'
Carl Flesch
THE MEMOIRS
OF
CARL FLESCH Translated by
and
Hans
edited by
Keller
him
in
collaboration with C. F. Flesch
Foreword by
MAX ROSTAL
SALISBURY SQUARE
LONDON
PUBLISHING 1957
by
Printed in Great Britain J. JMackay Sc Go Ltd, ClxatJbiana
W. &
10
FOREWORD by
IT IS
Max
Rostal
well-known and undisputed
a
fact that the
high standard absolutely unthinkable without the
of violin playing of today is powerful and lasting influence which Carl Flesch exercised his researches, writings
through
interest to all musicians in the
and teaching.
It is
of the greatest
world and in particular to
violinists,
to have the carefully considered opinion of such a distinguished
mind on critics
other
violinists, 'cellists, pianists,
of his time.
in the history
conductors and even
To my knowledge it is almost for the first time
of violin playing
us an authoritative
and
that a really qualified person gives
detailed account
of
his colleagues
and
other artists, whom the younger generations cannot have known. How fascinating it would have been for us and later generations to have had, for instance, an unbiassed
and
reliable description
of
of the usual, highly coloured, fanciful Paganini's playing, instead
and on the whole amateurish fairy-tales From now on, of course, history will be better served through the medium of recordings, !
which
if
they do not deteriorate in the course of time
will
give a fairly accurate picture.
For me, the most astonishing aspect of this book is the frankness which Flesch evinces towards his own abilities, and objectivity
limitations
and
difficulties.
Only
a truly great
man
could have
both the insight, as well as the courage, to make such admissions. In his extremely honest endeavour to apply the same high standards of objectivity towards others, he succeeds, I think, as far as it is great artist holds strong views
humanly possible. Every
on
his subject
tastes;
and naturally has
his
own
ideas, principles
and
more clearly defined are his that Flesch's opinion of some
the greater the personality, the
aesthetic values.
No
wonder
then,
be shared by everyone who knew the playing of those concerned and I must admit to being one of them but the artists
will not
Vll
FOREWORD number of
these idiosyncrasies
is
very small indeed and what
the thoroughly professional, scrutinizing and astute analysis of the various styles, rather than the conclusions at which Flesch sometimes arrives.
matters after
all is
therefore believe that these Memoirs of Carl Flesch will not only be of fascinating interest to all musicians and music lovers I
in our
own
time, but will serve also in the future as a
most
valuable contribution to the history of violin playing.
MAX LONDON, OCTOBER, 1957.
vm
ROSTAL
TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE THIS
is
original
the
the German publication of Flesch's Memoirs; in manuscript. I have condensed and edited it with
first
is still
the generous help of his son, C. F. Flesch,
objected to any of my suggestions, while course, heeded
his requirements,
who
I in
has hardly ever
my
turn have, of
and have not scorned
in certain details of translation and formulation.
I
his advice
think
it
can be
said that scarcely anything of musical relevance has been omitted. I have been careful to eschew slick editing, and have left un-
touched one or two varied repetitions and seeming contradictions because I regard them as meaningful, and because it is not for
me to tell Carl Flesch posthumously what he meant. In view of
reader might come to pp. 76 and 103, for example, a superficial the conclusion that Flesch acquired his sight-reading facility twice over, and there was the temptation to cut one of these passages or edit
them both. Closer
attention will show, however,
other out, and that they necessarily cancel each Flesch are, in any case, of equally substantial interest. It seems that his facility on the earlier occasion and developed it on that they
do not
acquired the later one.
Flesch did not throughout adhere to his original decision to leave
'official
dates
... out of account
(p. 5)
in so far as they can
be found in every dictionary of music.' Consequently, I have endeavoured to complete his practice rather than follow his easily
initial theoretical intention, inserting dates ancf facts
wherever they are relevant
either within his
in the text
own context or from
a more general historical point of view. It has been C. F. Flesch's as well as the publisher's wish, however, that the text should not brackets. These have therefore been conbe disrupted by square fined to a few insertions which
would otherwise make
curious
and to all dates of reading from the chronological standpoint, births and deaths, which I was asked thus to standardize typographically.
I
mention these details for one reason alone ix
:
my textual
TRANSLATOR
S
PREFACE
and corrections are not recognizable as such, and I do not wish to saddle Flesch with any wrong Christian names, dates, opus numbers, and the like for which I may be responsible. additions
Flesch's
marked by
own
footnotes,
of which there are only seven, are examples and two
asterisks, editorial footnotes (music
identifiable publisher's notes included) by figures. The editorial notes as well as the text supply details about the extended period
during which Flesch worked
at
the book, so far as
able to ascertain the relevant dates.
thus
become
clear
why
I
have been
The chronological reasons
certain artists (such
as
will
Menuhin) have
remained unmentioned.
Most
gratefully, I
acknowledge the
assistance
rendered by
my
Hamburger, Donald Mitchell, and H. C. Stevens, who have provided me not only with draft translations of considerable sections of the book, but also with invaluable editorial colleagues Paid
advice.
*
*
*
On a preceding page,
Rostal draws attention to Flesch' s exceptowards himself. Objectivity was indeed his overriding passion, and he would seem to have forced himself not to overlook any weaknesses, whether in himself or in others. tional objectivity
No grain of salt is needed for assimilating his positive evaluations, but if the reader
feels like adding a grain of sugar to one or the other of his unfavourable judgments, Flesch's own aims, which he
is
setting out in greater detail in the ensuing Introduction,
be harmed in the process.
may not
CONTENTS FOREWORD BY MAX ROSTAL TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE
...... .
.
.
.
.
vii
k
INTRODUCTION
I
WIESELBURG [1873-1883]
6
VIENNA [1883-1890]
13
PARIS
60
[1890-1896]
BERLIN [1896-1897]
130
BUCHAREST [1897-1902]
l6l
BERLIN [1902-1903]
195
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908]
212
BERLIN [1908-1913]
250
AMERICA [1913-1914]
280
THE WAR YEARS [1914-1918]
294
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923] AMERICA [1923-1928]
.
I
.
-310
.
329
THE LAST SIXTEEN YEARS [1928-1944] APPENDIX
.
.
.
.
.360
HUBERMAN
367
APPENDIX H LETTER FROM HUBERMAN TO
APPENDIX HI TRANSLATION OF LETTER
INDEX
C. F,
FLESCH
.
ROM SEVCIK TO FLESCH
370 371 373
XI
LIST OF PLATES CARL FLESCH
....
THE AUTHOR'S MOTHER
Frontispiece
facing page
10
THE AUTHOR, AGED 6
10
THE AUTHOR'S FATHER
10
MRS CARL FLESCH
II
THE YOUNG ENESCO
l62
THE YOUNG TffiBAUD
163
ENESCO, THIBAUD AND FLESCH REHEARSING FOR THE MARSICK MEMORIAL CONCERT IN Ip33
1 78
DONALD TOVEY, JULIUS RONTGEN AND PABLO ADELA AND JELLY D*ARRAGNI
178
CASALS,
WITH
ARTUR SCHNABEL (ABOUT 1935) LEOPOLD AUER
179
242
THE AUTHOR ABOUT 1914
243
PHOTOGRAPH GIVEN TO THE AUTHOR BY THOMAS EDISON
.
....
258
ARTUR SCHNABEL, HUGO BECKER AND CARL FLESCH DURING ONE OF THEIR RECITAL TOURS, 1917
259
GREGOR PIATIGORSKY, CARL FLESCH AND CARL FRIEDBERG AT BADEN-BADEN (1930)
259
THE AUTHOR WITH
MAX ROSTAL IN THE GARDEN OF HIS HOUSE
AT BADEN-BADEN (ABOUT 1930) THE AUTHOR WITH FIRTWANGLER AT BADEN-BADEN (ABOUT
322
322
1930)
:ARL FLESCH WITH A GROUP OF PUPILS
AND
LISTENERS IN
5
BADEN-BADEN IN THE EARLY I930 [HE CARL FLESCH JITTER
FROM
SIR
MEDAL
S
.
.
.
FOR EXCELLENCE IN VIOLIN PLAYING
ADRIAN BOULT TO
THE FIRST PAGE OF
.
C. F.
FLESCH
.
323
338
.338
A LETTER FROM OTAKAR SEVCK TO CARL
-339
FLESCH xiii
INTRODUCTION
WHEN a man has reached his sixtieth year, the ments of the symphony of his
whose length
is
uncertain.
life
and the
are over,
The time seems
first
to
three
move-
finale
opens
have come for him
on this earth left any he Has useful to his fellow been contemporary history? men and made the most of his talent? From such thoughts there to strike a balance: has his guest performance
traces in
but a step to the decision to chronicle the experiences of a lifetime for posterity. Why should not later generations know more
is
gather from one's birth and death certificates or a a dictionary of music? superficial entry in They will perhaps be interested in a description of the starting-point, development and
than they
fulfilment
may
of one's
career.
Allied with these personal motives is a desire to rescue from oblivion even those artistic events which may seem of minor
Our
biographical knowledge about great composers without a gap and thus stands in the most striking contrast to what we know about outstanding re-creative artists
importance. is
in
most
cases
whose creative art was of secondary import. the art of violin playing,
In our special field
of
we only possess superficial, feuilletonistic
notes and notices, unfactual and unauthenticated, about such figures
as Corelli, Tartini, Nardini, Locatelli, Viotti,
their best, these writings give us
no more than
or Rode; at
the barest bio-
In fact, without their actual music, which graphical outlines. inferences about the technical abilities of these certain admits artists,
the old Italian school
would be more myth than certainty.
Thus we know no more about Nardini as a violinist than that he had a noble and 'moving' tone. As for Tartini, we first of all* think of the devil who sat on his bed and pkyed him 'The Devil's Trill',
1 then of the resultant tones, and finally of his extant corre-
tones' in American, i.e. secondary tones which can be heard notes are played at the same time. They are produced either by the difference or by the sum of the two primary notes and, accordingly, fall into ls
Combination
when two
CARL FLESCH 1 which nowadays for Signora Lombardini spondence lesson would probably result in his being struck from the teachers' since a correspondence course in violin playing may register, 2 as so much wind. Or take Arthur Pougin's safely be regarded ,
essays
Rode
Viotti (Viotti et I'ecole moderne de violon, Paris, 1888) and sur Rode, Paris, 1874): their documentary value (Notice
on
a compilation of dates, contemposo far and newspaper notices, informative enough rary judgments without but are circumstances concerned, as external
are apart, they
no more than
biographical
even a
now,
superficial
account of the art of these
flashy platitudes
of his
life.
Then,
as
seem to have constituted the chief content
of critical evaluations. Louis Spohr was the 3
violinists.
first
who
tried to give a detailed
His autobiography centres
account
on
subjective impressions; to say the least of it, doubtisolated flashes of genius', he finds the first
the objective value of his judgment 'Despite some three movements of Beethoven's
ful.
is,
Ninth Symphony 'worse than
the finale is any of the preceding eight symphonies', while lacks 'Beethoven that and trivial' and tasteless 'monstrous, proves he menaesthetic culture and a sense of the beautiful'. Paganini tions twice, and very superficially too. Nor do these memoirs of distincattempt to evaluate any other contemporary violinist tion; instead,
history and
we hear
success
all
of
about Spohr's concert tours, about the works information that is of little
his
His autobiography is too self-centred; it does not enrich our knowledge of the violinists and violin playing of
interest to us.
his time.
As
for the legendary Paganini himself, despite his thirty-odd we chiefly have to rely on feuilletonistic
years of concert-giving,
gush from raving newspaper reporters, or differential tones tively. It is the
else
on
fantasies
of
and summational tones ('summation tones* in America) respecformer kind which more easily heard was discovered by
Tartini in 1714: see his Trattato dei prindpii del? armonia musicale (1754). 1
Maddalena Sirmen, nee Lombardini, an
who 2
3 still
Italian violinist, singer
and composer
died in 1735.
French musicologist [1834-1921].
An anonymous English translation available in music libraries.
of Spohr's Autobiography (London, 1865)
is
INTRODUCTION undoubted
literary value
which, however, are beneath factual
discussion (e.g. Heine's Florentine Nights, or E. T. A. Hoffmann). Concerning his style, then, we are completely in the dark; each
of us has
a different picture
of this mysterious figure, so that our may with impunity permit them-
violin quacks
contemporary
selves to use Paganini's
name
as a
signboard for their dubious
reforms. 1 Turning to the biographical literature of our own day, we have to appraise, above all, Moser's Joachim biography. A disvalue for our tinguished literary effort, it is also of unquestionable
knowledge of Joachim
in relation to his contemporaries. In
regard to his purely violimstic quite uncritical.
activities,
however, the book
is
Moser was much too insignificant as an executant,
teacher too narrowly confined within the 3 strait waistcoat of the concepts of a loose' wrist, a 'stiff upper
moreover, and
as a
arm, and a thin finger vibrato, to be capable of unprejudiced comand teacher and other great parisons between Joachim the fiddler
The lasting value of this biography consists, wealth of documentary evidence, which sheds of an only partial) light on the musical activities
contemporaries. therefore, in
stimulating
its
(if
entire age.
For the sake of completeness, another kind of autobiography must be mentioned, of which Willy Burmester's attempted selfis a characteristic example; based on an overglorification
estimation of his
own personality,
it is
a striking
reminder of the
an executant's self-assessment and the place disparity between to him. The laurels he reaps turn out to be made posterity assigns which becomes waste paper within a day. of chiefly
But it
is
news-print
from the ephemerality of newspaper criticism, almost always impossible to obtain a clear picture of a notices. In this respect, there is not from
quite apart
performance
journalistic
violinthe faintest difference between, say, the reviews about the of the end the at ists who played at the Paris concerts spirituels
nc
Flesch's death,
(London, 1951), Joseph
we
Kreisler biography autobiography, With Strings
have had Louis P. Lochner's
valuable Szigeti's highly
would no most
which Hesch Attached: Reminiscences and Reflections (London, 1949), doubt have accorded an exceptional place in the present context, and, Yehudi Menuhin (London, 1956). recently, Robert MagidofFs
CARL FLESCH and our contemporary critical efforts; in eighteenth century behind an either case, there is a tendency to conceal ignorance
empty impressionism. The
result becomes particularly amazing terms. As late as the art of when these judges try to use technical Berliner Tagettatt, the of twenties, Leopold Schmidt, the critic in normal posture was identical with thought that an elbow held confused with sautille; an Staccato is . "stiff 5
bowing
regularly
occasional failure of the
open
steel
E
string,
for
which the
fiddler
can hardly be blamed, is regarded as a crime against sound, whereas a scraping tone is described as Vigorous or 'racy'. At the about the outside, one in a hundred music critics knows something 9
technique of violin playing and
newspaper criticism
is
in
proper nomenclature. In sum, a substitute for factual informa-
its
no way
young violinist of of his individuidea accurate an of no getting possibility today has
tion.
Though
ality, just
Sarasate died as late as 1908, the
as tie
reviews in Mercure de France
tell
us nothing about
Viotti's actual style.
The gramophone cannot
altogether
fill
this
vacuum. The
frame of mind, more or less favourable recording player's personal conditions,
what
and the record's limited durability make for some-
unreliable judgments. In addition, there
is
the inevitable
lack of rapport, as well as the importance of pure sound for a successful recording, which makes for an extremely one-sided know that there are approach from the artistic point of view.
We
of tone which are eminently suitable for mechanireproduction, even though the total effort cannot make any
certain, qualities
cal
pretension to
formance
whereas a highly artistic pernot come off on a record. One of my American
artistic excellence,
may
whose
technical and psychic inhibitions prevented her from ever achieving unobjectionable artistic results in public performance, was engaged in Edison's laboratory: according to his point of view, she possessed the most perfect violin tone. In my own memoirs I shall attempt a new approach of evaluation; what I particularly want to avoid is personal bias in either direction and narrow-minded technical prejudice. On the one hand, I shall revive all kinds of lasting impressions I have received pupils,
in the course of
my career. On the other hand, I intend to describe
INTRODUCTION violinistic aspects of musical life since 1883 as far as I know hem from personal experience. I am interested in determining lot so much my own share as that of my professional colleagues;
he
want
to write the
memoirs of others
rather than
my own.
and stages in the careers of contemporaries shall leave out of account in so far as they can easily be found in notes on people and things are very dictionary of music.
my
Official dates
My
ntended to complete the picture drawn by professional musical esearch to supply the setting, the scenery as it were, of conemporary musical (and not merely violinistic) life.
But above all I propose to offer a reliable source for the history f violin playing from 1883 to I933- 1 If I succeed, musicology in ie twenty-first century may be able to get an idea of iolinists used to play a hundred years previously. 1
Flesch did not, in fact, get
>me of his observations on ter years.
beyond 1928 with his life and violin playing
violinists
how
story as such, though will be seen to cover
WIESELBURG The
First
WAS born on October
I
9,
[1873-1883]
Ten Years
a small 1873, in Wieselburg (Moson),
Hungarian market town with about 6,000 German-speaking be known inhabitants, chiefly fanners. The whole region used to a musicians'
as
breeding-place: Haydn, Liszt,
Nikisch,
Hans
Richter, Dohnanyi, Mosonyi and, amongst others, the famous Wagner singer, Katharina Klafsky, were all born within the ambit 1
of about fifty kilometres. My father was a general practitioner and,
same time, an army surgeon. His grandfather and greathis father a modest grandfather had been highly-esteemed rabbis,
at the
a fine figure, influential in the
dealer in tailor's cloth
and an unusually seventy-five.
one
who had
excellent;
religious,
Amongst
orthodox Jew; he died
his four children,
chosen a professional
he used to
tell
my father was
calling.
us that in his
community, age of
at the
the only
His education was
day you were required to
speak Latin in Hungarian public schools and, in fact, when he held with his colleagues he showed himself able to talk
a consultation
fluent Latin.
He had
an original mind and a tender heart; in his illiterate Hungarian farmers he had,
dealings with the mostly
however, developed a brusque manner.
he gave
free treatment to the
It
was well known,
poor, whence
his kindness
frequently abused. In his professional capacity, he
upon
as
an authority by layman and colleague
alike.
that
was
was looked His catholic
knowledge and abilities would seem wellnigh incredible in our own age of specialization. He regarded his profession as a mission means of earning money. The most popular figure Wieselburg, he was a typical family doctor of the old school
rather than a
in
whom Gentiles as well as Jews consulted about both their physical, and
their
spiritual ailments.
graced by
modern
Consulting hours were not, of course,
antiseptic precautions in those days; a
*A composer of Hungarian
national music [1815-70].
doctor
:
WIESELBURG [1873-1883]
would only wash
his
hands
when
was some imminent of the body which he
there
when the parts treated successively happened to be of a diametrically opposite nature. Occasionally, we children had to assist at operations; with danger of infection or
horror I remember co-operating in the surgical treatment ofa youth
who, while serenading, had been stabbed in the belly by his rival. Old-fashioned as he was, my father regarded caresses as unhe dearly loved his children, he stopped as soon virtually physical expression of affection towards them as they went to school at the age of six; thenceforth, the strict pedagogue took charge. Altogether, in fact, his mode of life was dignified: although all
To
the end of his days, he forced his entire household to eat, lunch after lunch, soup and boiled beefwith veg-
of Spartan
simplicity.
only on the sabbath did we get the traditional roast goose.
etables;
income was enormous; yet he left died of pneumonia in 1907 for he had always followed the generous
Relatively speaking, his only an inconsiderable sum
age of sixty-seven,
at the
principle
of investing
when he
his savings in the
education of his children.
According to German-Hungarian custom,
we had
a resident
French-Swiss nurse who taught us the rudiments of her language. The study of a musical instrument, too, was considered obligatory. a matter of course, moreover, a growing lad
As
had eventually
to be sent to a provincial town or a capital in order to complete father bore the dishis education. Without a murmur,
my
had to treat many patients proportionate expense involved. He before he could meet the demands of my first years of study in the cost of the education he lavished upon us was quite incommensurate to his income. Fortunately, he lived to see the investment. justification of his Work was his credo. In no circumstances did he tolerate idleParis
ness.
:
His stereotyped question used to be, 'What are you doing
now?' felt
an
owed
to his systematic education that, in later years, I insatiable need for activity, which almost amounted to a
I
it
vice; 'pleasure trips' were not only repulsive to resulted in attacks of neurasthenia.
My mother had noble features
a classical
me, but
actually
Greek nose which,
CARL FLESCH alas, I
did not inherit, and a particularly beautiful
mouth with an
a la Mona Lisa, a characteristic which she transenigmatic smile was extremely mitted as far as her great-grandchildren. She her last be and energetic and could very hot-tempered; spirited
box on
my
children
been
a
sixteenth year. Nevertheless, we attached to her; there could hardly have
ears dates firom
were deeply
my
more devoted wife and mother. She died relatively young,
of cancer of the breast an exemplar of conjugal treatment. For when she showed the first symptoms diagnosis and of her malady to my father, he resisted the idea of a malignant
at fifty-two,
he knew all too well from his experience) growth (whose signs and persuaded himself that he was confronted with a benign tumour. When an operation was eventually decided upon, it was one and a half years later. As a doctor's already too late: she died condition and was seized by a wife, she had no illusions about her death delivered her. deep melancholy from which only was a model marriage, even though there were
My
parents'
mother's passionate frequent storms, usually provoked by my whose a love as match, nature. It had started amusing history
my
father recounted to
me in an exceptionally communicative mood
on the day of my mother's funeral. round for university, he was looking
A
doctor fresh from the
match and conof the 'inspection' latter's flat, but the result was the in was arranged marriage object a suitable
tacted a Viennese friend for the purpose.
An
did not take to his proposed bride. unsatisfactory: the candidate He took his leave and, outside the flat, ran into a pretty young girl
whom he thought highly attractive.
At once he turned back and
who the young lady was. 'My enquired of the householder I do want to marry!' daughter.' 'Well, your daughter of my parents were redifferent The basically personalities dualism of character, which sponsible for the essential artistic both an impelling and an inhibiting influence on
my
my
had and
methodical personal development. From my father I inherited my
and analytic tendencies myself
owe
as
a certain reserve.
the impulsive, fiery side of
independently of each
aversion to exhibiting mother, on the other hand, I
well as
To my
other,
two
my
my
nature. Side
by
side
and
opposite temperaments have
WIESELBURG [1873-1883] always determined
and
my mental constitution;
reflective, enthusiastic
and
calculating
could be impulsive not only in turns, but I
same time. Like my mother, I would experience the spontaneous loves and hates of a child of nature; from my father I have the philosopher's critical attitude. I was capable of making music with the deepest passion and, simultaneously, of actually at the
writing the Basic Studies and the Art of Violin Playing. In this respect, my fellow beings have never really understood me. Some consider
me
a calculating, dissecting pedagogue, while others
regard me, above all, as an impulsive and vigorous artist. In mental reality, I always have been both at the same time. As a I
performer,
never succeeded in welding these opposite talents
was only in the teaching activities of my later years my vocation completely fulfilled, for there I was able
into a unity. It that I found
simultaneously to enlist
would would
my
intellect
and
my
emotions:
first I
afterwards I analyse a pupil's efforts, and immediately re-create for him the living work of art.
To judge from photographs and the reports of my elders, I was
my
My
a sprightly and pretty child. precocious gifts prompted of four years and eleven parents to let me attend school at the age months. I was to suffer for this early 'breaking in' during Viennese school-days, when I proved unable to concentrate an due to malice or lack of talent. incapacity that was thought to be and Jewish elementary Christian were there In childhood,
my
my
was of course sent to a Jewish one, where I learnt German and Hebrew and all the other things one is supposed to need in life. Before I had reached the age of six, the question of my musical career had grown acute. Now, this would be the place to insert the usual emotive anecdote about the young violinist, but as a matter of schools;
I
predestined
fact I did
not even choose
for me. parents did that
elder sister children)
;
and
my
two
this particular
instrument myself:
my my
to assigned the piano six were we elder brothers (altogether,
They had
school finished at four o'clock, piano practice at seven we ate and went to bed. Thus there would
whereupon have been no opportunity for me to get at the piano at all, and I had to learn an instrument which I would be able to practise even
o'clock,
CARL FLESCH while the others were busy at the piano. That was how the violin and I met; in fact, my case was typical. The story of the two-yearmuch old who practises pizzicati on a stringed cigar-box is so the environmental; bunkum. The incitement is almost invariably his child will be only too glad to seize any opportunity to gratify instrua certain definite, innate predilection for play-instinct. ment is extremely rare, and even when, in later years, a student to be determined by his instrument, his motives will
A
prove
changes muscular inhibitions.
entrusted a saddler Shortly before I was six, then, my parents with the task of teaching me the rudiments of violin playing; his owed to the circumstance that every reputation as a violinist he first (and only) desk. Despite* Sunday, in church, he played at the
have been somewhat their musical ignorance, parents must in due course they for doubtful about his teaching methods,
my
me to the promoted me to a higher rank, apprenticing of the local fire-brigade band. After about eighteen months
conductor
decided upon a surprise demonstration of the fruits of educational labours he studied a few dances with me, and took
jovial his
this
man
:
my violin along to a parish fair which I attended with my parents round which
there he suddenly lifted me up on the table musicians with their pint mugs, and I struck up a dance or
the peasants.
I
;
sat the
two for
created such a sensation that the dancing couples
Landler and gazed at 'the son of Dr Flesch' as if he were one of the seven wonders of the world. This was the first, and perhaps the only, complete satisfaction my parents derived interrupted their
\
teacher assumed and the prestige of his authority ^yas sacrosanct. thenceforth, gigantic proportions three lessons a week. Meanwhile, I scraped hard during 1 for all school violin In our parts, Schon's enjoyed great esteem;
from my
my
artistic activities, :
my
worse than any other: at that stage it' was, after all, a question of 'how' rather than of 'what'. And it was in the former respect that things went seriously amiss; it is almost impossible nowadays to get an idea of the kind of violin educatio^ I
I
know,
it
was not, in
fact,
received up to the age often.
Schon [1808-85], a pupil of Ries and Spohr, taught wrote various instructional works for the violin. ;
10
at
Breslau and
1
The
author's
mother
The
The
author's father
author, aged 6
Mrs Carl
Flesch
WIESELBURG [1873-1883] Since most of Schon's exercises are accompanied by a second teacher always performed with me; whence it was fiddle,
my
which of us two played out of tune. As for to practise an hour a day, and the most had my care was taken that it shouldn't be a minute less. This scrupulous unbearable coercion soon aroused my lively opposition, and I impossible to ascertain
homework,
I
began to sabotage my practising activities with all the resources at my disposal. Those who know me from my artistic and educational career and are aware that a sense of duty is for me the greatest of all human virtues, will no doubt be surprised to learn I spared no trouble to shorten my practising would put our big clock on a quarter of an hour,
that as a child
hour; thus
I
my strings in two, and so forth. During lessons, my teacher frequently
cut
with his
rapped
my
knuckles
bow in order to keep me in time owing to his profession, :
rhythm was the foremost requirement. Thus,
for four long years,
dragged myself through the dead wood of Schon's exercises, which were but rarely relieved by arias from Italian operas, I
Schubert songs, and scraps of melody torn out of popular chamber in short, the kind of stuffyou find in the usual collections
music for
amateurs.
Small wonder, then, that
my
initial
progress
my playing even suffered gradually ceased, from an unmistakable retrogression, so that it eventually dawned upon my parents that this was hardly the way which could lead and
to art
and
that, later on,
artistry.
had finished elementary school and had gymnasium at Altenburg in Hungary, two kilometres from Wieselburg, which was administered by friars. This meant In the meantime,
I
entered the
up at seven o'clock every morning, for school started at would sometimes make the way eight, and frequent snowfalls was by very troublesome. Although my command of Hungarian no means great, I was getting on quite well, and in the first trimester before Christmas I even came third in a form of about getting
Excited by my many distinctions, I raced home in a heavy frost and, on the following day, ran a high temperature which anon developed into a dangerous facial erysipelas the
fifty pupils.
only grave illness of my life. II
CARL FLESCH
My parents eventually decided that my violin studies should take a
more
poor results of my actual playing, of music seems even then to have shown an inmy way making definable something which justified the assumption of a special talent.
serious path. Despite the
Speaking from
my later teaching experiences, the only basis
for a favourable prognosis at such an embryonic stage of artistic development is the young violinist's general mode of behaviour, his posture, attitude, expressive needs, etc., for tangible results
technical, tonal, or interpretative nature cannot possibly from such a primitive kind of instruction as I received.
of a
emerge
My parents chose Vienna for my future studies,
both musical not only because we regarded ourselves above all as Germans, but also because my mother's sister and her two
and
classical,
brothers lived there.
Thus
my
premature end, even though well to
my parental home.
I
It
carefree childhood
did not find
was only
realized how strongly I was attached to
going, rural
way of life of the
you have been born in a by it I was not yet ten when,
me to
to bid fare-
in later years that I fully home town, to the easy-
my
you always remain bewitched
in July 1883, I
to a
provincial lower middle class: if
village,
Vienna. Henceforth, of Central Europe.
it difficult
came
was to
12
my mother travelled with
participate in the musical life
VIENNA Aged Ten
[1883-1890] to
Seventeen
UPON OUR arrival in Vienna we put up at my grandfather's *Zum
hotel
Lowen'
"Weissen
in the Salzgries, at that time a
tumbledown, dirty and evil-smelling quarter. My grandfather's own flat, however, was just acceptable, for he had secured the best part of the house for himself and his family. For all that, innumerable blackbeetles had taken up their abode in the kitchen and filled
me whose home
had been a model of cleanliness
with
indescribable terror. Rats busied themselves quite fearlessly about the pump in the yard, while the hotel guests supplied bugs and fleas,
must have been a pretty sound remain unconscious of the activities of these
Vienna's favourite vermin.
to sleeper, for I used
blood-sucking
The
parasites.
changeful
interested
on the other hand, and there even developed, with a girl of my
in
life
me greatly,
age and of
I
and outside the
hotel,
angelic appearance, a friendship full
of childhood
poetry. I also
have a
distinct
tion in the Prater
:
it
In the meantime,
memory of a visit
was there
the
first
saw a telephone.
my mother had been busy looking about for
a suitable violin teacher for me.
by
that I
to the electrical exhibi-
Her choice had
name of Adolf Back who enjoyed
a
fallen
on a violinist
good reputation as an
elementary teacher in certain petit bourgeois circles. His violinistic attainments, to be sure, were not up to much, and the artistic distance
between himandmy Wieselburg mentor was minute;
still,
he lived in Vienna where he had frequent opportunity to hear decent violin playing.
Amongst
his pupils
were Artur Bodanzki1 who
Austrian conductor [K Vienna 1877, d. New York 1939]- Before his various German engagements and his eventual New York appointment(i9i 5), he had been assistant
conductor to Mahler at the Imperial Opera in Vienna. See also pp. 341
13
f.
CARL FLESCH had an excellent reputation as conductor at the and Back's own son Oskar, Metropolitan Opera in New York, esteemed violin teacher at Brussels and Amsterdam. later a for
many
years
highly old Back, incidentally, had two or three strings to his bow: he acted as a house-agent and also negotiated other sales as far as his business worries tended to distract his they were profitable; but attention during lessons. He had an extremely skw vibrato and his first educational measure was to let me share in its 'advantages',
The
with the
had the greatest difficulty in getting rid a fraction better than the instruction I had
result that I later
of it. In sum, though
two his tuition was still pretty primitive. previously received, later were wasted, and in years they years under his guidance served to remind me to warn pupils' parents again and again that
My
was just good enough for elementary instruction. harm done by defective or actually absent
the best teacher
In most cases, the
And only quite irreparable. at times succeed, through intense mental
rudiments
in
is
making up
for
the greatest talents may and physical exertions,
what has been neglected
at the decisive
primary
stage.
Back had been
active as a
several trios for three violins his pupils to
My
composer too and had perpetrated which it was the traditional duty of
perform at periodic recitals.
aunt Regi, with
whom I now
went to
live,
was a well-
conserved, in fact strikingly pretty, blonde in her late thirties.; ten Having been married to a well-to-do merchant for about
good-looking stockbroker for whose sake she got divorced from her husband. It soon was unable to support appeared, however, that the new Adonis years, she
became infatuated with
a
The whole family was forced to live on the allowance which her good-natured first husband provided for his three^ children, so that the price paid for my board and lodging afforded his wife.
a considerable
relief.
my new
surroundings were scarcely calculated to exert a favourable influence on my development. The six of us lived in
But
three rooms;
I
graceful blonde
shared one with
who
my
oldest cousin Risa, a tall and,
died of tuberculosis at the age of thirty-one,
14
VIENNA [1883-1890] having caused quite a well as on
stir
was
in provincial
German
theatres, off stage
good, but somewhat reckless soul who had to be forgiven much, for she had loved much. I liked her best amongst my Viennese relatives, transfigured as she seemed by the as
it:
she
a
glory surrounding her provincial roles as a French demimondaine. Judging from various visitors, I was not alone in my admiration for my beautiful cousin, and although I did not alarm myself about them, this kind of schooling was hardly likely to inspire a ten-year-old boy with sound principles. was of to this doubtful parents to expose
me
my
How
naive
it
atmosphere change for the worse. Aunt Regi was an unloving egoist for whom I was but an additional means of meeting her household expenses. I was expelled from the rural paradise of my childhood, without friends, far
For the
rest,
my life had taken a
!
drastic
away from family, amongst people who remained strangers to me. Perhaps only joy was going home for Christmas, Easter, and the summer holidays, though it made the return to
my
my
Vienna all the sadder. During my second year in the capital, my mother once accompanied me there with my favourite brother because she wanted to consult a doctor about his state of health. They only stayed for two days. The separation affected me so deeply that I a child of eleven walked over one of the bridges
Danube, stared for a long time into the black, wintry and water, contemplated whether it would not be best to jump. the holidays, I had to return to the hateful Viennese after When, I used to shut atmosphere, myself into the lavatory on the train in order to be able to cry unobserved. This lack of love and emotional security was no doubt largely responsible for my somewhat reserved nature, for the periodical lack of artistic expansiveness and spontaneity which was to cause me great trouble in the later course of my development. At the outset of my Vienna years, I had failed the entrance across the
examination for a
state gymnasium owing to my inadequate was therefore put into a private gymnasium whence, preparation. in die course of the following year, I was supposed to move on to a regular school. At first I made fair progress, but what with the and my own pedantic, impersonal pedagogues who taught me, I
15
CARL FLESCH
on a single subject, I gradually receded for scapegraces. towards those back desks which were reserved when my terminated was affairs of state This unsatisfactory were studies violin progressing, and saw how slowly my
concentrate inability to
parents
decided to enrol that
me in the Conservatoire
would, in any
it
case,
have become impossible for
me
to
a private teacher
was
to
my studies at the gymnasium; take care of my general education.
continue
I
1 of the Musikfreunde, so
had appeared in public for the
first
time on December 31,
Fantasy in a New Year concert (with subsequent dance) of the Wieselburg Geselligfound that keitsverein; the musicians of my birth-place generally
when
1883,
I
had
played Alard's
I
'Faust'
my parents thought that Back of months of eighteen ought to be judged by a
greatly improved. Nevertheless,
the result
to wit, Joseph Hellmesberger sen. (of whom recognized authority, more anon). On a dull winter day early in 1885, then, my mother
me examined by its who had conveyed her
took me to the Conservatoire in order to have director.
The
caretaker,
all-powerful returned with the instruction that, first of all, a fee request to him, 2 had to be paid. That done, we were asked to wait a often
gulden
of the students' while, since the director was conducting a rehearsal band; we could, however, listen to it if we were interested.
We
box in the large hall where a small boy of about to play Sarasate's 'Faust' Fantasy or ten nine years was just about were led into
a
with orchestral accompaniment. I sat gaping, for such fiddling I had never heard before. The rehearsal over, the caretaker conducted us into the Holy of Holies the director's office. He first
of all asked me about the impression my little colleague had made I expressed my admiration he commented,
on me, and when
'Yes, little Kreisler will cause a great stir in the
world; if only he
had a better posture !' On one and the same day, then, I had encountered two violinists who were to exert a great if basically different influence on my artistic development and my personal fate alike: for me, as The Gesellsduift der Musikfreunde, a world-famous 'society of the friends of was founded in Vienna in the year of Wagner's birth for the purpose of promoting, performing, collecting and teaching music. ir
music', 2
Ten
Austrian
florins, i.e.
about ids 8d at the time.
16
VIENNA [1883-1890] indeed for
all violinists
the guide to
modern
of my generation, Kreisler was to become playing, the evolution of which had
violin
begun with Ysaye; whereas Hellmesberger became the negative and unwitting cause of my move to Paris and thus determined
my
career altogether. for the 'examination'
As
itself, it did not yield any result that future guidance. The director contented himself with murmuring a few talent, phrases about
could have served for
my
my
my
favourable prospects and the need for continued diligence,
whereupon he graciously dismissed us. as before, and my parents decided to
My mother knew as much consult a sounder judge
M.
Griin who, incidentally, was f. father's distantly related to This time we had indeed hit upon the right person. family. Grxin told us straight to our faces that the instruction I had so far
my
been given had been quite inadequate, recommended us Josef Maxintsak, the teacher of the preliminary course 1 at the Conservatoire,
and promised to take me into his own main course in (as he certainly expected) my preparation
the following year if
proved
successful.
In the meantime, I had entered my twelfth year and had been playing the violin for six years, without the vaguest idea of an artistic approach to the instrument. If one considers the level of
accomplishment which wellnigh
all
my
kter professional col-
leagues had reached at that age (e.g. Kreisler, Thibaud, Elman, and 2 Heifetz), whereas I was firmly stuck in the mud of dilettantism, one can only regard it as a miracle that something became of me after all another year and it would perhaps have been too late,
1
The British equivalent is the graded Associated Board Course which is usually taken before joining the R.A.M. or R.C.M. 2 Huberman, indisputably the most striking case in point, is omitted from this 4ist; see App. I. As for Kreisler, a letter which Freud sent his future wife from Paris (December 5, 1885) forms an amusing complement to Flesch's reminder. Freud had called on the wife of his parents* family doctor, then in Paris: *. The unhappy woman has a ten-year-old son who after two years in the Vienna
r
.
Conservatorium
won
the great prize there and
was pronounced highly
Now instead of secredy throttling the infant prodigy the wretched overworked and has a house
,
gifted.
father,
who
of children, sends the boy with his mother to Paris to study at the Conservatoire and get another prize. Just t-hinV of the expense, the separation, the breaking up of the household*' Two years later the boy, Fritz Kreisler, 'concerted' at Steinway Hall, New York. is
full
17
CARL FLESCH In the autumn of 1885 I began to study with Josef Maxintsak. new teacher was about forty years old, Viennese, with a
My
pronounced Slav
tinge.
His features were well drawn, if some-
body was
by a clubfoot. Originhe became the viola ally a pupil of Joseph Hellmesberger sen., 2 he also had a good reputaplayer of the Hellmesberger Quartet; tion as a first violinist in the Opera Orchestra and as a teacher at the Conservatoire. With his thorough orchestral training, he belonged to the upper middle class of violinists. He was a harsh, un-
what crude, while
his
disfigured
1
and extremely hot-tempered teacher, but while he he was uncommonly hardly bothered about bowing technique, sensitive to intonation and all matters rhythmical. My hyperthe bugbear of my pupils is largely his work, for critical ear restrained
all life, although, it was grateful to him decisive influence to the alive only at a maturer stage that I became craftsmanwhich he thus exerted upon the development of
my
which I have remained
my
ship; in
my
all too inoriginal recollection, his tuition seemed Since I had lessons twice or thrice a
and unimaginative. found sufficient time to work through an enormous we week, field of violin studies within ten months: Kreutzer, Rode, 3 and May seder4 were studied, not once, but Fiorillo, Rovelli, three or four times successively, with a thoroughness which even artistic
today enables me to play most of these pieces from memory for my pupils. For the considerable rest, concertos by Viotti, Kreutzer, *At this point, a brief genealogy of the somewhat confusing Hellmesberger family may be welcome: (i) Georg Hellmesberger sen. [1800-73], violinist, conductor and composer, from 1829 conductor at the Vienna Court Opera, and from 1833 professor of the violin at the Vienna Conservatoire; (2) His son, Joseph H. sen. [1828-93], professor at the Conservatoire from 1851, and conductor of the Philharmonic Society the man of Hesch's story (see also pp. 22 f); (3) The latter's
brother,
Georg H. jun. [1830-52],
violinist
and composer;
(4)
Joseph H.
jun. (son of Joseph H. sen.), violinist, composer and conductor [1855-1907], violin professor at the Conservatoire from 1878 and leader at the Opera; (5) For
Ferdinand H. [1863-1940], brother of the latter, see p. 25. 2 Led by Joseph Hellmesberger sen. from 1849 until 1887, had been his second fiddler) succeeded him. 3
was
when bis son (who
Pietro Rovelli [1793-1838], the most famous member of the Rovelli family, a Kreutzer pupil. He composed violin studies, caprices, and variations.
A lesser
4
known
figure in this country, Joseph Mayseder [1789-1863] was a and composer, and a chamber musician to the emperor. Aside from his violin works (including concertos), his output includes a mass, eighty string quartets, five string quintets, piano trios and other chamber music.
Viennese
violinist
18
VIENNA [1883-1890] Rode, and
also
some
Beriot, provided the necessary variety. In a teacher thus succeeded in establishing a fruitful basis for In technique. September 1886, 1 went entrance examination, Beriot's Seventh Concerto played
relatively short time,
firm and in for
my my
my
and was immediately admitted to Professor Griin's main course, Jakob (called 7-M') Griin [1837-1916] was a tiny and insignificant-looking figure of strikingly ugly features. Good-natured and somewhat limited as a man, conscientious and as a dry
violinist,
pupils.
he was an
His
artistic
enthusiastic teacher
career
gained some fame owing
had been
a kind father to his
ill-fated.
In his early years he
to the fact that his
name was connected
with Joachim's resignation from Hanover and his removal to Joachim had proposed Griin (at the time a member of the Court Orchestra at Hanover) for the appointment of a Chamber
Berlin.
Musician, but Griin was rejected because he was ofJewish descent. In view of his own origin, Joachim regarded this as an insult and tendered his resignation. In the late 'sixties, Griin became leader
Vienna Court Opera, succeeding Hellmesberger who, as Court Chapel concerts, quartet player and teacher, had no time left for orchestral at the
director of the Conservatoire, conductor of the
But Griin was not to the taste of the Viennese, and his and malicious predecessor soon made him into a witty laughingstock: for a long time to come, Hellmesberger's 'Griin Jokes' were to form an essential contribution to the amusement of the musical world. 1 They seemed to make Griin himself increasingly nervous; besides, he must have suffered from mental inhibitions in his art, for in 1880 the eighteen-year-old Arnold Rose was appointed second leader and had to play the solos instead of Griin. When we consider that Griin was only forty-three when it was made clear to him in this brutal manner that his soloistic career had come to an end, we can easily imagine the severe psychic trauma he must have suffered. All the more intensely, then, he devoted himself to his beloved teaching profession, in which he came to enjoy great esteem. A confirmed bachelor, he spent his entire life with his mother who, even in later years, treated him like a little services.
1
Some of them have even descended
generation.
C.F.-C
19
to the present translator's musical
CARL FLESCH included Franz Kneisel, WesApart from myself, his pupils Mrs Hochmann, and many violinists both sely, Lewinger, Rebner, Court in the Vienna Opera Orchestra and the Boston Symphony Orchestra (founded in 1 8 8 5) Griin retired at the age of seventy an occasion which was celebrated by a concert of his most outstanding 1 As often happens with men who are used to work, his enpupils. forced retirement weakened his mind and body; he died in 1916. He was a violinist with a sound left-hand technique, but his
child.
.
in a dry thin, almost invisible finger vibrato inevitably resulted effect that had a most disenchanting tone upon the
production
the best period, though he played a Stradivarius from
listener
2 which he had bought in the 'seventies for 5,000 fl. Like many other players, he was wont to make his instrument responsible for his own tonal insufficiencies, and to have it continually reLater on, the violin was bought by Franz Kneisel in New paired.
York and it is
still
in his family's possession.
mastery of all possible bowings, Griin's right-hand was dominated by the portato then usual in Vienna, technique which made impossible both a real legato and any subtle dynamics and nuances. Amongst his technical specialities was a 4 as well as a well-marked and rhythmical perfect mordent 1 An eminently competent ear-witness Oskar Adler, Schoenberg's first teacher Despite his
and quartet-partner, and the leader of the Adler Quartet described this concert to me. Rebner started off with the Mendelssohn Concerto and played it in what Adler called his usual manner. Next, Wessely played the Brahms Concerto which, at that time, was a new and formidable proposition; in the circumstances, he acquitted himself well. Tien came the climax of the evening Flesch's Beethoven Concerto it was an outstanding performance by any standards, technically perfect, crystal-clear, with a noble and big tone. Adler seemed to remember that Hesch played his own cadenza. Mrs Hochmann came last, playing Spohr's Scena cantante. Considering the brilliant halo which surrounded her name at that time, and the stories one had heard of her wonderful tone, she proved a disappointment; even her intonation was somewhat uncertain in the upper positions. Incidentally, it is instructive to compare Flesch's description of Griin's tone, and of his teaching methods in regard to tone production, with Adler's description of Hesch's own tone which, it seems, developed despite his teacher. *Then over 410. :
'Pralltritter:
V ULT
""
g B
Hesch
1
f
I
rather than the historically accurate tended to be executed before the beat.
J
one
20
uses the current
(Schneller).
After 1830,
German term this
mordent
VIENNA [1883-1890] 1
quite generally, in fact, his Spohr interpretawere lucid and stylistically true. If only his absolutely unsensual and unattractive tone production had not weighed so
'Spohr staccato';
tions
heavily
upon
intentions
!
the listener's ears, destroying the player's noblest
This lack of a corrective vibrato was the cause, too, of
his reputation
emphasized by Hellmesberger
persistently
of
2 being a 'note-sharper'. For even the greatest violinistic genius will play out of tune without a levelling and corrective vibrato,
Basically, however, Grtin's failure as a violinist must have been rooted in his personality itself which, pace his noble character traits, appeared to be the very opposite of all that is commonly
comprised in the term 'artistic' impulsiveness, charm, imagination, boldness and attack. No doubt his outstanding attribute as a teacher was his almost religious devotion to his profession.
An
unbiassed resume of his teaching methods, however, will have to arrive at an unfavourable conclusion: they were one-sided and defective.
On the credit side, his categorical demand for technical
precision
must be mentioned,
his aversion to cheating, to all
the glossing over technical deficiencies, and his emphasis upon purely musical aspect of performance. On the debit side, however,
we should have to
adduce his neglecting the functions of the right
arm and hand, and the correct movement of the bow,
as
well as his
habitual portato and the scant attention he paid to the vibrato. The highest aim of any really artistic education, moreover, ie.
the recognition, support and development of a pupil's personality, his comprehension. It was for this reason that far
was
beyond
level who left only those of his pupils were able to reach a higher him in good time and turned to a higher authority with higher
came development. Apart from of Martin Marsick after
ideals; all the others
to a standstill at a certain stage in their a myself, therefore (who became pupil
a
few
years),
gained an international reputation
none of
as a soloist,
Griin's pupils
whereas there
is
a
A
a see Carl Hesch, The Art of pure martete staccato adjustable to any tempo: Violin Playing (trans. Frederick Martens), Vol. I, revised ed. (New York, 1939),
*tt& nearest sharper
I
can get to Hellmesbcrger's pun: his Falschspieler (card-) verb falsch spielen, i.e. to pky out of tune
refers to the usual musical
(though not necessarily sharp
!).
21
CARL FLESCH disproportionately great excellent attainments.
At
number of Griin pupils of fair rather than
head of the Conservatoire of the Gesellschaft was Joseph Hellmesberger sen. [1828-93]. There is no comparison between the role he played in his lifetime and his historical significance which, with the present generation of violinists, is confined to his Peters edition of the Bach Sonatas and Partitas for unaccompanied violin, and to his numerous anecdotes and puns, chiefly on the subject of poor old Griin. His 1 father was Georg Hellmesberger senior who, as Hanslick indicates, had been a dilettante and become a professional; his brother was Georg Hellmesberger jun., Joachim's predecessor at Hanover; and his sons were Joseph Hellmesberger jun. (known as 'Pepi'), that time, the
der Musikfreunde
the violinist, composer and conductor, and the 'cellist Ferdinand. In short, the Hellmesberger dynasty dominated, and at times tyrannized, Vienna's musical life for close upon a century. At the
time
when
I
entered the Conservatoire,
its
director, the 'old'
me
to be a man of the world Hellmesberger, appeared to well on in years, tried at all costs to make a youthful
who,
impression, what with his wig and the jet-black dye of his whiskers a la Franz Josef. His tripping and stilted gait created the impression of a forced and coquettish grace which, according to Hanslick and Rose, had characterized his playing too. 2 I could not judge this question for myself, for owing to a complaint of the hand he had abandoned solo playing for several years past, and in the quartet, too, his son 'Pepi' had succeeded him. As opposed to Griin, the
old Hellmesberger mellifluence.
is
said to
He conducted
have produced a tone of captivating the students' orchestra
and directed a Three types of people were anathema to him Jews, short-sighted individuals, and Griin pupils. Since I rolled the three into one, he made me the of his
chamber music
class.
object
especial
^ee
the genealogy on p. 18. 2 I cannot trace the Hanslick reference. In fairness to Hellmesberger, however, it must be pointed out that Hanslick thus concluded an otherwise extremely favourable review of one ofJoachim's six concerts at Vienna in 1861 'In many a Beethoven [Concerto] passage, Hellmesberger's fine, stimulating naturalness would have played more directly to our hearts than Joachim's unbending Roman earnestness/ (Vienna's Golden Years of Music: 1850-1900, trans, and ed :
Pleasants, 3rd,
London,
Henry -my
1951.)
