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Joseph Joachim

Joseph Joachim (28 June 1831 – 15 August 1907) was a Hungarian violinist, conductor, composer and teacher who made an international career, based in Hanover and Berlin. A close collaborator of Johannes Brahms, he is widely regarded as one of the most significant violinists of the 19th century.

Joseph Joachim
Joseph Joachim
Born
Joachim József

(1831-06-28)28 June 1831
Died15 August 1907(1907-08-15) (aged 76)
EducationVienna Conservatory
Occupations
  • Classical Violinist
  • Conductor
  • Academic teacher
Organizations
SpouseAmalie Joachim
Signature

Joachim studied violin early, beginning in Buda at age five, then in Vienna and Leipzig. He made his debut in London in 1844, playing Ludwig van Beethoven's Violin Concerto, with Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy conducting. He returned to London many times throughout life. After years of teaching at the Leipzig Conservatory and playing as principal violinist of the Gewandhausorchester, he moved to Weimar in 1848, where Franz Liszt established cultural life. From 1852, Joachim served at the court of Hanover, playing principal violin in the opera and conducting concerts, with months of free time in summer for concert tours. In 1853, he was invited by Robert Schumann to the Lower Rhine Music Festival, where he met Clara Schumann and Brahms, with whom he performed for years to come. In 1879, he premiered Brahms' violin concerto with Brahms as conductor.[1] He married Amalie, an opera singer, in 1863, who gave up her career; the couple had six children.

Joachim quit service in Hanover in 1865, and the family moved to Berlin, where he was entrusted with founding and directing a new department at the Royal Conservatory, for performing music. He formed a string quartet, and kept performing chamber music on tours. His playing was recorded in 1903.

Life

Origins

 
Joachim's birth house in Kittsee

Joachim was born in Köpcsény, Moson County, Kingdom of Hungary (present-day Kittsee in Burgenland, Austria). He was the seventh of eight children born to Julius, a wool merchant, and Fanny Joachim, who were of Hungarian-Jewish origin.[2] He spent his childhood as a member of the Köpcsény Kehilla (Jewish community), one of Hungary's prominent Siebengemeinden ('Seven Communities') under the protectorate of the Esterházy family. He was a first cousin of Fanny Wittgenstein, née Figdor, the mother of Karl Wittgenstein and the grandmother of the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein and the pianist Paul Wittgenstein.[3]

Early career

In 1833 his family moved to Pest, which in 1873 was united with Buda and Óbuda to form Budapest. There from 1836 (age 5) he studied violin with the Polish violinist Stanisław Serwaczyński, the concertmaster of the opera in Pest, said to be the best violinist in Pest.[2] Although Joachim's parents were "not particularly well off", they had been well advised to choose not just an "ordinary" violin teacher.[4] Joachim's first public performance was 17 March 1839 when he was of age 7.[5] (Serwaczyński later moved back to Lublin, Poland, where he taught Wieniawski.) In 1839, Joachim continued his studies at the Vienna Conservatory (briefly with Miska Hauser and Georg Hellmesberger, Sr.;[6] finally – and most significantly – with Joseph Böhm,[7] who introduced him to the world of chamber music).[8][9] In 1843 he was taken by his cousin, Fanny Figdor, who later married "a Leipzig merchant"[10] named Wittgenstein, to live and study in Leipzig.[11] In the journal Neue Zeitschrift für Musik Robert Schumann was highly enthusiastic about Felix Mendelssohn, on which Moser writes "Only in Haydn's admiration for Mozart does the history of music know a parallel case of such ungrudging veneration of one great artist for his equal."[12] in 1835, Mendelssohn had become director of the Leipzig Gewandhaus orchestra. In 1843 Joachim became a protégé of Mendelssohn, who arranged for him to study theory and composition with Moritz Hauptmann and violin with Ferdinand David.[13] In his début performance in the Gewandhaus Joachim played the Otello Fantasy by Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst.

 
Joachim's birth house in Kittsee today
 
Memorial plaque on his birth house

London Philharmonic debut, Beethoven Violin Concerto

On 27 May 1844 Joachim, not quite 13, in his London debut with Mendelssohn conducting at a concert of the Philharmonic Society, played the solo part in Beethoven's Violin Concerto. This was a triumph in several respects, as described by R. W. Eshbach.[14] The Philharmonic had a policy against performers so young, but an exception was made after auditions persuaded gatherings of distinguished musicians and music lovers that Joachim had mature capabilities. Despite Beethoven's recognition as one of the greatest composers, and the ranking nowadays of his violin concerto as among the greatest few, it was far from being so ranked before Joachim's performance. Ludwig Spohr had harshly criticized it, and after the London premiere by violinist Edward Eliason, a critic had said it "might have been written by any third or fourth rate composer." But Joachim was very well prepared to play Beethoven's concerto, having written his own cadenzas for it and memorized the piece. The audience anticipated great things, having got word from the rehearsal,[15] and so, Mendelssohn wrote, "frenetic applause began" as soon as Joachim stepped in front of the orchestra. The beginning was applauded still more, and "cheers of the audience accompanied every ... part of the concerto." Reviewers also had high praise. One for 'The Musical World' wrote "The greatest violinists hold this concerto in awe ... Young Joachim ... attacked it with the vigour and determination of the most accomplished artist ... no master could have read it better," and the two cadenzas, written by Joachim, were "tremendous feats ... ingeniously composed". Another reviewer, for the 'Illustrated London News', wrote that Joachim "is perhaps the first violin player, not only of his age, but of his siècle" [century]. "He performed Beethoven's solitary concerto, which we have heard all the great performers of the last twenty years attempt, and invariably fail in ... its performance was an eloquent vindication of the master-spirit who imagined it." A third reviewer, for the 'Morning Post', wrote that the concerto "has been generally regarded by violin-players as not a proper and effective development of the powers of their instrument" but that Joachim's performance "is beyond all praise, and defies all description" and "was altogether unprecedented." Joachim remained a favorite with the English public for the rest of his career. He visited England in each year 1858, 1859, 1862 largely at the behest of his friend William Sterndale Bennett, and for several decades thereafter.[16]

Beethoven string quartets

Moser (p. 28 ff.) writes "After the appearance of the six String Quartets (Op. 18) Beethoven had complete command of the field of chamber-music", although in the later quartets he "makes many exacting demands" of string players. Moser (p. 29) further writes that "at the time of Beethoven's death", such people as Spohr and Hauptmann did not necessarily esteem the late quartets above the earliest ones. Moser, p. 30 writes that in Vienna "the public showed a marked hostility toward" the late quartets. But Joachim's teacher Böhm had an appreciation of the late quartets, which he communicated to Joachim.[17] At the age of 18, "in the whole of Germany" Joachim had no equal, either in the rendering of Bach or in the concertos of Beethoven and Mendelssohn; while as quartet player, "he had no cause to fear rivalry."[18]

Maturity

Following Mendelssohn's death in 1847, Joachim stayed briefly in Leipzig, teaching at the Conservatorium and playing on the first desk of the Gewandhaus Orchestra with Ferdinand David,[19] whom Mendelssohn had appointed as concertmaster on taking up the conductorship in 1835.

Weimar, Liszt; then Hanover

In 1848, the pianist and composer Franz Liszt took up residence in Weimar, where Goethe and Schiller had lived.[20] Liszt was determined to re-establish the town's reputation as the Athens of Germany. There, he gathered a circle of young avant-garde disciples, vocally opposed to the conservatism of the Leipzig circle. Joachim was amongst the first of these. He served Liszt as concertmaster, and for several years enthusiastically embraced the new "psychological music," as he called it. In 1852 he moved to Hanover, at the same time dissociating himself from the musical ideals of the 'New German School' (Liszt, Richard Wagner, Hector Berlioz, and their followers, as defined by journalist Franz Brendel). "The worship of Wagner's music permeating musical taste in Weimar was to Joachim inordinate and unacceptable."[21] Joachim's break with Liszt became final in August 1857, when he wrote to his former mentor: "I am completely out of sympathy with your music; it contradicts everything which from early youth I have taken as mental nourishment from the spirit of our great masters."[22] Hanover "was then an independent kingdom, later to be absorbed in the German empire."[23] King Georg of Hanover was totally blind and very fond of music; he paid Joachim a good salary and gave him considerable freedom.[24] Joachim's duties in Hanover included playing the main violin part in opera performances and that or conducting state concerts.[25] He had five summer months off, in which he made concert tours around Europe.[26] In March 1853 he sent to Liszt a copy of the Overture to Hamlet he had recently composed.[27]

The Schumanns, Brahms; Berlin

 
Joachim by John Singer Sargent, 1904

Also in 1853, a committee headed by Schumann invited Joachim to the Lower Rhine Music Festival.[28] At the Festival, Joachim again soloed in the Beethoven violin concerto.[29] His success made him, it is said, "the most renowned artist of Germany".[28] Robert Schumann and his wife Clara were deeply impressed, and formed a "close connection" with Joachim.[30] Joachim met the then publicly unknown 20-year-old Brahms, and wrote of him that his playing "shows the intense fire...which predicts the artist" and "his compositions already betoken such power as I have seen in no other musician of his age".[31] Joachim strongly recommended Brahms to Robert.[32] Brahms was received by the Schumanns with great enthusiasm. After Robert's mental breakdown in 1854 and death in 1856, Joachim, Clara, and Brahms remained lifelong friends and shared musical views. Joachim's performing style with the violin, like Clara's at the piano, is said to have been "restrained, pure, antivirtuosic, expressing the music rather than the performer."[33]

In December 1854, Joachim visited Robert at the Endenich asylum where he had been since February, Joachim being his first visitor.[34] Early on, Brahms already played and composed for the piano, which "he had mastered in a supreme fashion", but he felt deficient in orchestration.[35] In 1854 he began composing what was to become his first piano concerto, his first orchestral piece. He sent a score of the first movement to Joachim, requesting his advice.[36] After getting Joachim's response, Brahms wrote to him "A thousand thanks for having studied the first movement in such a sympathetic and careful manner. I have learned a great deal from your remarks. As a musician I really have no greater wish than to have more talent so that I can learn still more from such a friend."[37] Later in the composition of the concerto, which took four years, Brahms wrote to Joachim "I am sending you the rondo once more. And just like the last time, I beg for some really severe criticism."[38] The final manuscript of the concerto "shows many alterations in the handwriting of Joachim".[39]

 
Joseph and Amalie Joachim

Joachim's time in Hanover was his most prolific period of composition. Then and during the rest of his career, he frequently performed with Clara Schumann. For example, in October–November 1857 they took a recital tour together to Dresden, Leipzig, and Munich.[40] St. James's Hall, London, which opened in 1858, hosted a series of "Popular Concerts" of chamber music, of which programmes from 1867 through 1904 are preserved.[41] Joachim appears a great many times. He visited London each year from 1866 on.[42] In March 1898 and in 1901–1904 Joachim appeared in his own quartet of players, but otherwise far more often he appeared with resident Popular Concerts artists Louis Ries,[43] second violin, J. B. Zerbini,[44] first viola, and Alfredo Piatti, first cello, reputed to be "one of the most celebrated cellists" of the time. George Bernard Shaw wrote that the Popular Concerts had helped greatly to spread and enlighten musical taste in England.[45] Joachim had been a mainstay of the chamber music Popular Concerts.

