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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