22
VIENNA [1883-1890] antipathy, which went so far that he came to dispense me from the operatic performances, for the sole purpose of getting me out
whereas I was the favourite pupil of all my other Without being an occultist, I am inclined to think that his aversion to me was something of a divination: some forty-five years later, my Peters edition of the Bach solo Sonatas supplanted his own almost completely, and it was this latter to which he owed most of his popularity amongst violinists.1
of his
sight;
teachers.
Be
that as
it
may, in the
last resort I
entire career, for the following reason.
owe Hellmesberger my
Apart from the concerts of
the Philharmonic Orchestra (which was identical with the Opera Orchestra), there were the so-called Gesellschaftskonzerte pro-
moted by
the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde and given
by an of the
of variegated constitution, including licentiates candidate for membership had to be approved Conservatoire,
orchestra
A
the conductor. Like most of colleagues, I if I the test as an orchestral player, stood for membership: applied I could in due course get on to the last desk of the second violins
my
by Hellmesberger,
and
twenty years' service I might well hope to be promoted to the rank of first violinist! Hellmesberger, however, saved me from this fate: he deleted my name from the list, It seemed that entering the word 'blind' by way of explanation.
in the opera,
after
he found my short-sightedness the most antipathetic of my defects.
was obvious,
It
like Kreisler later
then, that
on
I
had no
future in Vienna, not even as an orchestral player; whipped up by the threat of artistic stagnation, the desire to leave the city dominated me from then onwards. With horror I think of what
would have become of me if I had been Hellmesberger's protege: when,
after thirty-two years,
I
performed
as a soloist
with the
discovered one of my best friends from
Philharmonic Orchestra, :he days of the Conservatoire at the I
first
desk of the second
Tiolins.
Viennese par excelHellmesberger was the naturally musical even compose, although he had ence he could do everything :
x
The psychoanalytically trained
train: the 'bad father's*
Bach
to replace it by a better one.
observer will be inclined to reverse this causal may well have been an incentive for Hesch
edition
CARL FLESCH
no
creative talent. His
magnum opus was
a waltz-like salon piece
and eminently
suitable for the charity concerts of the Princess Pauline Metternich. His real significance lies entitled Ballet Scene
he was the first who after Schuppanzigh's and but Jansa's similar, pretty unsuccessful attempts introduced the Viennese public to the wonderland of quartet literature. The in the fact that 1
construction of his
programmes
at that
time
middle of the century) was exemplary. As early
(i.e.
as
round the
1849 he per-
D
minor Quartet, which had been virtually Schumann's and Brahms' unknown; chamber music and, above all, the Beethoven quartets, of which only the op.iS set was generally known. If we stop to reflect that even today there are only few people who understand Beethoven's late quartets, we must have the greatest respect for the courage which must have been necessary at the time to present these works
formed Schubert's
in later years, he played
to utterly unprepared audiences. With his son's accession to the first desk, however, the popularity of the quartet diminished all
rapidly, far
the
more
superior rival
so since a dangerous and altogether was emerging in the form of the Rose
Quartet.
As
barely twenty-two-year-old
artistic
director
of the Gesell-
Hellmesberger succeeded in breaking put an end to the unworthy combinations of items in which the programme-builders used to indulge, and"
schaft der Musikfreunde, too,
new
ground.
He
should not always play their own products, but rather works of musical merit. There is no doubt that Vienna's
insisted that virtuosos
owes much to his artistic initiative. His conducting, to be sure, did not seem to amount to much, at any rate from the point of view of our own contemporary standards. In my recollection, he appears as a pretty mediocre and impersonal timemusical
life
beater of the roughest variety, too, he showed a downright
and
as a
chamber music
disarming negligence.
teacher,
Add
to
this
A little-known figure in this country, the Bohemian violinist and composer Leopold Jansa [1795-1875] actually lived in London from 1849-68, having been banished Austria for political reasons. From 1834, he had been musical^ from^ director and violin professor at the Vienna Conservatoire. He wrote four conX
certos, thirty-six duets, eight string quartets, three string trios,
and some church music.
24
many
solo pieces
VIENNA [1883-1890] that his violinistic attainments
have enabled him
were not of the
sort that
would
to master
supreme soloistic tasks and that, on the other hand, his ethical self was not sufficiently developed to produce a powerful personality, and you cannot be surprised that he remained, after all, a local celebrity who was soon to be. forgotten.
His son, Joseph fPepi') Hellmesberger jun. [1855-1907], was highly gifted, amiable and good-looking, and seemed destined for a brilliant future; at a relatively early age he had become conductor of the Court Chapel and of the Court Opera, and had com-
posed several successful operettas. Though he did not attain to Griin's stature as a teacher, he had prepared several 'child prodigies',
Kreisler
among them,
for their concert careers,
whence he
in great esteem in the educational field too. One day, he had seduced slapped however, the father of a ballerina
was held
whom
his face in the street,
whereupon he had to
He became
conductor
resign his court
at Stuttgart
where, shortly age of fifty-two. His brother Ferdinand, a distinctly mediocre 'cellist, changed over to conduct1 ing as a young man, in which capacity he obtained an appointappointment.
afterwards,
ment
he died
at the early
at the Berlin State
Opera
World War He left after a short
after the First
because he was confounded with his brother
!
time and, thenceforth, earned a scanty livelihood as a conductor of various spa orchestras: the sad end of a dynasty. Most outstanding amongst my fellow students was the eighteen-year-old Max Lewinger [1870-1908], who joined Griin's course at the same time as I did; he seemed an inimitable
With his strong natural musicality and his manual skill, he yet lacked distinctive personality extraordinary the ideal and represented type of an eminent Conservatoire 2 became student. Later on, he my predecessor at Bucharest, and an unsuccessful attempt to take up a soloistic career, he model
upon became
to us
all.
orchestral leader in 1896,
Leipzig, and
finally at
Dresden.
He
first at Helsingfors, then at died of a kidney disease.
*He had however been 'cellist in his father's quartet, 'cello teacher Vienna Conservatoire, and principal 'cellist at the Vienna Court Opera. 2 See pp. 159 and 162.
at the
CARL FLESCH In the orchestra,
I sat at
a desk with Berthold Bachrich, a son
of the viola player in the Hellmesberger Quartet, who soon and became second violinist in the joined the Opera Orchestra
Rose Quartet which, at Amsterdam in 1905, he suddenly left in the lurch because he was home-sick. He attained a certain degree of parochial fame by transferring the popular genre of the 1
time, Schrammelquartet to more respectable spheres: dinners was to serve up his ensemble Viennese at fashion big with the dessert. Barely fifty years old, he succumbed to for a
the
together
sudden heart attack while mountaineering. Of the same age and both strikingly tiny, the two of us had been inseparable. a
Beside orchestral and chamber music practices, the subsidiary harmony and musical history.
subjects
My
comprised piano,
piano teacher, Professor Ludwig
changed
his profession), tried to
former bank clerk
(a
who
had
make
the subject as attractive as rascals tended to regard piano
For we possible for us 'subsidiaries'. as a useless torture; besides, I playing
had not the faintest technical myself with the recognized fact of Richard Wagner's and Antonin Dvorak's pianistic ineptitude; when, at some later time, I was to play to Hans Richter at the Vienna Opera House and had to wait in the antechamber, a gruesomely cacophonic piano duet reached my ears from the direction of the directorial chambers, and when Richter eventually received me he told me that together with Dvorak he had just run through the latter's symphonic poem, The Wood-Dove Far above the rest of us 'ignoramuses' towered a young university student who seemed half starved and studied music as it were by the way. It was Heinrich Schenker, who later came to talent for the instrument. I consoled
I
An
x
instrumental group for which Johann Schrammel, a Viennese violinist,
was and
originally (1877) responsible; at that time, it consisted of two fiddles, clarinet, guitar. Later, the woodwind instrument was replaced by the accordion. From Vienna's pubs (Heurigeri) to Hollywood, the genre gained immense
popudo not think, however, that Berthold Bachrich's more powerful, creative successors have yet been mentioned in the Schrammel history: there are traces of the Schrammelquartet in Schoenberg's work (the Serenade and the Septet) and, far more obviously, in Alban Berg's opera, Wozzeck (the pub scene in the second act), where the instrumentation of the stage music is two to four fiddles, one clarinet in C, accordion, several guitars, and one bombardon in F. larity for the
performance of light Viennese music.
26
I
VIENNA [1883-1890] enjoy high esteem for his original musical theories and his
all-
1 embracing, practical and theoretical musicality. Kind Robert Fuchs, called the 'Serenade Fox', 2 tried to teach
me the rules of harmony. On two later occasions, I again occupied myself with the
subject, in order to acquire the necessary knowrather than to satisfy an inner need. ledge Fortunately for rny
contemporaries, however, (for posterity would not have been concerned in any case !), my composing activities have remained confined to the writing of cadenzas for violin concertos. I am using the term 'composing' in its
literal
a
Beethoven or Mozart
Among Institute,
!
the teachers
I
used to meet in the corridors of the
Anton Bruckner must be mentioned
incredibly wide figure.
of 'putting together'. for the inspirations of
sense
What a degrading description, incidentally,
pants,
Amongst
Epstein were the
first;
with
his
he then seemed to us students a ridiculous
the piano teachers,
Anton Door and
Julius
favourites, whereas Franz Sdhalk and Ferdinand
Loewe
were, as yet, in subordinate positions. Amongst my colleagues in other departments, the composer and conductor
Alexander Zemlinsky and the singers Franz Naval and Leopold to play an important part in our musical life. The
Demuth were 'cellists
Friedrich
Buxbaum3 and DemeterDinico (later my quartet
fellow students. partner in Bucharest) were likewise among The Vienna Conservatoire was steeped in a curious atmosphere genial and galant, artistically romantic. The voice of our
my
director, so strikingly impolite as a rule,
tender tone
when he
would assume
addressed himself to certain
a strangely
young
singers
of the opposite sex, and although Mrs Liebig, the lady who watched over the proprieties (Anstandsdame), was most anxious to prevent any outbreak of flirtation in the corridors, nobody could forbid students of different sexes to meet outside the Institute. 1 Schenker's prestige is still mounting, steadily and justly, especially amongst American musicologists and analysts. He coined the highly relevant terms Urlinie and Ursatz (fundamental line and fundamental structure) for what he demonstrated to be the underlying skeleton lines and patterns, the background, of all music from Bach to Brahms. He lived from 1868 to 193 5. 8
3
He composed
five serenades.
Later principal Quartet.
'cellist
of the Vienna Philharmonic and
27
member of the Rose
CARL FLESCH
On
rehearsals in the mornings when there were orchestral
in reachall prohibitions, large hall, we usually succeeded, despite to this day links the two sides of the hall which tunnel the ing
under the platform, and in picking up parts of the performances. It was thus that I first heard such virtuosos as Joachim, Sarasate and Ysaye.
we had a concert with the students' which the matadors of the different instruments
Twice or
thrice a year
orchestra in
have retained a particularly favourable impression Violin Lewinger's interpretation of Bernhard Molique's
collaborated.
of Max
Concerto in
I
A
minor. 1
Then
there
were the Princess Pauline
2
Metternich's charity academies, at that time a permanent institution. I remember this famous friend of Napoleon Hi's and Richard
outstandingly ugly old lady who, during order people about with a trumpet-like, tinny
Wagner's
as a quite
rehearsals,
would
voice, tyrannizing even old Hellmesberger.
The
concerts
them-
above all particularly popular with the students, because they entailed the distribution of gratis vouchers for one usually congulden's worth of refreshments at the canteen. selves
were
We
tented ourselves with a glass of beer, and pocketed the change. In addition, these events offered an opportunity to hear and see
was
at such an academy, for indebut in 1887; a carpet-knight with reddish curls, fresh from Leschetizky's school-bench, he caused a stir at the time in Vienna's fashionable circles. I also
famous
stars free
stance, that
of charge.
It
Paderewski made
his
remember Marcella Sembrich, Institute
of Philadelphia, then
my future
still
colleague at the Curtis
an attractive brunette.
And an
unforgettable impression was forty-six-year-old Pauline Lucca, surrounded by the nimbus of her relation with Bismarck, which
was
attested
by
had become famous. She was a woman with dark hair and strik-
a photograph that
graceful and enchanting little ingly black eyes (whence chocolate pancakes used to be called 1 One of six (excluding a Concertino). Molique [1802-1869] was highly regarded as a composer, solo and quartet pkyer, and as a violin teacher. As late as 1915, Hugo Riemann mentioned the esteem his music continued to enjoy. I gather that he left a sum of money to the Berlin Hochschule to be used for scholarship grants,
once a 2
on condition
that a
work of his be performed
year.
*Academies' in the eighteenth-century sense of 'concerts'.
28
at the Institute
;
VIENNA [1883-1890] 'Lucca Eyes'). Amongst other things, she sang Schubert's Heidenroslein with inimitable charm. Finally, there were the fair-haired
Bernhard Stavenhagen [b. 1862], a Liszt pupil and from 1907 conductor in Geneva, who died in 1914 from pneumonia; the Polish tenor Mieczyslaw Mierzwinsky; the American coloratura soprano Nikita (Louisa Margaret Nicholson); and the
pianist
Viennese baritone Theodor Reichmann, who,
at Bayreuth in 1882,
created the role of Amfortas in Parsifal Amongst the violinists who shone in these concerts, I only remember two: the fourteen-year-old Fritz Kreisler, who had just won a first prize at the Paris Conservatoire and older than his age, though artistically he was still
seemed far emerging; and a local celebrity from Vienna, appearing under the name of Marcello Rossi, 1 a pretty mediocre fiddler. An anniversary concert of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde was
by the protectrice, Crown Princess Stephanie, unhappy Crown Prince Rudolph. True to a
attended the
the wife of
deplorable
custom, Mayseder's Sixth Study, a kind ofperpetuum mobile, was played by the pupils of all violin classes in unison about fifty of
them. Berd Bachrich and myself played standing at the same desk, and our strikingly small stature together with our great agility aroused the particular interest of the sovereign lady. Unfortunately, my fosterers were not intelligent enough to see that
it
was absolutely necessary
violin to hear
for a prospective artist on the order to be set an example
great violinists, if only in
I do not remember ever having received the necessary for a standing ticket from aunt, and I had to resort to the afore-mentioned tunnel in into concerts; myself
and an aim.
money
my
smuggling
the large hall served as an important refuge in cases of emergency. desire to hear good things was strong, I soon became a Since
my
concert-goers and was thus able to hear an outstanding performance. At that time in Vienna, and Sarasate competed for the palm among violinists. I
virtuoso
many
among
illegal
Joachim was in a position to follow both their careers from 1886 until their deaths in 1907 and 1908 respectively; I also came to know them personally. There being countless well-known
1
Italian
29
musicians
by the name of Rossi.
CARL FLESCH at Kittsee in the
Hungarian 1831 Joseph Joachim was born from kilometres about of my own thirty Wieselburg, county traders. So far as the of son the was he poor Jewish birth-place; external circumstances of his life are concerned, Andreas Moser's in
1
biography
offers
us the
most
detailed information in every
cannot be gainsaid, however, that Moser glorifies art to the extent of utterly unobjective Joachim's personality and whereas in reality, even this supreme figure showed respect. It
idolatry,
certain unmistakable weaknesses.
In the course of his career, which spanned about sixty-six
Joachim was
active as a quartet leader,
2
soloist, composer, head of the newly-established department for musical execution Hochschukfur ausubende Tonkunst at the Royal Academy of Arts in Berlin. I have here enumerated his activities in what I consider to be the order of their importance. As a quartet player, he not only gave his best, but also conor after. It was not the perfecquered peaks never reached before tion of his execution to which he owed his lonely greatness, for
years,
teacher, conductor,
Sarasate's
and
as
sensuous euphony, Wilhehnfs powerful tone and fire were all superior to what Joachim had to offer
Wieniawski's
in these respects; it was not beautiful sound as such that made his it was the inner quartet playing a profound experience. Rather,
of his performances, the nobility of his musical outlook and the imaginative freedom which marked his interpretations despite all due obedience to the written text. His playing was informed
life
with an indefinable suggestive power to which every sensitive musician had to submit. In his last years, I sometimes heard him play out of tune, drily, and with a shaky technique (unsicher). Owing to the absence of any kind of vibrato, his tone had senile character, and his fingers had become so that semitones in the higher positions came
assumed a somewhat
gouty and
stiff,
critically close to
whole
tones. Nevertheless,
one could not but be
deeply impressed by his genius for shaping his phrases, by the somnambulistic certainty of his intuitions which always seemed 1
Joseph Joachim: Bin Lebensbild, Berlin, 1898. Completed edition (2 vols.), 1907-10. English translation by L. Durham (1901). 2 Also, together with Ferdinand David, as orchestral leader at the Leipzig
Gewandhaus.
30
VIENNA [1883-1890] to find the only true violinistic expression for the inner significance of the music. Unjustly, he used to be known as a 'classical' violinist in the slightly suspicious sense which the adjective had in the course of and which made one think time, acquired always
of a kind of respectable dullness. In actual fact, he was a romantic through and through, uninhibited, even somewhat gipsy-like by nature, and he always retained these traits which, indeed, can still be heard in his Violin Concerto 'in the Hungarian Style', op. n.
The Joachim Quartet, on the other hand, left a good deal to be desired as an ensemble. Robert Hausmann [1852-1909], the 'cellist, from a variety of technical insufficiencies; and on the Emanuel Wirth [1842-1923], known and feared as 'the viola, wrist player' (derHandg'lenkler), was as dry as desert dust; while the otherwise outstanding violinist Karel Halif [1859-1909] was not
suffered
sufficiently flexible to adjust
himself to Joachim's tonal peculiari-
Altogether, the quartet consisted of a solo violin with three instruments accompanying a style which is diametrically .opposed to the aims of our own time's quartet playing as first ties.
introduced by the Bohemian String Quartet. But then, the 'regulars' at these recitals only wanted to hear Joachim anyway; willynilly, the other players had to be accepted as part of the bargain. The leader's personality would indeed have towered
above even far greater instrumentalists than were his colleagues. My opinion ofJoachim as a soloist, on the other hand, can only be accepted with reservations: when I heard him for the first time, he had already reached the age of fifty-seven, whereas I was no Nevertheless, the nobility of his cantilena, the in adagio of Spohr's Second Violin Concerto and in especially violin transcription of Schumann's Gartenmelodie, has remained fhe
older than thirteen
!
all great violinists, he virtuoso tasks. In on concentrated his earliest in had, youth, Ernst's 'Othello' Wilhelm to play Heinrich particular, he liked
an unforgettable experience for me. Like
as well
Fantasy, which is almost completely forgotten nowadays, is that composer's Violin Concerto in F sharp minor. But he soon
turned to worthier tasks. In the development of modern violin playing he has, as it were, ntervened with his characteristic primacy of the spirit over 31
CARL FLESCH musical history, he survives in the first technique; and in general have a large-scale reformer of programme-maldng. place as
We
to
remember
was the period of operatic fantasies, mazurkas and so forth, of the tyranny of the
that this
polonaises,* elegies, salon piece, if we want to appreciate his courage in expecting his audiences to sit through the Bach Chaconne, the Violin Concertos
of Bach, Mozart and Beethoven, the Schumann Fantasy for and orchestra, and indeed even his own 'Hungarian' Concerto. He had to renounce all easy and cheap success, the
violin
enormous demands his stature was programmes made on the average listener, Joachim's from the outset of his career, this only proves generally recognized succeeded in educating the public and raising that he had acclaim of the broad masses.
its
quickly standards to his
own.
If,
We
despite the
owe
it
above
all
to
him
that the
virtuoso for virtuosity's sake came to be relegated to an inferior that the music itself was promoted to the first place. position,
von Bulow, too, began to reshape his piano programmes in a similar way. Thus the primacy of the musical over the virtuoso element was established on a firm basis Stimulated by Joachim, Hans
which, ever
proved unshakeable. Thanks to the high of Joachim's art, the virtuoso developed, within a
since, has
ethical ideals
mere thirty years, from his early nineteenth-century position of an entertainer to that of an artist who wished to be primarily regarded as a mediator between the work and the listener. As a violinist per se, we remember Joachim as a supremely comoutstanding figure although owing to his over-numerous an unmistakable he showed mitments in all possible spheres
We
technical deterioration at a relatively early stage. who tell us that in his early days
believe the historians
above
all
his rivals.
But on the other hand
certainly
he towered,
we know
that, for
instance, the unjustly forgotten Ferdinand Laub [1832-75], of Joachim used to say that he played the 'Hungarian'
whom
Concerto better than the composer himself, was cally his equal; that Wilhelmj later surpassed
at least techni-
him in both beauty of ^
*In his History of Viennese Concert Life, HansHck writes of this era that there was hardly a concert programme without one of Joseph Mayseder's [17891863]
popular Polonaises.
32
VIENNA [1883-1890] sound and racy virtuosity; and that the smooth technique, sweet tone and pure intonation of the Sarasate of the 'eighties ousted Joachim, purely as a violinist, from his leading position, though we must not forget that he more than compensated for his
by his unique spiritual and musical superiority. such could be described as rather cool; it needed
technical defects
His tone
as
from within before it stirred the listener, and was thus extremely dependent on his own mood. The outstandingly brilliant features of his technical equipment were an incredibly
inspiration
1
racy mordent, a pithily rhythmic 'Spohr staccato' (as distinct from the extremely rapid and stiff 'Wieniawski staccato') 2 and
extremely subtly differentiated ordinary and thrown spiccatos, which he very originally described as 'rain' and 'hail' respectively. Judging from the difficulties of his 'Hungarian' Concerto, moreover, his general double-stopping technique must also have been equal to the greatest demands in earlier years. Joachim seems to have been prevented from regular practice by his travels, his quartet playing, teaching, administrative duties and social obligations. As a result, he showed from his fiftieth year onwards a high degree of nervousness when he had to cope with solo tasks, so that for example he very seldom achieved his full
powers in the first movement of the Beethoven Violin Concerto; only in the second movement did the greatness of his personality md skill fully manifest itself. As he grew older, moreover, his strikingly unreliable, often forcing him to uterrupt his performance. From his sixtieth year, therefore, he
memory became
ievoted himself almost exclusively to quartet playing and, despite lis rather disturbing mechanical inhibitions, led the field there mtil his death, with a capacity for musical empathy that amounted ;o
genius.
bowing technique requires detailed discussion, not of the German >nly because it came to determine the development riolin school from the middle of the nineteenth century, but also Finally, his
Because
it
of his provides a transition to an appreciation
activities
See footnote 4 on p. 20. In bis Art of Violin Playing (Vol. I, p. 69), Hesch observes that 'neither Joachim tor Sarasate were masters of a normal staccato*, whose 'importance with regard to echnique as a whole should not be exaggerated*. 1
33
CARL FLESCH as a teacher. Joachim played with the then usual lowered upper arm, which necessarily .involved a right-angle relationship between the hand and the forearm at the nut. The bow was held by
the fingertips, the index finger touched the stick at the line of the top joint, while the little finger remained on the stick even at the point, all this as a result
forearm
at
of the unsatisfactory pronation of the
The change of bow at the fingers by means of a combined
the upper half of the bow.
nut was accomplished with
stiff
movement, very difficult to describe, consisting of a horizontal jerk of the wrist and a slightly rotating movement of the forearm. In my opinion Joachim's bowing was a purely personal affair, an intuitive
motional translation of a thoroughly individual expres-
The error started only when his followers and pupils attempted, on the basis of this personal and even physiologically defective style, to found a school whose principles claimed 1 universal validity. Emanuel Wirth [I842-I923] and his colleagues made the purely horizontal wrist movement the key to bowing technique altogether. Since, however, this movement had nowise sive need.
been provided for by nature, and hence was unnatural in the true sense of the word, it was not surprising that the majority of the students thus maltreated contracted
arm troubles and, as violinists,
Of
became
the smaller proportion cripples for life. succeeded in surviving this torture, the
of pupils
who
majority turned into the type of Joachim pupil of mediocre quality well known in orchestras and conservatoires, while a minimal number of especially talented fiddlers
succeeded in casting off the
strait
jacket into
which they had been thrust, and developed to a higher stage. But in the forty years of his activity, Joachim never trained a single violinist who achieved world fame, though during the years when he was its director, the Berlin Hochschule formed a centre at which the world's strongest talents assembled, him with providing
2 the best possible material. People like Halif Hess, Petri, Eldering, Klingler, Berber, Gregorowitsch, Wietrovecz, Wittenberg, ,
Havemann
etc.
were mostly
talents
x
of the
first
rank,
who
did not
Viola player in the Joachim Quartet, where he succeeded Edward Rappoldiin 1877, the year when, also at Joachim's request, he became professor for violin at the Berlin Hochschule. (Seep. 31.) 2
Henri Wilhelm, the father of Egon.
34
VIENNA [1883-1890] development only because from the beginning their had been thrust into a false path by this tragical wrist technique mania. Joachim himself is really innocent, for he never made any pretensions to be a teacher of basic principles. He was the ideal type of a training teacher, the playing teacher par excellence who influenced by his example, which, however, he was unable to analyse and explain purely rationally. Only those whose technical training was firmly established could profit by his teaching. His performances were distinguished by a poetic quality which, once one had experienced it, accompanied one all one's life. Marsick and Hubay, for instance, were thus affected; and I, too, have been unable all my life to free myself from the memory of his interpretation of certain works. But here again ky the danger of a repression of the pupil's individuality if, that is, he remained too long exposed to Joachim's seductive influence. As teachers, achieve
<
full
towering individualities usually are vampires
who
suck out their
pupils' personality.
All in
all
Joachim achieved no very beneficial effects as a he could have made up for his lack of a pure
teacher. Possibly
teaching talent by enlisting outstanding preparatory teachers, who :ould have supplied him with pupils technically perfected and ;hus ready for his specific spiritual and musical influence. But as
head of an
:he
institution
he seems to have been too
Dy the advice of others. There can be
easily swayed no other explanation for the
ircumstance that around 1900 such teachers
as
Hess, Petri,
and Wendling were employed omewhere in Germany, while the education of the young generation in Berlin was entrusted to Wirth, Moser, Markees,
ildering
nd Exner. As a result,
all
in smaller institutes
in the last seventy years the Franco-Belgian
and the Russian schools have achieved an indubitable superiority 1 over the German in world opinion. A similar state of affairs ^seems to have obtained in the other teaching departments instead :
2 Robert Hausmann was
in of Julius Klengel and Hugo Becker, was of singing pupils charge of the 'cello class, while the training 1
This was written in the early 'thirties. From 1879 until Joachim's death in 1907 he was a
2
Quartet (see p, 31).
G.F.-D
35
member of the Joachim
CARL FLESCH entrusted to Frau Schulzen-Asten, though there was a Julius Stockhausen available. And the teachers of composition, Heinrich
[1843-1900], Friedrich Kiel [1821-85], and Ernst F. K. Rudorff [1840-1916], took care to ensure that no blow into the fusty draught from the new-German school should
von Herzogenberg
atmosphere of epigonic mediocrity. As a composer, too, Joachim was an exceptional talent. It is Concerto in the Hungarian hardly astonishing that in view of his Style,
which
is
a
work of genius, Brahms regarded him as more work marks a climax in our literature; it
This gifted than himself.
the most outstanding creation that a violinist has ever written for his own instrument. The E minor Variations for violin and is
though several degrees more conventional, still an exceptional place in violin literature. But his activities occupy in the concert hall and Hochschule soon crippled Joachim's orchestra, too,
creative urge
to
Brahms's profound disappointment. Joachim the
composer seems to us like a meteor whose magnitude we can only divine from the brilliant trail of the 'Hungarian' Concerto and the Variations.
Joachim too time-bound as a composer, we must profoundly admire his cadenzas. That for the first movement of the Brahms Concerto is a masterpiece of which Brahms himself might have been proud, a paraphrase of the themes which If many consider
all
no equal in the relevant literature. The cadenzas for the Beethoven, Mozart and Viotti Concertos can likewise be regarded as models of their kind. Joachim's editions, on the other hand, are open to criticism. At times he left far too many fingerings and* bowings to discretion, as in the case of the Corelli and Beethoven Sonatas, which are hardly distinguishable from the original text. On the other hand, in the Violinschule bearing his name and in the Bach Sonatas he succumbed all too easily to the influence of his has
collaborator Andreas Moser;
many of the fingerings and bowing^
bear the stamp of a personality theoretically well-versed, but and reactionary; for Moser was really
practically inexperienced
one of the weakest violinists who emerged from the Joachim* and he hardly got a chance to acquaint himself personally with the pitfalls of playing in public. The unbiassed observer must school,
36
VIENNA [1883-1890] therefore find that while
we owe
to
Joachim epoch-making
changes in the ethical and musical aspects of virtuosodom, he has not advanced its purely technical side. This latter task was reserved for others, for Jakob Dont [1815-88], Henry Schradieck [18461918], Emile Sauret [1852-1920], Otakar Sevcik [1852-1934], and grhaps also for myself.
Conducting was decidedly the weakest of Joachim's musical talents. Like his friend Brahms, he was far too unshowy to express his personality by way of the baton. In regard to his intellectual and moral was an exception among contemporary spondence shows notwithstanding his
character, too,
Joachim
violinists, as his
corre-
obstinate rejection of his Wagner, susceptibility to the influence of his inferiors and a somewhat jealous attitude towards other artists and schools. Fritz Kreisler, for instance, had a sensational success when he made his debut in Berlin in 1898. His name was on all lips. It was felt that with him a new era was beginning in the history of violin
playing.
him
Now one of Kreisler's friends, a pupil ofJoachim, invited
to visit Joachim's class.
politeness,
Joachim received
Kreisler
without indicating by a single word that he
with icy
knew who
was no accompanist present Kreisler and carried it through with the had verve which always distinguished his piano phenomenal end lesson At the of the Joachim took leave of the great playing. 'You certainly are a ready the classic sentence: violinist with the visitor was.
As
there
offered to undertake this function,
pianist.'
Joachim was not happy in his marriage. He thought he had grounds for doubting the legitimacy of his youngest daughter. The divorce proceedings which he instituted were decided against him, since his wife, the famous singer Amalie Joachim, declared her fidelity to .
him on
handling of this
oath.
affair.
Brahms never forgave him the public
When
far
advanced in
his sixties
Joachim
the singer Melba; he even wanted to passionately in love with But her. Melba, according to reliable contemporary remarry fell
ports, did
not take him
seriously.
Joachim went on giving public performances until shordy before his death, at the age of seventy-six. He was, and will always 37
CARL FLESCH remain, one of the greatest figures, a landmark in the history of
our
art.
all who played the violin during the last quarter of the nineteenth century, Pablo de Sarasate [1844-1908] was a magic name, and even more: he stood for aesthetic moderation,
For
euphony, and technical perfection slightly superficial emotionas if he was a supernatural phenomenon from a ally. With awe, wonderland for ever inaccessible to us, we boys looked up to the small, black-eyed Spaniard with the well-trimmed, coal-black moustache and equally black, curly, over-carefully arranged hair. His features were regular, only the lower jaw was rather long in
relation to the upper part of his face. It was a unique experience to see this little man stride on to the platform with genuine Spanish
grandeza, superficially calm, even phlegmatic, to witness how, after some stereotyped movements, he began to play with unheard-
ofsovereignty and, in a rapid climax, put his audience into astonishment, admiration and highest rapture. I knew Sarasate much better than Joachim, both personally
Ysaye summed him up when
and
as a violinist.
once in Amsterdam in the
course of a conversation he said to me: 'C'est lui qui nous a appris a jouer juste.' (It is he who taught us to play exactly.) From him,
modern
and and fluency brilliance were considered the most important thing. Sarasate had been Alard's pupil at the Paris Conservatoire, and seems to have vegetated for quite some time as a popular salon player in Paris. The programmes of the spa concerts at Baden-Baden from the in fact, dates the reliability,
middle of the to
striving after technical precision
whereas before him a somewhat
'sixties still
facile
acting as a stop-gap who had a classical sonata and maybe play the
show him
open the concert with
obbligato violin for the singing star. It was only when he made debut in Vienna in 1876 that he caused an enormous sensation
his
and thus
one stroke became a European celebrity. With the effortless function of both his arms, he represented a completely new type of violinist. The fingertips of his left hand were quite smooth and ungrooved; they hit the fingerboard in a normal fashion, without excessive raising or hammering. His vibrato was rather broader than had hitherto been customary. at
precise and
38
VIENNA [1883-1890] Following an absolutely correct if unconscious principle, he conbowing first and foremost a means of producing the kind of tone which he regarded as ideal, and which was of a sidered his
pleasant and elegant smoothness, free from any extraneous noises, but at the same time unintensive and a little indifferent emotion-
an expression of his own fundamental character. ally label of 'sweet' tone, which hung around his neck all his
not so
But life,
the
was
much
the result of an inner need as of a technical peculiarity. In later years, I had occasion to establish this fact beyond
doubt: when, during my Bucharest period, he spent a whole week in music the Rumanian making Queen's salon, I was able to study his from a of two yards above him, distance bowing technique where I sat in a small gallery. I found that his stroke held constantly and firmly to the exact middle between the extreme regions of the bridge and the fingerboard, and hardly ever approached the as we where, know, a characteristic oboe-like bridge, intensity
can be achieved.
Sarasate's effect
on
his audiences
depended, in the first place, on the complete lack of friction in his tone production, a circumstance which today, in the age of a Heifetz,
would hardly impress were
us so strongly, but
which
when
then,
used to 'scraping' fiddlers, was regarded as It was not given to him to touch deeper strings absolutely unique. in the listeners' minds, except in his very own field that of listeners
still
Spanish dances, which he played inimitably.
Among his most were those of the now completely forgotperformances 3 ten Fee d Amour by Raff, Saint-Saens' and Bruch's concert and genre pieces, Ries* Suites and, above all, of his own compositions. It goes without saying that the last movement of the Mendelssohn Concerto came from his bow in a multicoloured pyrotechnic brilliant
He was, incidentally, the only violinist whom I ever heard play the flying, thrown staccato of this movement at the extreme point of the bow.1 As an interpreter of the Beethoven display.
Concerto, on the other hand, he was impossible. Later on, in Paris,
%L
Art of Violin Playing (Vol. I, p. 77), Flesch writes: 'The Flying Staccato combination of the martele staccato with the "thrown" or 'springing" staccato bowing, inasmuch as a number of short notes are produced . It is ?y a single bow-stroke, while the bow leaves the string after each note. . ised almost exclusively in the middle, although I know of some rare examples of his
sractically represents a
.
39
CARL FLESCH I
heard him play, for the
first
time, Schubert's
B
minor Rondo,
the violin transcription of Dvorak's Slavonic Dances and one of his fortes Saint-Saens' Concert Piece. 1 For chamber music he
When he visited Vienna he always with who took second violin, and during Griin, played quartets in I also had the my stay Rumania, opportunity to play second violin with him in several Beethoven Quartets. At the same time I also heard him play Bach Sonatas for clavier and violin. For this cherished an unrequited love.
kind of music he had the shy respect which Romance artists tend to show in face of everything classical: his interpretations were scrupulous and musical, but dry and lacking in imagination. years his art began to evince two unpleasant symptoms: he played sharp, and he lost his vibrato a typical
With advancing
I heard him for the last time in Bucharest in 1902; both grown older meanwhile, and since 1886 the artistic distance between us had considerably narrowed. No wonder that
sign of old age.
we had
him
more
childhood; Ysaye, soberly than in too, had meanwhile emerged, and for us younger artists he was a I
listened to
far
my
revelation.
In the course of the years
I
had only three opportunities to
come
into closer personal contact with Sarasate. The first time, while I was still a pupil at the Paris Conservatoire, he invited
me
through a mutual acquaintance to play the fourth violin in Svendsen's Octet during a musical tea in his Paris home. Thus encouraged, I asked him after some time whether I might play something over to him. He appointed an early hour in the morn-
When I arrived at his home he appeared not to be up yet, and kept me waiting a long time, during which I had an oppor-
*
ing.
tunity to admire his remarkable collection of snuff-boxes,
them
presents
from princely personages. At
the utmost neglige, begged
my
last
most of he appeared in
pardon and asked me to play he made his toilet in the^
something while, quite unembarrassed,
charming flying staccato at the extreme point.' Curiously enough, these 'rare examples' are not mentioned in the original German edition of the work (where, on the other hand, the reasons are given why the point and the nut are unsuitable'for^' this bowing) : Hesch must have remembered Sarasate and one or two others when revising his treatise for translation.
above, Flesch
is
speaking of the Morceau de
40
concert,
op. 62.
.
VIENNA [1883-1890] next room.
I played part of Joachim's 'Hungarian' Concerto and some then Spanish dances, accompanied by his impresario, Goldschmidt, who had meanwhile turned up. When anything interested him particularly, he became visible through the door to the next room, usually with his torso completely bare, and I observed the abnormally high arching of his chest, which provided a natural support for his violin and was the cause of its ideal
He expressed himself very flatteringly about my playing, but without making the least productive criticism. I met him the last time in Rumania, as I have already mentioned. He owned two
position.
magnificent Stradivarius violins: the 'Boissier', which, however, he never played, and one dating from 1725, which he used exclusively. He withdrew both violins from use for ever, by leaving
them
in his will to the
museums
in
Pamplona
(his birth-
and Paris
an ugly and petty step, considering that these place) achievements of the art of violin making are of the very supreme for musical practice. An artist with a genuine greatest importance
on the contrary, see to it during his lifethat his time favourite instrument be placed at the service of the social conscience should,
younger generation
after his death.
or one-sided powers of expression he had the very praiseworthy aspiration to build interesting programmes, in which he also included moderate moderns; but all his life he Despite his limited
never ventured on the Brahms Concerto. In his excuse
remember that even Ysaye did not include
this
work
we
must
in his reper-
toire until twenty-five years after its first appearance, and then he did so with reluctance. As a composer Sarasate was very prolific.
Quite early he reached a high goal with his Zigeunerweisen (Gipsy Melodies), probably the most popular and most grateful virtuoso piece of
all
time.
No
fewer than eight volumes of his Spanish
and correctly written paraphrases of Spanish folk songs and dances of intense melodic charm. There is no 'development'; invariably, we only find the bare themes, at times garnished with virtuoso runs, but with no other compositorial additions and that is as well, since as a professional and learned composer Sarasate would have been
'Dances appeared over the years.
They
unbearable. These dances are far too
41
are simple
little
considered by virtuosos,
CARL FLESCH
who nowadays much pot-pourri-like
prefer to play
Sarasate's
arrangements. in
its
perfumed and coiffured folk
simple
music,
lack of make-up, bears the same relation as a fresh, rosy-cheeked
charming our contemporary arrangements
infinitely
to
a peasant girl to
made-up
city lady.
But patience
!
His Spanish
have clotted
Dances will soon be 'rediscovered', when listeners their stomachs with the treated liqueur confectionery. Sarasate had far less success with his other compositions, in which he used
own
are inferior throughout, at technical studies in the mere or times vulgar, like the Tarantella, form of variations, like the Muniera. And yet he will I am sure
themes of his
invention.
They
of it dominate the virtuoso's repertoire with his Zigeunerweisen and his Spanish Dances much longer than many of his far more learned colleagues. Who today plays anything by his contemor porary Sauret or, going farther back, by Beriot, Alard, Sivori, dead all the of and fastest Prume? The dead ride fast, composing virtuosos.
In intellectual respects Sarasate was in the lower income He was what the French describe as 'simple d' esprit', a collector of snuff-boxes and walking-sticks. slightly obsessional, brackets.
Occasionally he delivered himself of amusingly simple aphorisms, which his friend and fellow countryman Fernandez Arbos1 passed
on to
his contemporaries. In the course of his fabulous of fortune he developed a ruthless indifference
career as a favourite
beggared description. An example from my own experience: Elisabeth, Queen of Rumania, wanted to give him a surprise during his stay in Bucharest, and to acquaint the author of the that
Hungarian Gipsy Melodies with Rumanian gipsy music. For this purpose she arranged for the finest gipsy band to play in the castle, and beside the guest of honour invited
a large
company. Sarasate
turned up unsuspecting, the beaming Queen informed him of the surprise she had prepared for him, and led him to the winter garden, where the orchestra was waiting. I was curious to hear his opinion, and attached myself to them.
He
nian national music for a few minutes, and *A
violinist
and conductor [1863-1939]
years.
42
listened to the Rumawhen the Queen asked
who was
Joachim's pupil for three
VIENNA [1883-1890]
him his <;a
P
(It's
impressions he answered quite drily: 'Mais, c'est mauvais pretty bad
!)
While Joachim through his personality and his
art set his
stamp
the world of the vioHn for half a century and educated it towards a radical change in the customary conception of art,
on
Sarasate influenced his violinist contemporaries for no longer than twenty-five years. His influence was partly beneficial, partly
harmful; for whereas his living example resulted in a far higher demand for purity of intonation and tone and raised the technical
of violin playing by several degrees, his continually mild, passionless, smooth, eely tone production brought into fashion a level
certain worldly-wise,
the
oncoming young
weary
whose hypnotic effect on was almost irresistible until Ysaye's
elegance,
violinists
appearance. His influence was so enduring that everybody
who
had once succumbed to it found it thereafter extremely difficult to free himself from it. As late as 1914 I was able to discern clear traces of this influence in the playing of Franz Kneisel in New York. I, too, long had the tendency to slip into Sarasate's style, heard him play. Here, as in all especially in pieces I had often imitation, the danger was that whereas in the original certain faults were inevitable and even lovable characteristics of the style as a whole, in the copy these same faults became unbearably magnified and coarsened, for they no longer complemented the valuable peculiarities of the original. Sarasate's personality would have appeared incomplete without his amiable phlegm. But the same quality, grafted on to another individual, aroused the imwith an unconscious pression of an aping affectation, coupled falsification of the player's own way of feeling. Thus it can be said that Sarasate's influence
epoch-making expression. :>f
on the development of violin playing was in matters of
technically, but not unobjectionable all is said and done, however, he remains
When
one
the greatest and most individual figures of the nineteenth the ideal embodiment of the salon virtuoso of the greatest
:entury, the history style;
without him. So
of modern violin playing cannot be imagined far as I am aware, he never practised as a
teacher.
At
a
becoming
distance
from 43
these
two
giants there was,
CARL FLESCH amongst the
violinists
I
heard
at
the time,
above
all
Cesar
Thomson [1857-1932], who, like Ysaye and Marsick, was brought into existence in the fiddlers' hot-bed of Liege. As a curio, the little-known fact may be mentioned that for several years towards
the middle of the 'seventies, Ysaye and he sat together at the first desk of the Bilse Orchestra in Berlin, which was to grow into the
Philharmonic Orchestra hear, all you young virtuosos who regard the demand that you should spend some time in an orchestra as a :
serious insult
!
Thomson's variously judged importance in the history of violin playing is chiefly due to the fact that he initiated a renaissance of pure virtuosity some twenty years after the programme reform which Joachim had achieved; a renaissance which was to reach its culmination with Kubelik, only to die away again as quickly. True, as early as the 'seventies "Wilhelmj had attempted to bring Paganini back into fashion, but his example seems to have had few imitators; Joachim's cleansing effect on the taste of the public had too strong. Thomson only appeared upon the CentralEuropean scene in 1886, and meanwhile the excesses of the
been
far
'technical' age, i.e. the first half
of the nineteenth century, had
sunk into oblivion. His strength lay in the so-called 'fingered octaves', a speciality which was regarded with reverential awe; legend had it that no ordinary mortal, but only a technical genius could play them. In my teaching, I have thoroughly disposed of this prejudice, as my pupils show. On the basis of a method which
much
doesn't take for that,
time to
practise,
and
is
none the
less rational
nowadays possible for every violinist to acquire the 1 necessary technical facility for fingered octaves, if he so desires. But at that time Thomson was regarded as a when his it is
magician
octaves rolled up and
simple
scale.
down under
his fingers at the
He had deliberately remained faithful to
pace of a
the old style
of bowing with lowered upper arm and a right-angle relationship between forearm and wrist at the nut, whereas his two close fellow countrymen Ysaye and Marsick had long since scrapped this survival of a His tone was past age. big, but inflexible and cold; his style of interpretation musically correct 1 See The Art of Violin Playing, Vol. I, pp. 43 f.
44
though dry. His
VIENNA [1883-1890] performances were extraordinarily uneven. la 1897 I heard him dispose of three-quarters of his programme in a sovereign manner,
when he came
F he wanted to pull his listeners' legs. Ten years later in Amsterdam, I heard him again play strikingly out of tune. With the best will in the world it was not possible for whereas
sharp minor,
it
seemed
to the final item, Ernst's Concerto in
as if
me
to be very enthusiastic about him; his other contemporaries appear to have reacted similarly. He was respected without being
on closer view one even had to pity him. In his career he had been pursued by a tragic fate; that fate was named Ysaye. By the middle of the 'eighties Thomson was famous. Five years loved; and
Ysaye appeared a heavy blow for Thomson, who thereby lost the title of the greatest Belgian violinist. Now he tinned mainly to teaching and took over Ysaye's place in the Brussels Conservatoire: Ysaye had resigned because of his unprecedented successes as a soloist. During and after the World War, Thomson in 1932. taught in Italy and Italian Switzerland; he died at Lugano After his brilliant start he had run on a sandbank, from which he never floated off. Through Ysaye the world had come to know a kind of Belgian violin playing that was related to Thomson's as later
genius is to talent.
His lanky appearance had a somewhat monkish, aesthetic his face, already a long shape by nature, quality in his youth; he made a further still seemed protracted by an oval beard. Thus
somewhat uncanny,
fantastic impression
on
the public
as
was
appropriate to a true Paganini interpreter. Thomson was one of the few concert-giving violinists of his
time
who
took his teaching seriously and devoted a krge part of But when we consider the results of his fifty years or
his life to it
we find
only two violinists of importance 1 Albert Spalding [b. I888] method who 2 The average of his pupils and Paul Kochanski [i 887-1934] not above that of the Joachim school. As a teacher he
so
of teaching
activity,
the value of his testify to
-
is
.s
certainly said to have
nolence. 1
His
been conscientious, but brutal to the extent of was like his playing: bizarre and
teaching
American violinist and composer. and teacher who settled in U.S.A. in the 'twenties
'Polish violinist
45
(see p. 540).
CARL FLESCH one-sided.
the
first
At times he had ideas that showed genius. Perhaps he was
who
attempted to correct faulty vibratos through
method
gym-
was
further developed by Achille the other hand, Rivarde [1865-1940] and perfected by myself. one of his pupils showed me some handwritten exercises of his
nastic exercises, a
that
On
which moved quite unoriginally along Sevcik's lines of thought. Thus the 'Thomson pupil' has not become a well-defined concept, and he himself, despite his incontestably high qualities, cannot be considered a necessary element in the development of our
was an
odd man
outsider, deliberately The traces that he left in
fired' genius.
out,
our
art.
He
something of a 'mis-
art are already difficult
Only twice did I come into close personal contact with him. The first time I was thirteen years old, and Griin introto recognize.
duced
him.
I played Vieuxtemps's second Air varie. himself expressed very favourably about my prospects. before his death I met him again, on the occasion of a years
his class to
Thomson
Two
I gave at Lugano, after which we sat together over a glass of beer; he left on me an unhappy, embittered impression and railed at all the younger violinists, especially Thibaud; nor did he say anything about my own performance: I have to assume that
concert
it
didn't please him In those days the
much
either.
Czech Franz (Frantisek) Ondricek [1859-1922] was the most outstanding violinist of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. Between 1880 and 1900 he certainly was a violinist of great stature, a mixture of French training and Slavonic individuality. Over the years I heard him perhaps half a dozen times, and thus obtained a good view of the various phases of his development. In his prime he was an excellent technician, had a noble tone full of vitality, was spirited and fiery and played with true and spontaneous feeling. I have retained a most beautiful memory of an extraordinarily inspired interpretation of Dvorak's 1 unjustly forgotten Romance for violin and orchestra, op. n. His decline, like that of so many violinists, began surprisingly early. The last time I heard him was at Amsterdam, when he played the Brahms Concerto under Mengelberg. He was then only forty-
six. I
could not understand
why 46
the solo violin
was always a
VIENNA [1883-1890] quaver ahead of the orchestra and why the conductor, who usually showed such great presence of mind, did not follow the soloist. I did not know that he had asked Mengelberg to hold him back throughout, because of late he no longer possessed sufficient self-control to keep in tempo During the last twenty years of his life Ondficek hardly ever played in public. Yet he is unjustly !
forgotten the present generation hardly knows his name at all for he doubtless was one of the most interesting violinists of
know
nothing about his teaching at Vienna during of his life. In 1909, years together with a certain Dr S. 1 2 Mittelmann, he published a work on left-hand technique, in which one finds the bold assertion that the key to the achievement of a powerful technique lies in the capacity for abnormal stretches. Asked by the Peters Edition for an opinion on the pedagogical value of this theory, I declared it to be false, since it violently exaggerated the normal distance between the fingers, which is so necessary for purity of intonation. In addition, the practice of the method in question could easily injure the hand. The publisher was not to be stopped from printing the work, and his day. I
the
last
unfortunately
able to establish in the course
to apply his
as I
was often
years. If Ondficek
attempted not sur-
my prediction proved entirely true,
method
of the
in the course
of his teaching,
it is
prising that he achieved no educational success at all. However, among the 'miracle-workers' who claim to be able to eliminate
by means of a single pill, he was a laudable exception to the extent that he himself could fiddle, and quite superbly at all
inhibitions
that.