At 18 of the Popular Concerts at least, Clara Schumann performed along with Joachim, Zerbini and Piatti, presumably playing piano quartets (without second violin), or sometimes piano trios (for piano, violin, and cello). (The programs of those concerts very likely also included string quartets in which she of course did not play, as Ries is also listed.) A favorite piece of Clara's was Brahms's Piano Quartet in A major. She wrote to Brahms 27 February 1882 from London that the piece had received "much applause".[46] About a performance of it in Liverpool 11 February she had written in her diary that it was "warmly received, much to my surprise as the public here is far less receptive than that in London."[47] In January 1867 there had been a tour to Edinburgh and Glasgow, Scotland, by Joachim, Clara, her oldest daughter Marie, Ries, Zerbini, Piatti, two English sisters "Miss Pyne," one a singer, and a Mr. Saunders who managed all the arrangements. Marie Schumann wrote home from Manchester that in Edinburgh Clara "was received with tempestuous applause and had to give an encore, so had Joachim. Piatti, too, is always tremendously liked."[48]

Joachim had extensive correspondence with both Clara and Brahms, as Brahms greatly valued Joachim's opinion of his new compositions. In 1860 Brahms and Joachim jointly wrote a manifesto against the "progressive" music of the 'New German' School, in reaction to the polemics of Brendel's Neue Zeitschrift für Musik. This manifesto, a volley in the War of the Romantics, had originally few (four[13]) signers (more later) and met with a mixed reception, being heavily derided by followers of Wagner.[49]

 
The famous Joachim Quartet. From left to right: Robert Hausmann (cello), Josef Joachim (1st violin), Emanuel Wirth (viola), and Karel Halíř (2nd violin).

On 10 May 1863 Joachim married the contralto Amalie Schneeweiss (stage name: Amalie Weiss) (1839–99). Amalie gave up her own promising career as an opera singer and gave birth to six children. She continued to perform in oratorios and to give lieder recitals. In 1865 Joachim quit the service of the King of Hanover in protest, when the Intendant (artistic director) of the Opera refused to advance one of the orchestral players (Jakob Grün) because of the latter's Jewish birth.[50] In 1866, as a result of the Austro-Prussian war, in which Prussia and its capital Berlin became the dominant German state and city, Joachim moved to Berlin, where he was invited to help found, and to become the first director of, a new department of the Royal Academy of Music, concerned with musical performance and called the Hochschule für ausübende Tonkunst.

On Good Friday, 10 April 1868, Joachim and his wife joined their friend, Johannes Brahms, in the celebration of one of Brahms' greatest triumphs, the first complete performance of his German Requiem at the Bremen Cathedral. Amalie Joachim sang "I Know that My Redeemer Liveth" and Joseph Joachim played Robert Schumann's Abendlied. It was a glorious occasion, after which about 100 of the composer's friends, the Joachims, Clara Schumann, Albert Dietrich and his wife, Max Bruch, and others gathered at the Bremen Rathskeller.

 
The Joachim Quartet performing in the Sing-Akademie zu Berlin—an engraving based on a painting (currently lost) by Felix Possart, published as a Beilage to the Zeitschrift der Internationalen Musikgesellschaft 4/5 (1903), between pp. 240 and 241.

In 1869, the Joachim String Quartet was formed, which quickly gained a reputation as Europe's finest. It continued to perform until Joachim's death in 1907. The first personnel of the quartet were: Ernst Schiever (1869–1871) a pupil of Joachim, Heinrich de Ahna (1871–1892), and Wilhelm Muller (1869–1879). Schiever resigned after their second season with de Ahna taking the second violin part and Eduard Rappoldi (1871–1877) on viola. Later members of the Quartet were Johann Kruse (1892–1897) followed by Karel Halíř (2nd violin) from 1897 on; Emanuel Wirth (viola) from 1877 on (occasionally replaced by Karl Klingler); and Robert Hausmann (cello), from 1879 on.[51][52]

In 1878 while writing his violin concerto, Brahms consulted Joachim, who "freely gave him encouragement and technical advice".[53] Brahms asked Joachim to write the cadenza for the concerto, as he did.

In 1884, Joachim and his wife separated after he became convinced that she was having an affair with the publisher Fritz Simrock. Brahms, certain that Joachim's suspicions were groundless, wrote a sympathetic letter to Amalie, which she later produced as evidence in Joachim's divorce proceeding against her.[54] This led to a cooling of Brahms' and Joachim's friendship, which was not restored until some years later, when Brahms composed the Double Concerto in A minor for violin and cello, Op. 102, 1887, as a peace offering to his old friend. It was co-dedicated to the first performers, Joachim and Robert Hausmann.

In late 1895 both Brahms and Joachim were present at the opening of the new Tonhalle at Zürich, Switzerland; Brahms conducted and Joachim was assistant conductor. But in April, two years later, Joachim was to lose forever this revered friend, as Johannes Brahms died at the age of 64 at Vienna. At Meiningen, in December 1899, it was Joachim who made the speech when a statue to Brahms was unveiled.

Honors and Jubilees

In March 1877, Joachim received an honorary Doctorate of Music from Cambridge University. For the occasion he presented his Overture in honor of Kleist, Op. 13.[55] Near the 50th anniversary of Joachim's debut recital, he was honored by "friends and admirers in England"[56] on 16 April 1889 who presented him with "an exceptionally fine" violin made in 1715 by Antonio Stradivari, called "Il Cremonese".[57] About ten years later, for the sixtieth jubilee, a concert in honor of Joachim was given by his former students of violin and viola playing and cellists who had studied quartet playing with him, on 22 April 1899.[58] The total of some 140 string players was impressive, as were their instruments (made by Stradivari, Guarneri, Bergonzi, Amati, etc.).[59] An honor such as that concert "had been accorded to no other musician during his lifetime".[58]

 
Joseph Joachim, by Philip Alexius de László, 1903

During 1899, Joachim was invited to become president of the newly established Oxford & Cambridge Musical Club in London. He remained club president until his death.[60]

In Berlin, on 17 August 1903, Joachim recorded five sides for The Gramophone & Typewriter Ltd (G&T), which remain a fascinating and valuable source of information about 19th-century styles of violin playing. He is the earliest violinist of distinction known to have recorded,[citation needed] only to be followed soon thereafter when Sarasate made some recordings the following year.

Joachim's portrait was twice painted by Philip de László. A portrait of Joachim was painted by John Singer Sargent[61] and presented to him at the 1904 "Diamond Jubilee" celebration of his sixtieth anniversary of his first appearance in London. Joachim remained in Berlin until his death in 1907.

At his 75th birthday observance in June 1906, Joachim said

The Germans have four violin concertos. The greatest, most uncompromising is Beethoven's. The one by Brahms vies with it in seriousness. The richest, the most seductive, was written by Max Bruch. But the most inward, the heart's jewel, is Mendelssohn's.[62]

Bruch wrote three violin concertos. Joachim was presumably referring to his Concerto No. 1, which is the most well-known and frequently performed. Joachim had assisted Bruch in revising that concerto.[62]

Repertoire

 
Amalie's and Joseph's grave in Berlin-Charlottenburg

Among the most notable of Joachim's achievements were his revival of Beethoven's violin concerto already mentioned, the revival of Bach's Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin, BWV 1001–1006, especially the Chaconne from the Partita No. 2, BWV 1004,[63] and of Beethoven's late string quartets.[64] Joachim was the second violinist, after Ferdinand David, to play Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto in E minor, which he studied with the composer. Joachim played a pivotal role in the career of Brahms, and remained a tireless advocate of Brahms's compositions through all the vicissitudes of their friendship. He conducted the English premiere of Brahms's Symphony No. 1 in C minor at Cambridge on 8 March 1877, on the same day that he received a D. Mus. degree there (Brahms had declined an invitation to go to England himself).[65]

A number of Joachim's composer colleagues, including Schumann, Brahms, Bruch, and Dvořák, composed concerti with Joachim in mind, many of which entered the standard repertory. Nevertheless, Joachim's solo repertoire remained relatively restricted. He never performed Schumann's Violin Concerto in D minor, which Schumann wrote especially for him, or Dvořák's Violin Concerto in A minor, although Dvořák had earnestly solicited his advice about the piece, dedicated it to him, and would have liked him to premiere it. The most unusual work written for Joachim was the F-A-E Sonata, a collaboration between Schumann, Brahms, and Albert Dietrich, based upon the initials of Joachim's motto, Frei aber Einsam (which can be translated as "free but lonely", "free but alone", or "free but solitary"). Although the sonata is rarely performed in its entirety, the third movement, the Scherzo in C minor, composed by Brahms, is still frequently played today.

Compositions

Joachim's own compositions are less well known. He gave opus numbers to 14 compositions and composed about an equal number of pieces without opus numbers. Among his compositions are various works for the violin (including three concerti) and overtures to Shakespeare's Hamlet and Henry IV. He also wrote cadenzas for a number of other composers' concerti (including the Beethoven and Brahms concerti). His most highly regarded composition is his Hungarian concerto (Violin Concerto No 2 in D minor, Op. 11).

 
Joseph Joachim

List of compositions

Fuller-Maitland, p. 56, lists the 14 pieces with opus numbers, not necessarily with the same details as below. On p. 57 he lists 6 of the 14 pieces given here as WoO, plus the orchestration of the Schubert Grand Duo and the Beethoven and Brahms concerto cadenzas.

Original compositions

  • Op. 1, Andantino and Allegro scherzoso, for violin and piano (1848): dedicated to Joseph Böhm
  • Op. 2, Drei Stücke (3 Pieces) for violin or viola and piano, (circa 1848–1852): Romanze, Fantasiestück, Eine Frühlingsfantasie; dedicated to Moritz Hauptmann
  • Op. 3, Violin Concerto in One Movement, in G minor (1851); dedicated to Franz Liszt
  • Op. 4, Hamlet Overture (1853); dedicated to Kapelle of Weimar
  • Op. 5, Three Pieces for Violin and Piano: Lindenrauschen, Abendglocken, Ballade; dedicated to Gisela von Arnim
  • Op. 6, Demetrius Overture (1853, to a play by Herman Friedrich Grimm; overture dedicated to Franz Liszt)
  • Op. 7, Henry IV Overture (1854)
  • Op. 8, Overture to a Comedy by Gozzi (1854); dedicated to Fritz Steinbach.
  • Op. 9, Hebräische Melodien, nach Eindrücken der Byron'schen Gesänge (Hebrew Melodies, after Impressions of Byron's Songs) for viola and piano (1854–1855)
  • Op. 10, Variationen über ein eigenes Thema (Variations on an Original Theme) in E major for viola and piano (1854); dedicated to Hermann Grimm.
  • Op. 11, Violin Concerto No. 2 in D minor "in the Hungarian Manner" (1857, published in 1861); dedicated to Johannes Brahms. It is said that the solo violin part of the Hungarian Concerto is very difficult to play.[66]
  • Op. 12, Notturno for Violin and Small Orchestra in A major (1858)
  • WoO, Violin Concerto No. 3 in G major (1875)
  • Op. 13, Elegiac Overture "In Memoriam Heinrich von Kleist" (ca. 1877)
  • Op. 14, Szene der Marfa from Friedrich Schiller's unfinished drama Demetrius (ca. 1869)
  • WoO Haidenröslein Lied for high voice and piano; pub. Verlag des Ungar, 1846.
  • WoO, Ich hab' im Traum geweinet for voice and piano, pub. Wigand, 1854.
  • WoO, Scene from Schiller's Demetrius (1878)
  • WoO, Rain, rain and sun, Merlin's Song (Tennyson), pub. C. Kegan & Co., 1880.
  • WoO, Melodrama zu einer Schillergedenkfeier (unpublished, autograph in Hamburg Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek)
  • WoO, Overture in C major (Konzertouvertüre zum Geburtstag des Kaisers) (1896)[67]
  • WoO, Two Marches for orchestra, in C and D[67]
  • WoO, Andantino in A minor, for violin and orchestra (also for violin and piano)[68]
  • WoO, Romance in B-flat major, for violin and piano
  • WoO, Romance in C major, for violin and piano; pub. C. F. Kahnt Nachfolge, Leipzig, 1894.
  • WoO, String Quartet Movement in C minor
  • WoO, Variationen über ein irisches Elfenlied for piano (first publ. by J. Schuberth & Co. Hamburg, 1989. Edited by Michael Struck.)
  • WoO, Variations for Violin and Orchestra in E minor (ca. 1879); dedicated to Pablo Sarasate
  • WoO, Fantasie über ungarische Motive (ca. 1850); premiered in Weimar under Franz Liszt in October 1850[69]
  • WoO, Fantasie über irische [schottische] Motive (ca. 1852); premiered in London in May 1852[70]
 
Joachim and Clara Schumann (1854), drawing by Adolph Menzel

An orchestration

Cadenzas

  • Beethoven, Concerto in D major, Op. 61[72]
  • Brahms, Concerto in D major, Op. 77[73]
  • Hiller, Concerto in A major, Op.152a
  • Kreutzer, Concerto No. 19 in D minor
  • Mozart, Aria from Il re pastore, K. 208, Concerto No. 3 in G major, K. 216, Concerto No. 4 in D major, K. 218, and Concerto No. 5 in A major, K. 219
  • Rode, Concerto No. 10 in B minor, and Concerto No. 11 in D major
  • Spohr, Concerto in A minor, Op. 47 (Gesangsszene)
  • Tartini, Sonata in G minor (Devil's Trill)
  • Viotti, Concerto No. 22 in A minor

Recordings of Joachim's compositions

 
Joachim at age 53

Joachim's own discography

  • J. S. Bach: Partita for Violin No. 1 in B minor, BWV 1002: 7th movement, Tempo di Bourrée, Pearl Catalog: 9851 (also on Testament (749677132323)).
  • Brahms: Hungarian Dances (21) for Piano 4 hands, WoO 1: No. 1 in G minor (arr. Joachim), Opal Recordings (also on Testament (749677132323)).
  • Brahms: Hungarian Dance No. 2 in D minor (arr. Joachim), Grammophon Catalogue #047905; HMV, D88.
  • Joachim: Romance in C major, Op. 20, Pearl Catalog: 9851

Original pressings are single-sided and have a flat red G&T label. Later reeditions have a black G&T label (or, from 1909, a label showing the 'His Master's Voice' trade-mark), and those made for the German market are double-sided.

A letter preserved in the EMI archives records the stringent conditions Joachim expected for the publicity for his recordings: sensational adverts were to be avoided, with no comparisons between his art and that of other violinists. The letter also stated that "it was only with the greatest difficulty that Professor Joachim was induced to play".[74]

Joachim's students

 
Joachim and the young Franz von Vecsey. Note the strongly incurving, arthritic first finger of his left hand. The chair in which he is sitting was a special present to him. He willed it to Donald Tovey, and it is now owned by the University of Edinburgh Museum.[75]
  • Leopold Auer, violinist and teacher; studied with Joachim in Hanover. Among his many outstanding students were Mischa Elman, Jascha Heifetz, and Nathan Milstein.
  • Dora Valesca Becker (1870–1958)
  • Hugo Leichtentritt
  • Aylmer Buesst
  • Willy Burmester
  • Carl Courvoisier (1846–1908), author of Technics of Violin Playing on Joachim's Method, London: The Strad Library, No. I, 1894.[76]
  • Bram Eldering (1865–1943), Concertmaster of the Berlin Philharmonic under Hans von Bülow; Concertmaster of the Meininger Hofkapelle
  • Adila Fachiri, Joachim's great-niece
  • F. Fleischhauer (born 1834), Hofconcertmeister in Meiningen
  • Sam Franko
  • Richard Gompertz (born 1859), professor of violin at the Royal College of Music, London
  • Jakob Moritz Grũn, born in Pest, 1837; Joachim resigned a position to protest his non-advancement for being Jewish. Has an article in German Wikipedia.
  • Karel (Carl) Halíř (1859–1909), Bohemian violinist, member of the Joachim Quartet
  • Willy Hess
  • Gustav Hille
  • Richard Himmelstoß (born 1843), Concertmaster in Breslau
  • Theodore Holland (1878–1947), British composer and teacher.
  • Gustav Holländer (born 1855), solo violinist
  • Rebecca Wilder Holmes (1871–1953), American violinist and music professor at Smith College
  • Jenő Hubay, Hungarian violinist, composer
  • Bronisław Huberman[77]
  • Karl Klingler, violinist of the Klingler Quartet and Joachim's successor at the Berlin Hochschule; Klingler was the teacher of Shinichi Suzuki.
  • Iosif Kotek (1855–1885), Russian violinist
  • Hans Letz, Concertmaster of the Theodore Thomas Orchestra[78]
  • Bernhard Listemann [de], Concertmaster of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
  • Charles Martin Loeffler (1861–1935)
  • Martin Marsick
  • Pietro Melani
  • Waldemar J. Meyer (1853–1940)
  • Bernardo V. Moreira de Sá (1853–1924), Portuguese violinist and teacher; director of the "Conservatório de Música do Porto"; director and founder of the "Orpheon Portuense"; studied with Joachim in Berlin
  • Andreas Moser (1859–1925), violinist and assistant to Joachim; Moser wrote the first biography of Joachim, Moser (1901), on Joachim's life up through 1899. He helped recover original scores of J.S. Bach's Sonate e Partite per violino solo, and collaborated with Joachim on numerous editions.
  • Tivadar Nachéz (1859–1930)
  • Johannes Palaschko (1877–1932)
  • Henri Petri, Concertmaster in Leipzig
  • Lili Petschnikoff (1874–1957), American violinist
  • Maximilian Pilzer, Concertmaster of the New York Philharmonic (1915–1917),[79][80]
  • Enrico Polo (1868–1953), Italian violinist, violist, pedagogue
  • Maud Powell, American violinist[81]
  • Willibald Richter (1860–1929), German-born English pianist, organist and teacher; student, friend and accompanist of Joachim; student of Haupt, Lebert, Liszt, Mischalek and Oscar; founded College of Music at Leicester
  • Camillo Ritter, teacher of leading violist William Primrose
  • Ernst Schiever (1844-1915), Leader of the Richter Orchestra, member of the original Joachim Quartet (1869-1871)[82]
  • Ossip Schnirlin (? – 1937)
  • Emily Shinner[83]
  • Axel Skovgaard
  • Maria Soldat-Röger
  • Theodore Spiering, American violinist; born in St. Louis, lived in Chicago; Concertmaster (1909–1911) of New York Philharmonic
  • Kemp Stillings (1888–1967), American violinist, music teacher
  • Agnes Tschetschulin
  • Franz von Vecsey, studied with Hubay, then Joachim; dedicatee of the Sibelius violin concerto
  • Alfred Wittenberg

Other pupils may be mentioned by Wilhelm Joseph von Wasielewski in his "Die Violine und Ihre Meister".

Joachim's instruments

Most, but not all, of the many violins (and two violas) Joachim is said to have had during his career are shown on the website of Tarisio Auctions, cozio.com. Further information, in German, is in the article by Kamlah (2013).

 
Joseph Joachim
  • His first (full-size) violin was a Guarneri Filius Andreae 1703, which he gave to Felix Schumann after he acquired his first Stradivarius.
  • A violin, the ex-Joachim Stradivarius of 1715 is currently held by the Collezione Civica del Comune di Cremona.[84] It was presented to Joachim on the occasion of his Jubilee celebration in 1889.
  • The Ex Joachim, Joseph Vieland Viola by Gasparo da Salò, Brescia, before 1609 is held by the Shrine to Music No. 3368.[85]
  • A Johannes Theodorus Cuypers anno 1807 was bought by Joachim in the mid 19th century and taken on tour throughout Europe. There is also evidence that the instrument was played by Joachim in a recital in Paris a half century later, in 1895. The same instrument was also played by Fritz Kreisler in a 1955 Carnegie Hall concert.[86]

Cultural references

The English poet Robert Bridges wrote a sonnet about Joachim in his first major work of poetry The Growth of Love.[87]