One day there was great excitement among us students: the word went round, 'Wilhelmj will be playing here shortly; we
We
were punctually in at least be present at the rehearsal.' the tunnel in the morning and heard Joachim's former rival rehearse the Beethoven Concerto with the orchestra, and with
must
the music in front of him.
It
must have been very mediocre, for
A medical man. *Neue Methode zur Erlemung der Meistertechnik des Violinspiels auf anatomischMethod of Achieving Technical Mastery in Violin ohysiologischer Grundlage (New in two parts, with an appendix Playing on an Anatomical and Physiological Basis), rf fifteen studies by Ondficek. X
47
CARL FLESCH his playing left
not the
least
impression on me. For that matter,
1
WiUielmfs picture in the history of our art is heavily blurred. doubt the chief reason is his fragile artistic development. He
No
gave up giving concerts earlier than any other great violinist; hardly forty, he devoted himself exclusively to teaching. The opinions that have come down to us about how he played in his prime contradict each other. Moser is certainly prejudiced, for
Wilhelmj was the 'red rag' to Joachim. Nothing could provoke Joachim more to fury than if someone dared to play in his presence the Wilhelmj transcription of the Bach Air, transposed
C major, and all on the G string too.* Also, Wilhelmj had early on joined the new-German Wagnerian movement which was so loathsome to Joachim; he was Bayreuth's first orchestral leader. While his supporters praised his unprecedented big tone, his opponents maintained that he owed it only to an abnormally 2frequent change of bow. His appearance, typically Alemannic to
Romanic,
as
well
as
his
audiences in his favour.
was due
It
bearing, immediately prejudiced his said that his early artistic decline
was
Rhine wine (he himself came of stock). In London, to which he
to his passion for strong
an old wine-growing peasant
*On the occasion of a series ofJoachim quartet recitals in Paris at the beginning of the century, a passionate admirer of Capet gave a musical soiree ostensibly in honour of the German master, but in reality in order to let him hear Capet. The evening fell under an unlucky star. It began by the hostess introducing Capet with the words, 'Allow me, dear master, to present to you the French Joachim.,* which immediately put him, who attributed no value whatever to being regarded as the German Capet in his native country, in a bad humour. Now Capet played* Bach's Chaconne, probably hardly in Joachim's spirit, and when it was over, Joachim
said to the expectant
Capet
flatly:
'Couldn't
you
rather play something
typically French, a piece characteristic of your nationality?' Instead of following this suggestion, Capet hit on the unhappy idea of playing the Bach Air in the
;
Wilhelmj arrangement. Joachim grew more and more restless and, when Capet had finished, he flew into a rage, to the horror of all present, completely lost his self-control, and shouted in the utmost indignation at the unfortunate violinist: *My dear sir, how can you as a musician have the tastelessness to play such a$ shameless falsification of a work by Bach?' Capet burst into tears, and the guests present considered rightly or wrongly that Joachim's outburst was out of all proportion to the importance of the issue. [Meanwhile, the Air on the String * has become an established solo piece, played rightly or wrongly in the
G
highest
musical 2
circles.
Tr.]
Geographically speaking, the region covered Switzerland.
by south-west Germany and
VIENNA [1883-1890] he gathered a large circle of pupils around him. But knowledge no outstanding violinist owed his training to
later retired,
to
my
him.
He
successfully arranged Wagner themes for violin under of 'Paraphrases'. The arrangement of the first movement of Paganini's D major Concerto which appeared under his name
the
is,
title
however, attributed on good authority to the authorship of
Max
the American
1
Vogrich.
He was
the
first
to recognize the
new Italian violin makers Rocca and Pressenda, whose instruments he bought in large numbers. He recommended them to his pupils, and thus drove their price up ten or twenty
importance of the
times.
Altogether, we, posterity, are
somewhat perplexed by the
was August Wilhelmj, He died the year after Joachim, but had been off the platform for twenty years. Joachim was sixty-four years before the public; Wilhelmfs career as a that
phenomenon
spanned barely twenty-five years. Great artistry needs an extended period of time for its development. Precocity is not soloist
maturity.
Towards the end of
Ysaye visited the with Wieniawskf s city for the first time. He made his debut D major Concerto in the Philharmonic concerts, and followed it
up with
my
studies in Vienna,
a recital. His appearance
next chapter, 2
1 shall
was a revelation to us
be dealing with him
the smaller-scale violinists,
Among
who
all.
In the
at length. I
heard Teresina Tua
active as a violin time of writing teacher in Rome. At that time she was a charming young girl with a seductive smile, which she turned on to the public when [b. 1866],
at the
she muffed a passage.
is still
The
violinist
Tivadar Nachez [1859-1932]
who came from Budapest and settled in London, now known
as
an arranger of old violin concertos, also presented his card in the Bosendorfer Hall. Of the German violinists I heard the GermanBohemian Halir [1859-1909] and one Waldemar Meyer, a pretty poorly
gifted,
Far above
but highly vocal, Joachim pupil.
all
these
was the
still
youthful Arnold Rose [1863-
1 i852-i9i6. Originally an Austrian. He came to but I can find no evidence of American nationality. pp. 78 .
49
live,
and died, in
New York,
CARL FLESCH 1946], the desk colleague
and deputy
soloist
of my teacher Griin.
He is worth while considering more at length. The outward circumstances of his life are quickly told. Rose's name was originally Rosenbaum he was born at Jassy in Rumania. lessons as a child from Heissler at the Vienna ConAfter ;
taking
under Massart, then the most famous teacher in the world. A Viennese stockbroker and amateur of the violin named Spielmann introduced him to the master. Rose, who was then sixteen years old, played Bach's servatoire,
he went to Paris
to study
who
in the following expressed his opinion votre words: 'Vous jouez tres bien du violon, mais jeu ressemble !' a une belle fleur sans (You play the violin very well, but
Chaconne
to Massart,
parfum
your playing
is
like a beautiful flower
tears at
without perfume.) The
wounding judgment, burst into and could not be persuaded to accept lessons from Massart He went straight back to Vienna, where lie had
youthful Rose, shattered
any
by
this
price.
of being an up-and-coming celebrity. already had the reputation directorate of the Vienna Opera was highly the time that at Just dissatisfied
with Grtin
as a soloist,
and was seeking
a
means of
making it possible to keep him as leader without being compelled to allow him to play the solos. So they made Rose the deputy leader and
first soloist.
1
Soon
after
and from then on he devoted
Rose started a string quartet, and quartet
his life to orchestral
he appeared but occasionally. His career was playing; as a soloist 2 one of die longest in the history of violin playing. As a quartet to Hellmesberger in the esteem of the player he was the successor Viennese public. When Gustav Mahler was director of the Vienna
Court Opera he followed this master's highly controversial and thin. He married Mahler's sister, and had genius through thick
two
children,
who
also chose the musical profession.
Rose was the type of natural, versatile, unintellectual Viennese music-maker. His style was that of the 'seventies, with no concession to modern tendencies in our art. His strongest suit was in changes of position. unquestionably his absolute certainty
The
History repeated itself when Mahler made Franz Schmidt the desk colleague the unofficial solo 'cellist. "cellist Friedrich Buxbaum 2 Close on seventy years. 1
of the principal
50
VIENNA [1883-1890] 1 purity of his intonation was proverbial. His
scales, runs,
and
passage work, moreover, showed an outstandingly fluent lefthand technique. His vibrato was noble if a little thin; in his later
an unavoidable tendency in old rime to counteract it age good by means of studies. His appropriate gymnastic bowing technique was dis2 tinguished above all by his skill at 'tone spinning', and he was equal to all, even the most complicated bowings. Against these virtues has to be set an habitual orchestral attack, i.e. noisy impacts of the bow at the nut, which with time became second nature to him. On the interpretative side the highest was due to Bis it
years,
gradually degenerated
if no steps are taken in
power of phrasing,
praise the absolute certainty with which he always
found the right kind of dynamic and agogical 3 expression. An ideal orchestral leader, irresistibly carrying the others with him, an infallible sight-reader, an unfailing support to the conductor, he
when
at the helm of the orchestra, even was closest to his heart. In his though quartet playing programme he acted as a building, too, pioneer, opening the way for the later Brahms, Reger, the earlier Schoenberg and many others. His gifts as a soloist, which originally were certainly extraordinary (I particularly remember an excellent performance of the Goldmark
perhaps gave his best
Concerto) did not
come
to full fruition,
to his time-
owing
and chamber-musical activities. He related consuming with pride that Ysaye said to him one day, 'Quelle chance pour nous autres que vous n'ayez pas choisi la carriere de soliste' orchestral
(What luck career)
;
you did not choose
for us others that
generally,
he spoke quite readily of
qualities as a violinist, in a
manner disarming
in
his its
the soloist's
uncommon naivete.
I
do
not, however, believe that the aura of his style was sufficiently effective for a successful career as a soloist. His playing in itself
made
a
somewhat
prosaic impression
on many
listeners;
plays beautifully, but coldly,* people used to say during 1
He
2
Slow-motion bowing.
used to say, quite naively, hit the right notes.' a
*My fingers are so constructed
lntroduced by Hugo Riemann, than in English-speaking countries. that are part
this
that they always
more widely known
in
Gennanof tempo
is
and parcel of a living interpretation.
51
my years
to the small modifications
term
It refers
'Rose
CARL FLESCH of study in Vienna.
I
myself never shared
this impression.
Essen-
was purely musical; he did not belong to who put their 'feeling* on show as soon as they
his individuality tially,
those violinists
tune their instrument. His feeling required a worthy object, a to reveal itself an attitude of composition, in order significant
which Joachim had been a shining example. For Rose, as for all real artists, sound and technique were valued only as a means in the service of a higher idea. Such a conception is alien to all who are chiefly concerned with sensuous ear-tickling hence the legend of the
'cold'
Rose.
the age of about forty he started to teach, but without any he was quite ungifted as a teacher. As a man success.
At
Apparently
he was rather unpopular with his orchestral colleagues. He was said to be tyrannical, and the orchestral players never forgave him his unrestricted autocracy and the merciless supervision he organized under Mahler in a
somewhat uncomradely
fashion.
In
many of our professional colleagues he was a little primitive; his general education was elementary. His editions of classical works are pretty superficial and are litde used. intellectual respects, like so
He renewed his quartet fiequendy over the years, beginning with the unsurpassable 'cellist Hummer and the versatile viola player Bachrich, down to his most popular partners Fischer, Ruzitzka and Buxbaum, whose imperturbable Viennese humour
celebrated
cheerful orgies after every quartet evening. While in the total picture of Rose's personality light and shade were closely allied, the echo of his artistic activity will un-
doubtedly continue to sound long after his death. In any case he cannot be excluded from the history of Viennese musical life. He fructified it and stamped it with bis artistic personality. He will live in
our
memory
as the
most perfect and
versatile
type of
Viennese musician. After the
German annexation of Austria Rose was pensioned
off. I instituted
he was able to
a collection for him, with the result that in 1939 settle in
1
England.
Meanwhile, what was happening to me? In Griin's class gained an insight into a higher quality of playing. Hitherto Wliere he died in 1946.
1-
52
I
I
had had
VIENNA [1883-1890] advanced only as far as Viotti, Kreutzer and Rode, but now the worlds of Beethoven, Spohr, Vieuxtemps, Mendelssohn, Ernst, Joachim, Bruch and Brahms revealed themselves to me, while in the orchestra
I
was learning the classical symphonies and overWagner and various other operatic frag-
tures as well as a little
But
my general musical education left very much to be was excused from the choral class because my voice was breaking, I had little liking or gift for piano playing, and I was extremely neglectful of the harmony class. In addition, Hellmesments.
desired. I
berger's
music
open antipathy prevented
class: I
my taking part in the chamber
waited in vain for an invitation to the quartet.
My
was proceeding along a very tortuous path. During my first year I was considered a future celebrity; my tone possessed a natural bloom which, it was said, was reminiscent of Hellmesberger. 1 Imagination and feeling were development
as a violinist itself
unmistakably present in rny playing, whereas everything techniwas still undeveloped. I was small and frail, my hands were correspondingly weak, my little finger too short and without
cal
Only in later years did I succeed in largely eliminating organic defect by regular studies in fingered octaves. But at that time the constitutional condition of my left hand was still so strength. this
defective that Griin greatest bar to
my
was able
to point
it
career as a violinist.
out to
My
my father as
the
shakes and staccato
very primitive stage, and my teachers were unable to propose effective measures to improve them. The running sore of teaching at that time was the complete ignorance of
were likewise
at a
methods of study. After inadequate performances the was always 'try again' or 'more* study, without any disremedy cussion of the whys and hows. The quantity of practice was regarded as the criterion of virtue. Apparently nobody knew that logical analysis of the task would yield twice the result in half the rational
time.
No
wonder, then, that
as I
advanced to the higher
classes,
performances, at first highly promising, declined step by step. All that for which I later invented the phrase 'applied technique',
my
the utilization of general abilities for a special task, or in short die science of study, was an unknown notion to me. By present-
i.e.
^.e.
Joseph Hellmesberger
sen.
53
CARL FLESCH as a violinist would day standards a stocktaking of my position have evinced a highly unfavourable balance: on the positive side a certain natural dexterity coupled with a natural sense of sound and tone and a ear; on the negative side the lack of a solid
good
technical foundation, feeble fingers, too broad a vibrato, instead of legato, in short the absence of about habitual
an all
portato those things which really make up artistic violin playing. The usual method of teaching consisted of the kind of planless and advice in interpretation, in view of which purposeless primitive the question always arises whether the recommended manner of
performance is really
right,
and indeed, whether there can be any
instruction in this direction, whether it is not in generally valid fact interpretative differentiation according to different students' that ought to be the ideal of teaching. personalities In the third year
of my study Griin had me play the then highly Zarzicki at a concert. This marked the true popular Mazurka by as a soloist. My debut on the concert beginning of my career so terribly remained has vividly in my memory. I was platform I was played quite mechanically and unconsciously; over was the when and, suddenly piece pleasantly surprised awakening from my cataleptic trance, I heard my teacher's en-
scared that
I
comtwo While Concerto. my major
couraging words of praise. Some examination1 took place, in which petitive
months
later the I
annual
played the
first
movements of WieniawsH's D was unanimously awarded colleague Fraulein von Brennerberg distinction the same the first prize, I received only by a majority vote. In the course of the three years I had spent at the Conservatoire, then, I had only reached second pkce. I could not rid myself of the obscure feeling that something was not all it should be in
my artistic development. Meanwhile I had grown from boyhood to youth. My classical education was supervised by a medical student. Although I wassupposed to continue
my
high school (Gymnasial)
studies,
my
teacher proved very liberal in the selection of the subjects; he let Latin drop and favoured German literature, world history and all"
those subjects
which could be assumed
M.e. Flesch's final.
54
to interest an alert
and
VIENNA [1883-1890]
My
artistic young mind. intellectual horizon widened and created a free road for a higher education which was chiefly autodidactic, but based on solid foundations.
While I was at the Conservatoire my parents bought me a Dutch violin for 150 gulden from the music historian Eusebius Mandiczewski. I went on playing this instrument until I was able to acquire a Storioni violin in Paris. In those days in Vienna, one could still buy very good violins by the lesser-known Italian
masters for 300 gulden (about ^25 los). The violin trade the hands of old Gabriel Lembock, who himself made
instruments
was in
very good (Hellmesberger senior played solely on one of
Lembock's imitation Guarneris); of Bittner, Zach (who later invented a new method of treating violin wood a la Vuillaume, without, however, achieving a success with
it)
and, finally, the
1 greatest expert and most successful dealer of them all Voigt. In the middle of the 'eighties a first-class Stradivarius of the best
period could be bought for 6,000-12,000 gulden and a Guarneri (Guiseppe del Gesu) for 5,000-8,000 gulden. Amatis and Magginis obtained roughly the same price, while the great Italians of
second rank, such as Guadagnini, Montagnana, Joseph Guarneri, the son of Andrea, and Petrus 2 Guarneri were obtainable for
The minor Italians such as Gagliani or below the French Lupot or Vuillaume, and few hundred marks at the outside a golden age
1,000-2,000 gulden.
Grancino cost reached only a
far
young talents who wished to acquire a good Italian instrument at a low price. As for my activities as a teacher, I took my first pupil at the age of twelve: in Wieselburg I had a friend of my own age, named
for
foska,
who
played the violin and was a pupil of the fire brigade's whom I have already mentioned. At the time, I
band conductor
was already studying the art in an allegedly big way in Vienna. I aad far surpassed Joska, and his father decided to exploit my as a violinist and arranged for me to give his son superiority .essons
during the long vacation.
^The firm is now in London. 2 Pietro ('Peter of Venice*), as
distinct
When he asked me what my fee from
>fMantua').
55
his uncle
Hetro Giovanni
('Peter
CARL FLESCH
would be,
I
answered that
as
recompense for
my trouble, I would
compote after each lesson a kind of sweetmeat made from unripe nuts, of which I was passionately fond. So after each lesson I consumed my fee stantepede; I would not tolerate 'credit accounts'. Joska's father had his afternoon nap in the
take a plate of nut
next
room while I was
giving his son the lesson; nevertheless,
we
for he awoke perform our task without interruption, as soon as his boy stopped playing. However, I preregularly ferred to play myself rather than try to correct Joska's wrong
had
to
we
his father thought of the following trick: as could not see us from the next room, I myself played instead of my own mistakes with a very loud voice. In this
notes,
and so
Joska, correcting way all the participants tried
were helped except the pupil himself. I my incipient teaching ability on a few other children of my in Vienna, for a fee of fifty Kreuzer per hour; but not
own age until I
had passed out of the Conservatoire did I begin to teach, Most of my pupils were dilettantes, professionally.
so to speak,
with the exception of the violinist Paul Riesenfeld, who later became one of the most popular cinema conductors in America. Until I was about thirty-three, however, the giving of lessons
was a torture for me, a troublesome means of earning a me of time for my own studies. Not until living which robbed much later did I begin to realize what a noble mission a spiritual is the transmission of one's knowledge and experiusually
propagation ence to the younger generation: one can live again not only in one's children but also in one's pupils.
Meanwhile
Gyula had come to live in Vienna, to the university. We both went to live with our
my brother
study medicine at
toilsome existence by our grandmother and greatly relieved her contributions for rent. As she looked after us very well, and my brother and
new
lived in perfect harmony, I felt very happy in my sunroundings, studied diligently, and was able to meet part oi I
maintenance by means of my teaching activities. Free from the fetters of Conservatoire lessons, I tried independently tc
my
perfect myself as an artist; at the same time I occasionally played for teacher Grion for supervision as it were, at which times my
my
brother accompanied
me on
the piano. Although
56
my
powers
oi
VIENNA [1883-1890] judgment were not yet developed
my own
evaluate
performance,
reached a dead end in influence larly
and
would not
sufficiently to enable
could not help realizing
I
my artistic
me I
to
had
development, and that Griin's
get me beyond it.
I certainly practised regubut without extensively, rhyme, reason, or enjoyment.
Psychologically
I
who was enough but dry and dormant artistic emotions.
lacked the stimulation of a mentor
worthy of imitation.
Griin's style, musical
lacking in poetry, did not arouse Then there was the utter lack of prospects in the prevailing circumstances, as well as Hellmesberger's animosity and the re-
my
was
My
former rival Irene von Brennerberg, her situation, had gone to Paris immeaccurately summing up after her course at Vienna, and fantastic diately completing rumours circulated in Vienna about her artistic development.
stricted life I
What was more that the
leading.
natural than that
name of Paris had always
I
by the spell good Germans,
too, fascinated
exerted
on
all
began to have the ardent wish to continue my studies at the which the young Kreisler, covered with glory, had left a few years before. My father was -undecided. On the one hand he could not conceal from himself the fact that a change of artistic atmosphere would be of fundamental importance for the shaping institute
of my future, while on the other hand he recoiled from the enormous sacrifice that my stay in Paris would impose upon him. He was, after all, the father of six children, of whom the three lads were studying abroad, while he still had to scrape together the dowry for two girls. So long as I was not capable of earning my own living, he had to reckon with having to put at
my disposal over 3,000 francs a year; in other words more or less amount as his own household cost him. He eventually swallowed the bitter pill and pkced the education of his children above his own well-being. Nor could his confidence in the firmness of my moral principles have been limited: the thought that it was not really altogether safe to set a lad of sixteen on the Paris there pavements did not seem to bother him. At the same time, the same
was in Paris a merchant by the name of Maurus Deutsch, who came from Wieselburg, whom my father had known since his who had promised to look after me and help me in pouth, and 57
CARL FLESCH everything that concerned ance, too,
was
a
was
installation;
and in the summer of 1890
question.
my
my
monthly allow-
The fact,
to pass through his hands.
man they could trust in Paris was
parents,
then, that there
my
a great reassurance to transference was a settled
My life acquired a new meaning, and I was once more of
heart.
good
my
Four weeks before the date fixed for my departure, but lost my life in the Danube. Familiar with the
however, watery element from our I all
earliest
childhood,
we
youngsters as
swimmers were in the habit, without practised and exceptional to it, of swimming mostly outside the giving much thought
took us we swam right across the Danube despite its rushing current, had a short rest on bank and then returned to our starting-point. One the bathing establishment.
When
the
mood
opposite afternoon I once again undertook this trip without a companion, but owing to the high water I could not land on the opposite
bank and had to return without a moment of rest. I had not reckoned with the strength of the current which was the result of floods, and which carried me with unusual force towards a watermill which was working. I struggled desperately with the waves. Meanwhile visitors to the baths had noticed the danger in
was and with shouts encouraged me to extreme efforts. I already felt that my end was near and all my former life passed before my mind. But just before the critical moment I made a three metres from the superhuman effort and succeeded, barely out crawled and feet in completely exhausted mill, gaining my
which
I
on to the bank. in Vienna after 1 Looking back over the seven years that spent the picture of a joyless leaving my parental home, I see mainly in inhospitable, unhealthy soil and a domestic childhood
planted milieu of Httle moral value. lettantish at the outset,
My
training as a violinist
mechanical at a
later stage,
was
di-
and finally, just
ended in a pedantic narrowmindedness. Nevertheless, there were signs of a favourable inner development which had remained intact despite the unsatisfrom a simple, rural middlefactory external influences. Coming
when
class class.
it
should have become
artistic,
it
I had been drawn down into the lower urban middle Good Viennese society was virtually unknown to me. Years
home,
58
VIENNA [1883-1890] were to pass
until I
was able to
feel at
home
in cultivated circles.
while I did feel a decided, need to widen my was incapable of the necessary concentration. My personality displayed a remarkable assemblage of mutually contradictory characteristics and talents, whose final development it seemed impossible to foresee. The dualism of feeling and reflection which was to become so characteristic of my artistic personality was already part of my still developing self. The entrance examination for the Paris Conservatoire was to be held in the first few days of October. Towards the middle of September my mother journeyed with me to Vienna, bought me a chest of enormous size in the *rag and bone' market, which was to accommodate my entire possessions, including my music, bought Intellectually,
knowledge,
I
me a second-class ticket to Paris and, with her blessings, sent me out into the
wide world.
59
PARIS
[1890-1!
Aged Seventeen
to
Twenty-three
THE LONGEST railway journey I had
from
so far
was one
No wonder that the thirty-two hours
of five hours to Budapest,
now had
made
I
to spend in the train seemed like eternity. I suffered
travel sickness
and aroused the sympathy of my
travelling
companions. Added to all this I had to smuggle cigarettes over the frontier.
dred Egyptian cigarettes
me by my them into
from a gentleman
and smuggle
violin case during a brief stop at Basle,
France.
At an unwatched moment I simply put the box
under the cushion of my satisfaction
me to take a hunwho would recognize
had asked
my Paris mentor,
Deutsch,
of
my
seat
patron.
and thus carried out the task to the
Towards seven o'clock
I
reached the
1'Est, where Deutsch was waiting for me, welcoming the country cousin with benevolent indulgence. When he caught
Gare de
sight
of my trunk he clapped his hands to his head, and
at first
was
not quite sure how it was to be transported to his home, where I was to put up for the time being. Only after great trouble did he find a cabby who said he was prepared to take the monster. The cab had hardly set off when we heard a passing youngster shout: 'Eh, la malle a Gouffef Deutsch explained that a sensational
murder
case
Gouffe,
who
in a
huge
had quite recently been brought against a certain had murdered his wife and had left her packed away
*
chest in the left-luggage office of a Paris station.
We
drove through the early morning streets, which were peopled by clerks and workers of both sexes hurrying to work.
When Deutsch, who apparently wanted to discover what sort of lad I was, asked me what, at first sight, struck me most about '
Parisianlifejsaidtohisamusementhowastonishedlwas to see that the women gathered up their skirts so
Maurus Deutsch was
a self-made
much higher than in Vienna.
man. Through diligence and
shrewdness he had risen from a small proletarian to a prosperous
60
PARIS [1890-1896]
and respected man, who later was awarded the Legion of Honour and became vice-president of the Austro-Hungarian Chamber of
Commerce. He lived in Rue Meissonnier close to the Pare Monwhere he had a dwelling of seven or eight rooms, for which he paid a rent of 8,000 gold francs, a sum that greatly impressed me. He was a curious mixture of a simple man proud of his obscure origins and a somewhat snobbish upstart. He had set his ambition on smoothing the road for me in Paris, and on showing himself obliging to my father. At the outset, he thus devoted a large part ceaux,
of his time to me, and through
his
many
connections he actually I was able to
succeeded in a short time in establishing me, so that devote myself without difficulty to my studies. First
and foremost,
would be
possible for
Conservatoire.
were accepted,
It
we had to find out on what conditions it me to enter one of the violin classes at the
transpired that in each class only two foreigners as a rule had the already been selected
who
by
professors in the first place. It first
of
all
which
most ardent
classes still
desire
of
all
was therefore necessary to establish had places free for foreigners. The
young
violinists
was
under
to study
Massart, the teacher of Wieniawski, Marsick, Lotto and Kreisler.
Unfortunately, however, he had just reached the age of eighty and retired. After he had heard me he expressed his regret that he could not now take me as a pupil. The other teachers were Dancla,
was
Maurin, Garcin and Sauzay. According to my information only Dancla and Sauzay had free places left. Dancla was already the better
known because of his
went
to
him;
salon pieces and studies, and so
his only free place,
I first
however, had by then been
promised to a little Dutchman named Jacobs, who later acquired a local fame in London as a restaurant fiddler. None the less, Danck invited me to be present at a lesson with his class. Like all violinists of his generation, he was in the habit of accompanying his pupils on a second violin, and I was amazed to see that he held the bow not at the nut, but some four to five inches higher towards the middle, a peculiarity which immediately prejudiced
me
against
his abilities.
Only Sauzay remained now, and with
Mm
everything went
smoothly. A place was vacant for a foreigner in his class, he liked 61
CARL FLESCH playing, and he promised me that if I passed the entrance examination, he would accept me as pupil. Although there were three or four hundred candidates for barely a dozen vacancies, to
my
and that of my parents I was accepted. Eugene Sauzay [1809-1901] was a vigorous old man of eightyone, who with his whole appearance, his manners, and unfor-
my great satisfaction
tunately his violin playing too, almost reached back into the eighteenth century. As a violinist in the opera orchestra, he had
taken part in Paganini's Paris debut; later he had married Baillot's daughter and had regularly played quartets in the salon of Princess Mathilde, the cousin of Napoleon III. A thorough man of the world, he dressed meticulously; even as a man of eighty-four he always wore white gaiters. A fine Stradivarius dating from 1709,
which
later passed into
Thibaud's possession, was his carefully
He was
composer of a collection of studies entitled Etudes harmoniques, which dealt specially with the intonation of intervals and are still regarded as uncommonly useful material. His analyses of classical string quartets, moreover, reveal guarded
treasure.
the
the sensitive and cultivated musician.
He must
influential patrons in the administration, for
have possessed
while Massart was
pensioned off at eighty, and Dancla 'already' at seventy-five, he was kept on at the Conservatoire until 1 892, his eighty-fourth year.
Meanwhile Deutsch had found a pension for me not far from his For a monthly rent of 180 francs I had a room and full board. The lodgers were a very mixed lot. Among them was a Spanish painter, with the secondary occupation of bosom friend to faepatronnei there was also a German-American painter, whom I often watched at work; a young Italian woman who rather set:
own home.
her cap at men tried in vain to entice me into her net wife of a French naval officer who was usually at sea to
my mind)
the wealthy
(I
found the
much more man named Modiano who was a distant relation of papal Count Camondo and had let the fact go to his, ;
a
head, and suffered
from
a touch of megalomania. But I most of a company young Brazilian lawyer by the name of Silva Jardim, one of the chief actors in the Brazilian revolution
enjoyed the
which had just ended with throwing the king, throne,
62
Dom Pedro, off the
PARIS [1890-1896]
One
inestimable advantage of living there spoke German, so that
pension was that nobody had to rely on French. Sup-
my I
daily reading of Ulntransigeant, whose Editor, Rochefort, kept all Paris talking with his leading articles, which were as strong in talent as they were lacking in style, I soon made rapid
ported by
progress in the language. After some months I could make myself easily understood and did not mind the amusement I would cause
when
venturing too far in
my
speech.
was a friend of my youth from Wieselburg, My Louis Pollak; he was of my own age and held the position of secretary to an ex-Viennese lawyer. It was Pollak who introduced me to Montmartre and taught me to love it. He lived in a very French hotel in the Rue des Martyrs off the Boulevard Rochechouart, where he had a room at thirty francs monthly. Here there were students, painters, musicians, clerks, workers, mixed with best friend
come-down
aristocrats
and
their feminine appendages,
who
all
On
lived in a capricious congeniality as a single family. top of it to new fantastic was the me, of the all, there atmosphere, quite
pimps and crooks, fashionable public who were out for amusegarnished with the ment by giving themselves the creeps. An evening spent with my friend in this environment seemed to me the epitome of worldly
outer boulevards with their swarms of
tarts,
usually called for him in the evening at his emin the lower city. slowly climbed the Rue des ployer's place and grocer's. Then at a butcher's stopping on the way
well-being.
I
We
Martyrs,
to Pollak' s room. On a small spirit stove we fried our added the lordly Paris bread and a piece of Brie the king ^f cheeses and had a feast fit for the gods Meanwhile we were
we went tneat,
!
by our friends from the surrounding Bohemia, then we event off to a cafe for a game of billiards. By then it was nine and )'clock, the dance halls had opened, and the bright lights
visited
of the Elysee Montmartre (the Moulin Rouge was too invited us in, to marvel at the latest Cancan of expensive for us) 1 'M Gouhe, a very popular dancer and a virtuoso in grand ecart.
placards
2
She was the subject and inspiration of Toulouse-Lautrec's
Aoulin Rouge with its t the Musee d'Albi
new elliptical technique (1891) 63
:
first
poster for the
see the preliminary sketch
CARL FLESCH
Two
couples danced a kind of quadrille, the 'cavaliers' with
remarkable bodily contortions, the ladies' kicking their legs as high in the air as possible, until as a crowning conclusion La Goulue, with a tremendous swing of her leg, sent the hat of an onlooker flying through the air. During unsuspecting, enchanted my first two years I spent practically every free evening in these surroundings, and regarded the time spent pany in the salon as wasted.
among decorous com-
Meanwhile, I had started my lessons with Sauzay. His teaching was of the most primitive kind, in some respects even far below Griin's. An ancient gentleman, he accompanied us on a second
from his young days Viotti, Rode, Kreutzer, and only ventured as far as Saint-Saens and Max Bruch by way of exception. This accompanying practice is very dangerous musically, for the harmony is necessarily incomplete, and the bass entirely absent, so that the whole can only be regarded as a fiddle in concertos Baillot
somewhat dilettantish makeshift. From the teaching point of view, too, this kind
of instruction
(just like
accompanying one's pupil
on
the piano) is definitely bad, if only because one's attention is diverted from the pupil's performance. The case is not altered by the fact that the violinists of earlier generations evinced a remarkable dexterity in this regard, which we today no longer possess; every thinking and conscientious teacher will readily get over the
good old Sauzay could not impress me at all with what he said or with his playing. On the other hand, he had a fair opinion of the technical facility of my left hand and loss.
In any case,
either
asserted that
he could not teach
respect. Since, unfortunately,
my
me
anything further in
bowing too seemed to
this
satisfy
him, his instruction was confined to the teaching of nuances and an antiquated style of interpretation which to me, a green youngster eagerly looking into the future, seemed rather comic. At bottom, however, I did not feel like laughing at all; on the contrary, I was deeply depressed, for I soon realized that with this
kind of teaching there could be no thought of a renaissance of my development as a violinist, that my urge to go forward could not thus be satisfied. I pondered how I could continue my stay at the Institute
with more
serious studies.
64
Now,
I
had gathered from
PARIS [1890-1896]
of my fellow students that many of them were having additional private lessons with younger and abler teachers. After all, the four violin professors of the Institute had a combined age of some three hundred years. They were respected on account of their past, and one put up with them because one wanted to take part in the contests, but no one had any illusions about the practical value of their instruction. I resolved, then, to take the same road as my colleagues, and began by making exhaustive inquiries as to who was regarded as the best teacher in Paris. The opinion was unanimous for Marsick, and so one day I rang at his certain allusions
door.
A lady, Mme Marsick herself, as I learned later, opened
lessons,
it,
wanted and, when I explained that I wished to have remarked in a business-like tone: *Mais vous savez c'est
asked what
I
vingt francs la le^on !' (But you know it's twenty francs a lesson.) After I had reassured her on this point we fixed a time at which I
could play for the master.
The interview went
tion of both parties, and so, six weeks after had become a private pupil of Marsick's, decisive role in
off to the satisfac-
my arrival in Paris, who was
I
to play a
my development as a violinist.
I came under his tuition, M. P. Marsick was forty-two, a medium-sized man of pleasing [1848-1924] His appealing face framed by a small black beard, his appearance. keen vivid, eyes and his southern vivacity charmed his fellows, of the female sex. He had a youth of privations behind especially him, had been a chorister to begin with and had taken up the violin exceptionally late. Influential patrons had enabled him to had also taken study first with Leonard and later with Massart. He lessons for some months with Joachim. His strength was in his bowing. His right arm was a model of physiological development,
At
the time that
an absolutely perfect instrument, although even in his case the 1 staccato had its flaws. He produced an enchanting tone, capable of extraordinary modulation, and played with great imagination, without falling into mannerconstantly engaging one's interest 'isms.
His
owing
left
hand, however, seemed to kg behind, probably At times it seemed that his intonation was
to his late start.
insecure,
and
his changes
What is meant is
1
of position were not
the typical string staccato
65
in
one
entirely reliable,
bow at a fast pace.
CARL FLESCH performances proved somewhat uneven somewhat younger school colleagues from Liege, Ysaye and Thomson, he was esteemed as a local rather than an international celebrity. But in Paris itself he was without rival, especially as a chamber musician. In his excellent quartet, Eugene Maurice Hayot (of whom more later) 1 played the second violin and Laforge the viola; the latter was the founder of the viola class at the Paris Conservatoire, whence France owes him the finest viola players in the world today. 2 The distinguished Belgian
with the
and
result that his
that, unlike his
'cellist
Loys completed the ensemble.
Marsick's peculiar significance, however, rested on his talent as a teacher. Restless, always dissatisfied with himself and driven by
he was a stimulating influence and his advice took the generous individuality of his pupils fully into account. It was he who taught me to think logically without enhis thirst for perfection,
dangering the
spirit
of the living work of art; and to him
I
owe
the development of what later made me realize that teaching was the noblest of artistic activities. gratitude for all he taught me
My
was not weakened by the circumstance that I could not work up the same admiration for the man as I felt for the artist. As a matter of fact, his attitude towards his best pupils left something to be desired, in that the pride he felt for the excellent results he achieved with them was not untinged by jealousy. For the rest, his came to be a sad fate. Seized with an irresistible attraction for a married woman, he left his family and pupils in the lurch and fled abroad with his mistress. They both wandered aimlessly about for several years, at times in fantastic disguises, plagued by fear of the injured husband's revenge. Some years laterr the woman remorsefully returned to her husband, while Marsick'
age of fifty-five attempted to found a new existence for himself in Paris. About this time he published a highly problemat the
novel system of finger exercises, called Eureka. In the course of the years our relations cooled down, after the following incident* had occurred. atic,
I
was giving a concert in Berlin in 1903 and Marsick announced ,
p. 87.
66
PARIS
one
at the
after so
[1890-1896]
same time. Overjoyed
many
years,
dence. His reception
be allowed to
that I
hastened to
I
call
would be seeing him again on him at his place of resi-
was rather lukewarm, and
listen to
him
at
my request to
occasionally while he practised, he gave me the fantastic answer: 'Ah non, cette fois-ci je garde mes trues pour moi !' (Oh no; this time I keep my tricks to I
myself!)
went away profoundly disillusioned and a little disgusted. After that I met him only once quite by accident in the vestibule of the Paris Opera and exchanged a few words with him. Then came the
World War, and in 1923 Thibaud told me in New York that Marsick had died shortly before in a state of poverty. When, in 1890, Marsick heard me for the first time he at once First
recognized
my
talent
on
finger right into the vibrato, and a habitual
the one hand, but
open wounds of
on the other put
my
his
training: the slow
He also watched arm, taught me the
portato instead of legato.
and improved the functioning of my execution of the various dynamic
right
and by playing over my own expressive needs. I found his interpretative style unusually sympathetic, and it made me aware of possibilities of expression which hitherto had only lain dormant in me. In the distance, he showed me an unsuspected world of feeling, to conquer which I had to perfect my still inadequate technique. I had finally escaped the artistic marasmus into which I had threatened to sink during my last years in Vienna, and I blessed the moment when I had decided to draw the
me
pieces before
shadings,
stimulated
only
sound conclusion from the disappointing circumstances prevailing at the Paris Conservatoire. -
Now, how
can one understand the
fact that despite the
un-
questionably high standard of French violin playing, the instruction at the Conservatoire was entrusted to four patriarchs, not one
of whom could have made any claim to in his prime?
The
not
special distinction
even
For 150 years every French instrumentalist had regarded appointment to 'professeur au conservatoire' as the crown of his artistic and social career. Yet this
activity
was
honorary. In
explanation
is
so badly paid that
my
it
difficult.
could almost be described as
day every teacher received 1,500 gold francs in yearly, exchange for which he had to give 360 lessons^ which 67
CARL FLESCH works out at about four francs per lesson. He was compensated by the moral prestige of belonging to the phalanx of the country's leading teachers, together with the tacit right to charge the highest fee (at that time twenty francs) for private lessons. When a post fell vacant, a game of intrigue started which in France, the land of influence and patronage, was particularly ruthless, and in which the most adroit rather than the worthiest gained the
of this kind
desired end. There
is
no other explanation
for the fact that
Hayot,
for instance, undoubtedly one of the foremost French violinists at the turn of the century, never belonged to the Institute, whereas
the quite mediocre Lefort became Dancla's successor and occupied on twenty-five years. Once a teacher had
this position for close
succeeded in getting on the staffhe clung firmly to his post until he had one foot in the grave. Danck was seventy-five when he was compelled to resign, whereupon he published a brochure in which he ferociously attacked the teaching administration and described his being pensioned off as the greatest outrage of the century. Berthelier, admittedly a pretty capable man, had to go completely blind before he could be moved to hand over to another man.
My
own teacher
Sauzay likewise regarded it as a great injustice when at the age of eighty-four he had to yield his place to Marsick. What overwhelming results a first-class teacher could achieve in such a post was shown by the example of Massart and Marsick; in the course of five years Marsick trained Thibaud, Enesco, and myself.
In yet another respect the organization of the Paris ConservaWhile every conservatory in the world has certain subsidiary subjects which are such toire laid itself open to criticism.
compulsory, harmony, piano, history of music, orchestral and chamber music, in my day only the lower prize-winners (accessits)' were under obligation to attend a weekly ensemble class, which, howas
chamber music with piano. Training in left to the iron necessity which forced r almost every student to earn his bread of an evening in a cafe, in the Variete or the and at best at the Operetta, Sunday concerts. The general education of the average Paris Conservatoire student, too, was of a very low standard. ever, limited itself to orchestral playing
was
68
PARIS [1890-1896]
had quickly and readily grown accustomed to Paris life. Because of the necessity to speak only French both at the Conservatoire and at home, I very quickly began to absorb the
Meanwhile
spirit
I
of the language, while
martre
at the
same time
I
found in Mont-
sufficient opportunities to learn the Paris argot.
My relations
with society were confined chiefly to evenings with Deutsch's family, where, however, as a poor and idealistic musician I felt verylonely. At the same time, he did introduce me to several musical families of good standing, which were a little more to my liking. But Montmartre suited me best of all. Here I was among equals,
among people who did not oppress me with their material superiority. It
was only
away from possible and impossible pretexts; whence
natural, then, that
fashionable society on soon won the reputation all
I
very unreliable fellow. In Sauzay's class I
young
tried to sneak
among my
acquaintances of being a
encountered only one serious
Russian girl from Odessa
rather unattractive, as a talent
enough, already in her
I
first
rival,
a
named Sophie Jaffe; outwardly she was among the elite. Sure
competitive examination in 1892, she
prize singly. In the years following I lost her, until suddenly at Berlin in 1897 she turned up
carried off the
of again and in sight
first
several concerts created a sensation.
But she did not
exploit her success, very quickly disappeared, married, and seemed to have vanished for good. Not till twenty-five years later, during the First World War, did I meet her again after one
of my concerts in Zurich, where she had
fled
from
Russia.
I
have
Although not the most musical of violinists, she was certainly the greatest woman virtuoso of her time: her name should not altogether be lost in oblivion. Apart from her the class consisted only of second-raters, Paris heard nothing of her
youngsters who
since.
equently shortened their lesson time with a game chorus of mothers who would not of billiards in a cafe opposite. fr
A
at any price sat on daughters go alone to the Conservatoire a wooden bench knitting stockings, for the moral reputation of the let their
Institute
was
far
from unobjectionable, and
it
passed as a well-
of the dramatic and singing classes known favourite from among their official were not above selecting an fact that the teachers
69
CARL HJESCH girl pupils,
who
often
owed
their training
of an older friend of means. competitions,
It
was
only to the generosity
also said that prior to the
many members of the jury were not at all unrespon-
sive to the influence
of the prettier female candidates. In the instru-
mental classes, however, the situation was fundamentally
different,
and during my four years at the Conservatoire I knew of no incident which threw any suspicion on the virtue of my feniinine colleagues in the violin or pianoforte classes though admittedly, most of them were rather unattractive. While, before the competitive examinations, there was virtuother classes, someally no opportunity to meet colleagues from
how
or other I did come to know a pupil of the pianist Diemer, and soon struck up a sincere friendship with him. His name was Joseph Thibaud; he came from Bordeaux and was the brother of the violinist Jacques Thibaud. Joseph had the misfortune to be deformed by a harelip, and a defective palate pre-
vented him, moreover, from talking
After a
distinctly.
mere
and as a result of a phenomenal year's study he was unanimously and singly awarded the first performance, at time that he was considered one of the greatest hopes of prize; at the Conservatoire,
the French school.
Two
years later his fiddling brother Jacques trod the Paris pavements, a sprightly, talented boy of fourteen
his brother's. However, gifts, however, we set far below while Joseph ended as a distinguished pianoforte teacher in Bordeaux, Jacques was to remain for forty years the pride of the French violin school.
whose
This period also marked the beginning of my chamber-musical
A
activities.
Lederer,
Hungarian Griin pupil by the name of Dezso a good-looking man of about thirty and a
who was
mediocre
fiddler, invited
me
to
become second
violinist in his
newly-founded quartet, without pay of course. I accepted and in this way came to know a number of quartets of average difficulty.
We gave several concerts in camera, but with the lively support of relations. Since,
leader's, I
soon
however, lost
as the rehearsals in
demanded
all
my
my technique akeady far surpassed the
desire to continue this activity, especially
any an orchestra whose
member
I
soon became
disposable time. For the rest, during the first
70
PARIS [1890-1896] year of
my stay in Paris, I did not trouble myself about artists and I divided my time between my violin studies, reading
concerts.
and diverse amusement. As foreign students could enter the competition only at the end of their second year, I did not bother to wait for the one that took place at the end ofJuly, but travelled three weeks earlier, the summer vacation, to during
my parents,
who were and
as
very pleased with my development both as violinist a man. Haloed with the nimbus of a 'Parisian', I had
gained a considerable increase in esteem
among
the Wiesel-
own age. The contrast between the vast city which had just left and my home town nest gave me much amusement; at the same time I felt that mysterious bonds were fettering me to I a was small-town man by nature, and I have tny birth-place. burgers of my [
remained one
all
my life. The accumulation of a large number of
people in a comparatively restricted space seems unnatural to me, md the contact with nature is, I think, one of the most worth-
while aims in life.
Although
my father knew enough about violin playing fully to
appreciate the extraordinary stimulus I had received in Paris, he bitterly complained about the hardly bearable financial burden
which
my
studies involved. I
promised him therefore to
live, if
on an even more modest scale, and on the other hand to to make some contribution to my keep. attempt possible,
The second
year of my stay in Paris began with my finding with an old woman from the Levant, who lived close to quarters the Conservatoire. She had been a cook in the house of Count
Camondo
in Constantinople,
and
now was
the proprietor of a
restaurant consisting of a single room, where the food was mainly of the kind of oriental dish favoured in North Africa or Turkey. [ soon grew tired of this monotonous fare in which rice in all
manner of preparations played the chief role; and as several colleagues of the Conservatoire urged me to share their life in jolly students' digs I took a modest room in the Hotel du Bresil in the Rue Richer, quite close to the Conservatoire, for the monthly rent of forty francs. Breakfast, consisting of a bottle of white coffee or chocolate and a croissant, was delivered to me at the hotel from a dairy close by and set down outside my door; my 71
CARL FLESCH
Owing to this independence of a member of the great brotherbecame unwittingly hood of the Paris Bohemia, to which I was to belong right through my stay. The hotel was occupied by petty employees and students, including a few musicians. I soon found friends among main meals
I
had in
a restaurant.
all restraint I
them, with
whom
I
spent the mealtimes which, despite their
seemed to us
frugal nature,
like feasts.
of some orchestra. step was to become the member choice fell on the Lamoureux Orchestra, which gave a conin the Cirque d'Ete in the Champs-Elysees every Sunday
The next
My cert
during the winter season. I applied for a position as a first violinist, which, after an audition, I obtained. I now had a regular job,
which consisted every week of three or four morning rehearsals and a Sunday concert. Each of the concerts brought me twentyfive francs, so that I was able to ease my father's burden to the tune of a hundred francs per month. Our almighty ruler, the conductor Charles Lamoureux [1834-1899], was then fiftyseven years old, a thick-set, stout, energetic and hot-tempered gentleman from the south, who had begun as a violinist and had advanced to the position of conductor at the age of thirty-five. Originally he had been a quartet partner of Edouard Colonne, but later the two had become bitter rivals, the conductors of two
competing orchestras which gave concerts at the same time. Colonne's interpretations were known as fiery and slovenly, Lamoureux's
by
as
dry but
the standards of our
precise.
If,
however,
own day we must
we measure the two
regard them both as
mediocre.
The outstanding feature of Lamoureux's personality was his rudeness, a completely uncontrolled and unvarying lack of consideration. He can be cited as a striking example of the fact that the proverbial courtesy of the French is a legend, which owes its origin to the all too frequent resort to the exclamation 'Pardon !' In reality there is no other country in which excremental and
pornographic words are used so readily in common speech as in France. Concerning Lamoureux's churlishness one can at least plead in mitigation that he gave way to it usually as the result oi
annoyance
at a
mistake in the orchestra. But
72
I
learnt
by experience
PARIS that French conductors
[1890-1896]
do not extend the Proclamation of the
Rights of Man of 1789 to orchestral musicians. Things are different in Germany and Austria. In Vienna, during a Philharmonic rehearsal in my student days, Hans Richter was carried so far as to !' to a negligent second violinist who entered a bar too the orchestra committee gave him the choice either of early; to the Lamoureux's apologizing player or of
call 'Ass
resigning. During rehearsals offensive insults followed each other in swift succession, until they ended in a choleric outburst of in which fury, grown-
up men, great artists among them, were scolded like schoolboys. Sometimes one of them would leave the rehearsal in but protest,
as a rule
nobody dared to stir. In the France of those days there could be no talk of any human and friendly relations such as has between Nikisch, Weingartner, Furtwangler, Walter, or Blech and their orchestras. It well be that the surpassing may due to the fact performances of the German orchestras are existed
largely
that for
German players feel not only anxiety aiid at times admiration their conductor, but also human sympathy: because of this
spiritual community they willingly submit to his influence, while the French players see in their chief a tyrant. Whether this state of affairs has observation. But changed of later years has escaped
my
I
do
know from my own experience that at least the distinguished
French conductor Pierre Monteux no longer comes within
this
category. The conditions in
which we worked were likewise most und'Ete was so cold that we frequently had to keep our overcoats on. The stools on which we sat had no backs, and after three or four hours of rehearsal we always favourable.
The Cirque
ached.
As for Lamoureux as a conductor, his lack of technical talent was the first thing to strike one. His beat was awkward, his quite inadequate. He always conducted with his nose buried in the score. As he could not play the piano himself, a
memory
coach, usually his son-in-law and successor Chevillard, or the Dutch solo 'cellist Salmon, had to cram the work into him on the piano. Thus, it was only when he came to the rehearsal that he learnt the work, simultaneously with us; the labour involved was
73
CARL FLESCH almost unbearable. At the performance lie was too closely fettered to the printed notes to achieve the inner freedom that is the essential prerequisite
My
of a
recognition of
great, inspired rendering.
his defects did not,
however, make
me
He possessed a boundless energy in pursuing an enthusiastic Wagnerite of the old guard he was
blind to his virtues. his ends.