Notes

  1. ^ . 7 November 2014. Archived from the original on 7 November 2014. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  2. ^ a b Campbell, p. 74
  3. ^ Monk, Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius: p. 5
  4. ^ Moser, 1901, p. 3
  5. ^ Moser, p. 6
  6. ^ Fuller-Maitland, p. 2
  7. ^ Moser, p. 17
  8. ^ Fuller-Maitland, p. 3
  9. ^ Campbell, p. 75
  10. ^ Fuller Maitland, p. 4
  11. ^ Moser, 1901, pp. 8–9
  12. ^ Moser, p. 38
  13. ^ a b Avins, 2002
  14. ^ "London Philharmonic Debut". Joseph Joachim. 3 July 2013.
  15. ^ Moser, 1901, p. 57
  16. ^ Fuller-Maitland, p. 13
  17. ^ Moser, p. 32
  18. ^ Moser, p. 76
  19. ^ Moser, 1901, pp. 39, 43–44
  20. ^ Moser, p. 78
  21. ^ Campbell, 1981, p. 76
  22. ^ Swafford, p. 174, in another translation
  23. ^ Leopold Auer, Violin Playing as I Teach It, Dover, New York, 1980, p. 5
  24. ^ Auer, 1923, pp. 58–59
  25. ^ Moser, pp. 116–117
  26. ^ Moser, p. 117
  27. ^ Moser, p. 120.
  28. ^ a b Moser, p. 121
  29. ^ Swafford, p. 62
  30. ^ Swafford, p. 63
  31. ^ Moser, p. 127
  32. ^ Swafford, p. 75
  33. ^ Swafford, p. 130
  34. ^ Swafford, p. 133
  35. ^ Gal, p. 60
  36. ^ Gal, p. 61
  37. ^ Gal, p. 114
  38. ^ Gal, p. 115
  39. ^ Fuller Maitland, p. 55
  40. ^ Litzmann, 1913,  p. 152
  41. ^ "Arts & Humanities Research Council Concert Programmes, St. James's Hall Concerts (1867–1904)". Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  42. ^ Avins, Styra, "Joseph Joachim", in Oxford Companion to Music, ed. Alison Latham, Oxford University Press, 2002–2003, p. 637
  43. ^ Louis Ries, born 1830, was the son of Hubert Ries. For a listing of Joachim's concert which includes some Monday Popular Concerts, see Joachim’s Concerts
  44. ^ Zerbini was of Australian origin. An obituary for him in the Illustrated Australian News (Melbourne) 1 January 1892 says he was "acknowledged to be one of the finest viola players in the world."
  45. ^ Shaw, George Bernard (1937), London Music in 1888–89 as heard by Corno di Bassetto, etc. (Constable, London), p. 297
  46. ^ Litzmann, p. 289
  47. ^ Litzmann, p. 294
  48. ^ Litzmann, pp. 249–250
  49. ^ Jan Swafford, Johannes Brahms, Knopf (1997), reprinted in the UK by Papermac (1999) pp. 207–211
  50. ^ Moser (1901) 202–206
  51. ^ Cobbett, Walter Willson (1963). Cobbett's Cyclopedic Survey of Chamber Music, Volume II. London: OUP. p. 38.
  52. ^ Stowell, ed., 2003
  53. ^ Gal, p. 216
  54. ^ Campbell, p. 81
  55. ^ Fuller-Maitland p. 56
  56. ^ Moser 1901, p. 282
  57. ^ Fuller-Maitland, 1901, p. 18
  58. ^ a b Moser 1901, p. 324
  59. ^ Moser 1901, p. 325
  60. ^ "OCMC history". ocmc.org.uk.
  61. ^ "Joseph Joachim".
  62. ^ a b Steinberg, p. 265
  63. ^ Fuller Maitland, p. 25
  64. ^ Fuller Maitland, pp. 39, 49
  65. ^ sleeve note, naxos 8.557428, BRAHMS: Sym. No. 1/Tragic Overture/Academic Festival Overture
  66. ^ Fuler Maitland, p. 52
  67. ^ a b Fuller-Maitland, 1905, p. 57
  68. ^ Fuller-Maitland, 1905, p. 60
  69. ^ Uhde, Katharina. The Music of Joseph Joachim (Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer, 2018), 41
  70. ^ Uhde, Katharina. The Music of Joseph Joachim (Suffolk: Boydell & Brewer, 2018), 21.
  71. ^ There are recordings, by the Vienna State Opera Orchestra conductor Felix Prohaska, and the Houston Symphony conducted by Christoph Eschenbach.
  72. ^ Joachim's was an early cadenza; later many others wrote more
  73. ^ Joachim's cadenza to Brahms's concerto came to be 'almost always' played, according to Fuller-Maitland, 1905, p. 55
  74. ^ Jenkins, Lyndon. The EMI Archive. International Classic Record Collector. Summer 1997, Vol.2 No.9, p40.
  75. ^ The University of Edinburgh Museums, Galleries & Collections 3 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  76. ^ "Violin-technik (Courvoisier, Carl)". IMSLP: Free Sheet Music PDF Download. 28 March 2022. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  77. ^ . huberman.info. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 13 February 2006.
  78. ^ "Hans Letz". theviolinsite.com.
  79. ^ archives.nyphil.orgindex.php
  80. ^ "Russian Symphony Orchestra of New York". stokowski.org.
  81. ^ "Department of Music". acu.edu. Archived from the original on 12 July 2012. Retrieved 13 February 2006.
  82. ^ "Mr Ernst Schiever: Distinguished Liverpool Musician's Retirement". Liverpool Echo. 13 May 1911.
  83. ^ Lahee, Henry C. (August 2008). Famous Violinists of To-Day and Yesterday. ISBN 978-0-554-34448-5.
  84. ^ . cozio.com. Archived from the original on 24 March 2005.
  85. ^ "Bowed Stringed Instruments Made Before 1800 at the National Music Museum". Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  86. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 February 2008. Retrieved 17 August 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  87. ^ "Robert Bridges". sonnets.org.

Sources

 
Joseph Joachim
  • Leopold Auer, 1923, My long Life in Music, F. A. Stokes, New York
  • Styra Avins, "Joachim, Joseph", in The Oxford Companion to Music, ed. Alison Latham, Oxford University Press, 2002, pp. 637–638, ISBN 978-0-19-866212-9
  • Ute Bär, "Sie wissen ja, wie gerne ich, selbst öffentlich, mit Ihnen musicire! Clara Schumann und Joseph Joachim", Die Tonkunst, vol. 1, nr. 3, July 2007, 247–257.
  • Otto Biba, "'Ihr Sie hochachtender, dankbarer Schüler Peppi', Joseph Joachims Jugend im Spiegel bislang unveröffentlicher Briefe", Die Tonkunst, vol. 1, nr. 3, July 2007, 200–204.
  • Nora Bickley, selector and translator, Letters From and To Joseph Joachim, with a preface by J. A. Fuller-Maitland, New York: Vienna House, 1972.
  • Beatrix Borchard, Stimme und Geige: Amalie und Joseph Joachim, Biographie und Interpretationsgeschichte, Wien, Köln, Weimar, Böhlau Verlag, 2005.
  • Beatrix Borchard, "Groß-männlich-deutsch? Zur Rolle Joseph Joachims für das deutsche Musikleben in der Wilhelminischen Zeit", Die Tonkunst, vol. 1, nr. 3, July 2007, 218–231.
  • Siegfried Borris, "Joseph Joachim zum 65. Todestag", Oesterreichische Musikzeitschrift XXVII (June 1972): 352–355.
  • Margaret Campbell, 1981, The Great Violinists, Doubleday, Garden City, New York. (Has a chapter on Joachim)
  • F. G. E., "Joseph Joachim", The Musical Times, 48/775 (1 September 1907): 577–583.
  • Robert W. Eshbach, "Der Geigerkönig: Joseph Joachim as Performer", Die Tonkunst, vol. 1, nr. 3, July 2007, 205–217.
  • Robert W. Eshbach, "Verehrter Freund! Liebes Kind! Liebster Jo! Mein einzig Licht. Intimate letters in Brahms's Freundeskreis", Die Tonkunst, vol. 2, nr. 2, April 2008, 178–193
  • Robert W. Eshbach, "Joachims Jugend", Die Tonkunst, vol. 5, nr. 2, April 2011, 176–190.
  • Robert W. Eshbach, "Joachim's Youth – Joachim's Jewishness", The Musical Quarterly, vol. 94, no. 4, Winter 2011, 548–592
  • J. A. Fuller-Maitland, Joseph Joachim, London & New York: John Lane, 1905, a Google Books; repr. Bibliobazaar, 2010, public domain
  • Johannes Joachim and Andreas Moser (eds.), Briefe von und an Joseph Joachim, 3 vols., Berlin: Julius Bard, 1911–1913
  • Hans Gál, Johannes Brahms: His Work and Personality, transl. from German by Joseph Stein, Knopf, New York, 1971.
  • Ruprecht Kamlah, Joseph Joachims Guarneri-Geigen, Eine Untersuchung im Hinblick auf die Familie Wittgenstein, Wiener Geschichtsblätter 2013, Vol. 1, p. 33, posted on "Joseph Joachim: Biography and Research", 2015.
  • Ruprecht Kamlah, "Joseph Joachims Geigen, Ihre Geschichten und Spieler, besonders der Sammler Wilhelm Kux, Palm und Enke, Erlangen 2018, ISBN 978-3-7896-1023-3, 230 pages.
  • Adolph Kohut, Josef Joachim. Ein Lebens- und Künstlerbild. Festschrift zu seinem 60. Geburtstage, am 28. Juni 1891, Berlin: A. Glas, 1891.
  • Berthold Litzmann, 1913, Clara Schumann: An Artist's Life based on material found in Diaries and Letters, Translated from the fourth German edition by Grace E. Hadow, MacMillan, London.
  • Brigitte Massin, Les Joachim: Une Famille de Musiciens, Paris: Fayard, 1999. ISBN 2-213-60418-5
  • Andreas Moser (ed.), Johannes Brahms im Briefwechsel mit Joseph Joachim, 2nd ed., Berlin: Deutsche Brahms-Gesellschaft, 1912.
  • Andreas Moser, Joseph Joachim: Ein Lebensbild, 2 vols. Berlin: Verlag der Deutschen Brahms-Gesellschaft, vol. 1: 1908; vol. 2: 1910. (Published after the following translation, so must be a revised edition?)
  • Andreas Moser, Joseph Joachim: A Biography (1831–1899), translated by Lilla Durham, introduction by J. A. Fuller-Maitland, London: Philip Wellby, 1901. (Published during Joachim's lifetime)
  • Hans Joachim Moser, Joseph Joachim, Sechsundneunzigstes Neujahrsblatt der Allgemeinen Musikgesellschaft in Zürich, Zürich & Leipzig: Hug & Co., 1908
  • Anne Russell, "Joachim", The Etude, (December 1932) 884–885.
  • Dietmar Schenk, "Aus einer Gründerzeit: Joseph Joachim, die Berliner Hochschule für Musik und der deutsch-französische Krieg", Die Tonkunst, vol. 1, nr. 3, July 2007, 232–246.
  • Michael Steinberg, The Concerto: A Listener's Guide, Oxford University Press, 1998, ISBN 0-19-510330-0
  • Barrett Stoll, Joseph Joachim: Violinist, Pedagogue, and Composer, Ph.D. Diss., Univ. of Iowa, 1978.
  • Karl Storck, Joseph Joachim: Eine Studie, Leipzig: Hermann Seemann Nachfolger, n.d.
  • Robert Stowell, Ed., Cambridge Companion to the String Quartet, Cambridge University Press, 2003.
  • Jan Swafford, Johannes Brahms: A Biography, Knopf and Vintage Books, 1997.
  • Katharina Uhde, "Rediscovering Joseph Joachim’s ‘Hungarian’ and ‘Irish’ [‘Scottish’] fantasias.", In: The Musical Times, 158/1941 (Winter 2017): 75–99.
  • Katharina Uhde, The Music of Joseph Joachim, Boydell & Brewer, 2018.
  • Katharina Uhde, ed., Joseph Joachim, Fantasy on Hungarian Themes (1850), Fantasy on Irish [Scottish] Themes (1852) for Violin and Orchestra, Bärenreiter, 2018.
  • Katharina Uhde, "An Unknown Beethoven Cadenza by Joseph Joachim: 'Dublin 1852'", The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 103, Issue 3-4 (Fall-Winter 2020): 394–424.
  • Gerhard Winkler (ed.) "Geigen-Spiel-Kunst: Joseph Joachim und der 'Wahre' Fortschritt", Burgenländische Heimatblätter, vol. 69, nr. 2, 2007.
  • Klaus Martin Kopitz (ed.), Briefwechsel Robert und Clara Schumanns mit Joseph Joachim und seiner Familie, 2 vols. (= Schumann-Briefedition, series II, vol. 2), Köln: Dohr, 2019, ISBN 978-3-86846-013-1