As
entrusted with the
first
performance of Lohengrin
at
the Paris
Opera in 1892. French chauvinists tried to frighten him off with anonymous threatening letters, at the same time organizing street disturbances in order to prevent the performance. During those days Lamoureux was even more excited than usual, and once
during our rehearsal he quite unexpectedly pulled a revolver out of his pocket, waved it in the air and exclaimed: 'If I'm attacked they'll find
me
Though
as a
elite, as
ready !' conductor and musician he did not belong to the
an orchestral trainer he was exemplary. In true recogni-
tion of the circumstance that every orchestral musician has a natural disinclination to tune his instrument properly, he did not
mind taking the trouble of having each of his 120 orchestra members pass by him one by one before each concert, in order to check, with a violin in his hand, the tuning of every instrument most
carefully.
Undoubtedly there has never
since been such
an
We
must turn to the great American enexactly tuned orchestra. sembles of our own time to find the quality and number of
Lamoureux had
at his disposal: twenty-four first and second violins, twelve violas, twelve 'cellos, and twenty-four twelve double-basses. The violins were mainly young fellows, but
strings that
were the old Dancla, the Belgian Houflack, an who kter went to pieces; Geloso, one of the in Paris; the South American Rivarde; the then
at the first desks
ideal orchestral leader
best violinists
hope of the violin world, the Dutchman Kossmann, who was for many years orchestral leader and conductor at Essen; Capet, who was to become the world-famous leader of the quartet which bore his name, and many other coming great artists. I myself was placed at the sixth desk. The violas were led the by Belgian van Waffelghem, the 'cellos by the outstanding great
later
Salmon; the woodwind, the prima donnas of the orchestra, 74
whom
PARIS [1890-1896]
even Lamoureux handled with kid gloves, were simply
ideal,
and
so were the horns.
Despite the conductor's unpleasant attitude, our capacity for enthusiasm was inextinguishable. I found his reading of the
Wagner and Brahms excited me to One boiling-point. morning we found a curious work on our Don entitled desks, Juan, whose composer was called Richard Strauss. He was thought to be a son of Johann; nobody knew classics rather
boring, but
him. The rehearsal began; the unaccustomed, baroque-sounding passages made us laugh. But Lamoureux said: 'Gentlemen, don't laugh, this young composer is conductor at Meiningen and will one day be the talk of the musical world.' Any difficult parts we
had to take home with
and in order to force us to study them Lamoureux threatened that at the next rehearsal he would have us,
each violinist play the quick passages alone, as did in fact once happen with the 'Magic Fire' music from the Valkyries which, strictly speaking, is unplayable.
Anyhow, his
bulldozing methods
our ambition to the highest degree, and every one of us endeavoured to give of his best at rehearsals and in concerts.
intensified
A noble trait of Lamoureux's character was his love of art for own
without concern for worldly honour, fame, or of which latter, incidentally, he had no need his wife was money one of the chief shareholders in the *Eau du Dr Pierre', one of the
its
sake,
:
most widely used mouth-washes in the world, and thus extrafor ordinarily wealthy. At that early stage of French enthusiasm Liebestod Wagner there were performances, such as that of the with Amalie Materna, when the conductor, soloist, orchestra and public all shed tears of emotion. It was under Lamoureaux, too, that I came to know and love Brahms' Second and Third Symfor which phonies, as well as all the Schumann Symphonies, classical German The a Lamoureux had predilection. repertoire formed a regular part of our programmes, and Beethoven's Ninth was performed at least once a year. On the other hand, Lamoureux was more or less unmoved by the French school, He Damnation of kept off Cesar Franck, while Berlioz, of whose Faust Cologne appeared to have a monopoly, was represented only by small fragments. A few of Vincent d'Indy's early works, 75
CARL FLESCH 'cello, an occasional piece Chabrier, Massenet, and Charpentier's were all I then came to know of French music.
Boellmann's Symphonic Variations for
by
Chevillard, a
little
Impressions d'ltalie
my
Nevertheless,
during these two
musical horizon widened very considerably student years in the orchestra; I moreover
a highly skilled sightacquired orchestral routine and became reader.
My personal relations with Lamoureux left much to be desired. could not stand his uncouth manners and often threatened to leave the orchestra if he did not change his behaviour towards me.
I
So he kept a
rein
his first violins.
on himself,
One day
singing, however,
woman
I
want to lose me from rehearsal in which Melba was
for he did not
during a
expressed
my
admiration for
this beautiful
few whispered words to my colleague at my desk, murmured between his teeth a few hardly Lamoureux and at which, according to my threat, flattering words to my address I
in a
stood up and without saying a
Now, even
in
less.
seem
word left
view of the bad example I gave,
He
first
pleased
Lamoureux
charged me with
to realize that
nevertheless,
the orchestra for good. this
he was
desertion, but eventually did in the wrong and drew in his horns;
we parted without being reconciled.
Lamoureux' s importance rested on his successful endeavours to put German music of the post-Beethoven era on the French musical map. In addition he tried to counteract the slovenliness of French orchestras of the day by a meticulous, in fact pedantic, orchestral discipline. If Habeneck deserves the credit for acquaint-
with ing the French at the beginning of the nineteenth century Beethoven's Symphonies, including the Ninth, and if Pasdeloup a fearless taught his countrymen to like Wagner, Lamoureux, as and as an and Richard for Brahms Strauss, Wagner, fighter orchestral educator, did a service to the musical culture
country which
To
is
of
his
not to be underestimated.
complete the picture,
I
must mention two other orchestral
The first, which overlapped during my with the end of my appointment with Lamoureux, was that of second and later of first leader in the Concerts d'Harcourt. The Viscount Eugene d'Harcourt [1860-1927], who came from one of activities
stay in Paris.
76
PARIS
[1890-1896]
the oldest and wealthiest of French aristocratic families, an idealist by profession, a musician inclination, had decided to devote
by
fortune not to horses and small concert hall
named
his
women
but to good music. He built a after him, gathered a kind of chamber
orchestra together and organized evening concerts several times a week. His second conductor was the then still unknown Swiss
Gustave Doret. D'Harcourt was no more than a beginner in the of conducting, without any authority over the orchestra; it can be we made fun of him. imagined how to art
cruelly
lack
of interest,
Owing
incidentally, the concerts
soon came to an end, and d'Harcourt was placed by his under family guardianship for his improvidence. The rehearsals were held after those of the '
Lamoureux Orchestra and were usually followed
by a concert, so were days when I spent eight or nine hours on orchestral for the playing. As I really needed all my time for that there
preparation
forthcoming contest at the Conservatoire, as well as Lamoureux's orchestra in the
I
left
d'Harcourt's
spring of 1893.
successor in the former
was the
My
distinguished Venetian violinist
Guarneri.
In the fifth year of residence in Paris months the position of first leader in the
my
I
occupied for some
popular Sunday concerts of the Jardin d'Acclimatation, which were conducted by a former double-bass player named Pfister, and a enjoyed large attendance. Here I first played a large-scale solo work with orchestra, i.e. the _
Godard Concerto, 1 and thus ended my orchestral activities in Paris. violinists whom I had the opportunity to hear during those years can easily be enumerated, for with the exception of the Sunday concerts, there was not really any international
The important
concert
life
in Paris before the First
were content
World War. The
native
one concert every year. There were for the sale of tickets. The artist in "hardly any public places sent to each of his friends or question patrons, at whose house he had made music in the course of the year without remuneration, a artists
to give
number of tickets, which they duly paid for. As concerts tended to be a social and financial :
a result, the Paris affair,
and
really
The Concerto romantique. Benjamin Godard [1849-1895] was a pupil of Reber (composition) and of the famous Vieuxtemps (violin) ; see also p. 97.
77
CARL FLESCH events were the exception. Nowhere else in the world was the nuisance of unpaid, playing so widespread as in Paris. Gabriel Pierne, who was born in 1863, assured me that in his youth it still artistic
went without saying that an artist made no claim to be paid for his performance. Only at the beginning of this century did the big Sunday concerts begin to remunerate their soloists to a modest extent.
The fact is
that the profession
of executant artist is the only
one in which even today the unpaid performance
is still all
too
often taken for granted. For all these reasons Paris at that time had an unfavourable reputation
can
recall
between
the important foreign virtuosos, and in fact I four outstanding violinists who played in Paris only
among
Ondficek. So if I
and 1896: Sarasate, Ysaye, Heermann, and was essentially thrown back on our native artists be edified by good violin playing. Here we had our
1890
wanted to
I
Geloso, Kossmann, then Marsick, for chamber and As music, in 1894 I made the Remy. Hayot the Bohemian of String Quartet, whose appearance acquaintance had a revolutionary effect on all of us. orchestral leaders Rivarde,
But above all I must try to describe Eugene Ysaye [1858-193 1] the most outstanding and individual violinist I have heard in all my life. Ysaye belonged to Vieuxtemps's school, was a member of an orchestra under Bilse in Berlin for some years, and then a professor at the Brussels Conservatoire. He made his world reputation with his Vienna debut as late as 1890, when he was group knew and esteemed Him, which however included musicians of the standing of Cesar Franck, who dedicated his Violin Sonata to him in 1887 and gave it to him as a wedding present. His career was already thirty-two years old. Until then only a small
but comparatively short. I often heard him during the years 1890 to 1914, and so was able to let his performances at various times have their influence on me. He was in his prime brilliant,
until 1910. From then on the tremor in his bowing, from which he had already suffered at times, began to get worse until, when at the age of sixty-two he gave a concert again in Vienna, his (1920)
playing made a catastrophic impression. Already, some years before, he had changed over to a career as conductor in Cincinnati, 78
PARIS [1890-1896]
war he also directed his own orchestra in Brussels. of At the age seventy he became diabetic, whence it became necessary to amputate one of his legs. Unable to play the violin during his last years, he devoted all his energies to composition. He died a poorish man. and
after the
Ysaye's importance as a violinist rested above
all
on
the
originality of his style. Joachim and Sarasate had formed the two poles of the axis around which the world of the violin had turned. The German-Hungarian was serious, expansive, profound; technique and pure sound were to him only a secondary means, often neglected, towards the sacred artistic aim. The elegant Spaniard, on the other hand, displayed a grandeur that was none the less pleasing for being blase; of incredible polish in all matters technical, he was a master of unemotional euphony. In their old age, neither corresponded in the least to the taste of the time, which yearned for a synthesis between technical perfection and
the greatest intensity of expression. In Ysaye, this need found its complete fulfilment. His tone was big and noble, capable of modulation to the highest degree and of responding to his impulsion as a horse to its rider. His vibrato was the spontaneous expres-
sion of his feeling, a whole world away from what had been customary until then: the incidental, thin-flowing quiver 'only on notes' ; his portamentos were novel and entrancing, his espressivo left-hand agility and intonation of Sarasate-like perfection. Inhe adapted his bowing technique to his expressive needs. tuitively,
There was no kind of bowing that did not show tonal perfection as well as musical feeling. His style of interpretation betrayed the so much with the impulsive romantic, who was concerned not as with the spirit that cannot the dead letter, note-values, printed be reproduced graphically. He was a master of the imaginative rubato, an ideal interpreter of Vieuxtemps's music. Although older maintained that there was not a trace of this kind
contemporaries of rubato to be found in Vieuxtemps's playing, an assertion which case cannot be proved today, the fact remains that, for his in
any
violinist
Vieuxcontemporaries, Ysaye's manner of playing
temps's compositions At the apex of this
was absolutely ideal. pyramid of fascinating 79
attributes,
however,
CARL FLESCH was an indefinable aura emanating from this dominating personwithin its charm. The ality and drawing everybody irresistibly Salle Pleyel in Paris, in 1892, of the Cesar the at performance Franck Sonata, which was still unknown to me, the absolute harmony between work and interpreter, will remain as unforgettable as the first performance, at the same time, of Debussy's alone then, a class String Quartet. Ysaye stood quite
towering high above
violinists.
all
by himself, But even ten
contemporary a performance of Tchaikovsky's years later, on the occasion of A minor Trio with Busoni and Becker, which I heard in London,
he was
My
in every respect superior to his partners. leave out impartiality requires me, however, not to
still
consideration the
less
admirable
traits
of
of
this
extraordinary' musical personality. In classical compositions the rubato which had become second nature to him was frequently misplaced. For instance, in the third bar
of the first solo passage in Bach's E major
Concerto, he used to play
:
instead of:
a bizarre procedure at which we youngsters smiled, and which forgave him in view of our blind admiration for him.
we readily Similarly,
in his hands the
Beethoven Concerto suffered an^
imaginative remodelling of the original into a personal experience, which did not leave much of the unadulterated Beethoven spirit. If
we may
define the ideal reproduction as a fusion of the commood evoked by the work in its inter-
poser's intentions with the
Ysaye often did not achieve this final end because in certain works he could not avoid putting his own personality be-4
preter,
fore that of the composer. But when, in race or sentiment, he felt closely akin to the composer, as in the case of Cesar Franck, SaintSaens, Lalo, Debussy, Vieuxtemps, Mendelssohn, or Bruch, the
was incomparable. His contemporaries were never
result
quite clear
Ysaye's relatively early decline as a violinist.
So
I
on
the reasons for
myself believe that
t
PARIS [1890-1896] the cause has to be sought in a lack of stability in his bowing. Inevitably, this induced a fear of tremor, which in turn led neces-
'
sarily to pathological obsessional ideas
and thus to a falsification of main aim was no longer to follow his inner avoid or mask the tremor in his bow; feeling and
his entire style: his
impulse but to
technique had to take second place.
The primary
cause of the
bow is
trembling usually of a technical nature, i.e. physiological; secondarily, it soon becomes a devastating psychical infection, an anxiety state, which then results in an unspontaneous and mannered style. According to my close observation, the fundamental technical cause in Ysaye's case was that he did not use the little finger of his hand at the nut where he right clasped the bow only with three fingers and with an iron-tight grip. He seemed ignorant of the
importance of the little finger as the most active agent in the supination of the forearm at the lower half of the bow. His end as a violinist provided a striking
proof of the absolute need for where the artist is endowed
correct technical foundations even
with genius. :
It was in 1911, after the final rehearsal for a Philharmonic Concert in which Ysaye was to play the Elgar Concerto with Nikisch as conductor, that I clearly realized this point. After the
rehearsal Ysaye, Kreisler and Elman a plentiful lunch we each in turn
came
to
my house,
and
after
played something: Ysaye chose
Vieuxtemps's
D minor Concerto, Elman the first movement of the
.Tchaikovsky Concerto, Kreisler and Elman played the Bach Double Concerto, and I took the major Sonata by Nardini.
D
After
performance Ysaye gave a deep sigh and said: *Ah, si de votre archet !' (Ah, if only I had the tranof your bow!)
my
J'avais la tranquillite quillity
Ysaye devoted himself to quartet playing only occasionally, ^whereas he joined with Raoul Pugno, the extraordinarily musical i
in regular performances of sonatas. In this, as in his solo work, he was above all original and creative, limited only by his
pianist,
personality.
As lis
a teacher Ysaye was the perfect type of stimulating model: influence was chiefly through the perfection of his personal
example, while he did not bother about technical 81
details.
He thus
CARL FLESCH as JoacHm. For young belonged to the same category of teacher artists with a sound technique but still in need of achieving perfect
when they expression they were uncommonly stimulating; artistic for technical the perprerequisites merely had to create formance they failed. Yet even stronger than their influence on individuals was their influence on the general atmosphere of violin playing. For the individual, incidentally, there was the risk absorbed by these surpassing personalities a kind of of
being hypnosis which can
The Joachim
last far
beyond the grave of the hypnotizer. not yet sucof his teacher,
for instance, has pupil, Karl Klingler,
ceeded in getting away from the spiritual fetters 1 which have held him in bond for thirty years. Ysaye used gather
many
disciples
around him in
his
summer
residence,
to
who
looked up to him with idolatrous admiration. In 1907, during his I had the opportunity of getting to longish stay in Amsterdam, know him more closely. One day he turned up quite un-
and asked me to play him Paganini's expectedly in my home Seventeenth Study: he had heard so much about my octave
we dined together several times, and on one me to visit him in the summer. I did
fingering. Thereafter of these occasions he invited
not follow up this invitation, for I had an instinctive fear that close contact with Ysaye might endanger the independence of my while on the other hand my style was already too personality,
for me to feel a need to travel any personal and firmly established felt often other road. But later I sorry that I had let slip this his example he might perhaps have been able opportunity, for by to help
me in getting rid of certain inhibitions and in
strengthen-
of my personality. Most violinists of owe Ysaye an inestimable amount of indirect my generation the exception of the Belgian violinists with stimulation, but ing the
more impulsive
side
Crickboom and Dubois none of his personal
pupils has achieved-
any importance. not yet finally established. Ysaye's position as a composer is nature he is no doubt that possessed an outstanding by In his talent for composition. early days, however, he was much
There too 1
much under
the influence of Cesar Franck
Written in 1933.
82
and Debussy to be
,
PARIS [1890-1896] able to develop a
technique his
may
more
personal
urge to create experienced a
six Sonatas for violin alone,
from the
style. Besides, his
have lacked adequate foundations. In
new
which
technical standpoint,
composing
his last years
spring; the chief result was are uncommonly interesting
though musically not quite
origi-
would appear to be among the most difficult forms of composition, which must be the explanation of the fact that J. S. Bach's example was not followed at all down to 1900, and from then on only with comparatively modest results. Reger and Hindemith alone have created something in this sense that
nal. Solo sonatas
may possibly last beyond our own time.
1
We cannot tell whether
Ysaye's solo Sonatas will survive too. In Ysaye as a man, one found the germ of many contradictions. His racial membership cannot
he was massive and corpulent, was struck above all by his noble, finely cut, slightly feminine profile. A certain brutality was, at the same time, part of his nature, and when he had been drinking heavily he was occasionally capable of physical assault. I remember a case which caused a sensation, in which he and his brother Theo were charged with beating up a tram conductor. They were both sentenced to three weeks' imprisonment, but were subsequently pardoned. Like all great men he was a good colleague, fiill of understanding for personalities different from his own, never malevolent. He loved wine, women and song on the violin. At the age of sixty an American pupil .years he married a second time; his bride was than with whom he lived in himself, thirty-five years younger happy marriage until his death. An amiable Bohemian-like lack of be definitely
established. In old age
in his youth one
practical sense
made him
scatter his earnings
with both hands,
without bothering about the future. In our memory he will always remain a knight of the violin, the last of the greatest virtuosos of K
permanent landmark in the history of our art Apart from Ysaye, Sarasate and Ondricek, among outstanding
an epoch,
a
ing
my
in
endowing
^brilliance. 1
Hugo Heermann
[1844-1935] durin Brussels and Paris and succeeded stay in Paris. He studied
foreign violinists
I
his
heard only
utterly
German
character
with Romance
His tone was definitely more cultivated than that of
This was of course written ten years before Bart6k's solo Sonata (1943)-
G.F.-G
CARL FLESCH
German violinists of the time, for which reason, if for no
the
other,
he occupied an exceptional place among them. He made his Paris debut as a soloist as late as 1893, aged fifty, when he played the Beethoven Concerto with Lamoureux (whose orchestra I had
and created an enormous sensation especially among musicians because of his style, which at that time was quite
left
by
then)
unusual for Paris. This novel quality consisted in his German attitude, his faithfulness to the work, whereas in the Romance
was still customary to place one's personal means of in the foreground in the most brilliant fashion possible. expression Shortly afterwards, in the same concerts, I heard him play the
countries
it
Brahms Concerto, which was almost unknown
in Paris, without
colleagues. Later I twice being able to share the enthusiasm of had the opportunity to hear him, but this was when he was sixtyto two and sixty-eight respectively, so that it is not possible for
my
me
But give a definite opinion on not his did distinctive case any possess playing quality. any his original capacity as a violinist.
in
Fundamentally he was a German violinist who sought to shape his playing rather deliberately on Romance belonged to the respectable medium class.
lines.
As a teacher he
He taught on
the basis
of sound principles, but without that intuitive talent which alone makes it possible to bring the pupil to the highest stage he can attain.
His achievements
as
sixty
were primarily based on did not seem given to him to pass by word of mouth. At the age of
a performer
a strong natural talent, while his knowledge on to others
it
he had the misfortune to be involved in an 'immoral'
with a
affair
young woman student, in all probability quite innocently,
which forced him to leave Frankfurt/Main, where he had lived and worked for almost forty years. Homeless, he attempted in vain to gain a foothold in Chicago, Geneva and Berlin, and landed finally as an old man of seventy in Montreux, and later at*
Meran, where he spent his last years. He was a lovable exponent of a cultivated style of violin playing, but without strong individual character.
Among
the violinists resident in Paris
who made
a
stronger
impression on me, apart from Marsick, were Rivarde, Hayot and Remy. The case of Achille Rivarde [1865-1940] was one of the
84
PARIS [1890-1896]
most remarkable violinists' careers of our time. He was a pupil of Massart, hung around Paris until lie was thirty, then went as a professor to the Royal College of Music in London. I first heard him with the Lamoureux Orchestra in May 1892, where he sat at the second desk. At one concert he played Svendsen's Romance and
from the Raff Suite in a manner which aroused my profoundest enthusiasm. At that time his tone combined the euphony and polish of Sarasate with Ysaye's warmth and directthe Minuet
ness,
while his technical equipment
left
nothing to be desired.
We
youngsters considered him the greatest talent among us and were convinced that before long he would be in the first international ranks. Some years later, then, I did not hesitate to recommend
him most warmly brother of the concerts for
Vienna impresario, Alexander Rose, a In consequence, Rose arranged several in Vienna, which ended in fiasco. But Rivarde to the
violinist.
him
continued to play the part of neglected genius. In 1910, Kreisler,
whose intimate friend he had become, had a similar experience with him as I had had fourteen years earlier. Incidentally, Kreisler had a grotesque fear of Rivarde's judgment and, amusingly enough, actually allowed him to tyrannize over him. As a supreme expert on the instrument, Rivarde was a pitiless, hard and rude critic. He attended every concert Kreisler gave in London and afterwards regularly went to the artist's room as a personified supreme court, with Kreisler humbly awaiting hisj udgment. 'Well, it, Achilla ?' he once asked timidly, whereupon Rivarde replied in front of everybody: 'Tonight you played like a pig/
how was
by the circumno one on the Continent knew, should go unemployed in London while he himself was well on the way to being recognized by the whole musical world as Ysaye's successor. So the good-natured Fritz began a campaign on behalf of his neglected friend, and in fact Apparently Kreisler
felt his
conscience troubled
stance that so distinguished a colleague,
whom
succeeded in obtaining half a dozen important orchestral engagements for him and in getting the Wolff concert agency to under-
But as Kreisler was not of these concerts, he asked me as going look after their mutual friend to Rivarde, who did not know a take the cost of
two
recitals in Berlin.
to be in Berlin at the time
35
CARL FLESCH
word of German. Thus I found the opportunity to spend many hours during one week in Rivarde's company and to study him had been arranged through Kreisler's closely. The concerts which were again a complete wash-out. It was obvious that Rivarde's playing was as fascinating in private as it was disappointing on the concert platform. In such cases, where the fault cannot influence
be attributed to any technical feature, the key to the enigma is usually to be found in the personal sphere. Three things are necessary for a superb artistic performance: first of all an overwhelming inner impulse, in the form of strong feeling and an equally inten-
need for expression; secondly, mastery of the technical resources necessary for expressing one's emotional experience; and thirdly, a frictionless cogwheel-like interplay of these two cosive
ordinated factors, with the result that the will is automatically translated into the deed, the conception into the desired sound.
Now Rivarde was by nature hard and cold;
also
he had with a
embittered
at the grown misanthropic, world's neglect of him. Thus he simply had no proper use for his brilliant technical resources. He lacked the spur to give expression in sound to a strong inner experience. He committed the mistake, moreover, of always seeking the cause of his apparently inexpli-
certain justification
cable failures in the purely technical sphere. He developed into a 'fusspot', who finds something new every day, only to discard it
moving further and further away from the from pure music-making, to end as an incorrigible crank. Nor, despite many an original idea, did he succeed as a teacher in leading his pupils through the thicket of technical training, which is vitally necessary yet inartistic, to pure art. Especially towards the end of his career he exaggerated the cultivation of mechanical exercising beyond all bounds and neglected the ultimate purpose, the cultivation of a repertoire. I myself, however, owe him a great deal, for he showed me the the day after, thus
final goal,
way
to correct faulty vibrati
by suitable gymnastic exercises, a have acknowledged in the first volume of The Art of Violin Playing. 1 So Rivarde's unsuccessful career did at least have
fact
which
I
the favourable effect of stimulating others, a poor consolation for 2 p. 37 of the English edition.
86
PARIS [1890-1896] that curious personality, in which a wealth of ideas, an original talent and the most precious resources were held in check an
by
unfortunate character: a tragic
fate.
Maurice Hayot's [b. 1862] career had a certain resemblance to Rivarde's in that he, too, was denied a great career, though for I regard Hayot as the supreme representative of the of violin playing at the turn of the century. tradition French noble
other reasons.
For I
me he represented in fact the finest type of Romance violinist. first time in May 1894, performing Schu-
heard him for the
D
minor Sonata, and at once realized his importance. At was still playing second fiddle in Marsick's quartet. the name 'Quatuor de Paris', he founded his own under Later, quartet, with Touche, Denayer and Salmon; I heard them frequently in Holland between 1903 and 1905. Hayot was a violinist mann's
that time he
who knew how
to achieve the very strongest impressions
by
deliberately primitive means. Thus, he would preferably play in the first position; disdaining to impress his listeners with compli-
cated choices and changes of position or portamentos, he achieved his effect solely through the purity and nobility of his feeling and
by means of simple but eloquent
technical resources.
I shall
never
of the Mozart Quartets. Despite these did not succeed in shaping his art and he extraordinary qualities, his life into a unity. He was the Bohemian par excellence, raising to the status of law, devoted to the eternal irregularity of conduct feminine in all its forms, a reflection of Baron Hulot from Balzac's forget his interpretations
Cousine Bette. It is obvious that upon this stony ground there could not develop the kind of regular study habits demanded by the career of a great interpreter. In fact, Hayot only very seldom per-
None
formed
as a soloist.
closely,
he remained one of the strongest
the
less,
to
all
who knew him more talents
of the French
violin school in the nineteenth century. There were three Belgian violinists of smaller stature,
gained rights
of
citizenship in Paris.
cultivated, pleasing style
who had
Remy, an exponent of
of the more intimate
a
variety, the most
good Important among them; Armand Parent, teacher without outstanding qualities; and Joseph Debroux, known as an editor of old French violin music. a
87
violinist
and
CARL FLESCH
The average standard of Paris violinists in those days, however, was not particularly high. There was, for example, the mulatto, White, owner of the last violin Stradivarius made, the 'Chant du exotic quality; Edouard a Cygne', whose playing had somewhat Nadaud, the leader of the Conservatoire orchestra who, safety his successor Alphonse first, was never entrusted with solo work; and finally the French of a violinist; Brun, typical 'bourgeois' type Paul Viardot, son of the famous Pauline, and Marcel salon players
Herwegh, son of the German revolutionary of 1848 all average players of no great artistic importance. Apart from Kreisler, the future exponents of the French school were still at their school desks: Boucherit, Sophie Jaffe, Marteau, Capet, Thibaud, Enesco and myself. a first prize in the Concours of Jules Boucherit [b. 1878] won 1892, together with four other violinists, Jaffe and Marteau among them. He was only fifteen years old, and was regarded as one of France's hopes.
He
did not
fulfil
these great expectations, pri-
marily because his uncertain health was not equal to the strains of concert life: because of a weak lung he often had to lay aside his
comparatively young age, he devoted himself exclusively to teaching; and in this capacity he came to occupy the first place in the Paris Conservatoire. His playing was as delicate violin.
Thus,
at a
as his constitution,
tone and technique,
of a somewhat feminine grace, cultivated in full of charm and the lightness of the French:
altogether a very attractive figure.
Henri Marteau [1874-1934], remarkable both for his individua German-French mixture. His ality and for his development, was
mother was
woman, his father French. Marteau spent all backward and forward between these two nations both as an artist and as a man, without ever really knowing where he belonged. He was originally an infant prodigy; I remem-' ber hearing him pky Bruch's G minor Concerto at Vienna under Hans Richter as early as 1887. At that time he was only twelve years old but already was playing with some perfection. Mainly a pupil of Leonard, in 1891 he entered Garcin's class at the Paris Conservatoire, with the open intention of winning the first prize as quickly as possible; which he did after a year. In those days he a Berlin
his life vacillating
PARIS [1890-1896]
was a
red-cheeked youngster, full of vitality, always and friendly good-humoured. He had grown up in favourable material conditions and could afford to dawdle through the world enjoying himself, and meanwhile to perfect his powers as an artist. He began to give very successful concerts in America and Scandinavia. In 1900, at the age of twenty-six, he visited Bucharest, and remained there some weeks. Here I had the opportunity to get to know him better both as a man and as a violinist. A few years kter he married a German and settled in Geneva as teacher at the Confresh,
servatoire. His concert activities grew more and more intensive, and he gave himself with great devotion to the advocacy of Reger, Moor and, rather indiscriminately, of other less important composers. In 1909 he succeeded Wirth at the Berlin Hochschule and married again. At the outbreak of the First World War he played a somewhat equivocal role, which was taken very badly by his French compatriots. Instead of reporting to his regiment, as a French captain on the reserves, during the last days of July, he remained quietly in his country house at and on
August 4 allowed himself to be ties, as a French officer. He was
arrested
by
Lichtenberg the German authori-
set free on parole and allowed to continue teaching at the Hochschule. From then on his compatriots considered him a deserter. But meanwhile his German
colleagues in their turn protested against his remaining in a German teaching post. He received permission to continue teach-
ing at home, and had to give his
soon broke
his
word not to leave Berlin; but he
and was
interned. Set free again after a promise brief period, he returned to Berlin and lived there unmolested, until his wife involved him in an were both espionage case.
They
imprisoned and convicted, and were in a highly dangerous situation. With the armistice, however, came the automatic release of all imprisoned enemy aliens. He left Germany, took Swedish nationality,
later
held various subordinate teaching posts in made a precarious living as a teacher
Leipzig and Dresden, and
relatively minor executant. He died in 1934 at Lichtenfels. In order to judge Marteau one needed to hear him between his twenty-fifth and thirty-fifth years, since he had reached his highest
and
powers by the time he was
thirty.
89
From about
1908, the year
of
CARL FLESCH second marriage, he suffered an uninterrupted decline. At the turn of the century, however, he was quite rightly regarded as one of the finest violinists of his time. Supported by an instrument
his
extraordinary in tinguished
of these
by its
kind
one readily accepted a somewhat slow and slack bowing technique had been polished in Leonard's
qualities
vibrato. His strict
Leonard's Maggini his tone was dispurity, fullness, timbre and modulation. In view its
school; although somewhat heavy, it was physiologically and a completely serviceable medium for his kind of feel-
correct
little
was
extraordinarily wide, sometimes even a too eclectic, but preferable, in any case, to that of those many
ing. His repertoire
colleagues who wander through the concert halls of the old and new worlds with a half-dozen well-proved 'hits'. He was rightly
regarded as an exemplary interpreter of Mozart, and I remember from those times with vivid enjoyment his versions of this master's Violin Concertos, distinguished as they were by simple, noble and pure feeling. His imaginative performances of smaller
genre pieces such
remained in
my
as
Dvorak's Romantic
memory,
Pieces1
have likewise
or of such conventional works as the
Concerto of Theodore Dubois, Ambroise Thomas's successor in the direction of the Paris Conservatoire. A few years later I heard
him again in Berlin and Amsterdam, when he failed
to arouse
me
my previous enthusiasm. In 1908 he gave the first performance of Reger's Violin Concerto. The last time I heard him was in 1910, to
a Saint-Saens' B minor Concerto disappointing that his decline was so After that I preferred interpretation. rapid not to hear him again. None the less I in no wise share the con-
when he played
temptuous judgment that has been pretty generally passed on him 2 during the past twenty years. The dispassionate estimate of a great artistic career has to take account of all the phases through
which it passes. Whoever heard Joachim after 1890, or Ysaye after 1910, cannot give these two giants their full due. In my memory the young Marteau certainly lives as one of the most distinguished violinists of his time. Incidentally, he worked quite intensively as a composer, and a considerable number of works of all produced *0p. 75, 1887.
Written
in the 'thirties.
90
PARIS [1890-1896] kinds, which, however, have given rise to a great variety opinions as to their purely musical value.
My
personal relations with
him
suffered
many
of
vicissitudes.
thought a great deal of him, found his personality most appealing and looked up to him in admiration. But as time with his passed our roles were exchanged, my rise Originally
I
coinciding
In 1908
decline.
we
both
moved
to Berlin; already he had been transferring all the difficult cases among his pupils to me. It became in fact fashionable to study with me, while on the concert
had
passed from protege to rival. Spurred on by he seized on an insignificant pretext in order to break off relations with me. I was sincerely upset, for I still had a weakness for this charmer which had lasted since our student even
platform, too,
I
his wife,
days,
had not proved spotless. Originally of a decent disposition, he succumbed all too easily to insinuations and did not hesitate to trim his sails to the wind: hence, ultimately, his decline. He was much too influenced not abnormally early easily to be restricted in his artistic development. Andreas Moser though
his character
attempted to persuade him to change his bowing technique, and him. The
also subtly to influence his interpretations, to Germanize charming and healthily sensual Frenchman, full
ofjoie de vivre,
was
to transform himself into a stern
and conscientious German 'classic'. But when the Romance artist tries to be classical he usually becomes a bore. Marteau was thrown out of his natural course, disorientated; he had aided and abetted a falsification of his own personality. What, around 1900, had been the characteristic and partly most attractive elements of his style, had largely vanished ten years later. Marteau had never grown alive to the fact that Moser's friendly influence amounted to an attempt on his spiritual
independence.
At the same time, he was by no means lacking in practical sense.
On the contrary,
he was very industrious,
a fluent correspondent,
who did not allow his relations with all the world to grow torpid. One day an American impresario had the idea of having a chamteam perform in the States which consisted of Ysaye, Marteau as viola player, and a pianist. Asked by some Gerardy, how the artists spent their time between one inquisitive person ber music
CARL FLESCH concert and another in those boring American provincial cities, Ysaye replied, 'C'est tres simple: quand nous arrivons dans une ville,
moi je
Marteau
vais boire
de
la biere,
Gerardy va voir
femmes,
les
et
very simple; when we arrive in a Gerardy goes to look at the women, and
ecrit des lettres/ (It's
town I go and drink beer, Marteau writes letters.)
Hans Bassermann and Florizel von no success worth mentioning as a teacher. In this capacity he was untalented and negligent, unable to combine technical instruction with musical and psychological influence. His teaching largely confined itself to playing to and with the pupil. Almost without exception, his students got stuck at the stage of average mediocrity. If, in spite of everything, I cannot help thinking of him with nostalgia, it is above all because the beginning of my rise as an artist dates from our Bucharest days: his stimulating influence during what was for me an Apart from
his pupils
Reuter, Marteau achieved
extremely
critical
period contributed considerably to
my
further
development. In the
Lamoureux Orchestra
I
came
know
to
Lucien Capet
who was
a pupil of Maurin at the Conservatoire. [1873-1928], the a namesake of Louis XVI, Capet came fact that he was Despite
from the
the time he
was
he had to There he got to know a working class girl eight years older than he, and they set up house together. This was when he was twenty years old, and he had to look after the entire family of his girl friend, who to help out with their living expenses also took boarders for the midday meal. Once as we were going home after a rehearsal he invited me Paris proletariat.
By
maintain himself by playing in bistros and
fifteen
cafes.
to try the good plain food in his 'family', and for six months I was Capet's lodger. His 'family' included a number of attractive little milliners, with whom we generally played the fool. We did not know what to do for high spirits. Among other things we
decided that
on three
successive days we would eat horse, ass which of these foods of evil reputation
mule flesh, to
establish
the best. Later
on our friendship underwent a
beat felt
severe
trial,
and was
when he
me in my second competitive examination. But I must have
genuinely drawn to him, for our relations continued as before,
92
PARIS [1890-1896] After
some years he parted from his lady friend; he married twice
subsequently.
He
spent his career in Paris where,
all
too early, he
died.
From the outset, Capet loved quartet playing. The 'Societe des derniers quatuors de Beethoven', which was founded in the 1850*5 by Capet's teacher, Maurin, was later taken over by the FrancoItalian Geloso,
then,
he rose
with Capet
as it
as
second violin. As a quartet player,
were from the
playing second violin with
him
at
ranks.
I
also
remember
often
musical parties. After a few
years he founded his own ensemble which bore his name, and whose members often changed over the years. Unfortunately I only once had the opportunity to hear the quartet in public, which overall impression was thoroughly was at Berlin in 1912. favourable: exact co-ordination, serious interpretation, cultivated
My
However, it seemed to me that the artistic did not afford a homogeneous picture. It of the leader personality fluctuated between touches of 'classical' dryness and an occasional emergence of a somewhat effeminate sweetness. But I admired without reserve the subtlety and tidiness in the solution of bowing problems. In his many extended rehearsals, Capet was of the most was Beethoven, painstaking, inexorable exactitude. His speciality whose quartets he played in complete series, especially in France and Holland. There are some outstanding records of these performances, so that posterity is in a position to gain a true picture of his individuality. As a soloist he did not succeed in making his way. He had to yield to the younger and more individual technical resources.
Thibaud, and soon preferred to devote himself exclusively to his beloved quartet playing. Nor was he a successful teacher. Though he gave many years to this task he did not produce any outstandThe reasons for this failure were of a technical nature. ing pupils.
teacher Maurin the principle of Capet had taken over from his the 'ring' in holding the bow, i.e. a ring-shaped lock of the thumb and middle finger creating a firm axis around which pronation were to develop in a natural manner: a seductive and
supination from the results achieved, theory which, however, judging his work on bowing technique1 In use. no of to be practical appears
La
l
Technique superieure de ratchet, Paris, 1916.
93
CARL FLESCH Capet has described and defended
it
in great detail. This treatise
should really be called 'The Art of Dividing the Bow', since it mainly occupies itself with the even distribution of the notes to be neglects the uneven distribuconsiderations. His editions of
played in a single stroke, though tion necessitated
by dynamic
it
are so pedantically overloaded with complicated is impossible to see the wood for trees. For this
works
classical
marks that
it
reason they are seldom used even in France. Like Klingler, Capet was hypnotically influenced by the old Joachim: as a thirty-year-
old man, he played the wise and dignified patriarch, wore square boots, polished his spectacles ceremoniously and stuck his beard into his vest opening before he began to play. His dry style was deliberate the Romance conception of German classicism. Only
now
and then did he allow his true French nature to break through. If we want to understand the complicated organism that was Capet's mind we must not forget his bent towards derided as a pose, but which others Thibaud has told that once when conviction. genuine respected he visited Capet in the artist's room before a performance of the mysticism, which
many
as
Beethoven Concerto, Capet raised his arms with a defensive gesture and exclaimed: *Ne me derange pas, je suis en communication avec Beethoven !' (Don't disturb me, I am in communicaPretentious though it sounds, I personally !)
tion with Beethoven
cannot find
this
kind of claim so funny
as it
seemed to most
can well understand how Capet felt Thibaud's facetiouspeople out of tune with that concentration of inner experience to be ness :
that
I
must be part and parcel of a public appearance. But what Capet's mysticism, or whatever else one may call it, un-
made
bearable to
me was his endeavour to
as a half-educated proletarian
convert it into literary form; he brewed together a heady bombast
of cliches which could not but appear ludicrous to anyone who loved the clarity of the French language. When all is said, however, Capet still remains one of the most outstanding French violinists
of his time; more particularly, he can claim lasting credit of quartet playing in his native country.
for his popularization
Enesco and Thibaud will be considered exhaustively later in book.
this
94
PARIS [1890-1896] Foreigners had the right to take part in the contests only after two years* study at the Conservatoire. Thus in 1892 I had got so far as to
be able to participate in
Four weeks played was
this
time-honoured
institution.
in a teachers' conference, the piece to be decided upon, which this time was the first solo of earlier,
Vieuxtemps's Fifth Concerto an unfavourable choice for me, it included two long staccato passages, which type of bowing was still my weakest point. The teachers and their pupils hurled since
on the test piece. The teachers provided it with what appeared to them most advantageous fingerings and bowings, and the pupils began an intensive study of all the difficulthemselves zealously
ties involved. The work was played with a string quintet reduction of the accompaniment, and each ckss had its own ensemble, consisting usually of earlier premiers prix. The first violinist had not
only to lead the quintet, regulate the tempi and adapt himself to any vacillations on the part of the soloist, but also occupied a special position of trust. Upon completing the set piece, each candidate had to submit to a test of his sight-reading abilities. *
Now, in order to prevent any wangling', one of the jury members who was also a composer would write a piece of his own for the purpose, which was presented to the assembled jury fifteen minutes before the beginning of the competition. It was traditionally provided
with an accompaniment for a second
violin,
&nd teemed with harmonic and rhythmic traps which made all the greater demands on the presence of mind and composure of the candidate, since the reading test took place in public. The leader of each quintet had to undertake the second-violin accompaniment for his protege, and was previously given the opportunity to look through the piece and even, if necessary, to play through it. Thus
he was able to whisper a few words of advice to the candidate in the brief interval between the two pieces, under the acoustic cover of the more or less vigorous applause: 'Look out! Line four, bar two change of time; line six, bar four minor instead of major/
Up
to a point, this mild fraud was even desired; only, the delinneeded to collect his five senses sufficiently to be able to
|uent jollow the hints which was not always the case. For half an hour Defore the competition began some thirty to forty students,
95
CARL FLESCH separated according to sex, had been interned in two large rooms where, according to the number each had drawn, they had to spend up to eight hours in suspense and anxiety. Behind a screen in a corner everything necessary was provided for those whose anxiety affected their internal organs. The entire horde practised like mad. Everyone attempted to improve the weaker aspects of his
performance
at the last
nerves to keep a clear head.
moment, and you needed strong
Add to all this a summer temperature
which, spiced by odours of all kinds, rose up to over 90?., and one has to ask oneself whether it is necessary to subject young people to a torture which must smother any higher artistic disposition in them, just in order to ensure the anonymity of the test piece for sight-reading.
Again, did the, say, forty competitors really offer so
of interpretation? Not
ferent kinds
simply four,
many
dif-
There always were corresponding to the number of classes; for each at all!
student had to represent, or rather imitate, his teacher's interpretation
on pain of exclusion. There were, however, some
particularly cunning characters who duly danced to the professor's pipe, but revealed their personal style at the contest. I myself had
drawn
whence
was placed immediately before the two stars Jaffe and Marteau. None the less I was unanimously awarded the first of the premier accessits (honourable mentions), a success with which in the circumstances I could be a
bad number,
thirteen,
I
quite satisfied.
Without particular trouble, I had climbed the first step of the ladder which led to the coveted highest distinction, the premier
now face my parents, if not as a conqueror, at least as who was entitled to strive for the highest.
prix. I could a growing artist
At the beginning of my third year at the Conservatoire, Sauzay* was at last pensioned off. Marsick took his place, and so I had the opportunity to have regular instruction from him six times a month, whereas hitherto he had taught me only sporadically. From this time dates my uninterrupted development and maturation. A kind of artistic community arose between us, whicb through both his playing and his comments grew steadily closer, I began to think and to feel independently the pupil was gradually 1
;
96
PARIS [1890-1896]
becoming an
My technical skill rested on sure foundations;
artist.
while the outlines of my individuality emerged more sharply. In the sphere of chamber music with piano I also began to feel at
home,
my premier accessit obliged me to attend the chamber
since
came to know all the pianists and string had received an award in the competition. players Its leader, Benjamin Godard [1849-95] is today almost completely forgotten. Occasionally one hears in some cafe or other the Berceuse from his opera Jocelyn, and is astonished at the freshness and inspiration of this attractive melody. Godard was originally a precocious 'prodigy composer* who in his childhood was regarded music
where
class,
who
like
I
me
coming French Mozart. His themes testify to a singular lightness of invention whose working-out in his development sections, however, is not of the best. He himself used to describe lis composing method in the following lapidary sentence: 1 take i theme and make a sauce around it/ In this respect he was a
as
the
ipiritual
whom, in fact, he greatly among the iron necessities in
descendant of Joachim Raff
esteemed and whose sonatas were
)ur class. Godard's Piano Trio in particular is a characteristic of his individual talent. His was a one-sided melodic gift
sample
>f the highest order,
which only lacked the technical equipment of
Jaint-Saens to bring his nation the greatest credit. As a person, he vas unusually gentle and soft-spoken, amiable, sickly looking. He lied quite young, of tuberculosis.
An important factor for my artistic development was the tir;umstance that I now had an opportunity of familiarizing myself vith Beethoven's,
Schumann's and Saint-Saens* chamber music
We
vith piano as well as with several pretty colleagues. lirted, in so far as their mothers, the teachers and the spirit of the
allowed us to do so, that is, most innocently and romanticto make this classroom Uy, but nevertheless with sufficient gusto us for he most popular place of rendezvous youngsters.
Lines
It
was
ears to
I came to know the young 'cellist Louis whose family was to mean a great deal to me in the
there that
lasselmanns,
come.
flattering
It
included grandpapa Hasselmanns, a former con-
whom
Richard Wagner's autobiography refers in terms in connection with a performance of Tannhauser
ruuctor to
97
CARL FLESCH at Strasbourg at the beginning of the 'sixties. This old gentleman has remained fixed in my memory chiefly because he maintained
he owed
his great age only to the habit of eating an apple before every night retiring. The next generation was represented by the father Hassehnanns, the most famous harpist of his time;
that
he was a handsome giant, whose success with the fair sex in Paris was proverbial. He had been a member of Bilse's orchestra in Berlin at the same time as Thomson and Ysaye. His wife came
from Russia; she was intellectually rather than physically attractive and strikingly short, so that together they made the strangest couple in the world. Two children were born of this marriage: Marguerite, and Louis, who was a pupil of the 'cellist Delsart and
won
the
first
prize at the early age of sixteen, without,
achieving anything extraordinary.
He
however,
married early and against
changed over to conducting, first at the Paris Opera Comique, and then at the Metropolitan Opera, New York, where he was in charge of the French repertoire. Mar-
his father's will, later
guerite, in every respect
more outstanding than her
brother,
and tie piano equally well, and moreover sang I first saw her in Godard's class I When delightfully. immediately under fell the spell of her personality, an impression which friendly intercourse soon came to intensify. played the harp
The Hassehnanns devoted every Monday night after supper to music. Classical string quartets and chamber music with piano were played in more or less polished renderings. Marguerite and I which then was unhackneyed which we put what we did not venture
revelled in the Cesar Franck Sonata,
and
captivating, and into to say to each other. Today's youth will find it hard to understand that although we were deeply devoted to each other, no word
ever disturbed the innocence of our relations. tions
were like an
amitie amoureuse wherein,
Our mutual
rela-
however, the element
of friendship strongly predominated. Marguerite was no doubt still suffering from the effects of an unhappy love affair which had been frustrated by family considerations. An excellent 'cellist oi origin, named Louis Abbiate, who had been Louis's teacher, had developed a deep affection for her, which she returned Italian
But the parents had
refused their consent to this union
98
on
the
PARIS [1890-1896]
ground that two 'cellists in one family would put good relations between its members to an all too severe test. Hence, her mother did not altogether resent my own feelings for her child and encouraged our association in every possible way. However, our mutual attraction was not strong enough to result in union. My feelings for Marguerite were chiefly of a spiritual nature; when
on I realized that a change of environment was necessary for my further artistic development, they did not prompt me to remain permanendy in Paris. A few years after I heard that Martalk of Paris for some time, because she guerite had become the had married a well-known violinist named Tracol, had left him later
on the wedding
night,
and returned
to her father's house.
affection for Gabriel Faure,
presently developed a profound was at least thirty years older than she, and to
She
who
whom, though not
wedded, she was to be a true and self-sacrificing companion until his death. Apart from a few youthful flirtations, felt spiritual Marguerite was the first woman for whom I
legally
sympathy.
du Conservatoire, in Opposite the school was the Cremerie found exponents one which one could take regular meals. Here of all the instruments that were taught at the Conservatoire, as officials and even charlatans with well as writers, painters, petty
modest pretensions. After the meal, the patriarchal proprietress, Madame Lechat, took part in a quiet hand of cards, with coffee as the stakes, while some of us flirted with her daughter, who sat at the cash desk. In length and breadth just like a modern dining-car, the Cremerie was the cosiest haunt I have ever come across. Excessive vitality and youthful high spirits were the spice that made the indifferent food palatable. There were only regular to drop in, we did any time a stranger happened that he did not come again. It was ensure to everything necessary like Ravel, Cortot and here, incidentally, that coming celebrities Bohemian in Paris, while I myself found Thibaud won their guests.
If at
spurs true friends in the Schiedenhelm brothers from Besanson, proLadies too, usually ficient players on the 'cello and the piano. our circle, and I remember singing students, occasionally joined
how
I
once estranged one such dainty nightingale from another
C.F.-H
99
CARL FLESCH in justified displeasure, proceeded to write me an insulting postcard. I demanded satisfaction in the form of a bout of fisticuffs, to take place the following evening. I felt a little
guest
who,
'shaky at the knees' as
I
bravely opened the door of the Cremerie
at the appointed hour, to
was repaid ferred to hook it.
But I
I
for
measure
my strength against my rival's. my courage, since my opponent had pre-
subsequently realized, however, my general physical conmuch to be desired. I decided to take up fencing, and
dition left
for a
month
conscientiously attended a fencing class; but I soon
could detect a stiffening in my right wrist, which thought me to renounce this noble sport. caused I threw eventually in into the French which consists of a boxing myself style, Savate, I
Now
combination of hand and foot
activity, a
rough sport, and a
fearful
weapon of attack and defence. Here I held out for three months, made good progress and felt that I could deal with any man who
me at night. Eventually, however, my wrist me to give up this form of sport, and swimming, again compelled attempted to waylay
mountaineering and cycling have been the only physical exercises to which I have remained faithful.
About Opposite
that time I also
my
hotel
was a
happened to visit a gambling den. where I sometimes had my
small cafe
lunch. Here a dubious cosmopolitan gambling crowd held its sessions. I was introduced to the mysteries of Poker and soon
succumbed to
passion. I remember once playing for twelve hours without a break. This craze lasted almost continuously for
a year. until
I
this
spent every fiee night in the stifling cafe atmosphere, o'clock in the morning. For
we were put outside at two
my
circumstances the play was for far too high stakes; but in the end I came out of it cheaply. One day my fever passed as quickly as it" had come, and ever since I have been immune from this vice.
Roulette and Baccarat bore me, and only games involving calcuor can hold me. Skat, Bridge
lation, such as
Eight weeks before the competitive examination I
moved
to
had to prepare as thoroughly as possible for the forthcoming trial of my strength a difficult task in Paris itself. My prospects were all the better because I had had a Stradivarius Asnieres, for I
100
.
*
PARIS [1890-1896]
of the
my
last
service
known by the name of 'Le Sicilian', placed at Fernand by Halphen, a pupil of Marsick. The test piece
period,
was the first
solo
from
Viotti's
Twenty-ninth Concerto;
lent itself to the display of technical ingredients remained
my
it
hardly
qualities as a violinist, since its
on an eighteenth-century level, and afforded no opportunity whatever for the solution of musical or technical problems of a more complex nature. My chief rival was Lucien Capet, who had already spent five years at the Institute and was regarded as the favourite. It is true that I myself was only competing for the second time, but under Marsick' s direction I had developed surprisingly, so that according to public opinion the first prize would inevitably be shared be-
tween us. I had in At the contest
parents of this prospect, in brilliant form, but received
fact assured I
was
my
only
the second prize, while the undivided first went to Capet. The audience's view was that I was at least Capet's equal, but, as I learned afterwards, the jury wanted to award a
unanimously
special distinction to the Frenchman, who already enjoyed a certain esteem in the musical world, while they deliberately relethe to the second with the justification that gated foreigner place, 'he can wait another year'. I was dumbfounded, and for the half-
hour
that followed the decision
as the greatest
misfortune of
I
regarded
my
that the jury's unjust decision
had
on
since
my artistic development,
my comparative defeat
so happened, however, an extremely beneficial influence life. It
I thus remained another whole year with Marsick, quietly perfecting my execution. Later on, this experience showed me that in no circumstances are we able to
form an objective judgment on the eventual significance for our life of an event which has just occurred. Next morning, I had already calmed down sufficiently to consider
my rank as second best out of thirty-five contestants not
so very disgraceful after all. The prospect of presenting myself to parents as a defeated candidate, however; was intolerable, and I
my
played with the idea of not going home
at all
during the
summer
But I lacked the means to spend all this time in France. In this dilemma I decided to ask my friend and rival Capet for advice. "Nothing simpler,' he commented. 'I have just received an
vacation.
101
CARL FLESCH Limoges. But you can imagine, newly-crowned prize-winner with naive self-assurance, in my present position it is impossible for me to continue
offer to play in the best cafe in
said the 'that
you can have the job any time/ Conditions?' 'Nine francs a day. The concert is from eight to twelve every night. Matinees on Sundays and bank holidays.
along these
lines. If
you
like,
*
Three refreshments per degrading for
me
night.' 'Yes, but don't you think it rather to pursue such an occupation?' 'What of it?
anyone. Besides, it only lasts two months.' I did not take long to think it over and signed the contract put before me. Since my parents would have been heartbroken if they had
you needn't
tell
known
their son
period,
I
told
was going to play them some story about
summer orchestra. For
the
rest, I
in a cafe,
even for a short
a post as a leader in a large
must say
I
found
it
very interest-
ing to learn something different.
The institution of cafe music seems evolution
to be
of specifically French
awaits a historian. In any case the expresorigin. sion 'Paris arrangement' 1 to indicate the reduction of the normal Its
still
few instruments justifies the conclusion that was the home of this musical practice. And unlike other France orchestral scoring to a
nations, the French
though they do
have never regarded this
not,
activity as degrading, a particularly dignified many others have laid the
of course, consider
it
occupation either. Capet, Thibaud and foundations of their solo careers in cafes; nor was this profession entirely unknown to me. As I was one of the few students at the Conservatoire
who had
free evenings I
had often deputized for
colleagues in cafes, variety shows, or operettas, though I was not particularly popular with theatre conductors, because instead of
keeping my eyes on the baton I used to stare at the stage, if the piece or one of the performers aroused my special interest. Even in those days there were outstanding soloists to be heard in some of the cafes. The stimulating influence of music on the consumption of food and drink has long been recognized all over the world, and one often finds, especially in Paris and the big American cities, cafe violinists who could win applause from the most exacting listeners in a concert halL Warner Besetzung,
lit.
Paris instrumentation or scoring.
102
PARIS [1890-1896]
became an industrial or utility musician, and adjusted my whole existence to the job. The 'ensemble* consisted of a Belgian pianist, an elderly second violinist, and a 'cellist who was also active as a traveller in hospital furniture. My efforts were and right from the moderate, extremely partners' For two months, then,
outset
I
I
occupied a special position
consisted of diverse pieces waltzes, as well as solos
of principle,
I
among them. Our programme
overtures, operatic fantasies, popular Since, as a matter
from my own repertoire.
did not look through the piece beforehand, but
played everything by sight, I had to be an efficient sight-reader with a touch of bravado if I did not want to be caught in the traps of unexpected cadenzas or arbitrary passage work. It was here that I acquired a remarkable
sight-reading facility that later astonished many composers. Although there could be no thought of regular studies, this period did not result in any damage to
my
technique; on the contrary, I not only refined, quite inevitably, my power of co-ordination (i.e. the ability to transform visual
impressions as quickly as possible into the corresponding physical movements), but actually further improved my tone production.
For owing to technical superiority, listeners soon concentrated their interest entirely on me, and I was forced to take as At no time much care over playing as over proper solo work.
my
my
allow myself the luxury of taking things comfortably, as one does in the orchestra. So my new activity involved no danger
could to
I
my artistic
development
as distinct
from
my moral balance:
now
experienced the demoralizing influence of a disliked not get up till about midday; immediately after activity. I did of cards in the ca&, then in fine a lunch I I
began quiet game weather went for a swim in the river, spent the time until the o'clock I evening in all kinds of dissipations, until towards eight
went
to
my place of work, where the public was already waiting
me in expectation of the coming musical enjoyment. In France there really are still people who visit this kind of place chiefly on
for
account of the music, but at the same time drink their coffee, read the papers, talk with their friends and even play a noisy game of cards. Our musical offerings were ended towards midnight, but as a rule I did not get to bed before three or four in the morning. .103
CARL FLESCH attitude to-
Nowadays, after many years, I take quite a different wards this kind of musical practice. Then, there was for me only a that of concert performer. Even possible occupation single
no more than a milch cow, which was teaching I still regarded as to provide me with the material means which would allow me later to devote myself exclusively to concert activity. Today I that the occupation of a cafe or restaurant musician of free choice but of bitter necessity. frequently not a matter
know
is
How
had the opportunity to help and advise above all to console them respect, and often
I
my pupils in this
!
returned to Paris at the beginning of October. I became a the Cremerie, and so had a reason to avoid regular guest of friend Deutsch's family evenings. The loss of income I had incurred by resigning from the Lamoureux Orchestra I made up by my intensified teaching activity. Also, prompted by Hasselseveral trio recitals with Louis and a pianist, mann's mother, I I
my
gave
which we disposed of tickets among our acquaintances. Simulto build I taneously, under Marsick's stimulating direction, began
for
virtuoso pieces still up a serious repertoire wherein, however, for the time being. predominated The Hasselmanns' home was still among my favourite social I got to know a young and amusing engagements. There, too, the name of Meyer, with whom I soon became painter
by
friends.
He
proposed that
following year and
set
I
should rent part of his studio
up house with him.
I
made
my
flat
the
decision
dependent on the result of the Conservatoire competition. third contest drew nearer. Gradually the great moment of this The piece chosen was the first solo from Kreutzer's Nineteenth Concerto, a work which was just as unfavourable to my specific talent as the previous year's set piece: for the technical standard of*
the work, written at the beginning of the nineteenth century, was that of, say, the curriculum of the preparatory classes at the Vienna
Conservatoire. If we
remember
that
by
that time the Concertos
of Bruch, Saint-Saens, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Goldmark, Dvorak and Lab were all available, not to mention the classical concertos of Bach, Mozart and Beethoven, we find it difficult to understand the mentality of those circles with the eighty-three-year-old 104
-
PARIS [1890-1896]
Ambroise Thomas,
at their head, which ventured to of the younger generation by mummified and extremely one-sided works of mediocre musical value. What a fusty atmosphere for an institution which by virtue of its past and its tradition was entitled to be regarded as the first in the
director,
measure the
abilities
world Given such !
tasks, great talents
advantage, mediocrity establish
and
a
at a
must necessarily be
premium;
at a dis-
differences are difficult to
miscarriage of artistic justice
is
hardly avoidable.
was unanimously awarded first prize; I owed it to some extent to my sight-reading which to the of was of a perfection seldom according opinion experts heard and so indirectly to my two months' training in the cafe at Limoges. But I had to share my award with a Mile Rousillon from Lyons, who made no further impact on the musical world. The chauvinistic jury found it quite intolerable to exclude the French element completely from the highest distinction. Despite the
set
piece,
however,
I
For the French the foreigner is an inferior, exotic animal, who strange to say cannot speak French at all, or at any rate only badly a tolerated guest. Since the end of the 1890'$ no foreigner has been engaged in the Paris symphony orchestras. In the Berlin State
Opera, on the other hand, three Austrian leaders occupied the desks as late as 193 1. And in the Berlin Philharmonic Orches-
first
have always been almost exclusively foreign: Austrians, Hungarians, Czechs, Danes, Dutchmen, etc. Never
tra the leaders
institution in 1784 has a foreigner taught at the Paris Conservatoire, whereas at the Berlin State Hochschule for Music
since
its
there have been,
among
others, the following foreign professors
since 1900: for pianoforte, the
Hungarian Dohnanyi, the Russian
Kreutzer, the Swiss Lutschg and Fischer, the Dutch Petri, the Austrian Schnabel; for violin, the French Marteau, the Austrians Deman, Wolfsthal and Rostal, I myself (Hungarian) ; while for
twelve years (1920-32) the Austrian Franz Schreker functioned as director. As late as 193 1 the Mendelssohn prize went to two Poles;
between 1929 and 1932 the Molique prize went to a Hungarian, a South American and a Russian. True, the preference for the to the available national foreigners was due to their superiority had to choose authorities the French German artists. But if 105
CARL FLESCH between a foreign Corypheus and a French mediocrity for a vacant post at the Conservatoire, the decision would doubtless be in favour of their fellow countryman. Things have of course changed
Germany, but the
in
distinction to
fact
France,
remains that
down
Germany with
to 1932, in contra-
generosity and broad-
mindedness made quality the criterion in every sphere without regard to nationality, an attitude that was unique in European national history.
Among my rivals I still remember Pierre Monteux [b. 1875] who played the test piece over to me in advance as I was the older and more experienced, and asked my advice. He was awarded a premier accessit and the following year he won tkepremierprix, but and then again to the baton. Today1 he is indubitably regarded as the most outstanding of French conductors, perhaps as the only one to whose performances an interlater transferred to the viola
national yard-stick can be applied. Jacques Thibaud's too, coincided
first
contest,
with my last.
In accordance with a long-established custom the violin makers Bernardel presented me with a pretty good instrument
Gand
&
with the customary dedication, which is inscribed on the ribs in gold lettering. I also had the honour to play the first half of Paganini's
D
major Violin Concerto
at a small
concert
upon the
occasion of the prize-giving; old Ambroise Thomas vigorously objected to the choice of the piece, remarking: 'C'est de la
bad music.) Marsick, who was at least as distinction as I was myself, was eager to present his
mauvaise musique,'
proud of my first
(It's
prize-winning pupil in the best possible condition to the public which used to assemble at the Conservatoire on this
select
occasion. After thorough preparation he obtained from promise to go to bed at ten on the eve of the great day.
day itself I had to
call
a final rehearsal, after
fed
me on light food.
me
the
On the
on him once more in the morning and have which he took me to a good restaurant and After the prize-giving,
artistic silver
medals
designed by Chaplin were presented; their value was enhanced by the fact, confirmed by the cognoscenti, that the state pawnbroking establishment would advance thirty-five francs on one
106
PARIS [1890-1896]
any time. Some days later a notice from the pen of the music critic, Arthur Pougin, appeared in the Menestral, the leading musical weekly; this was really the first serious review of any of bemy performances, and it has remained fixed in my at
memory
cause
its
tenor almost tempted
potential. Pougin,
who must
me
to over-estimate
my
artistic
have been in particularly good in which he exalted my technical
humour, wound up his piece, and musical qualities, with the words: 'Indeed, if the Conservatoire had produced only a few such young artists as Mr Flesch, it
would have
already justified its existence/ If there would have been an end to praise literally,
I
had taken
my
his
strivings for
self-critical faculty was perfection, but fortunately sufficiently to show me the limits of developed ability. All too favourable
my
my
notices can often
do much more harm than unjustly unfavourable
ones. I had happily completed a period of my life was to be of decisive significance for my artistic career, I set out on the homeward journey to my parents, whom I had not seen for two years. The little town had heard of my triumph, the
Conscious that
that
local rag registered the fact
appropriate commentary, and
of local boy makes good' with
my
fellow citizens from
now on
me
with befitting respect. About the same time my greeted brother obtained his doctor's degree, and thus my father had the reassuring certainty that at least
two of
his children faced
an
auspicious future.
After the holidays
I
returned to Paris, for
I
was determined to
career there as a free lance without any ties to an try to start orchestra or teaching institution. the Vienna South railway station I was entrusted, after previous agreement, with a young
my
On
whom
I was to assist to named Adolf Rebner [b. 1876] Marsick's into class. But since no free place was available get here, he entered the viola ckss which had just been started under
violinist
~aforge, in order possibly to acquire the prerogative of transferring to the violin class in the following year; at the same time, he took private lessons from Marsick. But after barely a year he
returned to Vienna and anon went to Frankfurt/Main, where he joined the Hermann quartet as second violinist. Soon after he
107
CARL FLESCH started his
own
quartet.
For
many
years he
was a teacher
at the
Hoch
Conservatoire, during which time he only occasionally and noble tone appeared as a soloist. Rebner had an inspirited
which went
to serve his outstanding interpretative talent.
fact that despite his gifts
The
he did not succeed in reaching the front
rank of his profession would seem to be primarily due, as in Boucherit's case, to poor health and a resultant tendency towards technical nervousness.
remembered
will be
It
painter
that at Hasselmann's I
named Meyer, who had proposed
his lodger. His place
Avenue de
met
that I should
a
young become
was above the outer boulevards, in the which neighbourhood one frequently
Clichy, in
heard the shrieks of prostitutes mishandled by their pimps, or witnessed knife fights between rival gang leaders. Meyer's flat consisted of a
roomy
studio, as well as
two rooms and a kitchen
my domain. The furniture was procured on the instalment system. If the instalments were not paid on time the which were seller
to
had the
be
right either to sue
you
or to
demand
the furniture
back without any compensation for the instalments already paid. Meyer's manner of living suited me. He was a thorough Bohemian, decidedly talented as an artist, and as a man decent, goodnatured and weak. His vice was drink, which destroyed him some years later. He worked only when he couldn't otherwise keep his head above water; but then he sat down resolutely, painted a charming flower still life, sold it to an art dealer at the fixed price
of 150 francs and, top of the world.
as
long as the
money lasted, was once more on
We lived together for about eight months. At
first all went well. Meyer got up just before eleven and, after he had obtained the necessary small change from me, went to make purchases. His first call, needless to say, was at the wine merchant's
had already been fiddling zealously for some long work to prepare lunch. We often had guests whom he brought home from his walks abroad: colleagues,, models and similar jolly company. But one day, on returning from a short concert trip to the Nancy district, I found to my un-
on
the corner.
time
when he
I
set to
whom
pleasant surprise one of these models, with Meyer had fallen in love installed as absence, during seriously regular housewife.
my
108
PARIS [1890-1896]
Jeanne was
thoroughly
attractive,
spoilt
and
but despite her eighteen years she was
entirely uneducated.
Her
life
story,
which
she once volunteered, taught me a thing or two about the depths of the Paris underworld. Meyer, who now had to provide for
one more mouth, had to look about him for regular work, unpleasant though this was to him. It so happened that a battle panorama of enormous size was then being painted, to be set up
Meyer was
for exhibition in the Trocadero.
fortunate, to the
extent ofa daily twenty-five francs, in obtaining work on it for some
two months as a painter of corpses. This caused great jubilation in our community. Jeanne was henceforth to act as cook. But on the very first day it transpired that she had never cooked before, and so an unparalleled culinary martyrdom began for me. The meat especially was always burnt, until I imparted to Jeanne the surprising information that according to experience always let a knob of butter melt in the pan before the meat
my
put into
it.
The
situation
one was
grew more and more unbearable,
although the master of the house came home as often as possible at midday, to undertake the position of kitchen chef himself. On one
of these occasions he brought Paul home with him, a goodnatured colleague of his schooldays whom he had run across at his workplace, and who soon became our regular guest until one
home Meyer found a scrap of paper from told him in plain words that Paul understood in which she Jeanne, he and that she would therefore try to find her than her better did, evening on coming
future happiness at his side.
Meyer took
this
double duplicity
he was no longer the same. In addition financial came along, arrears of rent, returned cheques for
deeply to heart; difficulties
share punctually. furniture, etc. although I always paid As a result of all these setbacks, he lost all desire for Paris
my
informed
me
one morning
that
he was weary of city
intended to go into the country, there to
work
and and Thus I
life
'seriously*.
became the independent possessor of a flat. Things went pretty well to begin with: I had a daily help, a not very attractive look-
woman of the people. Until one day I discovered that of three my dress shirts were missing, and had to dismiss her. Now I was alone, and had to do all the cleaning, shopping, cooking
ing, elderly
109
CARL FLESCH and washing up myself. taste to
on
my
others
A
drop of
wormwood added
a bitter
happy feeling that henceforth I had no longer to rely the necessity to do the washing up after eating. It was
magnificent orchestral performance a dilettante started one of the most beautiful melodic morsels from the
as if after a
to
hum
just heard. However, I consoled myself with the that only three weeks lay between me and the long vacathought tion. So ended this extremely stimulating attempt at alliance with
symphony
latent interest in visual art and laid a painter who brought out the foundations for gradually increasing understanding of this art form, to which I was to owe much pleasure in the future when
my
my
visiting all the galleries accessible to
me
a lasting enrichment.
At the same time I had come to know the very depths of Paris art life, and, what was then the main thing to me, had all in all had a good time. Under the influence of my adventurous milieu
jolly
of my
violin studies
ceeded
at the
had not
suffered at
all;
the regularity I had suc-
besides,
age of twenty-one in standing on
my own feet, able
to forgo support from father. I received an average of ten francs for a lesson, had some supplementary income from provin-
my
and was regarded by my colleagues as a fat bourmust, however, confess that I did not yet take teaching
cial concerts,
geois. I
very seriously. pupils were largely dilettantes or poorly talented professional violinists, and I myself was interested in
My
teaching only as a bread-and-butter job which enabled me to continue my violin studies uninterruptedly. educational principles themselves were still pretty primitive and stereotyped. own
My
My
development
clearly
illustrates
that
even given pronounced
pedagogical gifts, youth and an enthusiasm for teaching hardly ever go together. As a young man one is still too egocentric, all too
preoccupied with one's own joys and sorrows to sink oneself in the mind of a fellow man in need of help and advice. As for child pupils, a twenty-year-old can't
manage them
at all. I recall a six-
year-old girl whom I made practise the dry studies of Sevcik as if she were an adult, until she lost all desire to play the violin and was snatched away from me by a more experienced teacher, who knew how to spice the arid etudes with small pieces. This was a
no
PARIS [1890-1896] valuable experience in elementary teaching, which for too dearly with the loss As a concert artist, too, I
Marsick invited
of one began
pupil. to spread
I
did not pay
my wings. One day
me to take the second violin in Schumann's Piano
Quintet in one of his chamber music recitals, which he organized with Pugno and Hollmann. In the single rehearsal I fell into a
not know the work and was caught by rhythmic pitfall in the scherzo's second trio. That was the only time I had the opportunity to play in an ensemble with these three artistic giants. delicate situation: I did
surprise at the
Raoul Pugno [1852-1914] had an extraordinary career. At the age of eighteen he took part in the Paris Commune, functioned
some weeks as director of the Conservatoire, and upon the suppression of the revolt received a mild prison sentence. The next twenty years he idled away in typical Paris fashion, and at the for
same time scraped together a living as an organist, pianoforte teacher and composer for pantomimes, in which he himself he made his played the piano part. In 1892, at the age of forty,
debut in the Conservatoire concerts with the then highly popular Grieg Piano Concerto, and at once became famous. He never played from memory, had an unusually delicate touch which made a remarkable contrast with the massive build of his body,
and represented the most perfect type of pianist musician. Later, first permanent sonata duo with Ysaye. He died
he formed the
during a concert tour in Russia. Josef Hollmann [1852-1927] was quite a different type of artist.
^He was above
all a virtuoso, the undisputed possessor of the finest tonal quality on his instrument, of which he was the sovereign master. I had never heard Grieg's 'Cello Sonata played in so
fascinating a
Ten
manner
as
by
this last great 'cellist
of the old school.
the scene and achieved a
years later Casals
appeared upon ^complete revolution in the technical and interpretative principles of 'cello playing which, until then, had been of universal validity. Together with the pianist Lemaire and my old friend, the cellist Schiedenhelm, I also gave trio recitals in Rheims, which were well attended. Lemaire, a waggish, diminutive fellow with "he typical cheeky mother wit of a city boy, later changed over to
in
CARL FLESCH the career of a lyrical operatic tenor, and not without success ; I him after fourteen years as des Grieux in Manon at Nice.
heard
my German name, I gave several highly
In Nancy too, despite successful concerts. I there
made
the acquaintance of the oldest member of the Hekking dynasty, the violinist father of the 'cellist Gerard, whom I came to know later at Amsterdam. In addition, I occasionally took part in provincial concerts, where I had the powers as a soloist and to gather opportunity to try out
valuable experience for
my my future
concert career. In Paris itself I
regularly made music every Sunday in the art-loving family of the Viennese stockbroker Spiehnann, where I played with such
men as Marsick, the
distinguished Belgian 'cellist Liegeois,
whom
and the
have already mentioned. At first I Debroux, at the second but as the master of the house himself desk; played enjoyed taking the second violin, he asked me one night whether violinist
I
could play the viola too. Although I had no more than an elementary notion of the alto clef and had never handled a viola
I
agreed, courage inspired by ignorance of the danger, the fear of losing the evening's fee often francs. But by old Hellmesberger had always said that a proper violinist must be
before, as
well
my
I
as
able to play
all
stringed instruments at need, and that he himself his father to take the place of an absent
had once been forced by
double-bass in an orchestra. However,
I
took the initial precaution
of enquiring about my first note's whereabouts on the fingerboard, and decided to preserve its relation to violin notation throughout the entire piece, a venture crowned by approximately a fifty-per-cent success. Since then I have played the viola often,gladly,
and
All
this,
and I have even given several public perinstrument in Berlioz' Harold in Italy.
better too,
formances on
this
however, was no more for
me
than unimportant
skirmishing before the decisive battle. Gradually the thought bemind that it was time I made the attempt t<> gan to be fixed in
my
conquer a place in the concert life of Central Europe's Germanspeaking parts. Quite naturally the city which first came to my mind was Vienna, The chief city of the monarchy was then re-regarded as the centre of the German musical world. True, a figure of the importance of Joachim hardly called it his own, but it 112
PARIS [1890-1896] possess the reputation of being the most appropriate springboard for virtuosos of the grand style. It was here that Sarasate and
Ysaye had begun their international careers. Paderewski had made debut in Vienna and Leschetizky had founded a piano school of supreme importance. At that time Viennese concert life seemed to be the natural fruit of a great artistic tradition, whereas Berlin musical activity was more like a hothouse plant artificially forced to grow by shrewd concert agents. Of course I also wished to show my old Viennese school colleagues and friends what I had made of myself during the past five years. But first of all I had to overcome a considerable obstacle: I was still playing on my old Dutch violin which, admittedly, was not bad in itself, but inadequate as a concert instrument. I hit on the idea of putting my difficulty to my old friend Deutsch, and found him ready to lend me the necessary sum for the purchase of a better instrument. At this period there were three violin dealers in Paris who could be considered for this kind of purchase: the old Silvestre, Gand & Bernardel, and Deroux. I was on particularly good terms with Silvestre. He had taken a liking to me and once even let me watch as he removed the table of the 'Betz' Stradivarius to fit a new bass bar. At Gand & Bernardel's I knew chiefly one of the employees, a man named Albert Caressa, who at the time was mainly concerned with supervising the production of the worldfamous resin; nobody suspected that before long he would take over the firm and for forty years would be the most active and his
successful violin dealer in the world.
After various fruitless
of what proved attempts, one day found a Storioni instrument to be a quite outstanding tone in the shop window of a small violin maker; Storioni was the last famous Italian violin maker. I
Owing
to
its
substitute scroll, the instrument cost only 1,200 owned a it without much hesitation and
now bought in violin with which one could make a good show any but the Thus I had an end worth striving for, a new largest concert halls. to which I devoted myselfwith all my powers. zealous to study, spur Once a man has known the comfort of his own dwelling, he francs. I
cannot bear the thought of returning to the oppressive restraint of an uncivilized hotel room, surrounded by noisy neighbours. As 113
CARL FLESCH the previous year my income had akeady reached an average of 400 francs a month, I thought I would rent on my own account a small fiat of two rooms with offices, and acquire the necessary furniture
on an instalment
plan. In die rue La Bruyere, between I found a flat which seemed suit-
the inner and outer boulevards,
Now
able. only the little detail remained of finding the wherewithal to pay the rent and furniture instalments regularly a matter over which I did not worry for the moment, since I was
high in Marsick's favour. At
his request I had undertaken the of leader in the position accompanying quintet for his class in the competitive examination and, among others, had piloted Thibaud safely past the rocks of the sight-reading test to die haven of the premier accessit. I had also acquired several pupils from Marsick, chiefly such as were not sufficiently talented or rich for him himself. Among them was a young man from Nancy, the son of wellto-do parents, who though he had little talent had taken it into his head to become a violinist. His parents proposed that I should spend the two months of the vacation with them on an au pair still
basis at Paris-Plage (later a
my
popular seaside resort) near Boulogne,
contribution being to teach their son free of charge. I almost
immediately accepted. Like most people, I could not avoid a certain feeling of disillusionment when I first saw the sea. But I soon learned to appreciate the delight of salt water on the skin, and the resulting pleasant relaxation of the body. The place itself offered no distractions
whatever. There was neither casino nor spa orchestra. It was still the typical 'petit trou pas cher' (a cheap little place), the ideal spot"
during the holiday months. The was family only mildly amusing; the son was goodnatured, slovenly and untalented. I had no money in my pocket, but I had a fine room with a view over the sea and I fed plentifully and well. In addition I could study as much as I wished, and thus,
of the French life,
petit bourgeois
too,
the chief purpose of my holiday to prepare myself, unstay molested and in healthy surroundings, for my Vienna debut
was fully achieved. Towards the end of September I returned to my new flat in Paris. My neighbour on the same floor also happened to be a 114
PARIS
[1890-1896]
musician, the organist at a synagogue, and a nimble pianist, with I often made music. He had a friend named Rosen, a
whom
Frenchman despite his German name, a middle-aged musician of elderly and withered visage, who was the first conscious reactionary in the musical sphere with whom I had come into contact. Rosen was composing in the Mozartian style, and if one asked
him 'why he didn't try to keep in step with contemporary developments, he replied with the counter-question whether Mozart was not to be regarded as one of the greatest composers of all time. He considered that absolute beauty must not depend on changes in perfection was everlasting, experiment transitory. Apparently he did not realize that vitality in all and everything that
taste,
rests
much more on
was not yet
1 'becoming' than on 'being', while
able to put this
I myself of artistic highly important principle
development into words. Meanwhile I made preparations for my Vienna concert. I could choose between two concert agents, Albert Guttmann and Alexander Rose. Almost unchallenged, the first-named dominated Vienna's concert world: the most famous artists from Joachim to Patti were all in his hands. But since I myself was not so optimistic as to reckon with an appreciable sale of tickets, I preferred to enter into a contract with the far less known Alexander Rose, the brother of the violinist, on the assumption that an agent's interest in an artist stood in inverse proportion to the amount of work at the agent's disposal. I arranged for two concerts at an interval of some three weeks, of which one was to take place in the Bosendorfer
hall,
the other in the recital
Musikfmmde. The programme of
room of the
my
Geselhchaft der debut consisted of the
D
Saint-Saens' major Paganini Concerto, Bach's Chaconne, I still lacked a smaller various and However, Havanaise, pieces.
small working capital for the cost of the journey, the living the deficit that was certainly to be expected. Once expenses, and the loan of 1,200 good old Deutsch came to my aid: to francs he had already advanced me for the violin, he added a further 800 francs. Within two years incidentally, I had the satisfaction of repaying him everything.
again
1
The well-known German
C.F.-I
antithesis
of Werden and
TI 5
Sein,
CARL FLESCH Next I set about obtaining letters of recommendation to certain prominent persons in Viennese society. The Vicomtesse de Grandval, a society lady who was an amateur composer, and who had shown much interest in me since I had taken part in the performance of one of her works, seemed to for helping I
me a little in this
was introduced
to
me
eminently suitable
Through her good Mathilde Marchesi, who was married direction.
offices
to the
Marchese de Castrone, and who as a singing teacher led the field together with Jean de Reszke. Marchesi, who was to live to be ninety-two, was then already well over seventy and intrigued me because she showed a fantastic resemblance to Frederick the Great.
home
I also met my famous fellow countryman, Tiirr, of the 1848 revolution; he put me to no little embarrassment when he addressed me, an unsuspecting 'Swabian' (as the
In her
a general
called derisively by the Magyars), a tangible result of the Vicomtesse's exertions several impressive letters of recommendation,
German-Hungarians are in Hungarian. I
took
home
As
one to the then musical potentate Eduard Hanslick, and others to the Rumanian ambassador's wife, the Princess Ghika, and several to journalists. This chase after letters of recommendation was still a general above
all
custom, being a remnant from the
first
half of the nineteenth
century. We learn from Spohr's autobiography that if an artist of that period intended to appear in a city he had to go there three or four weeks in advance, in order to call on the notabilities of the
and to give unpaid performances in their homes. Only then could he venture to announce a concert with justified expectation place
of material success. This amalgamation of social and artistic obligations has meanwhile ceased, if only because our concert industry
depends on a rapid, ever-changing succession of performers,
must therefore confine themselves to
who
eating, sleeping, playing
and
travelling, the only variations consisting of changes in the order of these activities. In any case, the value of letters of recommendation
generally over-estimated. The experience of young days has taught me that such letters are the more effective the less 'eminent'
my
is
the people to whom they are addressed. After all, you cannot demand ofLord Rothschild that he should take an interest in all the
116
<
PARIS [1890-1896]
young artists who are recommended to him, while on the other hand the plain citizen regards it as an honour to be in touch with
members of this uncivic profession, and does everything to make the road smooth for them.
in his
power
For the
first time in five years, I was again in Vienna. Most of former of the Conservatoire were playing second my colleagues fiddle in the opera orchestra, while my former school-fellow Lewinger had been for three years a professor at the Conservatoire
Now I was shortly to provide the proof that I had done right in leaving my native land in order to acquaint myself with a different kind of violin culture. I grew more and more tense in Bucharest.
with every day. I regarded my Vienna debut as a turning-point my career, one which was to show whether I was to go the
in
even, comfortable road of mediocrity or the path that leads to the heights of art.
steep,
dangerous
And so the great day arrived. Both my parents had hastened to Vienna from Wieselburg. Old friends, relations and colleagues waited impatiently for the things to come. To put it briefly,
my
concert was a complete success which, because
even had a touch of the
sensational.
was unexpected,
unanimously exand even Griin himdiscovery, self was greatly surprised at the I had achieved. At development one step I had risen to the front rank of the youngest generation of violinists, and I basked in the sun of rny youthful fame. About that same time a young English violinist, Henry Such, had also made his debut in Vienna, though with decidedly less success. Later he became a teacher of the violin in Philadelphia, where I met him again some thirty years later. The most significant experience I had at this time was that I met pressed their pleasure at this
'
The
it
critics
new
Fritz Kreisler [b. 1875] again; thus began a friendship which has over forty years. It will be remembered that I first
now lasted for \
heard him play when he was ten years old. From that time on I have heard him play again and again at pretty regular intervals.
am
thus more intimately acquainted with the development of the this, greatest violinist of the last thirty years, than any other man. I
His father came from Cracow, and later practised as a doctor in Vienna. Fritz himself was Viennese by birth. Originally a pupil of 117
CARL FLESCH Hellmesberger, he left the Vienna Conservatoire at the early age of ten, entered Massart's class in Paris, and won the first prize after
two to
An astonishing infant prodigy,
years.
grow
which
he had the misfortune
up too swiftly, and to enter puberty all too early
an age
momentous for artistic development. At the age of twelve he could already be regarded as a violinist of great stature, but from then until his twenty-fourth year there ensued a vacuum which almost put an end to his entire career. During my is
usually so
concerts in Vienna in 1895 the youngster of twenty appeared to me to be a big, strong, broad-shouldered fellow whose facial
expression
and
showed a lively temperament with a touch of brutality,
who was
amiably superficial and dashing in character. Tc heard him play in the salon of the art-loving CohnHollander family; he rendered a suite by Gound, a young Vienbegin with,
I
nese composer, in a style whose novelty made Shortly afterwards the English violinist Such,
;
me sit up and listen.
whom I have already
mentioned, was to play to the Danish impresario Hansen with a view to a possible engagement. Alexander Ros wanted Kreisler
me also to make use of this opportunity. But we deliberately did not take our instruments with us, so that the whole thing might seem an improvisation. On Such's violin I played the;
and
Paganini Concerto in D, and Kreisler the Adagio Religiose by Thome. It was on this occasion that for the first time I gained some notion of Kreisler 's greatness and his of *
performance
originality:
this
piece of saccharine
life.
Of religious feeling,
was
a 'chant
d'amour
fully seductive sounds,
was one of the strongest impressions in my to be sure, there
was no
trace: rather,
$
it
was an unrestrained orgy of sindepravedly fascinating, whose sole driving
lascif '. It
force appeared to be a sensuality intensified to the point of fren2y^ His art seemed of value to him only in so far as it allowed him to
form of unlimited instinctual expression. To the horror of his ambitious father, he lived in Bohemian fashion from day to day, without end or purpose, as an ardent cafe use
it as
crawler
just another
a specifically Viennese profession, in
narcotic daze so
many
come of a Viennese and not unjustly.
talents
until
whose
pleasantly
have been wrecked. 'Nothing can
he has
left
118
Vienna', so the saying goes,
'
PARIS [1890-1896] living on his father, who despite all his admonitions could not get his son to practise any regular activity-
Kreisler
whatever.
was thus
How deep Kreisler's reputation must have sunk in those
which Rose has confirmed. A violinist Court Opera orchestra, and on his father's insistence Fritz took part in the audition, but without success. He was turned down by the selection committee on the ground that his playing was lacking in sense of rhythm Not until 1898 did he succeed in escaping from the morass. After a short period of preparation he at last brought himself to make his debut in Berlin. And then a career began which in respect of its intensity, duration and material results remains unique in the history ofviolin playing. The question arises, what was the cause of this cleft which days
is
shown by
was wanted
a story
for the
!
divided Kreisler's development into
two
sharply distinguished
periods? For from approximately 1887, the year he left the Paris Conservatoire, down to his d6but in Berlin, a period of twelve years, his art
had in
fact
almost lain fallow. In Vienna he did no
more than take part in other people's concerts, and passed as a talented local celebrity who had all but gone to the bad; he had in fact resigned
himself to ending up as an orchestral player.
How did
world of the day evidently and dehappen to the suggestion of this 'Pied Piper*? to succumb refused cidedly There must have been yet deeper reasons for this inward resistance of musical society than Kreisler's human and artistic lack of selfcontrol, for the qualities which later were to be recognized as the cause of his world success his strangely seductive tone, powerful of rhythmic force and natural musicianship must have been part the youngster who as a violinist was so extraordinary. But even in the years following his Berlin debut his success was by no means uncontested: much lesser spirits, such as Marteau, Thibaud and even Burmester, were far more popular. But time was working for Kreisler. The older he grew, the more he seemed to meet the taste and inner demands of the public, as if the world had needed a
it
that the musical
certain span of time in which to grow accustomed to his style.We are here confronted with one of die most remarkable problems in
the history of our let
art,
which has not yet been properly recognized,
alone solved. This is
my explanation: 119
CARL FLESCH
The
source of what seemed Kreisler's
his later superiority consists in his
initial
having
inferiority
and of
forestalled the taste
of
the time; he already intuitively divined it when the listeners were not yet ready for it. Usually the crowd's need for something new coincides with
its
provision
of reaction against
for instance, in Ysaye's case
by way
Sarasate's smoothness, or in Sarasate's case as
a reaction against Joachim's relative neglect of the purely sensual elements of sound, or in Joachim's case as a reaction against the
debasement of programme building. In all these instances, the coincidence of needs and their fulfilment was so striking that it points to reciprocal effects rather than to a simple succession cause and effect.
3n Kreisler's case the situation was different in so far as at his style
was
violinists
did not yet
of
first
be exaggerated, overwrought, unrhythmic, unmusical even, and so was rejected. The technical reasons for this aesthetic judgment are to be sought first and foremost in his We must not forget that even in 1880 the great special vibrato. felt
to
make use of a proper vibrato but employed a
which the pitch was subjected to only quite imperceptible oscillations. To vibrate on relatively unexpressive notes, not to speak of runs, was regarded as unseemly and inartistic. Basically, quicker passages had to be a certain from distinguished by dryness longer and more expressive notes. Ysaye was the first to make use of a broader vibrato and kind ofBebung,
i.e.
a finger vibrato in
already attempted to give life to passing notes, while Kreisler drew the extreme consequences from this revaluation of vibrato activity;
he not only resorted to a
still
broader and
more intensive
vibrato, but even tried to ennoble faster passages by means of a vibrato which, admittedly, was more latent than manifest. 1 He
himself sees in this replacement of e'fwfe-like dryness by expressive values the source of the response which, as the years passed, he
found in his audiences.
I
agree,
with the reservation that while
this
extension of expressive resources through a continuous vibrate may be regarded as his most important technical attribute, it is ultimately but the inevitable result of his highly individual neec for an increased intensity of expression. In any kind of artistic 1
lit.
'more thought than actually executed.*
120
PARIS [1890-1896]
always the impulse, the expressive need, the inner compulsion which dictates in the first place, and not the technical equipment. Just as a hungry man will always get hold of food, if activity,
it is
need be by
force, so every original artist finds, as a rule
sciously, the necessary technical
means to
still
his
unconhunger.
spiritual
Bohemian period came to an end towards 1902. His period began. The woman whom he loved and married, a
Kreisler's
great
German-American, knew how and to
characteristic sensuality
to guide him, to ennoble his refine the wild
and unbridled
elements in his temperament. Without endangering the seductive of his playing, Kreisler let his style be determined qualities pri-
marily by musical requirements, and thus drew nearer to the purely musical listener without estranging the more primitive lover of violin playing as such. This new attitude, a little more detached, could not degenerate into dry routine, for there remained,
unchanged, the unique beauty of his tone, which breathed out inner feeling as a flower breathes off its scent
The
his
quality of his
tone was unmistakable, incomparable and unequalled. If we force ourselves to
more
examine the
prosaic, professional viewpoint,
violinist Kreisler
we
from
a
again find a great deal
remarkable and highly relevant. In his bowing he deliberwith his contemporaries. Before him, we ately parted company unshakeable had the apparently principle that the whole bow must that
is
be used whenever possible and at all costs a principle whose strict application cannot be right, if only because the technical of gracefulness and delicacy requires as restricted an Kreisler's expenditure of bowing length as possible. In any case,
translation
example shows that grandeur and intensity are by no means tied up with the use of the 'whole bow'. He used the extreme point
He explained this by saying that arm prevented him from using the extreme at the lower end of the bow he was always troubled point, while a fear of damaging one of the corners of the violin. This bow-
just as
seldom as the extreme nut
his rather too short
by
ing
economy was counter-balanced by
pressure which, always slightly
automatically regulated
by
his characteristic
accentuated, was
in
its
bow turn
his extraordinarily intensive vibrato.
In his case, dynamics and shadings were effected 121
much more by
CARL FLESCH varied rationings of the length of stroke than by changes of the point of contact. The veiled mysterioso mezza voce was not so
much his strong point as an uninterrupted intensity of expression, any dead spot in the course of a recital. What a contrast to the elegant superficiality of a Sarasate, by whom Kreisler, alone amongst his contemporaries, did not seem
which did not
tolerate
to be influenced in
any way His bowing technique was supreme whose elan is to be placed side by side !
in characteristic rhythms,
with
his tonal qualities. Sonority
and rhythm are the firm bases on
which towered the edifice of his art. As for his left hand, and vibrato apart, we have to note
certain
defects in his intonation. Kreisler never 'practised' in the ordinary
sense
of the word.
He did not find it necessary to 'warm up' before
he was always ready. 1 Hence his attitude towards preparation was a little frivolous and doubly striking at a time when the technique of some violinists bordered on infallibility. a performance;
seemed that Kreisler under-estimated the
It
note.
As
ability to correct
he frequently neglected to
adjust a sustained, impure he did not believe in regular practice, it often happened
distonations:
that his finger technique defect, to which one grew
was not
altogether spotless; but this
accustomed in time, could not weaken
enjoyment of his playing to any appreciable extent. On the a concert he did not change his usual activities in the slightof day one's
and on the platform he displayed an admirable sang-froid. 'To practise is nothing but a bad habit,' he used to say; and in this, est,
most paradoxes, there is a grain of truth. In purely artistic respects the charm of his interpretations consisted in an uncommon harmony between his individual expresas in
and his very personal resources. Despite the danger of into claptrap by the perfection of his own tone, enticed being Kreisler never betrayed his (and his generation's) musical seriousness, which was partly innate and partly imparted by education. sive will
No matter how pregnant with feeling his portamentos might be,* they were always restrained, never tasteless or calculated to impress the gallery. His rhythmic feeling was incorruptible he did :
1
For a
of Kreisler's attitude to practising and Vanning up' Lochner (Rockliff I95i),pp. 85 ff. [Publisher].
fuller discussion
Fritz Kreisler by Louis P.
122
see
PARIS [1890-1896]
not
sacrifice it to a musically suspicious brilliance. He never raced; he shaped. The Allegro from the Praeludium and Allegro 'by Pugnani', which most violinists play as a perpetuum mobile, he took
at a
pace no
possibility
faster
of
than about
differentiation
damaged. Unlike so
many
J - iao
and
Thus
the
rhythm and the
articulation
remained unof his essential
.
others, Kreisler lost none
of the years, because the most valuable ingredients of his art were drawn from a spiritual rather than a technical source, and in particular from a strong inner impulse, which unconsciously found the manner of most qualities in the course
appropriate to
expression Since his vibrato formed the foundation
of his and is of an intensive the kind, style unusually ravages of time were unable to work any harm. His expressive power remained intact, and he was spared the violinist's arterio-sclerosis, the atrophy of it.
vibrato. last member of the phalanx of leading violinists reprethe second of the nineteenth century (Joachim, &alf senting he also had a determining influence on Sarasate, Ysaye, Kreisler),
As
the
our time's programme-building with his renaissance of the small genre piece. About 1907 he began to publish a series of arrange-
ments of
classical pieces
which soon came to enjoy the
greatest
popularity. Every year, he considerably enriched this collection, until by 1933 there were some fifty pieces with several original
A
definite extension of the repertoire among them. the was result. For us violinists the small-scale genre piece is a necessity to the completion of our programmes, in so far as these
compositions
are not out-and-out
Nevertheless,
chamber music. have certain doubts about
Kreisler's
work
in
which not even the
greatest affection for the artist entitles us to suppress. Above all, as a matter of principle,
this direction,
and man
we
Kreisler not only left unspecified the sources from which he took the pieces, but was sometimes guilty of a mild falsification, as
with the above-mentioned piece by 'Pugnani*, whose name he used as a cloak for his
own
piece happens to represent
composition. Admittedly, this very
one of
his
most impressive
inspira-
tions, and one of which Pugnani, in all probability, would never have been capable himself. But the whole business was far from
123
CARL FLESCH being
strictly
scrupulous
though one need not take
this
mysti-
Newman when Kreisler officially admitted 1 deception in 193 6. Newman was outraged because
fication as did Ernest his graceful
a witty artist had led him by the nose for thirty years. Sometimes Kreisler only took a fragment from the alleged composer and
proceeded to expand
it.
In the case of the 'Beethoven' Rondo, for
instance, only the eight bars
are Beethoven's.
in
which make up the Dvorak's
principal theme Slavonic Rhapsody he
Again whipped up scraps from the Romantic Pieces together with Lieder into a froth whose publication reflects little credit on the principles of the publisher concerned. And what is one to say to the transcription of the slow movement from Dvorak's 'New World'
Symphony, or the profanation of one of Beethoven's most heavenly inspirations, the Cavatina from the Quartet, op. 1302
To
must be added the fact that all these pieces were put a watch in the hand. with together They were intended first and foremost for the gramophone, which meant that the duration was this
limited to not less than three and not
minutes. But on the
positive side
it
more than four and half
must be
said that if
one
is
content to listen to these pieces for the pleasure of it, without bothering about their origin, one must admit that with a large
number of them gift to violinists last thirty
Kreisler has in fact presented a highly valuable violin programmes of the
and has thus made the
years enormously
more pleasurable and entertaining for
the broad mass of listeners than they had been before. There are small pieces such as those 'by' Couperin, Pugnani,
among them
Martini and Francoeur, compositions, which skill and playability.
some
of his admitted original are unequalled in violin literature for taste, as
well
as
Unfortunately, the mania for arrangements that anon attacked everybody (not excluding myself) resulted in a watering down of
programmes which gradually brought the
violin recital into dis-
We lack an artistic and suitable
repute with serious music-lovers. literature of small original works; 1
For a
Newman
at the
same time,
we
cannot
account of Kreisler's point of view and the interchange with Ernest see op. cit. pp. 292 fT. and pp. 295 ff. full
124
PARIS [1890-1896] ask a serious
composer to write genre
pieces for the violin, if all violinists are bound to prefer graceful transcriptions to his productions. The future attraction of our concerts largely depends on the
renewal of our repertoire and the gradual exclusion of effective but light-weight arrangements.
We
ourselves
must encourage com-
posers to cultivate this type of composition by our readiness to play their products. Only when we have again reached the stage
where audiences will attend our concerts above
all
music, only then will the violin recital recover
in order to hear
from
its
catastro-
phic decline. is only partly responsible for this state of he could not foresee that his example would give rise to
Kreisler himself affairs:
of arrangements. Every song, every orchestral piece, movement is only examined with a view to seeing whether it will provide a few bars which can form the framework for a pleasing and lucrative virtuoso piece. The evident propriety of a statement of source, which after all is a prerequisite this tide
every quartet
for judging the arrangement, is pushed aside as ludicrous pedantry, 1 for what is right for a Kreisler is reasonable for a XY. And so
people continue gaily to .knock things together, patch them up and cut them to shape, until a decided boycott on the part of the concert public will bring these violinists back to their senses. When all is said and done, Kreisler has been the most important has fundamentally figure for us violinists since Ysaye's decline; he influenced the development of our art as no other violinist of his time has done. In the history of violin playing he will live not
the art, Dnly as an artist whose genius stimulated and expanded but also as a most valuable symbol of a whole epoch. As a man, anally, despite his
unheard-of
success,
he has always remained
;imple and kind-hearted. My Vienna concert tour ended with a considerable deficit ^rhich, however, was covered by what was left of Deutsch's loan. the venture had been successful; my selArtistically, however,
had increased without degenerating into arrogance. had lived through an amusing time and had come to oiow part of Vienna's society. On the other hand I was glad to
:onfidence Besides, I
1
The name of a well-known contemporary 125
violinist is
here omitted.