External links

  • Joseph Joachim — Biography and Research.
  • Works by or about Joseph Joachim at Internet Archive
  • Joseph Joachim's autograph and handwritten note to Marianne Scharwenka (Violinist and wife of Philipp Scharwenka)
  • Bach Adagio G minor played by Joseph Joachim 1903 on YouTube
  • Joachim Romanze in C played by Joseph Joachim 1903 on YouTube
  • Brahms Hungarian Dance No. 1 played by Joseph Joachim 1903 on YouTube
  • Brahms Hungarian Dance No. 2 played by Joseph Joachim 1903 on YouTube
  • Short biography of Joseph and Amalie Joachim
  • Free scores by Joseph Joachim at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
  • Guide to the Joseph Joachim Collection at the Leo Baeck Institute, New York.

joseph, joachim, native, form, this, personal, name, joachim, józsef, this, article, uses, western, name, order, when, mentioning, individuals, june, 1831, august, 1907, hungarian, violinist, conductor, composer, teacher, made, international, career, based, ha. The native form of this personal name is Joachim Jozsef This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals Joseph Joachim 28 June 1831 15 August 1907 was a Hungarian violinist conductor composer and teacher who made an international career based in Hanover and Berlin A close collaborator of Johannes Brahms he is widely regarded as one of the most significant violinists of the 19th century Joseph JoachimJoseph JoachimBornJoachim Jozsef 1831 06 28 28 June 1831Kopcseny Kingdom of HungaryDied15 August 1907 1907 08 15 aged 76 EducationVienna ConservatoryOccupationsClassical Violinist Conductor Academic teacherOrganizationsGewandhausorchester Opernhaus Hannover Joachim QuartetSpouseAmalie JoachimSignatureJoachim studied violin early beginning in Buda at age five then in Vienna and Leipzig He made his debut in London in 1844 playing Ludwig van Beethoven s Violin Concerto with Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy conducting He returned to London many times throughout life After years of teaching at the Leipzig Conservatory and playing as principal violinist of the Gewandhausorchester he moved to Weimar in 1848 where Franz Liszt established cultural life From 1852 Joachim served at the court of Hanover playing principal violin in the opera and conducting concerts with months of free time in summer for concert tours In 1853 he was invited by Robert Schumann to the Lower Rhine Music Festival where he met Clara Schumann and Brahms with whom he performed for years to come In 1879 he premiered Brahms violin concerto with Brahms as conductor 1 He married Amalie an opera singer in 1863 who gave up her career the couple had six children Joachim quit service in Hanover in 1865 and the family moved to Berlin where he was entrusted with founding and directing a new department at the Royal Conservatory for performing music He formed a string quartet and kept performing chamber music on tours His playing was recorded in 1903 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Origins 1 2 Early career 1 2 1 London Philharmonic debut Beethoven Violin Concerto 1 2 2 Beethoven string quartets 1 3 Maturity 1 3 1 Weimar Liszt then Hanover 1 4 The Schumanns Brahms Berlin 1 5 Honors and Jubilees 2 Repertoire 3 Compositions 3 1 List of compositions 3 1 1 Original compositions 3 1 2 An orchestration 3 1 3 Cadenzas 3 2 Recordings of Joachim s compositions 4 Joachim s own discography 5 Joachim s students 6 Joachim s instruments 7 Cultural references 8 Notes 9 Sources 10 External linksLife EditOrigins Edit Joachim s birth house in Kittsee Joachim was born in Kopcseny Moson County Kingdom of Hungary present day Kittsee in Burgenland Austria He was the seventh of eight children born to Julius a wool merchant and Fanny Joachim who were of Hungarian Jewish origin 2 He spent his childhood as a member of the Kopcseny Kehilla Jewish community one of Hungary s prominent Siebengemeinden Seven Communities under the protectorate of the Esterhazy family He was a first cousin of Fanny Wittgenstein nee Figdor the mother of Karl Wittgenstein and the grandmother of the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein and the pianist Paul Wittgenstein 3 Early career Edit In 1833 his family moved to Pest which in 1873 was united with Buda and obuda to form Budapest There from 1836 age 5 he studied violin with the Polish violinist Stanislaw Serwaczynski the concertmaster of the opera in Pest said to be the best violinist in Pest 2 Although Joachim s parents were not particularly well off they had been well advised to choose not just an ordinary violin teacher 4 Joachim s first public performance was 17 March 1839 when he was of age 7 5 Serwaczynski later moved back to Lublin Poland where he taught Wieniawski In 1839 Joachim continued his studies at the Vienna Conservatory briefly with Miska Hauser and Georg Hellmesberger Sr 6 finally and most significantly with Joseph Bohm 7 who introduced him to the world of chamber music 8 9 In 1843 he was taken by his cousin Fanny Figdor who later married a Leipzig merchant 10 named Wittgenstein to live and study in Leipzig 11 In the journal Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik Robert Schumann was highly enthusiastic about Felix Mendelssohn on which Moser writes Only in Haydn s admiration for Mozart does the history of music know a parallel case of such ungrudging veneration of one great artist for his equal 12 in 1835 Mendelssohn had become director of the Leipzig Gewandhaus orchestra In 1843 Joachim became a protege of Mendelssohn who arranged for him to study theory and composition with Moritz Hauptmann and violin with Ferdinand David 13 In his debut performance in the Gewandhaus Joachim played the Otello Fantasy by Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst Joachim s birth house in Kittsee today Memorial plaque on his birth house London Philharmonic debut Beethoven Violin Concerto Edit On 27 May 1844 Joachim not quite 13 in his London debut with Mendelssohn conducting at a concert of the Philharmonic Society played the solo part in Beethoven s Violin Concerto This was a triumph in several respects as described by R W Eshbach 14 The Philharmonic had a policy against performers so young but an exception was made after auditions persuaded gatherings of distinguished musicians and music lovers that Joachim had mature capabilities Despite Beethoven s recognition as one of the greatest composers and the ranking nowadays of his violin concerto as among the greatest few it was far from being so ranked before Joachim s performance Ludwig Spohr had harshly criticized it and after the London premiere by violinist Edward Eliason a critic had said it might have been written by any third or fourth rate composer But Joachim was very well prepared to play Beethoven s concerto having written his own cadenzas for it and memorized the piece The audience anticipated great things having got word from the rehearsal 15 and so Mendelssohn wrote frenetic applause began as soon as Joachim stepped in front of the orchestra The beginning was applauded still more and cheers of the audience accompanied every part of the concerto Reviewers also had high praise One for The Musical World wrote The greatest violinists hold this concerto in awe Young Joachim attacked it with the vigour and determination of the most accomplished artist no master could have read it better and the two cadenzas written by Joachim were tremendous feats ingeniously composed Another reviewer for the Illustrated London News wrote that Joachim is perhaps the first violin player not only of his age but of his siecle century He performed Beethoven s solitary concerto which we have heard all the great performers of the last twenty years attempt and invariably fail in its performance was an eloquent vindication of the master spirit who imagined it A third reviewer for the Morning Post wrote that the concerto has been generally regarded by violin players as not a proper and effective development of the powers of their instrument but that Joachim s performance is beyond all praise and defies all description and was altogether unprecedented Joachim remained a favorite with the English public for the rest of his career He visited England in each year 1858 1859 1862 largely at the behest of his friend William Sterndale Bennett and for several decades thereafter 16 Beethoven string quartets Edit Moser p 28 ff writes After the appearance of the six String Quartets Op 18 Beethoven had complete command of the field of chamber music although in the later quartets he makes many exacting demands of string players Moser p 29 further writes that at the time of Beethoven s death such people as Spohr and Hauptmann did not necessarily esteem the late quartets above the earliest ones Moser p 30 writes that in Vienna the public showed a marked hostility toward the late quartets But Joachim s teacher Bohm had an appreciation of the late quartets which he communicated to Joachim 17 At the age of 18 in the whole of Germany Joachim had no equal either in the rendering of Bach or in the concertos of Beethoven and Mendelssohn while as quartet player he had no cause to fear rivalry 18 Maturity Edit Following Mendelssohn s death in 1847 Joachim stayed briefly in Leipzig teaching at the Conservatorium and playing on the first desk of the Gewandhaus Orchestra with Ferdinand David 19 whom Mendelssohn had appointed as concertmaster on taking up the conductorship in 1835 Weimar Liszt then Hanover Edit In 1848 the pianist and composer Franz Liszt took up residence in Weimar where Goethe and Schiller had lived 20 Liszt was determined to re establish the town s reputation as the Athens of Germany There he gathered a circle of young avant garde disciples vocally opposed to the conservatism of the Leipzig circle Joachim was amongst the first of these He served Liszt as concertmaster and for several years enthusiastically embraced the new psychological music as he called it In 1852 he moved to Hanover at the same time dissociating himself from the musical ideals of the New German School Liszt Richard Wagner Hector Berlioz and their followers as defined by journalist Franz Brendel The worship of Wagner s music permeating musical taste in Weimar was to Joachim inordinate and unacceptable 21 Joachim s break with Liszt became final in August 1857 when he wrote to his former mentor I am completely out of sympathy with your music it contradicts everything which from early youth I have taken as mental nourishment from the spirit of our great masters 22 Hanover was then an independent kingdom later to be absorbed in the German empire 23 King Georg of Hanover was totally blind and very fond of music he paid Joachim a good salary and gave him considerable freedom 24 Joachim s duties in Hanover included playing the main violin part in opera performances and that or conducting state concerts 25 He had five summer months off in which he made concert tours around Europe 26 In March 1853 he sent to Liszt a copy of the Overture to Hamlet he had recently composed 27 The Schumanns Brahms Berlin Edit Joachim by John Singer Sargent 1904 Also in 1853 a committee headed by Schumann invited Joachim to the Lower Rhine Music Festival 28 At the Festival Joachim again soloed in the Beethoven violin concerto 29 His success made him it is said the most renowned artist of Germany 28 Robert Schumann and his wife Clara were deeply impressed and formed a close connection with Joachim 30 Joachim met the then publicly unknown 20 year old Brahms and wrote of him that his playing shows the intense fire which predicts the artist and his compositions already betoken such power as I have seen in no other musician of his age 31 Joachim strongly recommended Brahms to Robert 32 Brahms was received by the Schumanns with great enthusiasm After Robert s mental breakdown in 1854 and death in 1856 Joachim Clara and Brahms remained lifelong friends and shared musical views Joachim s performing style with the violin like Clara s at the piano is said to have been restrained pure antivirtuosic expressing the music rather than the performer 33 In December 1854 Joachim visited Robert at the Endenich asylum where he had been since February Joachim being his first visitor 34 Early on Brahms already played and composed for the piano which he had mastered in a supreme fashion but he felt deficient in orchestration 35 In 1854 he began composing what was to become his first piano concerto his first orchestral piece He sent a score of the first movement to Joachim requesting his advice 36 After getting Joachim s response Brahms wrote to him A thousand thanks for having studied the first movement in such a sympathetic and careful manner I have learned a great deal from your remarks As a musician I really have no greater wish than to have more talent so that I can learn still more from such a friend 37 Later in the composition of the concerto which took four years Brahms wrote to Joachim I am sending you the rondo once more And just like the last time I beg for some really severe criticism 38 The final manuscript of the concerto shows many alterations in the handwriting of Joachim 39 Joseph and Amalie Joachim Joachim s time in Hanover was his most prolific period of composition Then and during the rest of his career he frequently performed with Clara Schumann For example in October November 1857 they took a recital tour together to Dresden Leipzig and Munich 40 St James s Hall London which opened in 1858 hosted a series of Popular Concerts of chamber music of which programmes from 1867 through 1904 are preserved 41 Joachim appears a great many times He visited London each year from 1866 on 42 In March 1898 and in 1901 1904 Joachim appeared in his own quartet of players but otherwise far more often he appeared with resident Popular Concerts artists Louis Ries 43 second violin J B Zerbini 44 first viola and Alfredo Piatti first cello reputed to be one of the most celebrated cellists of the time George Bernard Shaw wrote that the Popular Concerts had helped greatly to spread and enlighten musical taste in England 45 Joachim had been a mainstay of the chamber music Popular Concerts At 18 of the Popular Concerts at least Clara Schumann performed along with Joachim Zerbini and Piatti presumably playing piano quartets without second violin or sometimes piano trios for piano violin and cello The programs of those concerts very likely also included string quartets in which she of course did not play as Ries is also listed A favorite piece of Clara s was Brahms s Piano Quartet in A major She wrote to Brahms 27 February 1882 from London that the piece had received much applause 46 About a performance of it in Liverpool 11 February she had written in her diary that it was warmly received much to my surprise as the public here is far less receptive than that in London 47 In January 1867 there had been a tour to Edinburgh and Glasgow Scotland by Joachim Clara her oldest daughter Marie Ries Zerbini Piatti two English sisters Miss Pyne one a singer and a Mr Saunders who managed all the arrangements Marie Schumann wrote home from Manchester that in Edinburgh Clara was received with tempestuous applause and had to give an encore so had Joachim Piatti too is always tremendously liked 48 Joachim had extensive correspondence with both Clara and Brahms as Brahms greatly valued Joachim s opinion of his new compositions In 1860 Brahms and Joachim jointly wrote a manifesto against the progressive music of the New German School in reaction to the polemics of Brendel s Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik This manifesto a volley in the War of the Romantics had originally few four 13 signers more later and met with a mixed reception being heavily derided by followers of Wagner 49 The famous Joachim Quartet From left to right Robert Hausmann cello Josef Joachim 1st violin Emanuel Wirth viola and Karel Halir 2nd violin On 10 May 1863 Joachim married the contralto Amalie Schneeweiss stage name Amalie Weiss 1839 99 Amalie gave up her own promising career as an opera singer and gave birth to six children She continued to perform in oratorios and to give lieder recitals In 1865 Joachim quit the service of the King of Hanover in protest when the Intendant artistic director of the Opera refused to advance one of the orchestral players Jakob Grun because of the latter s Jewish birth 50 In 1866 as a result of the Austro Prussian war in which Prussia and its capital Berlin became the dominant German state and city Joachim moved to Berlin where he was invited to help found and to become the first director of a new department of the Royal Academy of Music concerned with musical performance and called the Hochschule fur ausubende Tonkunst On Good Friday 10 April 1868 Joachim and his wife joined their friend Johannes Brahms in the celebration of one of Brahms greatest triumphs the first complete performance of his German Requiem at the Bremen Cathedral Amalie Joachim sang I Know that My Redeemer Liveth and Joseph Joachim played Robert Schumann s Abendlied It was a glorious occasion after which about 100 of the composer s friends the Joachims Clara Schumann Albert Dietrich and his wife Max Bruch and others gathered at the Bremen Rathskeller The Joachim Quartet performing in the Sing Akademie zu Berlin an engraving based on a painting currently lost by Felix Possart published as a Beilage to the Zeitschrift der Internationalen Musikgesellschaft 4 5 1903 between pp 240 and 241 In 1869 the Joachim String Quartet was formed which quickly gained a reputation as Europe s finest It continued to perform until Joachim s death in 1907 The first personnel of the quartet were Ernst Schiever 1869 1871 a pupil of Joachim Heinrich de Ahna 1871 1892 and Wilhelm Muller 1869 1879 Schiever resigned after their second season with de Ahna taking the second violin part and Eduard Rappoldi 1871 1877 on viola Later members of the Quartet were Johann Kruse 1892 1897 followed by Karel Halir 2nd violin from 1897 on Emanuel Wirth viola from 1877 on occasionally replaced by Karl Klingler and Robert Hausmann cello from 1879 on 51 52 In 1878 while writing his violin concerto Brahms consulted Joachim who freely gave him encouragement and technical advice 53 Brahms asked Joachim to write the cadenza for the concerto as he did In 1884 Joachim and his wife separated after he became convinced that she was having an affair with the publisher Fritz Simrock Brahms certain that Joachim s suspicions were groundless wrote a sympathetic letter to Amalie which she later produced as evidence in Joachim s divorce proceeding against her 54 This led to a cooling of Brahms and Joachim s friendship which was not restored until some years later when Brahms composed the Double Concerto in A minor for violin and cello Op 102 1887 as a peace offering to his old friend It was co dedicated to the first performers Joachim and Robert Hausmann In late 1895 both Brahms and Joachim were present at the opening of the new Tonhalle at Zurich Switzerland Brahms conducted and Joachim was assistant conductor But in April two years later Joachim was to lose forever this revered friend as Johannes Brahms died at the age of 64 at Vienna At Meiningen in December 1899 it was Joachim who made the speech when a statue to Brahms was unveiled Honors and Jubilees Edit In March 1877 Joachim received an honorary Doctorate of Music from Cambridge University For the occasion he presented his Overture in honor of Kleist Op 13 55 Near the 50th anniversary of Joachim s debut recital he was honored by friends and admirers in England 56 on 16 April 1889 who presented him with an exceptionally fine violin made in 1715 by Antonio Stradivari called Il Cremonese 57 About ten years later for the sixtieth jubilee a concert in honor of Joachim was given by his former students of violin and viola playing and cellists who had studied quartet playing with him on 22 April 1899 58 The total of some 140 string players was impressive as were their instruments made by Stradivari Guarneri Bergonzi Amati etc 59 An honor such as that concert had been accorded to no other musician during his lifetime 58 Joseph Joachim by Philip Alexius de Laszlo 1903 During 1899 Joachim was invited to become president of the newly established Oxford amp Cambridge Musical Club in London He remained club president until his death 60 In Berlin on 17 August 1903 Joachim recorded five sides for The Gramophone amp Typewriter Ltd G amp T which remain a fascinating and valuable source of information about 19th century styles of violin playing He is the earliest violinist of distinction known to have recorded citation needed only to be followed soon thereafter when Sarasate made some recordings the following year Joachim s portrait was twice painted by Philip de Laszlo A portrait of Joachim was painted by John Singer Sargent 61 and presented to him at the 1904 Diamond Jubilee celebration of his sixtieth anniversary of his first appearance in London Joachim remained in Berlin until his death in 1907 At his 75th birthday observance in June 1906 Joachim saidThe Germans have four violin concertos The greatest most uncompromising is Beethoven s The one by Brahms vies with it in seriousness The richest the most seductive was written by Max Bruch But the most inward the heart s jewel is Mendelssohn s 62 Bruch wrote three violin concertos Joachim was presumably referring to his Concerto No 1 which is the most well known and frequently performed Joachim had assisted Bruch in revising that concerto 62 Repertoire Edit Amalie s and Joseph s grave in Berlin Charlottenburg Among the most notable of Joachim s achievements were his revival of Beethoven s violin concerto already mentioned the revival of Bach s Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin BWV 1001 1006 especially the Chaconne from the Partita No 2 BWV 1004 63 and of Beethoven s late string quartets 64 Joachim was the second violinist after Ferdinand David to play Mendelssohn s Violin Concerto in E minor which he studied with the composer Joachim played a pivotal role in the career of Brahms and remained a tireless advocate of Brahms s compositions through all the vicissitudes of their friendship He conducted the English premiere of Brahms s Symphony No 1 in C minor at Cambridge on 8 March 1877 on the same day that he received a D Mus degree there Brahms had declined an invitation to go to England himself 65 A number of Joachim s composer colleagues including Schumann Brahms Bruch and Dvorak composed concerti with Joachim in mind many of which entered the standard repertory Nevertheless Joachim s solo repertoire remained relatively restricted He never performed Schumann s