CARL FLESCH return to the Paris milieu, to see
my friends again and to tell them
of my triumphs. Thus, towards Christmas, I was once more strolling about the boulevards, without however experiencing the expected satisfaction. For four weeks in Vienna I had known the inner content that comes with a successful debut, had drunk it to the dregs, and had whereas in Paris impressed the public as an up and coming man; I had not got farther than being one of the countless prize-winners
who,
still
to completely unknown to the public, just manage
make
a living by teaching and occasional collaboration in concerts. To this were added two circumstances that depressed me deeply.
come back
me, but conblow to both all was the manner in of worst But and my pocket. my self-respect which Marsick behaved towards me. He had toured in America
Some of my former
pupils did not
tinued under the guidance of my deputies
to
a painful
for several months, to give concerts. Hitherto, in such cases, the the Conservatoire had always had the habit of professors of their best pupils as deputies. But for some reason that appointing
remained unknown to
me
Marsick preferred to entrust
this task
to an older colleague, less close to him professionally. Similarly, his private pupils to a young girl who was quite he was tied by bonds of as a violinist, but to
he handed over
whom
unimportant
tenderness. This double setback worried
me
all
more since it no help what-
the
gave me clearly to understand that 1 could expect teacher. ever from
my
Quite soon, then,
I
began to be short of cash, and
it
was only
mind to turn my^ natural that the idea began to take root in Vienna successes I no longer back on Paris for ever. After
my
found
dignified to by going the
it
my make my way
in the usual petit bourgeois
round of the Paris salons, instead of winning manner my spurs in the concert hall, as was the custom in Central Europe. Maybe I still had the possibility of grafting myself into the musicaJ world of Bohemian Paris, of which the most famous representative at that time was Gustave Charpentier. But inevitably, the of this class had a deterrent effect onirregular manner of living me, since I was rather the bourgeois type of artist. These young people would sit every night on the terrace of the Brasserie 126
PARIS [1890-1896] Pousset where, with the aid of several glasses of absinthe, they translated themselves into the kind of misty mood out of which the Fleurs du mal had raised their poisonously seductive blossoms, and Verlaine had created his magically depraved fantasies. Charpentier himself, France's greatest talent since Bizet, wrote his last work at the age of forty; with the early decline of his creative powers he had to pay very dearly for the superficial pleasures of
the irregular life he led. It
was
special place
monic
very time that Berlin was beginning to take a
at this
among first
concerts,
the world's musical centres.
The
Philhar-
under Billow, and then with Nikisch; the
venerable Joachim Quartet; the Hochschule, which was the nursery of Germany's art of violin playing they all endowed the capital
of Germany with
a special nimbus.
One
heard of young
who
for years had led an obscure existence in Paris and Helsingfors, but became famous at one stroke after their Berlin debut. It was said that in violinists
such
as
Petschnikoff and Burmester,
which offered had to be possibilities content with Bordeaux, Marseilles and Lyons, and in AustroHungary with Prague, Graz, Budapest and Lemberg. In view of
Germany
there
were many hundreds of
societies
of engagements, whereas in France the
artist
I had to vegetate in Paris, the prospect of breaking into the international artistic world was too alluring for me to resist the idea any longer. I decided there-
the constricted circumstances in which
fortune in Berlin the following fore to leave Paris, to try autumn, and to employ the time until then in intensive prepara-
my
tion in
my parents' home.
as the result of inexperience in all things conI had landed myself in a difficult situation. trade violin the cerning The Storioni violin which I had acquired a year before, though its tone was not particularly big, could be regarded as a noble,
my
Meanwhile,
do not remember now what fever possessed me, but one day I was no longer satisfied with the volume of my instrument and I decided to look around the violin shops for one with a bigger tone. At Serdet's I found a Italian instrument which seemed to meet iny wishes. valuable instrument in
supposedly Thoughtlessly, like
all
good
condition.
I
young, inexperienced 127
violinists in
such
CARL FLESCH cases, I
broom.
decided on the spot to exchange my Storioni for the new I did not have to wait long for the bad hangover: what I
had taken
was nothing but
for a 'big' tone
a dark-coloured,
rumbling, dull noise, probably the result of the strong enough. Besides, the instrument was not
wood not being of Italian but of
in brief, a complete disappointment. And to make matters yet worse, I was still in debt for the purchase money of the Storioni. For the benefit of future generations, let me briefly relate
French origin
the further story of this transaction: some years later I exchanged the unfortunate fiddle in Bucharest for an old Viennese instru-
ment, which soon after I sold to a woman pupil for 600 francs though I never received the money. Thus the 1,200 francs were reduced to o francs. Finally the alluring violin phantom vanished in the inane. Neither in marriage nor in the purchase of a violin does love at
first
sight afford
Before
any guarantee of lasting happiness. by way of conclusion to my
my departure school year, to give another concert, with Joseph Thibaud, in the Vienna programme before the kind of Salle Pleyel. I played I
decided,
my
audience customary in Paris, consisting of friends and colleagues,
without making any
special
impression on
anyone,
myself
included.
My Paris friends thkty-four-hour
saw
me
off with genuine regret.
journey home
I
had
During the
sufficient leisure to strike
I had spent in Paris. The had schoolboy developed into a knowledgeable both worldly-wise and highly idealistic. My know-
the balance of the five and half years shy,
solitary
young
artist,
ledge of French, both conversational and literary, was not behind that of a born Frenchman; my accent hardly betrayed the
had formed a special predilection was to retain all my life. I had met people, had gathered experience in life
foreigner. By ardent reading for French literature, which I
many and and
art,
very different
and
felt
I
well equipped for the struggle for existence.
As
a
had succeeded in freeing myself from the consequences inferior elementary education and in opening up a free
violinist I
of
my
road for
my future
development.
My musical
horizon, too,
had
widened considerably through my work under Lamoureux and my intensive practice of chamber music. 128
PARIS [1890-1896] I
had begun, moreover, to take an interest in politics the painof Boulangerism, the Panama scandal, the anarchaffair had propaganda, and the first phase of the :
ful aftermath ists'
Dreyfus
passed kaleidoscopically before
me; they had strengthened
my
inclination towards a moderate socialism
and had contributed towards an increased understanding of world events. As a teacher, too, I had begun to gather experiences by which I was to profit in due course. I had learnt to move in any kind of society, and to feel at home in it. I was mature in every respect, .and felt capable of playing that part in art and life which providence had in preparation for me. No wonder that I was grieved at leaving this wonderful city in which I had experienced so much that was beautiful and new. At the same time, I was absolutely clear about the fact that Paris was not the right place for I
envisaged.
its
I
me to realize the kind of artistic life which
was longing
musical world, into a
to get
more
away from
the narrowness of
spacious, international, artistic
atmosphere, which I hoped to find in Germany. Moved by such conflicting feelings I passed the French frontier, sadly looking back at the hospitable country which I was not to see again for seven years.
129
BERLIN
[1896-1897]
Aged Twenty-three
to
Twenty-four
ARRIVED in my native Wieselburg in a very gloomy mood.
I
I felt as if I
had passed without
transition
from
the airy height of
Mont Blanc into the oppressive atmosphere of a submarine region. There was no denying that I now belonged to a different world and was a stranger to the narrow-minded, petty way of life ot the market town. Besides,
my
dampened down by recent
events.
had been perceptibly Three months previously I had
self-reliance
been victorious, confidently gazing into the future; now I was like a prodigal son who has 'poor in the pouch, sick of heart', been forced by circumstance to give his life a new direction and, until he has succeeded in this, seeks refuge in his parents' house. Also, the longing for the French
way of life which had grown
dear to me, for unconstrained social intercourse, the
manners in the
streets, in short, for
all
that
life
so
and
made the charm of the
French metropolis, gnawed at me to such an extent that I was soon afflicted with a deep depression. Yet fundamentally my life wa3
by no means there is
is
so joyless, since in the
always an upper stratum,
German-Hungarian provinces alive if tiny, which intellectually
interested in other things than the neighbour's kitchen pot,
Bathing in the Danube provided an indispensable
relief
from
the
summer heat of the plain; and every evening the people promenaded until a very late hour along the main street in animated anc^ sometimes tender conversation. Occasionally the monotony of was broken by the visit of a touring theatrical company, and I still remember die unpleasant scene that my interest in everyday
life
the male lead's pretty I
had gone
so far as
caused in my parents' house. Just think,] to dine with the company in the tavern afte^ sister
the performance and to stay out after closing hours1 for as long as 1
i.e.
a small
The 'closing of the gates' at night, after which you had sum if you wanted to get back into your flat.
130
to
pay the
porter
4
BERLIN [1896-1897] fifty
minutes
!
Despite the prestige that
had conferred on me,
I
was
my early artistic successes
considerably under the guardian-
still
my parents. My father continued to supervise my studies, at any rate quantitatively, and my mother was firmly, if unsuccessfully, concerned to improve my tidiness. Even at the age of five-and-twenty I did not dare to smoke in my father's presence, while my mother forced me into pedagogical villeinage in the form of violin instruction, of which my youngest sister was the ship of
victim.
The profound love which, fundamentally,
parents and
was shyly concealed, without any external demonstration, a situation in which a trustful relationship based on mutual understanding could not freely develop. The only member of the family to whom I felt at all close was my oldest sister's husband, Jakob Stadler, who originally had studied art in Munich and who owing to his father's unexpected death had been forced by circumstances to give up painting in order to carry on his father's grain business. He alone could understand from his own experience how the unhappy change in my life was bound to oppress me. Nor would I have been able to stand this psychic burden if I had not had the early prospect of beginfor this ning a new course of life. I was resolved to prepare myself would leave as turning-point in my existence in a manner that I envisaged was a supreme What to chance. as little possible scope children
felt
for each other
performance, a revelation of all the artistic powers slumbering within me. programme was to be the same as the one in
My
D
Vienna: the Chaconne, the Havandse, and Paganini's major Concerto as the main works, together with some smaller pieces. I tried to raise htours a
my
technical level
day with
studies
by occupying myself up
to five
since the
works
of a general kind,
me
my Vienna manner. this in kill to months six had I :oncert. Altogether occusoon I the time to order in Mo wonder, then, that beguile at least which all kinds of odd speculations, pied myself with lad the advantage of stimulating and developing my teaching
themselves were
more than
familiar to
after
alent. It
was already
:haracter
C.F.-K
began to consider my artistic and to become conscious of the
at that stage that I
with impartial
eyes,
3E
3I
CARL FLESCH dangers that threatened my further progress. The original dichotomy of my nature, the conflict between impulsiveness and reflec-
and calculation, made itself felt in my manner of practice. Already study and interpretation were two fundamentally different things for me. Practice meant not
tion, spontaneity
study and
senseless, spirit-killing,
mechanical repetition, but the detection
and elimination of existing inhibitions by means of the most concentrated exercises possible. I realized even then that the origin of an impure note, a clumsy bow stroke, or an unlovely sound was ultimately to be sought in inexpedient movements, in motorial
To reduce these mechanical inhibitions to a minitnum was main purpose which I set myself during my practice, a somewhat meagre programme in view of the unlimited time which I had at my disposal. As there was no question of making music for its own sake, owing to the absence of suitable partners, I was defects.
the
definitely faced
living
work of
with the acute danger of losing contact with the art, and of getting lost in an undergrowth of
technical puzzling and fussing. If I had been exposed for another few months to this musical and human isolation it have
might
my artistic development. However, I was immune against the withering of my emotional life, which is the driving
proved fatal to
force of every kind of artistic activity, because I was able to adapt comrades, and thus to extract, from this myself to the life of
my
primitive milieu,
enough honey
this
for
my
youthful needs. So
I
transitional period without
dangerous passed through damage. In physical respects the healthy, uneventful country life even had a nervous constitupositive influence on my development and
my
tion.
Provided by
my father with the necessary money for my first
end of September 1896, steps, and put up at the Hotel Frederich in the Potsdamerstrasse. With the aid of a map of the city I at once set out on reconnaissance, I
travelled to Berlin towards the
above all, in order to get to
know the Potsdamerplatz, which was
The undertaking went awry, since I held the down and map upside unswervingly moved in the direction of Schoneberg. My feeling for the German capital was one of love at first sight. The flower-bedecked balconies and front gardens, the then the city centre.
132
BERLIN [1896-1897] clean streets, the obliging people, the ozone-drenched, overwhelming autumnal air, in such contrast to the smells of the Paris
from the outset, instilled in me a hopeful and mood. My first visit was to the Wolff Concert Agency, to whom the arrangement of both my concerts had been entrusted. The head of of the firm was Hermann Wolff, a remarkable man whose enterprising spirit could no doubt have proved itself in a much wider streets
all this,
confident
critic, he had soon abandoned of an impresario for Hans von Biilow and Anton Rubinstein, until, in 1881, he founded the concert agency which bore his name. The development of German concert life under his influence during the next fifty years was in no way due to any artistic or social need. It was the outcome ofWolff 's idea of
field too. Originally a
musician and
these activities for that
the politico-economic correspondence between artistic performshouldn't a ances and agricultural or industrial products. virtuoso be 'ordered' and 'despatched' in the same way as wheat
Why
was simply a question of organization; the concertgiving societies had to become accustomed to 'ordering* their artists through a central agency. Supply and demand were to fix the artist's fee just as stocks and shares were priced on the ex-
or steel?
:hange.
It
When it is remembered that until then every distinguished
to have his own impresario, while for lesser-known musicians there were only slender possibilities of being heard out-
irtist
had
permanent place of residence, Wolff's theory must be iescribed as entirely novel. He was, moreover, regarded as a :onnoisseur, whom you could not influence: he knew perfectly ;vell that it meant prejudicing his enterprise if he recommended
;ide their
who failed to live up to expectations. Thus from him almost always entailed the recommendation personal ronclusion of the desked engagement. Finally, his good 'nose' enabled him to sum up beginners accurately; it was only rarely,
indistinguished artists i
hat his preconceptions deceived him. At that time, when there were never more than two nightly
on the average, Wolff had no suspicion that fifteen years ater there would be occasions when as many as fourteen musi;al functions would be given at the same hour. This morbid
roncerts
133
CARL FLESCH of a principle logical in itselfwas only partly due to the natural exertions to get a hearing and favourable reviews in the German capital in order to find paying engagements in the efflorescence
artists'
provinces and thus first of all to cover the deficit inevitably incurred in Berlin. The unhealthy over-cultivation of the capital's concert
life
was, above
promises on the
all,
the result of unfounded and unrealistic
part of the
agents,
who prompted
the inexperi-
enced beginner to waste his or other people's money on independent concerts. To the beginner's shy question, 'After my Berlin concert, will I get well-paid engagements in the provinces ?' the invariable answer was 'Most certainly, if you are successful,'
though the agency knew quite well that the financial utilization of by no means be taken as a rule, but only as
a Berlin success could
a rare exception. After Hermann Wolff's death in 1902 this stimulative policy was raised to a fundamental business principle
of the entire profession:
all
too often, half-trained or feeble talents
were encouraged to give co'ncerts. No wonder that the disparity between the disproportionately high gains of the promoter and the losses of the concert-giver soon brought the whole business into discredit and, about 1931, led to the artists' energetic efforts
from the tutelage of this intermediary trade. When I walked into Hermann Wolff's private office
to escape
that day,
I
found a good-looking man of middle age with beard already grey,
who came to meet me in a friendly, but waiting spirit. On his desk stood the photograph of a lady in decollete with a strip of paper beneath it on which it was announced in bold script that the singer,
Miss X, had neglected to pay the costs of a concert of hers: a salutary warning for the beginner, suggestive of a mediaeval pillory. When I asked him to recommend me a suitable lodging if possible,
he referred
me
to his sister
who
chiefly superintended
the important office of distributing complimentary tickets. She recommended me to her cousin, who had a room to let which I as both the landlady and her daughter stone-deaf I had unrestricted freedom to practise.
immediately took:
were
Among the letters of recommendation with which my Paris and Vienna friends had liberally provided me, the most important was from the then attach^ to the Paris Embassy, Felix von 134
BERLIN [1896-1897] Mueller,* addressed to Joachim. For the
moment
I
contented
myself with sending the letter of recommendation to Joachim with the request that he would honour my concert with his Mueller had also recommended me to Robert von presence. the in Mendelssohn, the famous junior partner banking house. 'Robby' was more active as an amateur 'cellist than as a financier. He was the possessor of a quartet of Stradivarius instruments including, above all, a 'cello which had formerly belonged to the famous Piatti. He had attached himself with idolatrous veneration
whom
to Joachim, he accompanied on most of his concert tours the last visit and during years of the master's life. He returned said
he would be present
my
my concert before my debut sped past. at
The two weeks Technically, I felt was prepared as well as possible; the only thing that caused me some anxiety was my violin, for meanwhile I had been seized I
with such an antipathy against my exchanged, pseudo-Italian instrument from Paris, that I returned remorsefully to my old 'Dutchwoman' which, however, did not satisfy me sufficiently to spur
me
on,
by way of mutual
inspiration, to
my highest expres-
sive capacity.
At the same time as I, my former schoolfellow Max Lewinger had also come to Berlin to try his fortune on the concert platform. While I was completing my training at the Paris Conservatoire, he had already for three years occupied the position of a professor
Royal Conservatoire in Bucharest, and now exchange this monotonous activity for a solo career. shortly before, our former teacher Griin had invited something one Sunday afternoon in the presence of a at the
wished to In Vienna us to play
few musiLewinger chose the first movement of Joachim's 'Hungarian' Concerto, while I rode my hobbyhprse of that time, Paganini's D major Concerto, The chances were not, however, cal friends.
divided equally, for
as a faithful Griin pupil, Lewinger enjoyed *Von Mueller, cafled *le beau Mueller*, was considered one of the most handsome men in Paris. During the First World War he was ambassador to the Hague
and shortly
after committed suicide. As a type, he was the charming, representacultured German diplomat of the pre-1914 era. At the Hague in 1915, he a who had secretary waiting kept brought urgent despatches, because he thought it more important to show me on the piano the beauties of a Mozart sonata I had not known. tive,
Mm
135
CARL FLESCH far zreater
of the master than sympathy on the part
.,
Linger. What if I asked
him
to lend
I,
who had
me ks instrument,
half an hour comrade he quickly agreed and
later I
went
a
good
off with
BERLIN [1896-1897] the
new instrument,
confident that
I
had victory in
my hand. My
a miraculous success
daring feat
proved yet there were three very real things which were responsible for it: my resolute determination to cut the Gordian knot, the fact that I dared to tackle the most important concert in my career with an unknown instrument and, past six months.
finally, the
My
thorough technical preparation of the assumed die proportions
success that evening artistic sensation. Joachim,
of an
his
brought
good wishes
to
me
manifestly surprised, personally in the artists' room. Hermann
me
Wolff, extremely friendly, scented in
a future star, a 'cele-
The violin was
brity'. generally considered to be an Italian one; I had felt completely at home on it, as if I had never pkyed on any other all my life. All the same, the next day I had to hand it back
owner, who himself was to make his debut with it a week and the problem of my violin was once more acute, for my second concert was arranged for only two weeks ahead. But for to
its
later,
the
moment
warming echoes
I
did not give a thought to the matter. I was busily nascent fame, whose myself in the rising sun of I
my
followed in the
Public criticism in those days was is in the age of the gramophone and
press.
much more important than it when everybody can form his own opinion on the value of
radio, a
performance without ever having heard the much time and space at
Also, the critics had so
artist in
the
flesh.
their disposal that
they were able to listen to a concert from the first note to the last, and to review it in detail. The expectation of the first Berlin press opinions about my playing robbed me of my sleep. At five in the morning I could no longer control my impatience and I decided to obtain the Borsenkurier
and the
Vossische Zeitung at the Pots-
damertor newspaper kiosk, where morning papers were sold from six-thirty onward. At six I stood shivering outside the small booth, which concealed
newspapers. But praise
my
fate in the
still
unsorted bundles of
how
which the two
glorious I felt as I read the extravagant stern art judges bestowed upon me! In the
same issues a young pianist beginner was also noticed his name was Ossip Gabrilowitsch. We were both labelled as future stars of the ;
first
Mark Twain's daughter, in Detroit. He a conductor and became the baton
order. Gabrilowitsch later married
changed over
to
137
CARL FLESCH was one of the most sensitive and refined pianists; sidered
it
his
duty to
come
besides,
unobtrusively to the help
he con-
of his
less
fortunate colleagues. He died comparatively young. When during the next few days the other leading papers, too,
gave
me extremely appreciative notices, I could regard my success
A
as complete. week later Lewinger introduced himself to the Berlin public without, however, making any particular impression. The general opinion was that here was an outstanding
of a not very interesting personality. Lewinger did not hesitate to take the consequences: soon after he accepted the post of leader in the Helsingfors Symphony Orchestra.
ability at the service
Meanwhile the date of my second consolidate the success of nearer,
my
which I had to was drawing nearer and
concert, in
debut,
and the unfortunate problem of my violin again began to
me considerable anxiety. I decided I would ask Joachim to help me to borrow one of Mendelssohn's violins. Joachim received me with a certain unapproachable friendliness, without cause
remark that I had the honour of having been same Hungarian province as himself. It appeared that he did not much like to be reminded of his origin (his
my
reacting to born in the
had been a poor Jewish merchant).
father
He
said
he could not
possibly intervene with Mendelssohn, since the violins available there were akeady lent. He reflected for a moment, and requested
me
to wait in his ante-room until he
hour. 1
He
me
had finished
him
his
consulting
maker was the old whose Hochschule August Kessler, workshop opposite in the Potsdamerstrasse. After Joachim had introduced me to him in the most flattering terms and had asked him to help me out then invited
with a violin for
pkce
my
to follow
to the violin
second concert, Kessler did not hesitate to
my disposal for a few weeks. was not always ready to help other Joachim could not confirm this from my own certainly
a suitable instrument at
Rumour had violinists;
I
it
that
experience.
At Saens' initial 1
second concert, in which the main work was Saintminor Concerto, I did not succeed in strengthening my success, despite what was, on the face of it, an overwhelm-
my B
Sprechstunde: the
German term
extends beyond the medical sphere.
138
>
BERLIN [1896-1897] ing success with the audience. Possibly I was not so much in the mood, or maybe the new instrument did not suit me so well; in
any in
was unable to renew the sensational impression of my When next day a review appeared in the Berliner Tageblatt,
case I
debut.
which
this falling off
was emphasized,
I
could no longer close
eyes to the fact of a fortissimo entry with an immediately following decrescendo. Herman Wolff himself, however, did not
my
appear to succumb to this disenchantment. Shortly after, through his own hand-written recommendations, he obtained for me no
fewer than five orchestral engagements with prominent music Budapest, Leipzig, Prague and Strasbourg; of
societies in Halle,
which more later. For the
moment
was
and foremost in everywere my thing connected with violin playing in Berlin. rivals? First and foremost, there were Alexander PetschnikofF, I
interested first
Who
Willy Burmester and Arrigo Serato; at some distance, there followed Felix Berber, Among the older Joachim pupils Karl Halir and Henri Petri were regarded as the most important. Ysaye,
Thibaud and Marteau had not yet made their appearance on the field. Joachim and Sarasate still represented the great school of the second half of the century now coming to its end. Their stars were setting, though their unparalleled prestige did not diminish. Neither Budapest nor Petersburg, neither Hubay nor Auer had yet despatched outstanding exponents of their schools to the international centre of music, and the Hochschule itself had not so far succeeded in producing a young generation of violinists Kreisler,
good enough
Above rising star
all
for the concert platform. others,
of the
Alexander Petschnikoff was regarded as a order. He was born in 1873, studied in
first
Moscow, and led an obscure existence in Paris for several years. Then his luck changed. A Russian aristocrat presented him with m outstanding Stradivarius* and furnished him with letters of recommendation to leading members of Berlin society. He made this instrument was considered to be one of the best-sounding best-preserved violins in existence, until one day during a concert at Kassd PetschnikofF had the rare misfortune to run the stick between the strings on a iharply accentuated upbow stroke in Bach's Chaconne, sending the instrument, tfhich he was probably holding loosely, flying through the air, where it described
*For a long time
md
139
CARL FLESCH his
debut one year before
me
in the Bechstein Hall; a handful
of
people attended, including the Reich Chancellor Prince Hohenlohe. The next day he was famous. The newspapers praised him to the skies; the Berliner Tageblatt, the Chancellor's official organ, him as the greatest violinist of the future. Yet the very next
hailed
year his performance of the Beethoven Concerto in one of the Philharmonic concerts proved a complete flop. It was on that occasion that I myself heard him for the first time, and I shared the general disappointment. His chief merit was his unusually beautiful tone colour, but the tone itself was lacking in volume.
His technical facility, judged from the highest standpoint, was of an average kind, but his style had an undisputed charm of a SlavonicRomance kind. His stance while playing was highly original if unpractical. He thrust his left leg so far forward that he was forced to set no more than the toe of his right foot on the floor and to extend his body's right side in a steep incline backward a
highly inconvenient playing position. In any case it seemed an enigma to me that this estimable, but in no way outstanding, violinist should have succeeded, if only for one season, in con-
quering Berlin: in 1895, public opinion in the German capital placed him above all other violinists. His further career showed gift fate can make to a man by overestimation An artist who at first is not, or not sufficiently, recognized and who must advance step by step, has the full joy of
what a dangerous of
his capacity.
growing, of ascending, of developing ever' further until he finally achieves perfection: he fights and wins. The so-called favourite of fortune, on the other hand, to providence has granted
whom
faced with the incomparably greater task of on his dizzy height. The weight of Petschnihimself maintaining koff 's name, and of his sudden, overwhelming success exercised painless success,
its
is
power only for
a
few years. With the arrival of Ysaye,
and Marteau, PetschnikofFs fame ended just
as
Kreisler
abruptly as
it
had
a wide arc before it landed at his feet. Several serious cracks testified to the violence of his misdirected energy. Incidentally my own Dutch fiddle was once the victim of a similar misadventure: my oldest brother was turning over for me and, with a swinging movement of the hand, sent my instrument flying through, the air into the far corner of the room.
140
BERLIN [1896-1897] begun. Later he held only subordinate teaching posts and, no older than forty, virtually ceased to play a part in international concert life.
The chief exponent of German violin playing was Willy Burmester [b. 1869], who had many sensational successes in Berlin round about 1894 with Paganini programmes in the Cesar Thomson manner. Although he had originally been taught by Joachim, he considered that he had only himself to thank for his abilities. The unprejudiced observer must pass a decidedly unfavourable judgment on the violinist Burmester. On the credit
playing only showed a certain fluency, which however superficial and inexact, and a strong rhythmic sense, at rimes
side, his
was
exaggerated and distorted.
The
of his defects calls for far more space. What, one could learn from Joachim, the feeling for a musically logical declamation, he lacked completely. His style was distinctly unmusical, arbitrary, inconsistent and unbeautiful; his tone was cold, his bowing angular and mixed with scraping noises. In later years, moreover, he pkyed intolerably out of tune. And yet for some twenty years he remained a declared favourite of the German and Austrian public 'the Raphael among violinists', as one imaginative critic called him: what a testimony to the poverty of German critical standards at the time By almost every other country he was flatly rejected. Whenever the question of the German public's artistic understanding was discussed between French and German violinists, the inexplicability of Burmester's
above
specification
all,
!
was always
the chief French argument against Germany. yet something must have been responsible for his effect on the great mass of concert-goers. It was no doubt the quality of his success
And
not particularly attractive, yet characteristic and well-defined personality. He was a living witness to the unhappy truth that an inferior personality
at ality
Le
all.
is
of greater value to an artist than no person-
Of proverbial
was of perfect
build,
fat to
it.
arrogance, witty, vain and unabashed,
and
his
sinewy face had not one scrap of stiff elegance of his appear-
The somewhat
unnecessary ance, the natural unmusicality of his
of whose absolute and exclusive rightness he always seemed completely convinced all 141
style,
CARL FLESCH created a hotchpotch of mutually contradictory characteriswhich, taken together and despite their inferiority, presented the picture of a very definite individuality. In addition he was the
this tics
first violinist
who, long before
Kreisler,
made
the 'small pieces',
the musical confectionery, fit for the concert hall. After he had scraped his way through the first part of his programme, say the 'Kreutzer' Sonata or a concerto (Spohr, Bruch, or Mendelssohn),
he proceeded to offer the 'Burmester pieces' in the form of scraps of graceful melodies, drawn from all kinds of classical chamber music, torn out of their context, and scantily glued together with the aid of a hack pianist. Each piece demanded the attention of the
audience for no those
more than
who had come
a minute or two, with the result that
for entertainment rather than edification
could take an incredible quantity of this product. They alone were responsible for the success of his concerts, at which one met almost exclusively people
who were
missing
from more
serious
events.
Even before he was fifty, however, his playing capacity was seriously on the wane. After the First World War he still attempted to go on concert tours overseas. He first went to Japan, but had the misfortune on the voyage to become involved in a wrestling match with a sailor whom he had challenged, trusting
own exceptionally well-trained body. He received a pretty severe beating, had to spend a considerable time in hospital and could not carry out the projected concerts in Japan. He then in his
decided to try his fortune in the United States, but suffered a fearful failure. After that one heard of him but rarely. He died in 1933
i*1
near-poverty.
figure without
He was
artistic
an adventurer, an odd and original
ambition, passionately devoted to the He did not feel any need to bring new
material things of life. works before the public.
Max
Sonatas, op. 42* to him, but
Reger dedicated his four solo he never took the trouble to study,
1 Hesch writes *op, 44' which, however, consists of piano pieces. He no doubt means op. 42 (see also p. 237). I have not retouched the rest of the sentence, although it may not be altogether correct. Burmester seems to have replied to the dedication with a letter of profound appreciation, and to have examined the work in detail, without finding any technical fault with it. He must, moreover, have given Reger a copy of the music with his comments, for Adalbert Lindner,
142
1
BERLIN [1896-1897] let
alone perform them.
Nor did he feel any urge to
play chamber
music or even to teach. Of the intrinsic qualities which make up artist he did not possess a single one. Posterity will pass
the true
on him the harsh judgment
that
he was of no
significance
ever to the development of violin playing. year before my debut the eighteen-year-old
A
Italian,
what-
Arrigo
had made his, with much success. People were surprised to hear again an Italian violinist of importance. Sivori and Bazzini had departed from the scene many years since, and the Italians had produced no successor worthy of them. For the art of pretty Teresina Tua was not of sufficient stature to form a link in the great line of Italian violin development. But even with Serato, Serato,
could only be said with reservations. Originally an appealing daredevilry was the chief feature of his personality, supported by musipleasant tonal qualities, an average technique and a healthy cal sense. But he shared with Petschnikoff and Burmester the misthis
fortune oflacking any notable possibilities of development, and like
them he passed his prime as a violinist before he reached the age of thirty.
When
Italy entered the First
World War he
left
Berlin,
where he had spent over twenty years, and settled in Italy, where he was often to be heard on the radio. Good-looking, charming and amiable, he was for long regarded as the official exponent or violin playing in his native country.
At
die time of
my Berlin concerts,
three concerts with orchestra, in
Felix Berber [b. 1871] gave carried through the
which he
then sensational undertaking of performing nine violin concertos in three evenings. Berber, who died before he was sixty, was one
of his time. Utterly original, he played and great devotion. His technique was remarkrough (ungepjiegf), and his musicality, especially in he convincing. The fact that nevertheless
of the strongest
with genuine able if a
little
talents
fire
quartet playing, highly did not succeed in playing a leading role in international concert life is
due first and foremost to
certain features
of his character.
He
one single passage of double stoppings Reger's biographer, remembers 'only ' which Burmester had marked "very difficult" (Max Reger, Stuttgart, 1922, p. However, Flesch knew Reger, and there may be more in Hesch's account 188).
than has so far met the eye.
143
CARL FLESCH was uncontrollably impulsive, a virtuoso at giving offence to his fellows. In the course of his life he held no less than nine posts, each of which he quitted after a row. His lack of consideration for his colleagues was proverbial. Once asked why he never attended other violinists' concerts, he replied: 'Out of regard for my
mood;
for if a violinist plays badly
I
get thoroughly annoyed;
and if he plays well I get even more annoyed/ Berber's immoderation and lack of self-control as a man was no doubt responsible too for the absence of any harmonious development in him as an artist. None the less I regard him as the most interesting personality among German violinists of his generation. Anton Witek [b. 1872], who was then leader of the Philharmonic Orchestra, occupied a peculiar position. He was a German Bohemian of the Prague school. He was an outstanding violinist and musician, admittedly without much individuality, but head and shoulders above the Berlin average. He was always ready to take the place of a missing soloist at the shortest notice and without rehearsal, a task from which, as a rule, he emerged most honourably. He was, incidentally, the first violinist who, forced by excessive perspiration, resorted to the still despised steel E string. Rose and he were regarded as the best living orchestral leaders.
Later
on he migrated
to
Boston and
after the First
"World
War
shuttling backward and forward between America and Europe. He died in America in 1933, poor and neglected an undeserved fate for this highly meritorious and versa-
led a restless
tile violinist,
life
life,
who
from 1894 to
played a distinguished part in Berlin's musical
1910.
Berlin's concert life
still
centred
on
the recitals
of the Joachim
Quartet, in which the old master celebrated the mass of what is for me the most sublime musical form, the string quartet not always with unobjectionable technique and tone, but with indes-
power and an Olympian As these series were sold out by subscription,
tructible spiritual freshness, constructive
freedom of delivery.
Joachim always arranged a semi-public rehearsal for his pupils and less prosperous friends on the morning of a concert, to which he invited me on several occasions. The unforgettable impressions that I carried away for all the rest of my life I have 144
BERLIN already described in
The woman settled in
[1896-1897]
my characterization ofJoachim's personality.
violinist
Wilma Norman-Neruda, 1 who had
England, played wholly in Joachim's
spirit,
and was
certainly the leading female exponent of his school. I heard her play three Beethoven Sonatas in partnership with Mme. Gernsheim. She seemed to have inherited much of her master's expressiveness, and although I could not hear a truly personal note, her
playing
left
an extraordinarily profound impression on me.
Among the violinists who had settled in Berlin, the GermanBohemians, Karel Halif, Anton Witek, Florian Zajic [b. 1853] and Gabriele Wietrowetz, were in the front rank. Halif, Joachim's second violin, belonged undoubtedly to the upper middle ckss of and violinists, trio recitals in Zajic too, who
chiefly organized Heinrich Griinfeld, enjoyed good repute. Gabriele Wietrowetz [b. 1866] was an extraordinary and original talent which, however, never came to full fruition,
association
owing
with the
'cellist
to the one-sidedness
of her
technical training
and her lack
of psychological balance.
As for all the others who bustled around the concert platform, none of them impressed me in the least. Neither the academic drily
Emmanuel Wirth with his wrist mania, 2 nor the charlatanish Waldemar Meyer, nor the many one-day lilies who had come from the Hochschule could make me forget Paris, the city of Marsick, Hayot, Rivarde, Geloso, Capet, JafFe and Marteau, Most of all I was annoyed by the disregard of pure sound, the
unconcern with which these people, scratched and scraped and thrashed as
as
a matter
of course,
if musical intentions in
themselves were sufficient for a violinist to renounce spotless
was owing to the disregard of this basic of principle craftsmanship that despite the multitude of great and highly promising talents then at the Hochschule, not one of them succeeded in taking a place among the great violinists of our time. In spite of their indubitable inferiority to the foreign artists who realization in sound. It
1 Wilma (Wilhemina) Neruda, Lady Halle,was a Moravian violinist [ 1 839-191 1 ] who studied with Jansa. She first appeared in London in 1849. In 1864 she married
the Swedish composer Ludvig Norman; became the second wife of Charles Halle". *Seepp. 3 1 and 34.
in 1888, three years after his death, she
145
CARL FLESCH gave concerts in Berlin, everything that had any connection with was charged with a self-conceit that won it the
the Hochschule
nickname of the High and Mighty School (Hochmutsschule), and which could not but seem downright grotesque to an outsider. The concept of 'Joachim Pupil' seemed to be crowned with a nimbus, despite the obvious inadequacy of those who bore the title.* A rare collection of violinistic cripples gathered in the
shadow of the for
great man; many of them had early on been ruined the torture of Wirth's wrist exercises. This conceited
life
by whose fiasco became obvious during the following decades, fawned on the susceptible master in oriental fashion, sought to obtain for themselves the juiciest posts at the Hochschule, and to cling to them like leeches until the legal age of retirement, to the elite,
detriment of the students training there. In the field of composi-
around Joachim was consciously reactionary. The Cesar Franck Sonata, which today seems so tame, was briefly described as filth, while the compositions of the Hochschule tion too, the clique
professors Friedrich Kiel, Heinrich von Herzogenberg, Ernst F. K. RudorfF and Robert Kahn were declared to be, with Brahms, the only kind of true modern art. The Joachim clique watched
anxiously to ensure, moreover, that no alien element should get a hold in the musical circles of Berlin society. In the Mendelssohn
house the Joachim cult sometimes took on the nature of idol worship and was extended to people whose only merit was that they had once been taught by the master,
While
more or less successfully.
find myself compelled to distinguish sharply between the venerable personality of a Joachim and the unhealthy influence I
must on the other hand make it clear that I pernever had to suffer under the then prevailing state of sonally affairs. The master himself seemed to have the best of opinions of his
satellites, I
concerning my qualities as a violinist and did not hesitate to express himself accordingly on suitable public occasions. Even the pedantic Wirth once condescended to express to me his admiration of playing, though with the reservation that I habitually took
my
semitones
much
*'My name's the pianist
too closely, thus often conflicting with the equal
Schulze, a Joachim pupil,' a youngster once introduced himself to Eisner at a party. 'Don't let that worry you', came the answer.
Bruno
146
BERLIN [1896-1897]
temperament of the piano, a criticism which very probably was I also was a great favourite with the students at the Hochschule; with a few of them I even struck up a superficial friendship. The were majority happy young people; they were great fun and showed their mettle at the billiard table in the correct at that time.
Cafe Austria opposite the Hochschule.
It
was only when
in Berlin after Joachim's death that, as a teacher,
horror
how many
I
settled
I
with
realized
epoch had left behind as testimony to its inadequacy, and that even the outstanding talents among them had not succeeded in raising themselves above a violinistic ruins this
certain average level. In fact, the pernicious influence of this continues to make itself felt period today : there still are extremely
few purely German youngsters of real
calibre.
the greatest impression on me apart from Joachim was Artur Nikisch. He was born only seven miles from Wieselburg. His father was an under-clerk in a sugar re-
The musician who made
me
finery. Nikisch had always shown a certain friendly feeling for as a close fellow countryman and, with amazing amnesia, he re-
peated the same anecdote for twenty years whenever we happened to make music together: 'You are from Wieselburg?* he began in his
broad Swabian-Magyar
joke.
When I was
a
dialect, 'that
young man
reminds
me
Hellmesberger and the 'cellist had a number of small provincial engagements. Now burg there was a lawyer by the name of Bokay,*
engaged us for a
trio recital in the Rossi inn.
in the afternoon; there
of a good
often played trios with "Pepi" also Karl Lasner, I at the piano. I
were
still
two hours
Well,
We
in Wiesel-
who
once
we drove
to the concert,
out
and
so
we sat down in the parlour and had something to eat. Suddenly we heard a tremendous row going on in the main street Pepi ran to the window and shouted: "Come and look, boys, here comes the audience/' Lasner and
I
ran to the
window and saw about
a
with a frightful noise.
hundred cattle coming along the street Well, you can guess how we laughed!' I myself smiled rather in local pride. forcedly every time he told the story, a little hurt my *Bokay discovered that a girl working as a servant in his house had an extrathe ordinary vocal talent; she was Katharina Klafsky [1855-96], who became father still remembered how she had to carry drinking famous Wagner singer. water in great buckets up to the first floor.
My
C.F.-L
CARL FLESCH Nikisch had succeeded Hans von Biilow
as
conductor of the
Philharmonic concerts twelve months before my Berlin debut. To me he was a revelation. From the time of my work under
Lamoureux, I was still used to the type of unimaginative stickwagger who, strictly according to the compass, beat f time in the four cardinal points. Now for the first time I saw a musician
who,
in the air impressionistically, described
not simply the bare
dynamic and agogical the indefinable mysterious feeling that .lies between the notes; his beat was utterly personal and original. With
metrical structure, but
nuances
as
well
above
all
the
as
Nikisch began a new era of the art of conducting. I could not judge whether he continued what Bulow had prepared, for I had
never heard Biilow conduct. In any itself seemed
thought out,
case, Nikisch's
technique
unprecedented and completely individual, in no wise but experienced, felt an instinctive expression of his
personality. He was the first conductor to beat in advance, i.e. to give the note value a fraction of a second early, a style that was later adopted, and somewhat exaggerated, by Furtwangler. Born in a part of Hungary that was racially very mixed, he combined German musicality with Hungarian fire and Slavonic morbidezza (delicacy). From this rare mixture came an integral whole that left the impression on the hearer of something absolutely unique of its kind, especially when the work in question was in harmony with his individuality. In intellectual respects one would say he was somewhat primitive. He read little or nothing,
was fond of cards, women and company the most perfect type of a musician of genius from the former Austro-Hungarian monarchy. His ambitions were chiefly musical and social. Irreproachable performances and good company to follow gave him more satisfaction than external honours and lucrative guestconducting outside his regular circle of activities. Of the moderns of his day, and Wagner apart, Tchaikovsky and Bruckner were closest to his heart. The 'Pathetique' was particularly to his mind, and despite his many performances of the work the dark Weltschmerz of the finale continued to move him to tears. His appearance, too, completely accorded with the character of his art. His well-built, medium-sized figure was crowned with a long face
148
BERLIN [1896-1897]
which was framed by a pointed beard, and whose expression centred on the strange and weary melancholy of the eyes. His personality, as that of every interpreter of strong direct appeal, contained a fair dose of femininity, which with his otherwise thoroughly masculine bearing formed an attractive whole. When studying a new work, he could perhaps be accused of depending too much on his instinct and his innate for interpretation
facility
and execution. It was common knowledge that he often cut the pages of a new score as late as the first rehearsal. The fact was that he had a special talent for skilful I improvisation. regularly attended the Philharmonic concerts in those days, and as a former
orchestral player his
I
never tired of both watching the variety of
means of manual
expression,
and
listening to the intensity
of
his renderings.
At
the time, Brahms' First
Symphony was
still
regarded as a
wild, heaven-storming, heterogeneous and problematic work, Tchaikovsky's 'Pathetique' as the most audacious expression of the
Slavonic character, while over Strauss's symphonic
poems or
Mahler's symphonies (of which, incidentally, one only dared to play selected movements) audiences sometimes expressed their different opinions by coming to blows. And over all this commotion the good Nikisch hovered like a reconciling spirit, outwardly spick and span, apparently a little blase, but inwardly full of youthful fire and an overpowering capacity for enthusiasm. The orchestra went with him through thick and thin, and submitted willingly to the influence of his personality, since the orchestral musicians regarded him as one of themselves; they felt that he really belonged to them, that at the bottom of his heart he remained a simple orchestral musician, whom only a kind, but just, fate had placed at their head. As a former violinist he understood the practical side of orchestral playing down to the last detail, and his criticism never took the form of those aesthetic
or metaphysical considerations detested by orchestral musicians; every one of his remarks started out first and foremost from a practical mistake;
this eliminated,
the desired aesthetic result
would come of itself. As he never indulged in hot air or general twaddle, always mentioned what was necessary and never the 149
CARL FLESCH superfluous, his rehearsals
were of a comforting
brevity, a circum-
made him even more popular with the orchestra there to is which the orchestral musician is more responsive. nothing stance that
know Nikisch in 1897, on the occasion of one of luncheons which, down to about 1930, regularly took
I first
those
:
came
to
place at Wolff's after the public rehearsals of the Philharmonic Orchestra. At the request of Hermann Wolff, I played the first
movement of Goldmark's
Violin Concerto. Apparently the host have Nikisch's opinion as to whether I was suitable as a for one of his concerts in the forthcoming season. But
wanted soloist
to
turned my back on the German capital more came of it. Exacdy ten years were many years, nothing to pass before I was to make my debut under Nikisch in the Berlin since, shortly afterwards, I
for
Philharmonic concerts.
And fiom
then
down
to his untimely
death in 1924 1 played with him about a dozen times in Berlin and
performing, among other works, Dohnanyi's and Weingartner's Concertos and Suk's Fantasy for violin and orchestra. As a thorough expert on the violin he was an uncommonly Leipzig,
first
sensitive, adaptable
mity always had
and considerate accompanist, whose proxiand calming effect on the soloist.
a comforting
Like Ysaye in his own field, Nikisch was the last consummate exponent of the romantic era, in which the financial exploitation
of artistic
ability
had not yet become the main aim, more or
avowed, of concert-giving, where
artistic satisfaction
could
less still
be a compensation for a financial loss. His early death left a painful gap in European musical life. The memory of this lovable and outstanding
artist
has remained alive
among
all
who were close to
him as men and musicians. Nikisch's rival in the favour of the Berlin public was Felix I did not to know at that time. Weingartner, get
whom
Only
seven years later did I have the opportunity to come into artistic contact with him. I remember him as an exceptionally handsome
man, well-proportioned sculpture. In his art too
in his figure
and
he aimed at clean
features like a
Greek
formal balance, and a firm rhythmic foundation; he rejected excess of any kind. His beat was far more conventional and old-fashioned than Nikisch's.
What was
lines,
remarkable, however, was the difference in
150
-'
BERLIN [1896-1897] quality first
between
movement
one of the
Moscow in
performances. While his interpretation of the of Beethoven's Fifth in Amsterdam in 1903 was his
greatest re-creations I have ever heard, his 'Eroica' at like a feeble, average performance 1910 seemed to
me
of a provincial conductor. The effect left by his interpretations depended above all on whether he found it possible to compel the .orchestra to surrender
its
will entirely to him.
Thus
his art rested
on psychic foundations, whereas his pure craftsmanship, baton technique and in rehearsing the orchestra, was on a comparatively primitive level. His state of mind was decisive for the achievement or failure of his intentions, since purely technically he was unable to produce, up to a point, a substitute for any missing inspiration. The great tragedy of his life consisted
primarily
both in
his
in the unsatisfied need to be creative, a great composer. In this
respect Weingartner regarded himself all his life as an unrecognized genius, whereas in reality he was no more than a clever eclectic, composing what was, fundamentally, the better kind of
At later stages, I had Kapellmeistermusik (lit. 'conductor's music'). Violin in his the opportunity of playing Concerto, two of public his Sonatas, the Sextet and a String Quartet. When he himself he always succeeded, by his participated in these performances of force and suggestion, in giving the fascinating amiability effect that was impression that the music had great significance, an when another to reduced interpreter sat naught immediately
at the piano.
He was
his
own
manager, and a very clever one
too.
Tormented by
his frustrated
longing for great success as a
his sphere of composer, he spent a restless life, frequently changing often. more almost and Decidedly egocentric, marrying activity, he judged the world in general and his fellows in particular that they showed in his according to the degree of interest creations. In his later life he took charge of a much-attended school for conductors in Basle. He was the last survivor of the group of conductors around the turn of the century, which had
great
with Hans Richter. In Wolff's house I also met Siegfried Ochs, who in his capacity conductor of the Philharmonic Choir was the unchallenged
started
as
CARL FIESCH lord of the world of choral singing. a la
gimen Under his
Lamoureux
He
maintained a
and was notorious for
strict re-
his rudeness.
direction the Philharmonic Choir achieved unsurpassed
bloom. As orchestral conductor, on the other hand, he was pretty moderate; it seemed incomprehensible that this man, who could carry choral singers with him to supreme performances, artistic
turned into a flop alone. Later
when
confronted with orchestral instruments
Ochs was forced by circumstances
ing post for choral singing at the Hochschule,
to take
up a teachwhich he held till
he reached the age limit. Ochs was notorious for his stinging tongue, and woe to anyone he disliked. When he was asked for the address of Luise Wolff, the owner of the concert agency, who was staying in Venice, he replied: 'Of course, canaille grande! He retained his youthful ardour until his old age. Berlin's musical life
between 1890 and 1920 can hardly be imagined without him. Meanwhile, the success of my Berlin concerts, with Hermann Wolff's ensuing recommendations, had helped me to a number of engagements which were to enable me to consolidate my reputaI embarked on the above-mentioned concerts in Halle,
tion.
Leipzig, Budapest, Prague and Strasbourg. In Budapest I played under Hans Richter for the first and only time in life.
my Origina horn player, to whom Wagner had entrusted the transcript of the score of The Mastersingers, this disciple of the master ally
of intellectually primitive, eminently whom the Austro-Hungarian monhad in always produced archy astonishing numbers. He too had been born in the West-Hungarian German musicians' corner, i.e. at Raab (Gyor) a supremely competent conductor of the old, belonged to the noble
class
natural musicians of genius
solid school.
While I was occupied with preparations for a concert in Budapest I received a telegram from the Wolff concert agency asking whether I was prepared to play the Beethoven Concerto in a week's time at a Philharmonic concert under Franz Schalk in the
Prague German Theatre. True, I had studied the work with Marsick at the Paris Conservatoire, but my awe of this concerto of concertos had so far been
thought of performing
it
much
too profound for
in public.
152
However,
vile
me
to
have
mammon
in
BERLIN [1896-1897] the
form of a fee of 400 marks, which seemed extremely necessary
for the replenishment of seriously depleted resources, towith the of youthful frivolity three-and-twenty years, gether
my
my
prompted me
to accept the offer out of hand and to attempt to work the up to scratch within eight days. To this end I had bring an accompanist come every day to rooms, and swotted with
my
gloomy
resolution, playing
it
on the day of the concert with
the
courage of desperation. Fourteen years later, Schalk assured me that he had retained a highly pleasant memory of it, but all the
same
it
from an expert that was not an organically mature one but a *com-
surely could not have been concealed
the interpretation
mand' performance.
met Jeno Hubay [1858-1937]. Incontestably, Magyar German, whose original name was Eugen Huber,
In Budapest this
I also
was of great
significance for the development of violin playing in for it is only since his appointment at the Budapest
Hungary,
Academy
that
one can speak of a
His individuality
Hungarian school. of a mixture of German, renounced the soloist's career
specifically
as a violinist consisted
Belgian and Magyar elements. He while still young, in order to devote himself exclusively to composition, quartet playing and teaching. I heard him only once in
He gave me the impression of a noble with outstanding technical and musical qualities. Like Auer in Petersburg, he had the good fortune to have an extraordinary fine lot of students at his disposal. One can safely say that 1896, as a quartet player.
violinist
even today the Conservatoires in Budapest or Petersburg (Leninall others, have no untalented students grad) or Moscow, unlike whatever, while the number of pronounced talents 1
ably high.
is
incompar-
A very fine preparatory teacher by the name of Studer
worked under Hubay
for
many
years,
and
as a rule
he passed on
the students completely matured in technical respects; therefore, with most so-called Hubay pupils of the last twenty years, it is to decide to which of the two teachers they owe really impossible their education.