Violin Concerto in D minor which Schumann wrote especially for him or Dvorak s Violin Concerto in A minor although Dvorak had earnestly solicited his advice about the piece dedicated it to him and would have liked him to premiere it The most unusual work written for Joachim was the F A E Sonata a collaboration between Schumann Brahms and Albert Dietrich based upon the initials of Joachim s motto Frei aber Einsam which can be translated as free but lonely free but alone or free but solitary Although the sonata is rarely performed in its entirety the third movement the Scherzo in C minor composed by Brahms is still frequently played today Compositions EditJoachim s own compositions are less well known He gave opus numbers to 14 compositions and composed about an equal number of pieces without opus numbers Among his compositions are various works for the violin including three concerti and overtures to Shakespeare s Hamlet and Henry IV He also wrote cadenzas for a number of other composers concerti including the Beethoven and Brahms concerti His most highly regarded composition is his Hungarian concerto Violin Concerto No 2 in D minor Op 11 Joseph Joachim List of compositions Edit Fuller Maitland p 56 lists the 14 pieces with opus numbers not necessarily with the same details as below On p 57 he lists 6 of the 14 pieces given here as WoO plus the orchestration of the Schubert Grand Duo and the Beethoven and Brahms concerto cadenzas Original compositions Edit Op 1 Andantino and Allegro scherzoso for violin and piano 1848 dedicated to Joseph Bohm Op 2 Drei Stucke 3 Pieces for violin or viola and piano circa 1848 1852 Romanze Fantasiestuck Eine Fruhlingsfantasie dedicated to Moritz Hauptmann Op 3 Violin Concerto in One Movement in G minor 1851 dedicated to Franz Liszt Op 4 Hamlet Overture 1853 dedicated to Kapelle of Weimar Op 5 Three Pieces for Violin and Piano Lindenrauschen Abendglocken Ballade dedicated to Gisela von Arnim Op 6 Demetrius Overture 1853 to a play by Herman Friedrich Grimm overture dedicated to Franz Liszt Op 7 Henry IV Overture 1854 Op 8 Overture to a Comedy by Gozzi 1854 dedicated to Fritz Steinbach Op 9 Hebraische Melodien nach Eindrucken der Byron schen Gesange Hebrew Melodies after Impressions of Byron s Songs for viola and piano 1854 1855 Op 10 Variationen uber ein eigenes Thema Variations on an Original Theme in E major for viola and piano 1854 dedicated to Hermann Grimm Op 11 Violin Concerto No 2 in D minor in the Hungarian Manner 1857 published in 1861 dedicated to Johannes Brahms It is said that the solo violin part of the Hungarian Concerto is very difficult to play 66 Op 12 Notturno for Violin and Small Orchestra in A major 1858 WoO Violin Concerto No 3 in G major 1875 Op 13 Elegiac Overture In Memoriam Heinrich von Kleist ca 1877 Op 14 Szene der Marfa from Friedrich Schiller s unfinished drama Demetrius ca 1869 WoO Haidenroslein Lied for high voice and piano pub Verlag des Ungar 1846 WoO Ich hab im Traum geweinet for voice and piano pub Wigand 1854 WoO Scene from Schiller s Demetrius 1878 WoO Rain rain and sun Merlin s Song Tennyson pub C Kegan amp Co 1880 WoO Melodrama zu einer Schillergedenkfeier unpublished autograph in Hamburg Staats und Universitatsbibliothek WoO Overture in C major Konzertouverture zum Geburtstag des Kaisers 1896 67 WoO Two Marches for orchestra in C and D 67 WoO Andantino in A minor for violin and orchestra also for violin and piano 68 WoO Romance in B flat major for violin and piano WoO Romance in C major for violin and piano pub C F Kahnt Nachfolge Leipzig 1894 WoO String Quartet Movement in C minor WoO Variationen uber ein irisches Elfenlied for piano first publ by J Schuberth amp Co Hamburg 1989 Edited by Michael Struck WoO Variations for Violin and Orchestra in E minor ca 1879 dedicated to Pablo Sarasate WoO Fantasie uber ungarische Motive ca 1850 premiered in Weimar under Franz Liszt in October 1850 69 WoO Fantasie uber irische schottische Motive ca 1852 premiered in London in May 1852 70 Joachim and Clara Schumann 1854 drawing by Adolph Menzel An orchestration Edit In 1855 Joachim orchestrated the Schubert Grand Duo piano duet into a Symphony in C 71 Cadenzas Edit Beethoven Concerto in D major Op 61 72 Brahms Concerto in D major Op 77 73 Hiller Concerto in A major Op 152a Kreutzer Concerto No 19 in D minor Mozart Aria from Il re pastore K 208 Concerto No 3 in G major K 216 Concerto No 4 in D major K 218 and Concerto No 5 in A major K 219 Rode Concerto No 10 in B minor and Concerto No 11 in D major Spohr Concerto in A minor Op 47 Gesangsszene Tartini Sonata in G minor Devil s Trill Viotti Concerto No 22 in A minorRecordings of Joachim s compositions Edit Joachim at age 53 Violin Concerto No 1 in g minor Op 3 Suyoen Kim Violin Michael Halasz Conductor Weimar Staatskapelle Naxos 8 570991 Violin Concerto No 2 in d minor Op 11 In the Hungarian Style Rachel Barton Pine Violin Carlos Kalmar Conductor Chicago Symphony Orchestra Cedille Records CDR 90000 068 liner notes Elmar Oliveira Violin Leon Botstein Conductor London Philharmonic Orchestra IMP Masters MCD27 Aaron Rosand Violin Louis de Froment Conductor Luxembourg Radio Television Symphony Orchestra Vox Catalog CDX 5102 Violin Concerto No 3 in G major Takako Nishizaki Violin Meir Minsky Conductor Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra Marco Polo 8 223373 Naxos 8 554733 Hamlet Overture Op 4 Leon Botstein Conductor London Philharmonic Orchestra IMP Masters MCD27 Mariss Jansons Conductor Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra Simax PSC 1206 Meir Minsky Conductor Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra Naxos 8 554733 Henry IV Overture Op 7 Leon Botstein Conductor London Philharmonic Orchestra IMP Masters MCD27 Elegische Ouverture Op 13 Meir Minsky Conductor Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra Naxos 8 554733 Andantino and Allegro scherzoso Op 1 Andantino Marat Bisengaliev Violin John Lenehan Piano Naxos 8 553026 Drei Stucke fur Violine und Pianoforte Op 2 Florin Paul Violin Birgitta Wollenweber Piano Tacet 56 Drei Stucke fur Violine und Pianoforte Op 5 Florin Paul Violin Birgitta Wollenweber Piano Tacet 56 Notturno in A major Op 12 Hans Maile Violin Jesus Lopez Cobos Conductor Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra Schwann CD 11622 Romance in B flat major Marat Bisengaliev Violin John Lenehan Piano Naxos 8 553026 Aaron Rosand Violin Hugh Sung Piano Biddulph Recordings LAW 003 Romance in C major Florin Paul Violin Birgitta Wollenweber Piano Tacet 56 Hebrew melodies Op 9 Anna Barbara Dutschler Viola Marc Pantillon Piano Claves 9905 Heinrich IV Overture Op 7 2 pianos arr Johannes Brahms Duo Egri Pertis Hungaroton 32003 Variations for Viola and Piano Op 10 Numerous recordings Variations for Violin and Orchestra in e minor Vilmos Szabadi Violin Laszlo Kovacs Conductor North Hungarian Symphony Orchestra Hungaroton 32185 Variations for Violin and Piano in e minor Hagai Shaham Violin Arnon Erez Piano Hyperion CDA 67663 String Quartet Movement Quartettsatz in c minor Israel String Quartet Classic Talent B001HADEWI Joachim Quartet Thorofon CTH 2120 WoO Fantasie uber ungarische Motive Fantasie uber irische Motive Katharina Uhde Violin Dennis Friesen Carper Conductor Radio Orchestra Warsaw Soundset SR1122 Joachim s own discography EditJ S Bach Partita for Violin No 1 in B minor BWV 1002 7th movement Tempo di Bourree Pearl Catalog 9851 also on Testament 749677132323 Brahms Hungarian Dances 21 for Piano 4 hands WoO 1 No 1 in G minor arr Joachim Opal Recordings also on Testament 749677132323 Brahms Hungarian Dance No 2 in D minor arr Joachim Grammophon Catalogue 047905 HMV D88 Joachim Romance in C major Op 20 Pearl Catalog 9851Original pressings are single sided and have a flat red G amp T label Later reeditions have a black G amp T label or from 1909 a label showing the His Master s Voice trade mark and those made for the German market are double sided A letter preserved in the EMI archives records the stringent conditions Joachim expected for the publicity for his recordings sensational adverts were to be avoided with no comparisons between his art and that of other violinists The letter also stated that it was only with the greatest difficulty that Professor Joachim was induced to play 74 Joachim s students Edit Joachim and the young Franz von Vecsey Note the strongly incurving arthritic first finger of his left hand The chair in which he is sitting was a special present to him He willed it to Donald Tovey and it is now owned by the University of Edinburgh Museum 75 For Joachim s notable students see List of music students by teacher G to J Joseph Joachim Leopold Auer violinist and teacher studied with Joachim in Hanover Among his many outstanding students were Mischa Elman Jascha Heifetz and Nathan Milstein Dora Valesca Becker 1870 1958 Hugo Leichtentritt Aylmer Buesst Willy Burmester Carl Courvoisier 1846 1908 author of Technics of Violin Playing on Joachim s Method London The Strad Library No I 1894 76 Bram Eldering 1865 1943 Concertmaster of the Berlin Philharmonic under Hans von Bulow Concertmaster of the Meininger Hofkapelle Adila Fachiri Joachim s great niece F Fleischhauer born 1834 Hofconcertmeister in Meiningen Sam Franko Richard Gompertz born 1859 professor of violin at the Royal College of Music London Jakob Moritz Grũn born in Pest 1837 Joachim resigned a position to protest his non advancement for being Jewish Has an article in German Wikipedia Karel Carl Halir 1859 1909 Bohemian violinist member of the Joachim Quartet Willy Hess Gustav Hille Richard Himmelstoss born 1843 Concertmaster in Breslau Theodore Holland 1878 1947 British composer and teacher Gustav Hollander born 1855 solo violinist Rebecca Wilder Holmes 1871 1953 American violinist and music professor at Smith College Jeno Hubay Hungarian violinist composer Bronislaw Huberman 77 Karl Klingler violinist of the Klingler Quartet and Joachim s successor at the Berlin Hochschule Klingler was the teacher of Shinichi Suzuki Iosif Kotek 1855 1885 Russian violinist Hans Letz Concertmaster of the Theodore Thomas Orchestra 78 Bernhard Listemann de Concertmaster of the Boston Symphony Orchestra Charles Martin Loeffler 1861 1935 Martin Marsick Pietro Melani Waldemar J Meyer 1853 1940 Bernardo V Moreira de Sa 1853 1924 Portuguese violinist and teacher director of the Conservatorio de Musica do Porto director and founder of the Orpheon Portuense studied with Joachim in Berlin Andreas Moser 1859 1925 violinist and assistant to Joachim Moser wrote the first biography of Joachim Moser 1901 on Joachim s life up through 1899 He helped recover original scores of J S Bach s Sonate e Partite per violino solo and collaborated with Joachim on numerous editions Tivadar Nachez 1859 1930 Johannes Palaschko 1877 1932 Henri Petri Concertmaster in Leipzig Lili Petschnikoff 1874 1957 American violinist Maximilian Pilzer Concertmaster of the New York Philharmonic 1915 1917 79 80 Enrico Polo 1868 1953 Italian violinist violist pedagogue Maud Powell American violinist 81 Willibald Richter 1860 1929 German born English pianist organist and teacher student friend and accompanist of Joachim student of Haupt Lebert Liszt Mischalek and Oscar founded College of Music at Leicester Camillo Ritter teacher of leading violist William Primrose Ernst Schiever 1844 1915 Leader of the