What
is
certain
is
that the
young Hungarian
student of our day almost always has an excellently developed Written
in 1933
left
but as recent Flesch Competitions and other events tend to
indicate, the observation
may
still
retain part
153
of its
validity.
CARL FLESCH hand, a natural feeling for tonal beauty and great ardour behind it all, while on the debit side we usually have to record too slow and
broad a vibrato, habitual portato bowing and a certain lack of
dynamic differentiation. Also, the fact that as interpreters the good violinists of the Budapest school resemble each other to a remarkable extent, seems to indicate that
Hubay
did not regard the pre-
servation and development of a pupil's individuality as the teacher's supreme law. Thus it came about that while this school
has produced a great number of good players, not a single outstanding personality has emerged from it after Vecsey, Szigeti and
Telmanyi. As a composer Hubay became well known not only with his several salon pieces, but above all through his Csdrdds Scenes and his arrangements of Hungarian folk songs and dances, of which the cleverly written Hejre Kati has even acquired world fame. In his violin concertos he deliberately remained faithful to
Vieuxtemps' harmony and melodic structure. The symphonic development of the modern violin concerto, which Max Bruch initiated and Brahms brought to a climax, passed Hubay by without leaving a trace. In the last years of his life he waged a subterranean, but all the more bitter, struggle for leadership in
Hungary's musical
Dohnanyi. Even
at
with the younger and far more gifted the age of seventy-five he was unwilling to
life
hand over It is
the conducting of the Academy to a younger man. true that in view of their artistic importance, the
engage-
ments which came
my way through Wolff's mediation could be
regarded as an unusual honour for a young debutant, but neither their number nor the money they brought me could be considered satisfactory.
By way of compensation, I amused myself in Berlin's
lively society
and was a welcome guest in many homes in which, made music. On one such occasion, in some salon
at times, I also
or other
(I
don't
remember which),
I
improvised the
first
Berlin
performance of the Cesar Franck Sonata with a sorrowful-looking and somewhat deformed young pianist by the name of Hans Pfitzner, whom I had never seen before. In the Cafe Austria, chief haunt, there was lively company after concerts: one met acquaintances, discussed artistic and social problems, or played billiards or ,
my
chess. In this
way!cametoknowBusoniandOttokarNovacek,for 154
BERLIN [1896-1897] they devoted themselves to the royal
The
game there almost every day. part that Ferruccio Busoni [1866-1924] played in the
musical development of his age is not yet clear. True, everybody and the agreed that by virtue of the versatility of his
is
musicality
high moral earnestness with which he followed his musical mission he was, in any case, one of the most venerable figures of his time. In his threefold capacity as a pianist, composer and writer, he decisively influenced the development of contemporary musical life. But it still seems impossible to pass an objective judgment
on the
lasting value
belong, like
Franz
whose titanic whose genius
will
of
his compositions.
Liszt, to is
To
me, he seemed to
the class of those Promethean natures
inhibited
earthbound
their
by
abilities,
and
destined to stimulate other people rather than to perfect their own creative selves. As a pianist, too, he went his own is
way. Despising purely sensuous sound he shaped
his interpretations
an expressive medium, to his formal needs in according as
mighty planes, architectonically. As a teacher he formed, with Joachim and Ysaye, a constellation of three stars who, despite, or perhaps just because of their towering personalities, exerted an unhealthy influence on the students entrusted to them. His pupils inevitably came under the charm of his fascinating influence, renouncing their own personalities and identifying themselves with his, under a kind of hypnosis. Artists like Artur Schnabel or myself, who sought to preserve their individuality intact, therefore avoided coming within his magic circle. As a matter of
Busoni taught without remuneration a principle that honest teacher would gladly make his own, if he were not every compelled by our social order to provide for himself and his
principle,
family with his own labour. In following the highly ethical rule to give artistic advice without selling it, Busoni apparently forgot the stern necessities of life. it
did not occur to
him
Near is
my shirt, but nearer is my skin:
that every
providing for his family.
The
man has above all word about
the duty of
perhaps the of the late musical nineteenth and figure early twentieth strangest centuries, has not yet been spoken. final
Today Busoni's chess partner and Novacek [1866-1900], is almost entirely 155
this,
exact coeval,
Ottokar
forgotten. Originally he
CAUL ELESCH violinist, and came from a numerous family of musicians. It a cruel irony of fate that tins extraordinarily gifted man is now mentioned only in connection with an effective genre piece for violin, the Perpetuum Mobile. At the time he was regarded as one
was a
is
of the most daring innovators among the young generation, and I still remember the storm of indignation that his Piano Concerto when it was played by Busoni in the Philharmonic provoked concerts. It is likely that he had the stuff for a really great composer in him, but fate gave his talent no time to mature. He died at the age of thirty-four in the United States, where he had been forced to earn his bread as viola player in the Brodsky Quartet. 1 For the time being, my concert activities in Berlin had come to an
end with
my two recitals. I lacked the means to arrange my own risk, and I did not yet feel ready to
further concerts at
play in the Philharmonic concerts. Only once during that winter did I have another opportunity to perform in Berlin, as a stop-gap in the first concert
of the later famous
Italian singer,
Camilla Landi.
fulfilling my few foreign and in occasionally playing obligations private concerts. Although not exacdy satisfied then, I lived comfortably in the enjoyment of the reputation which, as it were, I had acquired on account, and I allowed myself to be carried along on the waves of Berlin society life, leaving the immediate future to providence. In my spare time I was a zealous visitor to the workshops of the Berlin violin and made friends with the two most important, makers, special Hermann Hammig and Ernst Kessler. Hammig came from an old Markneukirchen family of instrument makers who had moved to Leipzig. He was an amiable man, always ready to help a young
For the
artist
rest, I
who
contented myself with
needed
a violin; his
only weakness was that he placed
alcoholic delights above all else. Thirty years later he fell stairs when tipsy and died of his injuries. He was justly
down-
regarded
as
the leading connoisseur of violins amongst his professional colleagues; he played quite acceptably himself and his sensitivity to
sound was highly developed, for which reason fiddlers preferred and sound-post to him.
to entrust the adjustment of the bridge
*A year before his
death,
he retired from
of Hi-health. I 56
all
professional appointments because
BERLIN [1896-1897]
demanded 'hot* prices for his violins, but one was of obtaining an unobjectionable instrument from him. His colleague, Kessler, on the other hand, often managed to mistake a Gagliano for a Stradivarius, as when he sold a 'cello to Robert von Mendelssohn. From then on Joachim went over to Hammig, and remained faithful to him for the rest of his life. Around 1896 it It is
true that he
sure
was
possible to acquire a first-class Strad or Guarneri for to 25,000 30,000 marks. Bergonzis of high quality cost 15,000 still
marks, Montagnanas 8,000, Guadagninis 3,000 to 4,000, Gaglianos about 1,000 marks, while fine old German or Dutch instruments
were
to be
200 to 400 marks. activity brought with it a lively interest in the conditions prevailing in the field of Berlin music criticism. From my life in
bought
at
My
Paris I
was
still
having to serve
accustomed to think of concert notices as often as an occasion for cheap puns, as in the case of
Gauthiers-Villars who each week reviewed the Sunday (Willy), concerts in the.B:/z0 de Paris, tinder the 'L'Ouvreuse du
Cirque
d'Ete'. Incidentally,
pseudonym commendatory notices
in the biggest
newspaper were paid for according to a fixed scale. In the Berlin press, on the other hand, music criticism was to some extent in the hands of experienced professionals, who usually
Paris daily
took great trouble to offer factual (if dry) criticism. Admittedly the critic of the Berliner Tageblatt, Neumann, the successor to the highly esteemed Heinrich Ehrlich, enjoyed no particularly high regard, and the cutting Wilhelm Tappert of the Kleine Journal had to admit in legal proceedings that he growled only if no sausage had been supplied to him previously. But there still were *old'
Urban and
Max
Julius
young Max Marschalk of the Vossische Zeitung, 2 Loewengard of the Berliner Bdrsen-Zeitttng, Otto 1
the
3 Lessmann, the Wagner advocate of the Allgemeine Musikzeitung, the reactionary but thoroughly honest Krebs4 oftheLokalanzeiger, 1
Also a prolific composer. Also a conductor, theorist, teacher and composer. 8 AIso a pianist, teacher and composer. Since 1 88 1 he was the proprietor of the Allgemeine Musikzeitung which he edited until 1907. 4 Karl Krebs, the musicologist and historian who wrote, successively, for the Vossische Zeitung, the Modeme Kunst and the Tag. I cannot find any record of his work for theLokalanzeiger, but that does not necessarily imply faulty recollection on Hesch's part. 2
157
CARL FLESCH and many others whose judgments were held in high regard by the professional musicians. Sensational at the time was an affair between a critic and an artist which today is almost completely pianist Georg Liebling, who was an expert at rather than at the keyboard, had managed, through advertising his connections with the Berliner Tageblatt, to arrange for pros-
forgotten.
The
pectuses in which his successes were described in glowing words to be distributed with each copy of that paper. In his own paper, the critic Loewengard described this advertisement, which was
not yet
common in Europe
Whereupon
in those days, as unfair competition. Liebling gave him a box on the ear in some beer hall
and, in the subsequent court case, was given fourteen days, while the Berlin critics decided to boycott
emigrated. Berlin stay
My
him
henceforth, until he
would have given me much more
pleasure if I
had not been plagued occasionally with longing for my beloved For six years I had experienced the fascinating influences of French life, I had drunk from the source of the country's literature, had enjoyed the subtleties of its social intercourse, had observed Paris.
through French glasses I had been well on the way becoming wholly and completely French. Not until many years later did I come to understand and learn to love Germany; political events
:
to
for the time being
reading French. Early on in 1897
I
1
sought every opportunity of speaking and
also
began
to feel artistically dissatisfied.
I
had
the vague feeling that my development as a violinist had come to a standstill, and that in my latest performances there was even a certain retrogression to be noted. The inner tension that the of two Berlin concerts had brought about, the
success
my
strong
psychological impulse, which had then spurred
me on to the best
possible performances, had vanished, while on the other hand I lacked any opportunity to play chamber music, to get to know new works in my special sphere, and to remain in living contact
with new music in general. The perpetual study of the same works began to bore me; my playing lost its strong drive, its youthful freshness, its great line; I began to fuss about petty technical and tonal details.
The lack of any inner necessity for my work, too, the 158
BERLIN [1896-1897] absence of a regular employment, increased my restlessness beyond the point that must be considered normal for an artist, and aroused
me gloomy
in
thoughts about
my
present condition
and the
There was no mistaking a stagnation in my artistic progress; the climax of the development which had begun seven years previously with my departure from Vienna, seemed
immediate
future.
not only to have been achieved, but even to have given way to a decline which extended equally to my qualities as a violinist and to
As
my mental vitality.
Hungarian province
me
less alluring.
for the prospect of returning to end of the season, nothing
at the
Was
this
my native seemed to I had
annual return to a milieu which
outgrown to continue for ever? I had the vague feeling that, if there were a compulsion of some kind to a regular activity appropriate to my capacities, which would prevent me from revolving around a
new
my own personality,
a starting-point
might be found for
ascent.
For the first time I began to
realize that, as a matter
of character,
inclined towards productive, regular work in the civic sense of the word, and that I disliked the Bohemian manner of working
I
mood
took one. Tolstoi had just laid down the principle that the mental worker too needed to have at least an auxiliary manual occupation, if only in order to but occasionally,
as the
always precarious in the case of an from the self-tormenting preoccupation with
restore his inner balance artist
by
diversion
I received a ego. In this critical mental frame of mind soil. fruitful brother Gyula which fell on letter from
his
own
My
my
former teacher Maxintsak advised the post
left
me through him
to apply for
vacant by Lewinger at the Bucharest Conservatoire,
on a solid basis. friends, my agent, seemed absurd that I should interrupt my auspicious concert career after a mere six months, just to place myself in the yoke of a teaching post, and
above
all
in order to put
To my
in the Balkans too
and
!
my
material existence
especially to
it
They did not suspect that inside me everything
was seething and boiling, that I was yearning to get away from the lotus-eating life of the Berlin dinners and amusements into the barsher air of a responsible and regular activity. I did not hesitate with the director of the Bucharest long before I got in touch 159
CARL FLESCH
We
Conservatoire. agreed that a test performance should first be held at the end of March in one of his orchestral concerts, where I
D
major Concerto and the Bach with Chaconne. My parents agreed my plan to secure myself an assured existence: my Berlin experiment had brought me much honour but little cash, and I was deep in debt to my father. I
would play
the Paganini
my move a logically necessary consequence of inner development, a means of climbing again into the clear
myself considered
my
heights of art. I critical point in
was
sure in
my own mind that I had
reached that
where its future was finally to be decided, that I needed peace to overcome the dangerous crisis whose germs were already King within me. My instinct of artistic find myself again in self-preservation told me that I would never but of a restless the only in the solitude of a agitation metropolis,
my
artistic life
remote corner of the earth. Nevertheless,
I
did not regard
my Berlin days as wasted;
on the
was alive to the fact that despite their negative final contrary, result they formed an important link in the chain of my artistic evolution. I had escaped from the national straitness of the musical world of Paris into the fresh air of a truly international concert world which, geographically the centre of Europe, radiated into the neighbouring countries so that they became a natural market for its works and interpreters. I had gained insight into the contemporary state of violin playing, and especially German violin playing, which seemed on the decline it seemed to lack the solid technical foundations to which I had been accustomed from Paris. The unconstrained forms of social intercourse, the existence of an artistic bohemia to which even world-famous artists were not ashamed to belong, the cosy, frowsty atmosphere in which all who had anything whatever to do with the practice of art passed their lives and activities all this made me regard the past months as but I
:
maybe permanent, stay in the German Moved by these feelings, I joyously and hopefully entered
an upbeat to a longer, capital.
the train
which was
to carry
me
manian capital.
160
in thirty-six hours to the
Ru-
BUCHAREST
[1897-1902] to
Aged Twenty-four
MY TRANSFER
Twenty-nine
marked the beginning of a that was of decisive importance for my human and artistic period after an development. As, exhausting journey, I approached the city,
I
to Bucharest
was at first unpleasantly affected by the
the suburbs; they resembled the dwellings
style
of the houses in
of some wild
tribe
and
authorities
had
not bothered to make the same prudent arrangements on
my
sometimes looked
like
wigwams. The Rumanian
of the Austrian Emperor, which had taken place shortly before. Then they had racked their brains to think of ways of ensuring that the Emperor, who was visiting arrival as
during the
Bucharest for the
visit
first
time, should not get an unfavourable
opinion of Rumania's architectural sive to pull
down
daring to replace
culture. It
seemed too expen-
the dilapidated huts and build
them by theatrical properties, and
new ones,
too
so they simply
decided to send, for half an hour before arrival, a second train
along a parallel track to the Emperor's so that the exalted guest would be unable to see the compromising barracks. Bucharest
resembled a Hungarian provincial town of average size transplated to the orient At any time of the day, a noisy, gesticuitself still
lating
crowd swarmed along
the
main
street,
the Calea Victorea,
gathered outside the Cafe Capsa, which was the rendezvous of fashionable society, and shamelessly ogled the passing ladies, whose elegance recalled their Parisian sisters. The boulevards were
sample card of the different classes of the Rumanian population- A dandy with monocle, dressed in the latest Paris fashion, like a
rubbed shoulders with a peasant in picturesque national costume, Greek Orthodox priests with long beards and hair like a woman's
mingled with orthodox Jews with sidelocks. In between, were ladies of the monde and demi-monde as well as gipsies
there
and
typical city rabble. It all
gave 161
me
the impression of a strange
CARL FLESCH
new
a superficially white-washed, but at part of the world, with culture. still rather primitive
bottom
My who
first call
was on
my
future superior,
Eduard Wachmann,
the triple position of director of the Conservatoire, conductor of the symphony concerts and conductor of the church filled
choir of the Metropolie, the leading Greco-Catholic church.
He
had reached an advanced age, a goodnatured, sluggish musician of average ability and without any Vienna Conservaenergy. He and a former colleague from the
was of German
origin,
toire, the 'cellist
Demeter Dinico,
set
the tone in the musical
life
of the capital. Dinico derived from an old race of gypsy musicians, and was an extraordinarily gifted player of brilliant and virtuoso music; but since his departure from the Vienna Conservatoire in 1889 (the year of
my own
deteriorated in his art,
which was
owing
characteristic
The reception he gave
departure too), he had perceptibly to a propensity to let things slide,
of Bucharest's half-oriental
style
of life.
me was
ambiguous. Although he put himself out to give me a friendly welcome with a feline flexibility, I had the impression that he feared a restriction of his influence. On
hand he must have thought it desirable that the interwhich Max Lewinger's departure had produced should be regnum ended by the permanent engagement of an artist of at least equal standing, for Dinico had long been playing with the idea of forming a permanent string quartet, a plan in which Queen Elisabeth herself took a lively interest. True, of recent years another young violinist, named Richard Hartzer, had attempted to replace Lewinger, but he was not regarded as suitable, owing to his the other
admittedly competent, but impersonal style. Dinico himself seemed to prefer to wait for the result of my first appearance before he decided for or against me. After a rehearsal, the concert that was my audition took place one Sunday afternoon in the Atheneuni, a large, semi-circular concert hall, in the presence of the Queen. By no means on top of * my form and, owing to the unusual surroundings, highly nervous, I
did not succeed in
In the the
making
a clear-cut, favourable impression.
D major Paganini Concerto many runs went awry, and in
Chaconne I was even overtaken by a 162
failure
of memory, in the
*
The young Enesco
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] some seven or eight variations sank into oblivion. did have the presence of mind or should I call it Afterwards, ? to maintain that I had made this cut impudence deliberately and that it was the latest thing in Central but the musicians in Europe, the audience were hardly taken in this excuse. Some of course of which I
the reviews
were
Hartzer clique,
by poor some even negative, and the Dinicoemboldened by this course of events, began indifferent,
openly to take up a hostile attitude towards me.
Some
friends
whom I had acquired from the very beginning, and who believed in me despite my poor debut, revealed to me the web of intrigue in whose meshes my opponents hoped to frustrate my appoint ment. For the time being, until the
summer
I
had only been engaged
vacation.
The
final
for a
few months, was
three-year contract
to be concluded
some time
in the spring, leaving
an interval
which
intended to
to prevent mines laid by the
permanent
my
rivals
settlement in Bucharest.
The
utilize
necessary to resort to countermines; friends, and to find support among
I
had to try
them
intrigues. Fortunately old Wachmann, had the decisive say in the matter, was
my
enemy made it to win influential
against
my
opponents*
who as my future director
absolutely on my side: he and overlooked my qualities my defects. A very influential and musical lady of society, moreover, Constance Cantacuzfene, had taken a fancy to me. This plain but keen-witted and cultivated
valued
woman was
the youngest of six daughters, all married to leading statesmen. She thus belonged to a highly important family. In her
salon,
lovers
good music was played regularly once a week for the music of Bucharest society; she herself played the piano on these
occasions. She stopped at nothing and had even ventured a performance of Beethoven's Choral Fantasy in her home, with the aid of a chorus assembled from society ladies and of a double string quartet. From the beginning we were drawn to each other
by our Sonata,
common liking for the still unhackneyed Cesar Franck which we had to play again and again at the request of
our listeners. In ful. I felt
this
milieu
that if need be
I
my fluent French was particularly use-
could count on the active support of the
entire circle.
C.F.-M
163
CARL FLESCH herself who
was the court of first instance else, and her apartments were the focus of all real and alleged musical interests. Here three or four times a week chamber music of every kind was performed, interspersed with instrumental or vocal solos. Her private secretary, Edgar dalTOrso, and the 'cellist Dinico were, as it were, the producers of these programmes. It was an unwritten law that visiting soloists from abroad had to But
it
was the Queen
in musical matters; she loved music
more than anything
of their art in the palace, while the regular give demonstrations to domestic executants. The music performances were entrusted
was made in a large room, in which
a small
organ built into the
wall testified to the Queen's preference for this regal instrument. raised platform was overshadowed by a miniature gallery, in which usually a rosary of young ladies rejoiced the eyes. At the foot of the platform was a sofa on which the Queen lay in white
The
flowing garments, drawing the guests into conversation at big were more intimate she was receptions; when the proceedings
armed with
a
the forelock quartet, she
notebook and
if,
muse by of a Beethoven Dall'Orso, who at one
pencil, in order to seize the
enticed hither
by
the noble sounds
condescended to reveal herself.
time had been a pupil of Marsick, induced his royal mistress to me, and this was the beginning of a five and half years*
invite
relationship, in the course
know and
get to
Queen
of which
understand
Elisabeth
I
had ample opportunities to
this fascinating personality.
of Rumania came of a small German ruling young girl she had
dynasty, the Princes zu Wied, Even as a ardently played the piano and she liked to
tell
how
her father
on her eighteenth birthday with a court concert given by Rubinstein 1 and Wieniawski. Soon after she had given her
a surprise
married the Hohenzollern Carol of the Sigmaringer line, who in 1866 had ascended the princely throne of Rumania and in 1881
took the tide of King. Their marriage was unhappy. The King was shrewd, cold and calculating, the Queen enthusiastic for everything beautiful and good, without understanding of cruel reality. ^.e.
Carol was only interested in
Anton Rubinstein
greatest pianists
politics
[1830-94], a considerable
of all times.
164
and hated
art,
while
composer and one of the
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] Elisabeth, apart from their joint national obligations, occupied herself exclusively with poetry, music and painting. The
King
maintained his prestige with the frequently rather disrespectful Rumanian politicians by surrounding himself with a nimbus of inaccessibility,
the
and always kept
who
Queen,
how to flatter her. Also, she
his
subjects at a distance, unlike
received everybody unsuspectingly
was rather a
spendthrift,
who knew
which caused the economical
The allowance provided for her personal requirements amounted to a mere sixty thousand marks per annum. Her only daughter died at a tender age, and she never recovered from the loss. Disillusioned with her King
to
keep her very
short.
marriage, she sought to find outlet for her motherly instincts in friendships with congenial younger people. In the course of the years she was drawn to four deceived people, all of
whom
bitterly
of all these was her literary collaborator, Mite Kremnitz, wife of the King's physician and daughter of the famous German von who also wrote a biography of her royal Bardeleben, surgeon friend. One reads it with mixed feelings, since from the sweetsour nature of her for her portrayal one can tell that Mite's her. First
feelings
were unfavourably influenced by the atmosphere of intrigue that surrounded the royal palace. In the middle of the 'eighties court society had split into two parties, the one for the Kong and the other for the Queen, and a bitter feud was waged between them. mistress
About
this
Vacarescu,
time there was a lady-in-waiting named Helena especially intimate with the Queen and
who was
who became
the centre of a large-scale intrigue that even played a part in high European politics- It was a question of nothing less than an evasion of the fundamental Rumanian state law
which forbade the marriage of the ruling monarch with a Rumanian. The heir to the throne, Ferdinand, a nephew of the King, was to marry Vacarescu, despite all prohibitions. The poor
Queen was entangled
in the obscure machinations
of the court
towards whose success even
kid
under contribution. The
and
matters
all
spiritualistic seances had to be result was a European scandal,
but developed into a revolution; the situation was only 165
CARL FLESCH saved by Vacarescu's timely departure from the country. Later she lived as an esteemed authoress in Paris. The Queen's private the name of Scheffer, who secretary and favourite, a Frenchman by was who and in the had settled regarded as spiritus rector country of the entire French-inspired conspiracy, was likewise put across
the frontier.
He
took revenge by the publication of a perfidious
which caused a great sensation. The was made responsible for all the trouble, though unhappy Queen a she had been only complaisant instrument in the hands of cunning political tricksters. Her relations with the King and his party novel, entitled Misere royale,
grew
intolerable.
She had to leave Rumania for some years, and
wandered, half exiled, about Europe. In an attack of hysteria she escaped into illness and maintained she was paralysed and con-
Her sufferings disappeared as swiftly as they had come, and when I came to know her ten years later there was
fined to a bathchair.
nothing left to outward view of all her troubles. What did remain was her need to have someone around her on whom she could be-
stow her repressed feminine and motherly feelings by
way of
sublimation.
Her choice was the Edgar dalTQrso already mentioned, a young Rumanian of Italian origin, the perfect example of a talented, versatile, but superficial dilettante.
He
played the
violin acceptably, had a baritone voice of good timbre, took part successfully in fencing tournaments, and had studied literature and
philosophy in Paris. Before very long he had won just as effective an influence over the Queen as his predecessor of unhappy
memory. Impudent and presumptuous, he soon began
to tyran-
nize over his royal mistress, who did all he asked. Once an exchange of views arose between the Queen and myself over the
programmes of our quartet matinees. I took the view that three complete string quartets would be too exhausting for the Rumanian public and that a group of smaller and more pleasing quartet fragments would be advisable as a relaxation between a programme's two massive cornerstones. Dall'Orso w as on my side, and when the queen, somewhat irritated, remarked that she could r
not understand
why
full-scale quartets
one
he, unlike herself, could after another,
166
not stand three
he replied quite unabashed,
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] Parce que je suis normal P [Because I'm normal !] I had Rumania when he had to surrender his position, for reasons unknown to me. He went back to Paris where, embittered and 'Parbleu
!
left
with
disillusioned
carry
on
life,
He
his studies.
had nibbled
he returned to died shortly
beloved Sorbonne to
his
after, before he was
everything and digested nothing
at
fifty.
He
a genius of
superficiality.
While the Queen was drawn
irresistibly to art in all its forms, a writer. 1 She did not really know very much about music, as was shown her by predilection for Bungert's
she was, above
insipid
and
all,
sickly stuff:
he
set
many of
her poems to music. 2
Ultimately, music was only a stimulant towards her poetic ends: while we played a Beethoven quartet she gave herself over to her poetic inspirations, moved by the beauty usually the fruit was committed to paper
of the composition; immediately in the form of a poem. People disagreed about the degree of her poetic talent. own was that she doubtless had a sense of the My impression sublime which, however, to her lack of owing any kind of selfcriticism, was marred by a tendency towards and exaggeration
formlessness.
An
emotional character such
as hers
needed an in-
exorable and incorruptible judge who could have exposed mercilessly the defects in her frivolous attitude towards form as well as her tendency to But as her friends and coun-
among
verbosity.
hardly one was master of written German, the court society had to take the poetical value of the royal verses on trust. sellors
The
usual result
the credulous
was
Queen
of her audience
a loathsome, platitudinous toadyism, took for good coin. I was really the
who would have
which
only one been in the position to express a
on an adequate knowledge of the language of aU the superlatives such as admirI refrained from expressing a critical judgable, divine, sublime, ment which no doubt would have been taken as an intolerable presumption on the part of a musician in her majesty's service.
judicious opinion based
and
its literature.
But
in face
*Her pen-name was Carmen Sylva. August Bungert [1846-1915] was a Wagnerian composer who would have liked to build a special theatre & la Bayreuth for the production of his tetralogy* Die homerische Welt ('The Homeric World*). His orchestral works include a symphony with the title Zeppelins erstegrosse Fahrt ('Zeppelin's First Long Flight*),
167
CARL FLESCH
Thus
I
held
my
a task
thoughts
peace and contented myself with thinking my which I found all the easier since it often hap-
pened that when the Queen read her poems, usually with the ink still wet, the sound of her voice impressed me so much that I did not take in the sense of the words she had uttered. Even in her old age, the silvery, bright timbre of her girlish voice aroused in the listener's mind visions of a fabulously pure, dematerialized, better resist. The magic of her essenand eminently human femininity, together with all her lovable virtues and weaknesses, made her presence an unforgettable ex-
world, whose charm no one could tial
perience for
Despite
Queen
left
who knew her well.
all
my
admiration for her,
being very fond of me.
was
stiff"
as are
my personal relations with the She respected me without myself kept my feelings to myself, and
something to be desired. I
and conventional.
common
Polite, conventional
compliments such and so cold and unfeeling, even when the
in such a milieu
were
alien to
my nature,
she must have thought me emotional content of my playing seemed to give the He to her impression. For the rest, her judgment of music and musicians was
was hardly capable of distinguishing good from bad, and was equally enthusiastic over dall'Orso's fiddling as over the artistry of a Sarasate. After a year then, slowly but steadily, I uncertain; she
began to
lose
my
illusions
about
life
and work
My
at the
Rumanian
best began royal court. original pride in always giving of to wane, and in the end I regarded myself only as a court official
my
responsible for the musical part of the afternoon-tea gatherings. The recitals in the royal castle gave me the opportunity to meet
many important figures, such as Earl Roberts of Kandahar, Baron Aerenthal who, ten years later, prepared die way for the
break-up of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy with his foolhardy Balkan all policy, and the free and easy Kiderlen-Wachter who, against
society conventions, kept a common household with his lady friend in the German embassy building. such occasions neither the King nor the Crown Prince Ferdinand ever showed himself, and the Crown Princess Marie but
On
appeared
beautiful,
young and full ofjoie de vivre
rarely. Exceptionally
as she was, she felt
the tutelage of the aging royal couple like a singing bird
168
under
whose
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] wings Lave been clipped. In her memoirs she openly expresses her antipathy for the Queen, whom she regarded as an eccentric,
who occupied herself far too much with music. She herself preferred visual art and was utterly unmusical. I was
tedious idealist
greatly astonished, therefore, when one day she asked me to play quartet in her apartments, and added: *I have had a new floor of
a
majolica
laid in
tiles
music sounds in
it.'
some
six years old,
while
we made
my
boudoir and
I
The later King Carol
would ft,
like to hear
who was
how
then a child
used to play noiselessly with his tin soldiers Once between two quartets a discussion
music.
whether Mozart or Beethoven was the greater com'And you, Carol/ the Queen asked him, 'what music do
arose as to poser.
you like most?' 'Military music, Grandmama!' After my somewhat unsatisfactory introduction in the concert hall I decided to give a recital, which turned out to be so successful that my unfavourable critics were compelled to revise their judgments, while
Wachmann
could safely venture to propose to the
ministry that I should be engaged as professor at the servatoire for several years. As Dinico and Hartzer
ready to accept the inevitable
But
I
could count on
Royal Conseemed also
my contract being
was
a sudden hitch, of the and industrious existence which prospects peaceful was bound up with my settling in Bucharest were very nearly shattered. One day in a cafe a German operetta conductor was introduced to me who had just arrived with his company to make a tour of Rumania. Among other things, we talked about musical
signed immediately.
and
at this stage, there
all
conditions in Rumania, and inevitably entered into comparisons between Berlin and Bucharest, Some weeks later one of the
Rumanian dailies printed
a report interlarded with insulting comand my address, pointing out that the Berlin Signals had a mean and published wounding article on the musical life of Bucharest from the pen of this same conductor. Various esteemed
ments to
Rumanian musicians had been mentioned by name and and noodles, while
described
only musician of in was out for Bucharest, importance singled exceptional mention. as nonentities
From
there
it
was only one
I
myself, as the
step to the assertion that
inspired the article. Dinico, deeply offended,
169
I
had
summoned a meeting
CARL FLESCH of the
which the strongest possible protest was made engagement. Despite my oral and written denials, the
professors,
against
my
at
newspaper campaign against me continued merrily. Dinico declared that he was not prepared to make music with me; he ignored me assiduously and hoped to make things impossible for
me by
this
kind of passive
resistance.
But
as
Constance Canta-
cuzene declared that she was more ready to renounce Dinico's collaboration than mine, and dalFOrte also induced the Queen to
my side, Dinico soon saw that he had lost the game. A recon-
take
between us ensued, after I had once more declared in so many words that I had not had any hand in the creation of the incriminating report. The very next day Dinico officially invited ciliation
me
to found a string quartet with him, in order to lay the
foundation-stone for the cultivation of chamber music in nia.
Ruma-
Now
contract,
nothing more stood in the way of concluding my and so, in the summer of 1897, 1 bound myself for three
years for the remuneration
French gold franc; in return at the Conservatoire.
holidays
I
had
of 4,800 I
Lei, a Lei
being equal to the
to give six violin lessons a week for summer, Christmas and Easter
was
Allowing do nine months* teaching per annum.
officially to
But when one took into account a month for the religious holidays, which are particularly numerous in Greco-Catholic countries, and for the patriotic holidays, I had to give no more than two hundred lessons a year at the outside, which meant roughly twenty marks per lesson
an unusually large fee for the
had every reason, then, to be satisfied with the material aspect of my new position, and for the first time in my life I felt secure and carefree as a bourgeois with an assured income, which time.
1
would henceforth allow me the ideal of
about
the luxury of working exclusively for
without any worry was to be expected, moreover, that I my total income by private lessons and artistic perfection,
daily bread. It be able to triple
my
would
human and
concerts and thus even to save three.
and
all this
at the
age of twenty-
Now my first care was to clear my debt to Deutsch and to
And by opening a bank account I also got the proud of feeling having become a capitalist. The students at the Conservatoire, however, were a very poor
my
father.
170
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] of Rumanians, Jews and gypsies, of whom the were two last-named decidedly superior to the lords of the country; for the number of talented genuine Rumanians was still very low in relation to the population. At that rime an Enesco was lot.
They
consisted
only the exception that proved the rule. This people, originally a colony which, in the course of the centuries, had become
Roman
mixed with every
possible race that
had dwelt
close
by or passed
through the country, totally lacked any artistic tradition on which alone the foundations of a musical culture could have been built. nevertheless, the
If,
Rumanians can boast of possessing the most of the European south-east, Hungary alone
charming folk music
excepted, this development seems to be due to the piquant mixture of Turkish, Slavonic and Magyar rhythms and melismata. In
any case, the Rumanian gypsies quickly captivated me, and
I
could
not hear enough of these barbarian, exotic, yearning melodies and dances.
were recruited chiefly from children or of good society, who had no intention of becoming professional violinists; none of them had any outstanding talent. They spoke French, more rarely German, never Rumanian, which in the houses of the upper classes was used only for talking to servants. This neglect of the native tongue, which in our race*conscious age must seem doubly strange if not characterless, naturally applied even more strongly to the foreigners living in the country, and so it is not to be wondered at that in these cir-
My
private pupils
young women
cumstances,
my
I
myself felt no inclination to learn Rumanian, despite
position as a state official. In the
Conservatoire
I
used a gibber-
with a few strong Rumanian oaths as basic means of communication with bad linguists. For the rest, life at the Conservatoire ish
was pretty informal. Nobody bothered to check whether I did in fact put in the agreed number of six lessons a week, but my sense of duty was strong enough to resist the temptation to shorten the period of instruction. My social intercourse was confined to young colleagues of my a age and families usually of Austrian origin. I had my meals in restaurant together with a few colleagues, and then went off to a cafe to play chess or tabla, a board
171
game
called Trictrac* or
CARL FLESCH *PufP elsewhere, to which I sacrificed many a private lesson I could have been giving. On Sundays I sometimes made music at the house of the bank director Walter Dickin, a Germanwife had the art of spreading comfort Englishman, whose amiable all around her and making her guests feel perfectly at home. A characterized the home of another distinctly musical atmosphere bank director named Jules Goldschmidt; here every Monday to listen to chamevening the elite of the foreign colony gathered these however, someof were, ber music. The pleasures evenings the of what marred by the fact that some parts were played by dilettantes,
rimes put
technical slips and tonal insufficiencies somefacial muscles to a hard test, especially in solo
whose
my
was still so powerful delight in music itself, however, passages. such overlooked I that and fresh imperfections; but every readily
My
on me, and quartets became performance thus depended entirely violin solos with three accompanying instruments. Since, moreover, in the string quartet which Dinico and I had founded the were also very inferior, I soon got used to the dominatinner parts
to such an extent that in later ing role which was forced on me, I had the with when I associated partners of equal standing, years,
of difficulty in getting out of the habit of solo execution. At Goldschmidt's, 1 also became thoroughly familiar with part of the older chamber music with keyboard; a former colleague of greatest
the Vienna Conservatoire took the piano part. At the beginning of my residence in Bucharest several
rooms
I
that proved to harbour an extraordinary
had rented number of
cockroaches, which sometimes at night quite unceremoniously ran over my face. However, at Dickin's house I met four young
bank officials who came from influential financial circles and wanted to make a thorough study of banking and finance in the a High School of the Balkans, We swiftly struck up friendship, same from the and as we were all suffering frightful living conditions
we decided to set up a common house in
a small villa after
summer vacation. For almost two years we continued this kind of communal life very happily; it gave us the illusion of the
having our
With
own comfortable home.
the
coming of
the
summer 172
vacation
I
was able to
flee
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] from the tropical heat of Bucharest and present myself to my and friends in Wieselburg in the dignified capacity of a parents
newly-made
professor.
With
the inner security that is always I felt an increased joy in life.
coupled with material independence
The world,
transfigured in the glory of
seemed created to bring years, fruition. The only dark spot was
all
my
my three-and-twenty hopes and wishes to anxiety about my artistic
my
The
concentrated effort that had produced the success of my Berlin debut had been followed by an spectacular decline whose source seemed enigmatic. One thing, equally sharp
development.
was
clear: my characteristic duality of and the conresultant and artistic feeling psychic on ideas the which the of weeds flicts provided ground parasitic the healthy development of my art. undermining freely, grew For what is really the ideal picture of a musical interpretation, as it presents itself to the searching mind? In brief, conscious,
certainly,
absolutely
thought and
functional study results in perfect technical preparation which, in its turn, should create the feeling of certainty and security that enables the artist to concentrate, freely and almost unconsciously, on the work he has to interpret. If a performer comes to a stand-
in his development, or suffers complete shipwreck, the fault always in the non-fulfilment of one of these two basic condi-
still is
tions: either the lack
of
technical certainty inhibits the carefree
his feeling; or else his feeling does not succeed, in forgetting the technique despite the best possible preparation,
expression of
and in soaring over the earthly mist of the craftsman's skill. In this formula can be found the solution to most of the dramas of arrested development, however enigmatic and complicated they own state was indeed more complex in that both seem.
may
My
elements, the technical and the emotional,
were present to an
at the adequate degree without, however, dominating alternately of performances were followed by right moments. The finest
others in
which
my
a certain coldness appeared to fetter playing. on to the platform
During that critical period, I always walked with a feeling of definite reluctance; in fact,
from 1897 to 1901, a few of with the exception unimportant appearances in other I did not perform as a soloist at all I confined people's concerts, 173
CARL FLESCH
which allowed me to myself chiefly to chamber-musical activities, brood over my soloist's worries in the quiet of my study. And thus of self-tormenting, I had gradually slid into the muddy channel one day believing I had found the to throw it away the next day as a philosopher's stone, only common pebble. The seemingly grotesque and exaggerated picture I have sketched out of the maniacal, brooding violinist in
hypochondriac
of
fussiness,
my Art
Vol.
II
own
personality at that stage.
of Violin Playing I
is
a faithful reflection
suffered inexpressibly
of
my
under the
constant pressure of my unsuccessful and ever-changing experiments. The nagging dissatisfaction and inner unrest which was the result
which
of this
vacillation
soon brought about a neurotic condition of my will to overcome. Only a
called for all the strength
gradual but fundamental change in
my
emotional
life
was
to
hitherto unsuspected powers within me, before whose intensity the spectre of petty hair-splitting vanished for ever.
awaken
From
the outset
I
was aware
that the Bucharest
atmosphere development that were not to be underestimated. For beside the fatalistic outlook of the Orient, where idleness is an aim in life, there was the danger of slipping concealed hindrances to
my
artistic
away from Central-European culture. The visit of a foreign artist, then, always offered me a welcome opportunity to keep in touch with the rest of Europe. I have already spoken of the beneficial influence of the youthful Marteau, who looked full of hope to the future, and whose playing was to me like a breath of fresh air in
an overheated and
stifling
room.
To him
I
owe above
all
my
acquaintance with Mozart's Violin Concertos. Sarasate and Ondricek too renewed, if to a weaker degree, the favourable
childhood. impressions they both had made on me in other hand, Kubelik and Huberman were new to me.
my
On the
Jan Kubelik [1880-1940] was then the most important factor in the attempted renaissance of Paganini's style. Wilhelmj had started, Thomson continued it; and even in our days it has not
been fully overcome. Without possessing any real artistic justineo-Paganini-ism can yet arouse pleasure in the
fication, this
listener interested in violin
perfect solution
technique as pure artistry offers the of technical problems, a kind of refined gymnas-
174
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] and juggler's
tics
art.
At
this
time (1900) Kubelik
fulfilled the
necessary requirements in the highest measure. His technique was not so much absolutely reliable and beautiful in sound,
though of a minute precision. It was he who really brought the slow practice of runs into fashion. His strength consisted in lefthand pizzicatos and harmonics of every kind the sign of brilliant as
Paganini-like acrobatics. His tone production, a little stiff in itself, did not lack a certain astringent and chaste grandeur, but from his as a whole one could gather that his teacher, Sevcik, regarded musical requirements as far below the need for a spotless technique. But again, this was com-
performances
shortcoming
the freshness and carefree of the twenty-yearspirit all all in so that he was an and for his time even old, extraordinary
pensated
by
phenomenon. Outwardly he was the picturesque as a man he was simple, and serious he left all industrious; kindly, publicity to his impresario, who looked after it very thoroughly. The arrival of Kubelik on the scene could be regarded as an event inasmuch as the tendency towards technical integrity and the aversion to slovenly bogus techniques received an impetus through him whose beneficial effect can still be felt today. I too learned from him to apprea
singular
Czechoslovakian 'platform' type. But
of slow study, the importance of rhythmic preopposed to pseudo-brilliant racing, the necessity for a kind of automatism which, however, must confine itself to the technical aspect of the artistic execution. In musical respects, ciate the benefit
cision as
however, his arrival signified a retreat as against the noble spirituality of a Joachim or Ysaye, a regression to the remote past when violin playing
and
circus art
belonged together.
During Kubelik's stay of several weeks in Rumania there developed between the world-famous artist and myself, the bardly-known Bucharest violin teacher, a friendship which, though superficial, was based on mutual sympathy. But it did not
any closer relations in the future. Not until five years later meet him again, in Amsterdam. As the years passed the phenomenon of Kubelik became the :ase of Kubelik. He was one of those unfortunate artists who
lead to
did
I
ire
already in, or even past, their prime at a time
when others are
CARL FLESCH at the
there
beginning of their development. Even before he was thirty clear indications of a decline. The astringency of his
were
tone developed into dryness, the absolute reliability of his technique began to break down, his chastity turned into coldness, and the unpolished quality of his execution, which had been attributed to his youth, proved to be a lack of musical culture. He to
be markedly
materially for the sufficient to make
successful
less
began however, suffering the power of his name was still
moment, since him a draw. But
without,
the faffing curve
of his execu-
tion continued without interruption, and people have vainly racked their brains over the cause of this collapse. own
My
opinion can be put as follows originally Kubelik was a talent of the highest calibre which, driven by an intense urge to perfection, drew extreme consequences from the technical principles of his :
teacher Sevcik with their merits
and
defects.
The
precision
technical preparations was virtually unprecedented, but coupled with: (i) a defective practising hygiene, by which
of his was
it I
mean
tendency to exaggeratedly long, slow and mechanical studies, of resulting in an atrophy of elemental feeling; (2) a a
disregard purely musical thought in favour of a perfect but lifeless, soulless mechanization of the playing movements. Technically Kubelik was fully developed at the age of twenty;
he could then have retrieved what, musically, he had neglected under Sevcik. An exclusive concentration on all kinds of chamber music for some years would have thawed out his powers of interpretation which had been frozen fast by his stupifying exercises. It
was
a
major tragedy
that
he did not succeed in escaping from
the blind alley in which he found himself. It was in Bucharest, too, that I first met and heard Bronislaw
Huberman
whose
[1882-1947] about
agreement. While most of the
stature there is sharp dis-
violinists
of
his
own
generation
have adopted a negative attitude towards him, he is highly esteemed by a number of his younger colleagues as well as by the general public. If one wants to understand his style, one has to bear in
mind above
took lessons a pupil
until
all
that
he was
he
ten,
of Michalowicz and
is
basically self-trained, for
and irregular ones
at that.
also, occasionally,
176
he only
Originally
of Marsick and
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] 1 Joachim, he soon followed his own intuition, sharply defined as his personality was at an early stage. After his sensational success
at Adelina Patti's farewell concert in Vienna on January 12, 1895, he entered a period of triumphs which lasted, approximately, until the age of puberty. His development then seems to have gone through a crisis which was only resolved after a decade, to give way to a renewed ascent. Ever since, he has been playing uninterruptedly all over the world.
Two
factors are decisive if we
wish to judge a
violinist objec-
grounding and his particular personality. Huberman's technique, though sound, has always betrayed the fact that he left school too early. His technical basis is that of the tively: his technical
bow in the old manner, employs a pure without participation of the wrist, and intonates finger vibrato 1890*5.
He
holds the
semitones pianoforte-like, according to equal temperament a circumstance which becomes particularly and unpleasantly striking in his unaccompanied Bach. In tonal respects, too, he follows
much as he sacrifices smoothand evenness of tone production, which in our time is an
the tradition of his childhood in as ness
absolute necessity, to extravagant characterization; in other words, 'scrapes' or 'whispers'. His bowings again, excellent as
he either
in themselves, leave much to be desired from the of view. Unreserved praise, on the other hand, is due and passage work, the precision and verve of which meet the most fastidious requirements.
they
may be
tonal point to his runs
Musically, too, his style gives occasion for serious criticism. his own devices at an all too early stage shows in his frequent neglect of elementary rules of articulation,
The fact that he was left to
form of wrong accents. Above all, however, it is the over-emphasis he lays upon his own personality as distinct from the work of art, that characterizes both his good and his bad especially in the
performances. His personality excitable, passionate
and
is
self-willed, sensitive,
self-assured. It
nervous and
does not tolerate contra-
and demands subordination, even of the music. In this way, extraordinary results can be achieved if composition and interpreter are in natural harmony with each other, whereas otherwise diction
a
He studied with Joachim for eight months in Berlin in 177
1892.
CARL FLESCH the tone of the work to the pitch or disagreement with his interpretaego. Agreement tions depends chiefly on the degree of sympathy or antipathy
Huberman always of his
tries to adjust
own
which the individual tradictions. Side
listener feels for a personality so full
side
by
with
extreme drive for perfection, will, there his
own
result in
is this,
at times,
his acute intelligence
and
his iron
downright amusing over-estimation of
which, in favourable circumstances,
self
of con-
his serious artistic intentions, his
may
yet again
an extraordinary power of artistic conviction, to whose
hypnotic suggestion the receptive listener submits unresisting. The strength of his personality, then, is undeniable, like it or not. Its
influence
on the younger
generation, however,
would seem
to
be unfavourable: young people tend towards self-glorification at the expense of the music, and Huberman's successes are likely to confirm them in their attitudes.
Huberman cannot be placed in any school or line of development. In the history of violin-playing he will survive as the most remarkable representative of unbridled individualism, a fascinat1 ing outsider.
The Rumanian Georges Enesco [1881-1955] towered above his musical compatriots like a solitary rock in a sea of mediocrity. I had already made his casual acquaintance at Marsick's in Paris, where he had landed
after
completing his studies
at
the Vienna
Conservatoire. Enesco represented the most perfect type ofversatile musician. It is impossible to say which of his gifts deserves to be
regarded
as the greatest, since his qualities as
composer, conducwere about equally outstanding. Howtwo main professions, that of composer and of violinist,
tor, violinist
ever, in his
and
pianist
he did not achieve
all that his precocious genius promised. The Second Violin Sonata which he wrote in 1899 is among the strongest contemporary works of this kind. Its emotional content and its technique are on the same high level, and both
melodically seems to us novel, unhackneyed and captivating. At the time he was regarded as the coming man not simply of Rumania but of the musical world altogether, as a link
and harmonically
it
still
between the German (Brahms) and French (Franck-Debussy) 1
See Appendix I for further discussion on Huberman.
178
Enesco, Thibaud and Flesch playing a Vivaldi Triple Concerto at a rehearsal for the concert in memory of their teacher, M. P. Marsick, in 1933 (see p. 179)
Donald Tovey,
Julius
Rontgen and Pablo
Casals,
with Adela and Jelly d'Arragni (1911)
Artur Sdmabel (about 1935)
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] traditions at
filled
an expectation which, he does not seem to have fulleast in so far as I know his later works. His violin
a similar history. Originally playing had
highly
it
seemed to display a
combination of gypsy daredevilry and cultivated based on an extraordinary talent for the instrument. But
attractive
artistry,
in later years a strange cleavage seemed to develop between these two qualities, in so far as both his playing and his programmes alternated between a capricious and shallow virtuoso attitude on
the one hand and a deliberately dry and scholastic pseudo-classicism on the other. In those days he was unable to weld together the individual elements of his artistic character. Personally, too, he was often very difficult to understand. It was as though an inner rift York had prevented the full development of his capacities. In
New
I
heard
him play
the
last
movement of Beethoven's Violin Con-
tempo of J..48 instead of the generally accepted J69, which for a musician of his rank was an inexplicable blunder. In May 1933, on the occasion of the unveiling of a memorial tablet on the house where his and my teacher, Marsick, was born, the little town ofJupille near Liege organized a concert in which Thibaud, Enesco and I took part. We played a Vivaldi certo at the
triple
concerto together, and each individually one of Marsick's I was assigned a nocturne, which in its structure,
small pieces.
mood and even key was so like Schumann's Serenade that I had the them. Enesco and Thi-
in avoiding confusing greatest difficulty little pieces. The concert similar baud played
was to take place in we went back to the afternoon, and after the morning our hotel. There Enesco suddenly declared that he would not have rehearsal
dinner with after
us,
he simply must
'practise'.