Richter Orchestra member of the original Joachim Quartet 1869 1871 82 Ossip Schnirlin 1937 Emily Shinner 83 Axel Skovgaard Maria Soldat Roger Theodore Spiering American violinist born in St Louis lived in Chicago Concertmaster 1909 1911 of New York Philharmonic Kemp Stillings 1888 1967 American violinist music teacher Agnes Tschetschulin Franz von Vecsey studied with Hubay then Joachim dedicatee of the Sibelius violin concerto Alfred WittenbergOther pupils may be mentioned by Wilhelm Joseph von Wasielewski in his Die Violine und Ihre Meister Joachim s instruments EditMost but not all of the many violins and two violas Joachim is said to have had during his career are shown on the website of Tarisio Auctions cozio com Further information in German is in the article by Kamlah 2013 Joseph Joachim His first full size violin was a Guarneri Filius Andreae 1703 which he gave to Felix Schumann after he acquired his first Stradivarius A violin the ex Joachim Stradivarius of 1715 is currently held by the Collezione Civica del Comune di Cremona 84 It was presented to Joachim on the occasion of his Jubilee celebration in 1889 The Ex Joachim Joseph Vieland Viola by Gasparo da Salo Brescia before 1609 is held by the Shrine to Music No 3368 85 A Johannes Theodorus Cuypers anno 1807 was bought by Joachim in the mid 19th century and taken on tour throughout Europe There is also evidence that the instrument was played by Joachim in a recital in Paris a half century later in 1895 The same instrument was also played by Fritz Kreisler in a 1955 Carnegie Hall concert 86 Cultural references EditThe English poet Robert Bridges wrote a sonnet about Joachim in his first major work of poetry The Growth of Love 87 Notes Edit San Francisco Symphony BRUCH Concerto No 1 in G minor for Violin and Orchestra Opus 26 7 November 2014 Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 16 December 2020 a b Campbell p 74 Monk Ludwig Wittgenstein The Duty of Genius p 5 Moser 1901 p 3 Moser p 6 Fuller Maitland p 2 Moser p 17 Fuller Maitland p 3 Campbell p 75 Fuller Maitland p 4 Moser 1901 pp 8 9 Moser p 38 a b Avins 2002 London Philharmonic Debut Joseph Joachim 3 July 2013 Moser 1901 p 57 Fuller Maitland p 13 Moser p 32 Moser p 76 Moser 1901 pp 39 43 44 Moser p 78 Campbell 1981 p 76 Swafford p 174 in another translation Leopold Auer Violin Playing as I Teach It Dover New York 1980 p 5 Auer 1923 pp 58 59 Moser pp 116 117 Moser p 117 Moser p 120 a b Moser p 121 Swafford p 62 Swafford p 63 Moser p 127 Swafford p 75 Swafford p 130 Swafford p 133 Gal p 60 Gal p 61 Gal p 114 Gal p 115 Fuller Maitland p 55 Litzmann 1913 p 152 Arts amp Humanities Research Council Concert Programmes St James s Hall Concerts 1867 1904 Retrieved 28 March 2022 Avins Styra Joseph Joachim in Oxford Companion to Music ed Alison Latham Oxford University Press 2002 2003 p 637 Louis Ries born 1830 was the son of Hubert Ries For a listing of Joachim s concert which includes some Monday Popular Concerts see Joachim s Concerts Zerbini was of Australian origin An obituary for him in the Illustrated Australian News Melbourne 1 January 1892 says he was acknowledged to be one of the finest viola players in the world Shaw George Bernard 1937 London Music in 1888 89 as heard by Corno di Bassetto etc Constable London p 297 Litzmann p 289 Litzmann p 294 Litzmann pp 249 250 Jan Swafford Johannes Brahms Knopf 1997 reprinted in the UK by Papermac 1999 pp 207 211 Moser 1901 202 206 Cobbett Walter Willson 1963 Cobbett s Cyclopedic Survey of Chamber Music Volume II London OUP p 38 Stowell ed 2003 Gal p 216 Campbell p 81 Fuller Maitland p 56 Moser 1901 p 282 Fuller Maitland 1901 p 18 a b Moser 1901 p 324 Moser 1901 p 325 OCMC history ocmc org uk Joseph Joachim a b Steinberg p 265 Fuller Maitland p 25 Fuller Maitland pp 39 49 sleeve note naxos 8 557428 BRAHMS Sym No 1 Tragic Overture Academic Festival Overture Fuler Maitland p 52 a b Fuller Maitland 1905 p 57 Fuller Maitland 1905 p 60 Uhde Katharina The Music of Joseph Joachim Suffolk Boydell amp Brewer 2018 41 Uhde Katharina The Music of Joseph Joachim Suffolk Boydell amp Brewer 2018 21 There are recordings by the Vienna State Opera Orchestra conductor Felix Prohaska and the Houston Symphony conducted by Christoph Eschenbach Joachim s was an early cadenza later many others wrote more Joachim s cadenza to Brahms s concerto came to be almost always played according to Fuller Maitland 1905 p 55 Jenkins Lyndon The EMI Archive International Classic Record Collector Summer 1997 Vol 2 No 9 p40 The University of Edinburgh Museums Galleries amp Collections Archived 3 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Violin technik Courvoisier Carl IMSLP Free Sheet Music PDF Download 28 March 2022 Retrieved 28 March 2022 Bronislaw Huberman huberman info Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 13 February 2006 Hans Letz theviolinsite com archives nyphil orgindex php Russian Symphony Orchestra of New York stokowski org Department of Music acu edu Archived from the original on 12 July 2012 Retrieved 13 February 2006 Mr Ernst Schiever Distinguished Liverpool Musician s Retirement Liverpool Echo 13 May 1911 Lahee Henry C August 2008 Famous Violinists of To Day and Yesterday ISBN 978 0 554 34448 5 Tarisio cozio com Archived from the original on 24 March 2005 Bowed Stringed Instruments Made Before 1800 at the National Music Museum Retrieved 28 March 2022 Archived copy Archived from the original on 29 February 2008 Retrieved 17 August 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Robert Bridges sonnets org Sources Edit Joseph Joachim Leopold Auer 1923 My long Life in Music F A Stokes New York Styra Avins Joachim Joseph in The Oxford Companion to Music ed Alison Latham Oxford University Press 2002 pp 637 638 ISBN 978 0 19 866212 9 Ute Bar Sie wissen ja wie gerne ich selbst offentlich mit Ihnen musicire Clara Schumann und Joseph Joachim Die Tonkunst vol 1 nr 3 July 2007 247 257 Otto Biba Ihr Sie hochachtender dankbarer Schuler Peppi Joseph Joachims Jugend im Spiegel bislang unveroffentlicher Briefe Die Tonkunst vol 1 nr 3 July 2007 200 204 Nora Bickley selector and translator Letters From and To Joseph Joachim with a preface by J A Fuller Maitland New York Vienna House 1972 Beatrix Borchard Stimme und Geige Amalie und Joseph Joachim Biographie und Interpretationsgeschichte Wien Koln Weimar Bohlau Verlag 2005 Beatrix Borchard Gross mannlich deutsch Zur Rolle Joseph Joachims fur das deutsche Musikleben in der Wilhelminischen Zeit Die Tonkunst vol 1 nr 3 July 2007 218 231 Siegfried Borris Joseph Joachim zum 65 Todestag Oesterreichische Musikzeitschrift XXVII June 1972 352 355 Margaret Campbell 1981 The Great Violinists Doubleday Garden City New York Has a chapter on Joachim F G E Joseph Joachim The Musical Times 48 775 1 September 1907 577 583 Robert W Eshbach Der Geigerkonig Joseph Joachim as Performer Die Tonkunst vol 1 nr 3 July 2007 205 217 Robert W Eshbach Verehrter Freund Liebes Kind Liebster Jo Mein einzig Licht Intimate letters in Brahms s Freundeskreis Die Tonkunst vol 2 nr 2 April 2008 178 193 Robert W Eshbach Joachims Jugend Die Tonkunst vol 5 nr 2 April 2011 176 190 Robert W Eshbach Joachim s Youth Joachim s Jewishness The Musical Quarterly vol 94 no 4 Winter 2011 548 592 J A Fuller Maitland Joseph Joachim London amp New York John Lane 1905 a Google Books repr Bibliobazaar 2010 public domain Johannes Joachim and Andreas Moser eds Briefe von und an Joseph Joachim 3 vols Berlin Julius Bard 1911 1913 Hans Gal Johannes Brahms His Work and Personality transl from German by Joseph Stein Knopf New York 1971 Ruprecht Kamlah Joseph Joachims Guarneri Geigen Eine Untersuchung im Hinblick auf die Familie Wittgenstein Wiener Geschichtsblatter 2013 Vol 1 p 33 posted on Joseph Joachim Biography and Research 2015 Ruprecht Kamlah Joseph Joachims Geigen Ihre Geschichten und Spieler besonders der Sammler Wilhelm Kux Palm und Enke Erlangen 2018 ISBN 978 3 7896 1023 3 230 pages Adolph Kohut Josef Joachim Ein Lebens und Kunstlerbild Festschrift zu seinem 60 Geburtstage am 28 Juni 1891 Berlin A Glas 1891 Berthold Litzmann 1913 Clara Schumann An Artist s Life based on material found in Diaries and Letters Translated from the fourth German edition by Grace E Hadow MacMillan London Brigitte Massin Les Joachim Une Famille de Musiciens Paris Fayard 1999 ISBN 2 213 60418 5 Andreas Moser ed Johannes Brahms im Briefwechsel mit Joseph Joachim 2nd ed Berlin Deutsche Brahms Gesellschaft 1912 Andreas Moser Joseph Joachim Ein Lebensbild 2 vols Berlin Verlag der Deutschen Brahms Gesellschaft vol 1 1908 vol 2 1910 Published after the following translation so must be a revised edition Andreas Moser Joseph Joachim A Biography 1831 1899 translated by Lilla Durham introduction by J A Fuller Maitland London Philip Wellby 1901 Published during Joachim s lifetime Hans Joachim Moser Joseph Joachim Sechsundneunzigstes Neujahrsblatt der Allgemeinen Musikgesellschaft in Zurich Zurich amp Leipzig Hug amp Co 1908 Anne Russell Joachim The Etude December 1932 884 885 Dietmar Schenk Aus einer Grunderzeit Joseph Joachim die Berliner Hochschule fur Musik und der deutsch franzosische Krieg Die Tonkunst vol 1 nr 3 July 2007 232 246 Michael Steinberg The Concerto A Listener s Guide Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 0 19 510330 0 Barrett Stoll Joseph Joachim Violinist Pedagogue and Composer Ph D Diss Univ of Iowa 1978 Karl Storck Joseph Joachim Eine Studie Leipzig Hermann Seemann Nachfolger n d Robert Stowell Ed Cambridge Companion to the String Quartet Cambridge University Press 2003 Jan Swafford Johannes Brahms A Biography Knopf and Vintage Books 1997 Katharina Uhde Rediscovering Joseph Joachim s Hungarian and Irish Scottish fantasias In The Musical Times 158 1941 Winter 2017 75 99 Katharina Uhde The Music of Joseph Joachim Boydell amp Brewer 2018 Katharina Uhde ed Joseph Joachim Fantasy on Hungarian Themes 1850 Fantasy on Irish Scottish Themes 1852 for Violin and Orchestra Barenreiter 2018 Katharina Uhde An Unknown Beethoven Cadenza by Joseph Joachim Dublin 1852 The Musical Quarterly Vol 103 Issue 3 4 Fall Winter 2020 394 424 Gerhard Winkler ed Geigen Spiel Kunst Joseph Joachim und der Wahre Fortschritt Burgenlandische Heimatblatter vol 69 nr 2 2007 Klaus Martin Kopitz ed Briefwechsel Robert und Clara Schumanns mit Joseph Joachim und seiner Familie 2 vols Schumann Briefedition series II vol 2 Koln Dohr 2019 ISBN 978 3 86846 013 1External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joseph Joachim Joseph Joachim Biography and Research Works by or about Joseph Joachim at Internet Archive Joseph Joachim s autograph and handwritten note to Marianne Scharwenka Violinist and wife of Philipp Scharwenka Bach Adagio G minor played by Joseph Joachim 1903 on YouTube Joachim Romanze in C played by Joseph Joachim 1903 on YouTube Brahms Hungarian Dance No 1 played by Joseph Joachim 1903 on YouTube Brahms Hungarian Dance No 2 played by Joseph Joachim 1903 on YouTube Short biography of Joseph and Amalie Joachim Free scores by Joseph Joachim at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Guide to the Joseph Joachim Collection at the Leo Baeck Institute New York Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Joachim amp oldid 1149386198, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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