Sure enough, shortly
we heard him zealously doing finger exercises
(for
which he
had not the least use in the concert itself) for an hour on end, while Thibaud and I together with some friends set no bounds to our appetites.
I
only recall
this incident,
unimportant in
itself, as
an
and obscure elements in the character example of the incalculable old could, at of this artist, who when he was fifty years great
times
still
behave
like a
nervous student.
When he
to his innate nature, as in Ravel's Tzigane,
supreme performances. C.F.-N
I
gave free rein he was able to achieve
was strengthened in 179
my
opinion by the
CARL FLESCH his playing impression that
made on me
in Paris in 1935. After a
he had devoted to the composition of pause of two years, which as far more mature, balanced, and me struck he an opera, before. than Through certain peculiarities in perfect technically his
uncommon
mechanics he achieved
expressive effects. His
the strings at an acute angle, which resulted in a fingers touched kind of smooth, velvety tone without any admixture of metallic colour. In order naturally to achieve this position of the fingers,
however, he had to turn his left elbow excessively outward. His him into tendency towards mystical expression often seduced over-refined, hardly audible pianissimos; and he easily neglected the difference between strong and weak beats. What gave his was his habit of starting playing a pronounced personal quality expressive,
sustained notes a
pitch and then
to raise
them
few vibrations below to their correct level
their
proper
by way of his
vibrato. This device gave his expression a strange,
somewhat
lascivious tinge;
it
has, incidentally,
ambiguous, been coarsened by
and today can actually be regarded as a characteristic of light music. Despite my reservadistinguishing tion, however, his playing on that occasion enchanted me from
professional jazz players,
beginning to end. His feeling was genuine, deep and alive, his technical basis solid, his mixture of thought and emotion well balanced, and I
came to the conclusion that he was one of the most
attractive artistic
characters
of our time.
In middle age, Enesco devoted himself to teaching for several
months every year. He held violin courses in Paris for advanced students, in which he accompanied them on the piano without touching the violin himself a kind of 'coaching' which of itself to interpretation. I regard this sort necessity had to confine of instruction as not only useless, but even harmful, since it technical from the spiritual (for don't false nuances separates the often have technical origins?) and endangers the independence and inviolability of the student's personality by forcing a way of feeling upon him that is foreign to his nature. Besides, a violinist as excellent as Enesco had the duty to try and be a living
example too.
the smaller fry who gave concerts in Bucharest I recall the two infant especially prodigies Steffi Geyer and Max
Among
180
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] Steffi, who later became the wife of the Swiss and impresario Schulthess, was then a dainty teenager composer who could already fiddle quite well, though without displaying much personality. Her much too broad vibrato pointed unmistakably to the Hubay school. She later developed into a sound violinist, without fulfilling the promise of her childhood. Max
Wolfstal. Little
Wolfstal (whose talent did not survive the years of adolescence) came from the Polish musical family of the same name, of which the
most outstanding representative was
who also
my own
pupil, Joseph,
died early.
pleasure I remember the pianist Alfred Griinfeld [1852embodiment of Vienna. His playing was saturated with the 1924], Viennese charm, beautiful in tone, graceful and utterly musical;
With
but his technique was a little on the weak side, with the exception of some dubious specialities such as the notorious 'Griinfeld octaves*. It was only after a concert, when he sat down again at the piano in an intimate circle, with a tumbler of champagne in front of him, that he revealed himself in his performance of
Viennese waltzes
One of was
my
as a great artist in the smaller forms. the finest memories of residence in Bucharest
my
with the Bohemian String Quartet had first heard in Paris in 1894. Its appear-
closer acquaintance
[1892-1925],
which
I
ance marked a turning point in the history of quartet playing. Hitherto, one had been accustomed to see in quartet ensembles
dominating leader, as was the case above all in are not in the position today to judge has been variously asserted, Jean Becker [1833-1884]
chiefly a foil for the
the Joachim Quartet.
whether,
as
We
head of the Florentine String Quartet [1866-1880] did in fact effect a change in this respect. In any case, Joachim himself still had to show very great indulgence towards the performance of his partners. Now suddenly at the beginning of the 'nineties, at the
four musicians from Prague, three of them quite young, appeared on the concert platform and, completely equal in quality, fiddled
and technical miraculously, with unheard-of intensity, freshness perfection: Karel
Hoffmann [1872-1936] an outstanding
leader;
in tone quality Josef Suk [1874-1935], the great composer, Nedbal Oskar the to leader; [1874-1930], the giant of the superior
181
CARL FLESCH viola,
and Hanus Wihan
the ideal of a quartet
The
changed.
[b. 1855],
'cellist.
1
The
the ruling spirit of the whole, usual roles seemed to be ex-
was a magnificent
first violinist
interpreter, but
nevertheless tonally the weakest of the four; the occasional solo violinist Suk proved a serious competition passages of the second
And when Nedbal
for him.
took the lead
Smetana's First String Quartet (From
was hearing
my
at the
Life),
beginning of one thought one
real viola playing for the first time,
while
Wihan
of Czech musicality both
united in himself the best qualities musician and as instrumentalist. One
no longer regarded
as
the
occasional passages in which the other instruments came to the fore as a disagreeable necessity, as was the case with the Joachim
Quartet, nor had one to wait anxiously for the return of the first violin after often painful interludes; here for the first time one
heard ensemble playing by four congenial individualities
who
were on the same technical level. The steadily rising development of quartet playing in our own day can be traced back to this revolutionary phenomenon. The 'Capet', 'Flonzaley', 'Lener', 'Kolisch', 'Brussels', *Pro Arte', and 'Guarneri' Quartets would be unthinkable without the electrifying example of the 'Bohemians'. By comparison with the Joachim or Rose Quartet however, the life of the Bohemian Quartet was of short duration. First Nedbal (accompanied by the leader's wife) broke away, then Wihan died; at a relatively early stage, Hoffmann's bowing revealed a serious lack of steadiness; and after a long wait, Suk was at last recognized as the most valuable composer of his native land. Thus this rare ensemble came to a partly unharmonious end, and only the its
memory remains ineffaceable for all those who knew it in
prime.
myself had also become an ardent quartet player at this time. The founding of a permanent quartet ensemble, which Dinico had I
the help of the Queen,
took
palpable shape with inspired, soon as early as the winter season of 1897-8
and
first series
of quartets, but not without a
name which
the child
was
to bear.
My
we embarked on
bitter
our
struggle over the
proposal to
call it the
Preceded by Otto Berger in the first year of the Quartet's existence. Like the other three, Berger was a pupil of Wihan. He resigned because of ill health,
182
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] Flesch or the Flesch-Dinico quartet was turned down, wliile I as leader could not accept the title 'Dinico-Flesch'. Finally we agreed
names of all the four players on the programme and But as Dinico attended to the business side of the and stamped the admission tickets with his name by way
to put the
leave
it
at that.
concerts
of check, the cunning gypsy effortlessly achieved his end of getting
name
'Dinico Concerts' generally accepted. Our programmes included the better known works of Beethoven's first period, 1 as the
well as quartets by Haydn, Mozart and Dvorak, though we did not yet venture on Brahms. Encouraged by the Queen's interest, Bucharest society showed great interest in our undertaking. But the performances 'cellist
was not
were not on
while his brother, the second
The
was played by
viola
a very high level; the talented
sufficiently reliable either technically or musically,
a
violinist,
was decidedly
inferior.
German named Loebel who, with
a
good average musical education, was able to meet all technical requirements too; but at times he eagerly resorted to the bottle before concerts. Thus the entire responsibility for the execution rested
on
my
shoulders.
I
had
to lead the
ensemble and hold
it
had to shine at every moment in the absence of another and willynilly I had to make the best of it by playing solo planet; to the accompaniment of three instruments. As we also had to together ;
I
chief activity make music for the Queen several days a week, in Bucharest, teaching apart, was quartet playing. Though musical horizon was form as a soloist suffered in consequence,
my
my
my
considerably enlarged, and I was moreover forced to get away from self-tormenting ruminations about problems of technique or expression. The close contact with the purest form of musical me out of the nervous restactivity was the best means of helping lessness that marked this stagnant period in my development as a violinist. And so I have retained good memories of my Bucharest and despite my aversion quartet activities despite their inadequacy to the
'cellist.
first publication, the new edition of Kreutzer's eighteen Studies, in circumstances which did not lack studies in Paris I had made the a tragi-comic touch. During
This period also saw
my
my
183
CARL FLESCH acquaintance of a sculptor who played the violin and who proposed that he should do a bust of me in exchange for a few violin lessons.
While rummaging about in his
studio
I
found under a pile
of old music the original edition of the eighteen Kreutzer studies, which were quite unknown to me. My pupil readily made me a present of them, and after they years under my hands during my
own
new
this
of
had
lain
unnoticed for several
music, they happened to
first visit
to Berlin,
and
it
come
occurred to
into my me that a
might be useful. By questioning my colleagues I established that none of them knew tie work, and I proceeded to get in touch with a publishing firm, whose director declared himself ready to publish my edition provided that no other new edition was in circulation. In my presence every possible reference book was consulted, and no trace of the work was found. There was nothing to stand in the
edition
way of our
soon
valuable collection
concluding a contract. Engraving was to start as the proofs were to be sent to me at Bucharest.
as possible;
several months later, before I returned the proofs to Berlin, showed my 'discovery' proudly to an older colleague at the Conservatoire, who drily remarked, 'But these studies were published twenty years ago by Schradieck', an assertion which proved correct on reference to a catalogue. The embarrassing part of the business was my foreword which now could not be suppressed, and in which I had expounded to the world of violinists the
Now,
I
'discovery'. It was, however, the publisher who to his researches had blame: chiefly obviously not been thorough enough. For the rest, the unintentional fraud does not
significance
of my
was
seem to have been discovered. Admittedly as possible, a strict silence
about
my
I
have preserved,
My favourable financial position soon enabled me to acquiring a valuable Italian instrument. choice fell on a splendidly preserved,
which
as far
first editorial child.
For the
think of
moment my
but brittle-sounding
bought for some 4,600 marks. But as it did not satisfy me I soon sold it at a small loss and experimented with chance purchases of instruments of doubtful past, at a correspondGofriller,
I
ingly low price; with most of them I grew disenchanted after a few hours. At last I found that the wife of a diplomat, a woman
184
BUCHAREST [1897-1902]
who had
been a pupil of Vieuxtemps, had a violin which had belonged to her teacher, labelled 'Joseph Guarnerius filius Andrae, though it was a genuine Guadagnini. I acquired it for 4,500 marks. After some minor repairs it proved to be a violin of first-rate tone,
and
I
played on
it
Stradivarius. Later
exclusively for seven years, until I bought it passed into the possession of the violinist
my
Robert Pollak.
To
the Gofiiller violin already mentioned I owe a remarkable experience. I bought it back in 1912, frequently lent it to outit a second time to Alma Moodie, whose possession it remained. I was thus able to follow the tonal
standing pupils, and finally sold in
development of the instrument for over forty years. When I bought it in 1898 it was outwardly quite untouched, stiff in tone, sluggish in response
had only one
desire
and incapable of tone modulation, so that I to get rid of it as soon as possible. Today,
after forty years' intensive use
by excellent artists, the instrument, small format, can take its place beside any relatively despite first-rate Italian instrument. This confirms me in the conviction its
development of a violin largely depends not only on whether it is played at all, but also on who plays it. We know that that the
dilettante scrapings can completely ruin the finest of instruments within a few years; whereas cultivated sound production sets up
and pure vibrations in the wood and thus promotes its of response and vibration. power Beside our quartet evenings there were also six orchestral concerts, which were conducted by the Conservatoire director, Wachmann. As leader I was in charge of a horde of violinists who had not the slightest respect for the old gentleman; he for his part lacked the courage to maintain his position. During rehearsals he did not let us off a single repeat, and one day this drove us to regular
kind of coup
we
agreed to ignore every had happened. The conrepeat and play straight on as if nothing heart apparently old for the came off, greybeard's worthy spiracy resort to a
d'etat,
in that
sank into his boots in face of the unanimous determination of the
desk colband; shaking his head, he bowed to the inevitable. who was reconciled rival Richard former was Hartzer, my league
My
with
his fate
and
also
with me.
We became more friendly, not so
185
CARL FLESCH
much in our art as in chess, the tabla game, and above all in cycling. He was said to be the child of a well-known violinist of the 'seventies, and a certain Baron, who soon vanished from the scene and
left
the mother
the
went
mother
to care for the child.
to France
and
left
Soon afterwards
the child behind with her
at the Budapest Conservatoire, then with parents. Richard studied Griin in Vienna, and in due course began a modest concert one day he received a letter from his father activity. Suddenly
in Sofia, a
who had
newspaper
chanced to come across his son's
When
criticism.
their relationship
beyond
father,
then in Bucharest, where
all
I
had been
in
estab-
went to live with met him in 1897. When I
doubt, Richard
lished
name
first
his left
Rumania in 1902 he followed me to Berlin and later to Hamburg, where he married a wealthy Dutch woman, but lived a quite undistinguished existence as an
artist.
From our
Bucharest days,
he had retained a certain attachment to me, which however was curiously mixed with envy and jealousy. After the First World
War
induced
I
him
to settle in Berlin,
where he worked
as
my
and soon became one of the most preparatory sought-after violin teachers in the capital. He was an outstanding craftsman, conscientious and hardworking, but incapable of deassistant teacher
veloping the students' ability to stand on their own feet and to teach them all that for which technical skill is but a prerequisite. Later
I
me
took him with
where he spent three years
to the Curtis Institute at Philadelphia, as preparatory tutor in unusually
my
now our relations worsened: he began dependence on me unnecessary and an
favourable conditions. But to consider his artistic injustice.
wards in
His bad
humour vented
my instructions,
Amsterdam in
itself in
insubordination to-
and I was forced to part with him.
He died
1939.
Meanwhile, the three-year contract which I had signed in 1897 was drawing to its close, and I had to consider whether to extend it or to look about me for other possibilities of existence. Just at that time a minister hostile to
Hungary was
to a renewal of
in office,
and he was
opposed my appointment. Prudence counselled to look for another position betimes in order to be prepared against any eventuality. Just about then the post of orchestral
me
186
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] Vienna Court Opera fell vacant, and I quickly decided to apply for it by way of reinsurance. An invitation from the director, Gustav Mahler, brought me one day to the opera house, where Arnold Rose, who for his part would have been leader at the
me
next to him at the first desk, received me in He gave me a friendly explanation of the demands that Mahler, who did not know much about violin technique, used to make during auditions. He attached the greatest very glad to see
the director's office.
significance to the steadiest possible bowing in sustained notes and therefore considered the beginning of the third act of Siegfried1 as
bowing technique of an orchestral violinist. old Rose did not hesitate to cheat a little; he showed me
a touchstone for the
Good
the passage in question beforehand. Mahler came in a little later; he first asked me to play a Mozart adagio, and then all unprepared as I was set the Siegfried passage in front of me. But as
my
bow glided over the
strings
with the phlegmatic calm of a world-
weary philosopher, he seemed greatly pleased, wanted to nail me down to the post of leader at once, and accompanied me himself to the administration building, where I was informed of the
The uncanny suddenness, however, with which the matter had developed went rather against my grain; for the question of my remaining in Bucharest financial conditions attached to the post.
was not yet
my
artistic
settled,
while
I felt at
the same time that the time for
had not yet come. Thus advanced from promised to make my decision known to
resurrection
candidate to courted,
I
the proper quarters as soon as possible. Shortly after, however, I contract at Bucharest for a further three years, and did extend
my
removal to Vienna the question of to strengthen was calculated episode
my
fell
my
to the ground.
The
self-confidence con-
to the worst I could siderably, for it showed that if the worst came orchestral haven of find refuge in the sure leadership. For the rest,
Mahler seemed
to
me highly neurotic. An embarrassing tic made
him frequently swing his right leg forward like a marionette, even when he was standing at ease. An angel and devil in one, he was 2
undoubted
regarded by the orchestra as a tyrant, despite his ^esch means the beginning of Act IE, scene 3. 2 Not by its outstanding members, such as Rose' or the 'cellists Buxbaum and Franz Schmidt; see also p. 344.
187
Friedrich
CARL FLESCH to the greater glory of art. He was the kind of fine-nerved artist who reacts to a wrong note as if
idealism;
it
it
was
certainly
were a box on the
all
ear.
Only time
composer. At the turn of the century
will
show
his stature as a
my development as a violinist began
more hopeful phase. Through the example of Marteau and Kubelik my playing had been favourably influenced as reand my emotional life, too, gards both expression and technique, had undergone a change which was to free unused and inhibited powers and place them at the service of my art. The deep connection between music and the endless gradations of erotic feeling
to enter a
is
indisputable, if
by
'erotic'
one understands not simply sensual
love but the aggregate of all emotions which not only attach in the relations with people to each other but also find expression
God and nature,
Down
to
my
as a
yearning for the unattainable in every form.
twenty-fifth year
my
erotic feelings
had wavered
between the extremes of idealistic selflessness and earthbound love.
Not long
after
my
installation at Bucharest, relations
veloped between myself and a married than
I,
in
whom,
for the first time,
1
had de-
woman some years
loved the
older
human being
too,
and who succeeded to some extent in melting the ice which had so far separated my instincts from my spiritual self. in 1899, 1 met a young woman during a railwho was to make the most powerful impression on
Some time later,
way journey
my emotional
development during the next few
me
sight of her touched strings within before. I passed the brief journey as
carried
away her
picture in
my heart.
years.
The
first
had never sounded though in a dream, and I The winter passed without that
It was only at a Conservatoire recital, which her younger brother participated, that we met again. I was introduced to her mother, who invited me to call on them. My visit followed the next Sunday, and from that moment I was
our seeing each other again.
in
hopelessly in love. The summer vacation
was close at hand, and I only rarely found the opportunity to see Anna. She seemed the embodiment of all the ideals which I regarded as the essence of the eternal feminine. She had just passed the years of flapper dom, was of average 188
size,
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] with a natural elegance, more than a mere beauty, full of intangible charm, attractive and unapproachable at once. She loved art in all its forms, played the violin a little, had also tried her hand at painting and could recite French poetry with all the slim,
enthusiasm of her youth. All that that
was to
I
had dreamed of the
woman
command my future seemed to be miraculously united
in her person. Filled with
hope and content with a definite aim before me, I went home for the vacation, where a mournful surprise awaited me. My mother was suspected of cancer, and had to be immediately operated upon. Eighteen months later she died, only fiftytwo years old. With her passed a woman whose entire existence had unselfishly been devoted to her husband and to the education of her children.
autumn I returned to Bucharest, and to Anna. My love was chaste and unsensual; no impure thought disturbed the tenderness of our relations. I was allowed to spend every Sunday afternoon in her company, when her mother was "at home*. The time from one Sunday to the next seemed grey and boring, for In the
for her
on weekdays we could certs or in the street.
see each other only 'accidentally' at con-
When my yearning
grew unbearable
I
did
not disdain to promenade, like a high school lad, beneath her window. An agreed motif from the Nibelungen, which I whistled
with
virtuosity,
would
call
her to the window, where
rejoice in the sight of her for a
few
I
could
seconds. She appeared to re-
feelings, though I could hardly avoid noticing that ciprocate hers were far more temperate and intellectual than mine, a reaction which I attributed to the natural modesty of a young
my
woman
of the time. In this state of uncertainty, I felt an all the need to clarify our respective positions and to It was one fine a decision. spring morning that I told bring about her my love and asked her whether she would be my wife. Her
more
irresistible
was indefinite and reluctant, and I had to conclude that hers was not a sufficiently strong attachment to justify a bond for
reply life.
Deeply hurt, I withdrew without a word. After the shattering impression of this unexpected development I was overtaken by an 189
CARL FLESCH apathetic resignation. I resolved to forget the fickle girl and to devote myself with increased enthusiasm to art. I had not yet had time to put this noble resolution into practice when some
my
hours later,
me
I
received a desperate letter from her elder
sister, telling
Anna had been thrown
into a deep depression; she was reproaching herself bitterly for having lost me for ever, and wanted to take her life. Would I forgive her thoughtless words, that
which she then on
bitterly rued.
Next day we talked
it
over and from
we
regarded ourselves as engaged. This shaky beginning of our relation was to remain characteristic of its further course.
A
young Rumanian
painter
was
swayed to and fro between us ing what was going on inside
my
rival,
and Anna's
inclinations
for years without her really herself,
while
I
know-
remained unswerv-
ingly constant to her. Only for a brief time did there was complete harmony between us, as
it
seem
as
though though we were destined for each other. My conviction that we belonged to each other was as firm as a rock, and when a year later I left Bucharest for good it was primarily in order to attempt to win a position
abroad worthy of my future wife. During these years of separation, however, I was frequently overtaken by a renewed uncertainty as to the sincerity of her feelings, since the tone of her letters
bride.
hardly showed the affection which I wished to find in my Yet when we saw each other again in Vienna, before I took
up my post in Amsterdam, she seemed once again, to be dominated by true feeling. And as now it appeared that my position in Amsterdam offered me the possibility of setting up my own house
on
securer foundations, our plans for the future form in our letters.
began to take
definite
In anxious expectation, hopeful and fearful at once, I set out to Bucharest at Easter 1903, with the intention of
on the journey officially
asking Anna's parents for her hand. But
which
I
soon
realized
meantime a change of
feeling had occurred in her, she cloaked with the excuse that she still needed a little
that in the
time before she could be quite sure of herself and
Now
from
make
a final
my eyes. Her problematic character, her inconstancy, her lack of inner fibre, and above all the weakness of her feeling for me all this was at last horribly decision.
the scales
fell
190
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] obvious to me. Outwardly calm, but inwardly deeply wounded, I declared that I finally renounced all claim to her. Now the only
need was to accomplish this withdrawal with the least possible for all Bucharest had known the object of my journey. publicity,
To
all decorum, I therefore remained in the city for a few time this with and succeeded, during superhuman selfdays, the truth from in friends. restraint, my keeping Only when, many years later, I saw Anna again, did I discover
observe
the true reason for her hesitation at the time:
my rival, the young
had threatened her that the day she painter already mentioned, was betrothed to me he would shoot himself on her doorstep.
Her and
refusal to
marry
me
had therefore saved one man
his life,
another his happiness.
Nevertheless, the immediate effect on my emotional development was tragic, and it was years before I succeeded in recovering from the severe shock I had suffered. Yet the revolution that had occurred within me had set new strings vibrating. I had matured, become a man. From that time dates my rise as an artist. It was in November 1901 that I first set foot on English soil.
had encouraged me the year before to both thought I was too good for Buchtry my luck there. They arest and that London was precisely the right place for my dual teacher. In those days the journey from capacity as a soloist and Bucharest to London took some sixty-four hours. On the day of Kubelik and
his impresario
my arrival there was a fog, the worst London had known for ten years.
Blind and dumb, for
I
could not then speak English,
I
was
overcome the same morning by a fearful depression, which left in particular. Both my cursing God, the world, and England success. At that time I moderate a had moreover, concerts, only
me
did not
know
conquest of the
that
two
artistic
qualities
are absolutely essential to the
world in England
patience and persever-
successes are unusually rare with British audiences,
ance. Lightning while slow but constant hammering of a name into their consciousness makes them esteem and later love an artist, to whom for die first time in my life, they will then remain loyal. Here, too, of the over-estimation artist's the importance of newspaper I read the very moderate As to me. obvious criticism became
191
CARL FLESCH reviews of
concert I was overcome by a feeling of on suicidal Not I that had lost faith in despair bordering thoughts. it was of the myself; rather, thought my acquaintances and col-
my
first
leagues, the 'whatever will they say?', which at first made defeat as regard
my
me my mood passed as swiftly
damaged
prestige,
an irreparable disgrace. as it had come, and I
However, this quickly came to judge the London interlude according to its worth, as one of those unsuccessful experiments with which
true
every
artist's
career abounds, without their influencing the big line of
development unfavourably. It was only thirty years later, had already come to regard my concert career as closed, that I was to work in England as both soloist and teacher.
his
after I
At
the turn of the century portance in artistic regard.
London was
An
artist
still
of secondary im-
played there
'to
make
money' the people themselves were regarded as unmusical From own personal experience I can say that this is certainly no ;
my
longer correct. After the First changes in the distribution of capitals
of the world, and
World War
there
were many
among the .various time of writing (1935) London
artistic life
at the
must be regarded in every respect as the centre of the world of music. Yet even in the early years of this century the fame of a Wilhelmj or a Sauret induced many violinists to study in London. Soon after my visit to London I heard Sauret
minor Concerto in Berlin. with old-fashioned resources,
as a violinist
definitely
on
[1852-1920] play
A
Vieuxtemps's
the
down
grade. In
any
case,
remember him who was already however, he was reI
as the
only outstanding purely French violinist of the third of the nineteenth century. He did not perform his
garded
last
military
service in the 1870 Franco-Russian war,
was
treated as a deserter,
and not allowed to set foot in France again. Judging by his studies, he must certainly have possessed a stupendous technique in the days of his prime. But since Ysaye's arrival the demands that were
made of violin
playing especially in matters of sound and sonohad grown enormously. The elegance and blase smoothness of a Sarasate or of the violinists he influenced no satisfied
rity
longer
the listeners; they
a
la
demanded
full-blooded, intense interpretations For that matter, I believe that the development of Ysaye.
192
BUCHAREST [1897-1902] England was influenced less by Wilhelmj and Sauret than by Wessely and later by Rivarde. Hans Wessely one of Griin's pupils, spent many years in England as [1862-1926], a teacher, and trained many violinists of the middle rank. As a soloist he could be regarded as a typical exponent of the Griin school, with a solid left-haiid technique despite his primitive bowing technique, and a strong expressive need that was inhibited by his slow vibrato. Because of the indifferent result of my London concerts I soon gave up the thought of settling there. Experts on English musical life had assured me that it took at least three years to secure a sure foundation for the material existence of a young artist in London, and that was too long for me to wait, since, after all, I wished to get married as quickly as possible. So I just spent a few enjoyable weeks in London before returning to Bucharest by way of Wieselburg. In any case this London interlude had again made me realize that in the semi-oriental atmosphere of the Balkans it was
violin playing in
impossible to achieve either progress as an artist or the material conditions necessary to an untroubled domestic life. This conintention to abandon Rumaviction strengthened me in
my
my
possible and again to try my strength in Berlin season. I applied to the Rumanian authorities the next very during for release from the last year of my contractual obligations, and
nian post as soon
as
departure I request was granted, though with regret. On of and the title was awarded an order Royal Rumanian Chamber
my
my
Virtuoso, a distinction which at the time represented to me the farewell audience with the height of worldly honour. Of
my
Queen,
who received me in the palace gardens,
ber that while
I
wandered under shady
I
mainly remem-
trees beside
Her
Majesty,
who was in a bath chair, an intolerable itch on my back made me almost forget the courtly manners that I had acquired during the back home I found that a cockchafer, I past five years. When got as I was, had been crawling for hours as desperate probably just over my bare skin.
Two months later I left Bucharest, after residing there for more than five years, broken only by the summer vacations. The parting was not easy, for aside from the bonds of love that held me to the 193
CARL FLESCH spot, I left
behind quite a number of sincere
friends,
with
whom I
had shared joys of all kinds as well as sorrows. I instinctively felt that this storm and stress period of my twenties, during which, all material cares dismissed, I had lived chiefly for my artistic and personal development, would in retrospect become the happiest time of my life. I was even disposed to regard the less happy such as my relations with aspects of my activities in Bucharest, all was it with Dinico, past and would not return. I indulgence: was about to begin a new period in my life. It is true that my teaching activities had left little trace in Rumanian musical life, since, apart from the fact that my pupils were uninteresting, I had still been too preoccupied with my own development to be able to muster the necessary neutral detachments for dealing with personalities different from my own. But as a violinist I had succeeded, after a period of hard and nerve-racking work, in finding myself again and in establishing a preliminary balance between intellect and impulse. Now I had to test the change in the psychological foundations of my work and try to win a place in the concert life of central Europe. felt I
194
BERLIN
[1902-1903]
Aged Twenty-nine
WHEN,
in the
autumn of
absence of five years,
musical
life.
1902,
1
to
Thirty
returned to Berlin after an
noticed no fundamental changes in its Nikisch continued to be the celebrated conductor of I
the Philharmonic Concerts, while "Weingartner
was in charge
of the Court Orchestra (Konigliche Kapelk). The weekly average of concerts, to be sure, had risen from about fourteen to twice that
number Joachim was violin classes
of the Hochschule, where the were in the same hands as six years before. As yet, still
director
was no sign of a young generation of noteworthy violinists who owed their training to the Hochschule. At the same time, the influx of foreign artists had considerably improved the general there
standard of violin playing.
During my absence, Ysaye, had risen as the new stars who, their personalities
who had been,
Kreisler,
Marteau and Thibaud
for a to stamp generation, were the art of violin playing. Of the violinists move were, in the public ear at the time of
on
as it
my
to Bucharest, Petschnikoff had fallen several degrees in the esti-
mate of audiences, while Burmester was no longer taken seriously by the musical section of the public. Serato, too, had meanwhile been reduced to the top rank of respectable second-class
fiddlers.
Halif rarely appeared as a soloist any longer, and the members of the older guard, such as Petri, Hess and Eldering, had all become
and stayed away from Berlin. on the other hand, had reached the zenith of his Ysaye,
orchestral leaders
inimit-
able art; he was followed by Kreisler, the Pied Piper, who had meanwhile married and whose wife kept him to a regular mode
of living. Marteau, beginning to concentrate on the interpretation of new music, created for himself an unassailable position in that even though his purely instrumental accomplishments were far below those of Ysaye or Kreisler.
field,
C.F.-O
195
CARL FLESCH in 1901, creating Jacques Thibaud had turned up in Berlin
a
from the
outset as the long-awaited exponent of the French type of violin playing. He was born in 1880 at Bordeaux, the son of a violin teacher. As early as 1893, in Marsick's
justified sensation
class,
style
he aroused general interest in view of his already personal of interpretation which was coupled with a pronounced
whole approach gave rise to the hope that an interval of almost a century, France would at last produce another great French violinist. For such players as Artot, Beriot,
technical talent. His ,
after
Ysaye, though commonly considered French, were mostly of Flemish origin and After the Big Three, Rode, really belonged to the Belgian school.
Leonard, Massart, Marsick,
Thomson and
Kreutzer and Baillot, France had produced only mediocrities, with the exception of Sauret, who had been expatriated measured :
France was no against international violin playing standards, longer in the running.
When I won
the
first
prize in 1894,
little
Thibaud was one of the competitors. To the amazement of all who knew him, he flopped one more striking proof of the unreliable
judgments that tend to be pronounced
at such a
levy in
He won
the third prize at the next concourse, and it was mass. only in the subsequent year that, at last, he gained the highest
award. the
I lost
sight
of him during the following six years, though me at Bucharest that he had scored a
rumour reached
with his violin solo in the Prelude to SaintLe Deluge, when leading the orchestra of the Colonne
sensational success
Saens'
Concerts.
At twenty-two, Thibaud was the youngest violinist of great Huberman, his junior by two years, was just passing a transitional through phase during which he was unproductive and avoided international concert life. Thibaud had not artistically far but only fulfilled, surpassed the promise of his boyhood. Above stature; for
all, it
was
listener
his
by
its
tone which, though not big in itself, fascinated the sweet and seductive colour, literally unheard-of at
the time. For better or worse, moreover, he introduced into
modern violin playing a flat initial intonation of the more sustained and expressive notes, which he then levelled up. For him, at any rate, this device seemed to be an organic necessity, a means 196
BERLIN [1902-1903] of expression which was essential to his utterly individual It is always an artist's character that provides the master an understanding of his everything.
art.
style.
key to To the young Thibaud, women were
However unconsciously,
his art as well as his
thoughts
and actions were dominated by the eternal feminine. His playing was imbued with his yearning for sensual pleasure, with an unchastity that was all the more seductive for its refinement. What a difference from the ideals pursued by Joachim and even by Ysaye in their youth! However, times change manners. Thibaud's violin playing expressed the spirit of the turning century, of the Jin de
siecle.
In addition to his bewitching tone, his left-hand
technique was sufficiently accomplished to do justice to the exigencies of the repertoire (when he was on form), and his right hand, too, showed a high degree of mastery, both in its diverse bowings and in its modulations of tone. His attack was sharp without being scratchy, and the bow adhered to the string without preventing vibration through undue pressure. The music of Lalo, Saint-Saens, Chausson and Franck suited his style best. Even his outward appearance, slim and distinguished, expressed the smooth and tasteful elegance which the French nee-classicists1 showed in their approach to composition. At the time, he struck us all as the exponent of a hitherto unknown style of violin playing which was as new in its resources as it was individual and characteristic in
its
ultimate
artistic
aim, viz. an eroticism that
remained unadulterated even though he ennobled it. You could not compare him to any other violinist, and public opinion had already placed him in the ranks of the very greatest; he even
seemed to be considered heir presumptive to Ysaye.
On
me, he
made the profoundest impression in Lalo's F minor Concerto, a work with which I was ill acquainted and whose first and second leaders who have grown up on the anti-romantic neo-classicism of Strawinsky and Hindemith may think that Flesch gets his terms wrong, but in point of fact the term 'neo-classicism' got itself wrong in the first place, applied as it was to music of late-nineteenth-century composers which showed a varying degree of interest in the methods of ckssical and pre-classical masters. This nineteenthcontemcentury 'neo-classicism' is not to be regarded as the forerunner of the was the porary variety: the forerunner of twentieth-century neo-classicism anti-romantic Busoni [1866-1924]. Cf. his Essence of Music and other Papers (trans.
Rosamond Ley),
RocklifT, 1957, pp. 19
('Young Classicism')
197
ff.
[Publisher].
CARL FLESCH
movements
are, to
my mind, far superior to the same composer's
hackneyed Symphonic Espagnole. Thibaud was happy like a child when
we met
He had and prided recently married, enjoyed himself on the Strad he had newly acquired from my former teacher Sauzay. With his natural charm went an unusual talent for he had a masterly story-telling. A typical imaginative Frenchman, again.
financial independence,
way of
adorning
trivial
delighted his audiences
events
with
his
with droll trimmings,
southern
vitality.
During
and
recent
he had learnt a great deal from his intimate friend Ysaye, while his individual and characteristic style had emerged unharmed. I acknowledged his artistic superiority without envy; we were very fond of each other and have remained so over the years.
years,
At
the
smoothly
same time,
development did not proceed as had hoped. When I heard him at Amsterwas disappointed by his interpretation of
his further
as his friends
dam two years later, I the Mendelssohn Concerto, nor did he repair this impression on later occasions. The unforgettable Berlin concert I heard has remained in
be equalled in should this have been the case ?
my memory as a unique event, never to
Why
his
subsequent performances. try to give a detached answer to the question. The external circumstances of Thibaud's career were exceptionally favourable since, for thirty-five years, there was no rival I
shall
to fear in his special field: apart
from
himself, France did not
produce a single great fiddler during that period. Thus, when a French violinist was wanted for the performance of French works, fall back on Thibaud, whether performance made a return visit desirable. Now, though one has no right to demand from an artist that he be at his best all the time like clockwork, one may expect him to maintain a minimal standard of and not to let the number of performance,
concert promoters were obliged to
or not his
latest
exceed that of his wholly satisfying interpretations. For apart from its attendant artistic disappointments, such a Disproportion is most inconvenient for the executant himself, his inferior efforts
since the good performances may take place at Timbuktu, and the bad ones in Berlin and London. In fact, Thibaud met with this kind of bad luck so often in his career that his reputation was
198
BERLIN [1902-1903]
bound
to suffer considerably in the long run. In addition, there
was the rigid immutability of his artistic attitude which, at the age of fifty and beyond, still made him regard the erotic side of mental life as the centre of musical experience. Not that I think that emotion should take second place in an ageing artist, but it must be a different kind of emotion, more spiritualized and sublimated.
Old men giving themselves youthful
airs are
comic figures, on the stage as in life. The deeper causes of Thibaud's technical
amongst the stock
unreliability are
not
difficult to
grasp. Unlike, say, Heifetz's, his initial training was not sufficiently versatile and thorough to absolve him from regular
study at later stages. Throughout his career, Thibaud was as passionately fond of playing the violin as he was disinclined to devote himself to its systematic study. At the same time, his general technical equipment was not comprehensive enough to render him impervious to unfortunate accidents. His art was in fact
rooted in his innate
solid technical ability.
talent, rather
He
than in the acquisition of a
lacked the manual routine which will
on days of physical or mental He depended upon being in good form, whereas a step into the breach
indisposition.
with of proficiency will be able to keep a fair level of performance by his craftsmanship, even on days of failing inspiration. Throughout all these years, Thibaud's repertoire centred on the Symphonic Espagnole by Lalo, the E flat major Concerto of Mozart, the Havanaise by Saint-Saens, and the Cesar Franck Sonata. But the development of a violinist is intimately connected with the enlargement of his repertoire and the resultant widening of his horizon. If he always occupies himself with the same violinist
a certain surplus
emotion will turn into stony routine, and while is a necessary component of safe execuroutine sins tion, spiritual against nature by making a habit of feeling. Thibaud seems to have been aware of his unstable ability, for in the course of the years he made repeated attempts towards material, his
purely technical routine
improvements. Thus, at Berlin in 1931, 1 found him surer of himself technically than eight years previously. Perhaps the harsh criticism that I am forced to mete out to my drastic
friend
Thibaud
in the interest
of impartiality is 199
chiefly
due to the
CARL FLESCH exaggerated hopes I had had for him when he was twenty. After many then regarded him as the greatest violinist of his genera-
all,
tion. Eventually,
however, he seemed to come to a halt
at,
or
only just inside, the border of supremacy. In the history of violin playing, he will survive, in the first place, as the greatest really
of the early twentieth century. [He died in 1953.] had myself put on a concert and a recital, the former in the Beethoven Saal, the latter in the Singakademie. In newly-opened 1 concert with orchestra, I played the Concerto by Dubois my in Bucharest) as well (which I had come to know through Marteau as the Beethoven and while Concertos, my recital with Paganini with the A minor offered usual the fiddler's piano programme, Concerto of Vieuxtemps as piece de resistance. For these performances, Hammig had put at my disposal a wonderful violin of French
violinist
I
Giuseppe Guarneri del Gesu, the so-called 'd'Egville', which later came into the possession of Friedrich Wilhelm, the music-loving Hohenzollern prince. It was generally thought that I was developing with much promise. Press notices were good, partly even enthusiastic, and I had every reason to be satisfied with my success,
even though you could not describe it as sensational. I had meanwhile passed on to Eugen Stern's concert agency, for I thought that a small agent would better promote my interests than the big international firm of Hermann Wolff, which claimed a kind of monopoly of concert organization both in Ger-
many and
even, at times, abroad. Stern was the prototype of the vain, self-important concert agent in whose view the success of a
concert was never due to the performance of the artist but, above to the skill of the organizer. All engagements had to go
all,
through his hands, and he always knew how to justify the commission due. When you had a direct invitation from a musical society you had to request its secretary to conclude the contract with the agent, whereupon you could be certain to receive, within
a
few
days, a letter
from Stern with this kind of opening sentence:
Theodore Dubois [1837-1924] took
the Prix de Rome at the Paris Conservaand succeeded Saint-Saens as organist at the Madeleine in 1877. Nine years later he became director of the Conservatoire, a post he held, again, for nine years. Curiously enough, the Violin Concerto is among the least known of his numerous compositions which include four operas and two oratorios. ^
toire in 1861
200
BERLIN [1902-1903] 'After prolonged endeavours extending over several months, I have at last succeeded, to great satisfaction, in securing you an
my
engagement at X.'
The only benefit arising from this connection was my meeting came to like with the piano virtuoso Leopold Godowsky. each other and formed a sonata duo: in the course of the winter,
We
we gave several recitals at Bremen and Hanover that were crowned with considerable Before the
success.
First
of the master
World War, Godowsky
class at
succession to Busoni.
in 1938.
[b.
the Vienna Conservatoire died,
[He
1870] took charge from 1908-14, in
an American citizen, in New York
He had been director of the
Chicago Conservatoire.]
He
was perhaps the only pianist since Liszt who succeeded in directing piano technique on to hitherto uncharted territory. He was one of those virtuosos
concert
hall.
who
make
only
their
mark
chievous colleague once
said.
The
room, not in the two yards,' a mis-
in a
'Godowsky' aura extends for just s
fact that his playing did
not
have any magnetic effect upon his audiences seemed to be due to his technical preoccupations, which resulted in an excessive degree of mechanization and thus inhibited the free play of his imagination.
His closer professional colleagues held him in far higher rest of the public, which tended to remain un-
esteem than the
aware of the subtleties of his style. On one occasion, I saw Theodor crowd Leschetizky, Josef Hofmann and Wladimir von Pachmann round him in the profoundest admiration while he played one of
Chopin arrangements, whose difficulties seemed welhiigh inconceivable even to these sovereign exponents of the instrument. As a writer of music, he was less of a composer than what one
his
might
call a
1 'combinator', in which capacity he
showed genius
to a relatively inferior activity. His original compositions lacked inner compulsion while at the limit of intellectual calculation. In the same time if this superlative
may be applied
very reaching order to apply his talent, Godowsky always needed an external 2 fulcrum: he very rarely invented his own themes. But his X
I
am
retaining Hesch's
German neologism,
Kombinator.
Hesch Here describes a characteristic symptom of a musical culture's ktest can be at least a partial virtue is shown by such stages. That Godowsky's failing 2
~eative characters
as
Max Reger's. 201
CARL FLESCH arrangements of Chopin and Bach are veritable masterpieces in that they solve the most intricate problems and exhaust multiple technical possibilities which, to be sure, are mathematical kind despite the unquestionable finished result. For the rest, he
was
of
somewhat
a
euphony of the
said to be an excellent teacher
matters technical, which seems hardly surprising in view of his creative talent for musical mechanics. Nevertheless, he re-
in
all
garded teaching
as a
mere source of income. The
great
and un-
flagging passion of his life was to 'combine' music for the piano. Godowsky's Berlin home used to be the centre of a sociable
On Sunday nights he kept open house, when was welcome. everyone Music-making and conversation prooften indeed gressed freely, simultaneously. Everybody who was crowd of musicians.
scraping a bow across strings or thumping a piano met together in this in the best sense Bohemian circle, for everyone was fond
of the kind-hearted and benevolent
host.
Wladimir von Pachmann [1848-1933], never
when passing through Berlin. Pachmann was as a
failed to
turn up
Inimitable in Chopin's small pieces,
and charlatan, just odd into an asset. He liked to
a curious mixture of artist
man to turn his
enough eccentricity intrigue audiences by clowning on the platform. In fact many only attended his concerts in order to be entertained by the nonsense he used
to utter, while attentive observers avowed that the partimoments he chose to address his listeners were always just when his memory was about to fail. He took great pleasure,
cular
moreover, in humiliating
his
younger colleagues.
young Schnabel was introduced to him,
pretended not to be able to catch his name: after
he
at last
repeated thrice, the well-known flutist.'
remembered:
When
the
of all had been
for example, he first
'Yes,
it
of course, Schnabel,
With Busoni, Godowsky was not on the best of terms. Once, when Godowsky played at the house of his friend Landecker, president of the Philharmonic Society (Philharmonic), Busoni, who was sitting next door, asked his host very loudly 'Where did :
you
get hold of that lovely pianola?' Then there was Busoni's riddle: What is the difference between Godowsky and a pianola ? Answer :
Godowsky
can play ten times
as fast as a
202
pianola but, to
make up
BERLIN [1902-1903] with ten times as much feeling as Godowsky. was a frequent guest at Godowsky's when he Leschetkky, too, stayed in Berlin. He was then at the top of his fame as a teacher: for
it,
a pianola plays
Paderewsky, Schnabel, Friedman, Gabrilowitsch, Mark Hamburg and many others bore witness to the quality of his teaching methods. Apparently, however, he did not always appraise when both Mark Hamburg and Schnabel
his pupils correctly:
studied with him, he thought
most of the former and
least
of the
latter.
The house of Max Friedlander (the 'Schubert Friedlander', as they called him in order to distinguish him from his many namesakes)
was likewise
a
meeting-place of musical and literary
Berlin. 1 Originally intended for a commercial career, the host had turned to singing at an early stage and subsequently took up musicology. He came to be regarded as an authority on the history
More of a philologist than a musician, he was whole hive of bees; at the same time he was invariably in excellent humour an amiable epicurean. He was fond of illustrating his lectures with musical examples, which he sang with what was left of his voice; undoubtedly, he thus made musicology accessible to a wider public, even though he tended to of the German
lied.
industrious as a
water It
down his scientific information in the process.
was
at Friedlander's house, too, that I
made the acquaintance
of young Georg Schunemann, later the director of the State Hochschule, with whom I was to form a sincere friendship. Friedlander himself had just refused the position as first music critic on the Berliner Tageblatt, recommending in his place Dr Leopold Schmidt, his friend and pupil. Schmidt subsequently held the post for about twenty-five years, exerting a powerful influence upon Berlin's musical life. His importance, however, derived
wide circulation rather than from any personal Old Lessmann continued to edit the Allgemeine Musikqualities. read by concert promoters. It was in zeitung, which was widely
from the
paper's
men Paul Bekker, Georg journal that the up-and-coming Schiinemann and Paul Schwers won their spurs (though no more
this
1
Max
Friedlander [1852-1934] taught at Berlin and Harvard University and by Schubert and Schumann, Gluck's odes, and German folksongs.
edited songs
He
wrote books on the
lied
and on Brahms* songs.
20J
CARL FLESCH than
these).
Max
Marschalk of the
ciated for his frank
and
Vossische Zeitung
factual, if rather dry,
was appre-
approach.
The somewhat reactionary Krebs, the thorough theorist Klatte and the naturally gifted Paul Ertel completed the ranks of music critics who had to decide the fate of performers. The philologian Adolf Weissmann as yet played a subordinate role and in the monthly journal Die Musik
Berliner Tageblatt,
on the it was
Dr Wilhelm Altmann who reviewed violin playing. Although he described me as 'the king of violinists', thus considerably contributing to
my
subsequent popularity,
I
am
deny him an outstanding position among
objectively bound to the critics. One has to
acknowledge, on the other hand, his considerable achievements as a widely active statistical and bibliographical scholar, in which capacity he undoubtedly collected valuable material for the researches of future musical historians.
my agent Stern did not seem able to secure me a sufficient I had to turn to my own friends in order to satisfy need for Thus I used my music-making. Since
number of provincial engagements,
to play with a lawyer, Dr Felix Landau, an efficient amateur who possessed a small but excellent collection of musical instruments. It
sounds like a fairy-tale from past and musical days that for
many
years,
My
Dr Landau had
a daily violin lesson
from
a.m. before setting out for his office. free nights I used to spend in the old Berlin
pupil at
a Joachim
8
wine-room
(Weinstube) of the Frederich Hotel in the Potsdamerstrasse, where I came to enjoy the pleasures of that specifically German institution, a Stammtisch}- It
whom
I
had known
was
since
one Jacques Weintraub days at the Vienna Conservatoire, tavern a relic from past centuries,
a colleague,
my
who had introduced me to this
when the Berlin suburbs began at the Potsdamer Tor and people made Sunday trips to Charlottenburg or Schoneberg. Although the proprietor, 'old Kriiger', hailed from Breslau, he had come to represent the prototype of the Berlin gift of the gab. The number of his sayings was legion. One evening, when the problem of antisemitism was raised at the Stammtisch, old Kriiger, too, was *A
table reserved for regular guests
usually a
circle.
2O4
crowd of friends or an
artistic
BERLIN [1902-1903] asked for his opinion. 'I am an antisernite', our host declared to the astonishment of all, since his inn was chiefly frequented by Jews. Asked for his reasons, he replied, 'The Jews don't drink enough for my liking/ He was the only person allowed to ap-
proach Adolf Menzel, the painter,
when
most ancient of
this
regulars dozing in his corner. One day, an embarrassing incident disturbed our convivial harsat
mony. Poor old Weintraub, whose financial situation was steadily deteriorating, was taken under the wing of the Kriiger family and put in matrimonial touch with an elderly widow of means. "With aplomb and subtle virtuosity, Weintraub played the part of the
whose great before him. In due course, he had induced his fair
significant artist, as yet insufficiently recognized,
future
was
still
lady to place 12,000 marks at his disposal in order for him to redeem the fiddle he had pawned in Paris. Enquiries made meanwhile by some ill-disposed relatives of the bride-to-be, however, revealed the whole
affair as a rather tall story
and Weintraub
an undistinguished and idling musician. The engagement was dissolved, but Weintraub was allowed to keep his violin as com-
as
pensation for missing the chance of maintenance in perpetuity.
When I surveyed my second effort to gain a footing in Berlin, had again failed, despite many a pleasing or It seemed that my time had not yet come; I find of had to some sort fixed besides, employment before I could think of marrying. True, for the moment I had no financial worries a sum of several thousand marks, which I had saved at Bucharest, as well as occasional concert fees, kept me afloat. But
told myself that I encouraging event. I
:
was not far off when my savings would be exhausted, became absolutely necessary to look out for a job as a teacher or orchestral leader, which would enable me to set up the time
whence
it
house.
At about this
time, the post of leader at the Leipzig
Gewandhaus
vacant owing to the departure of Berber, and immediately I decided to apply for it, after presenting myself to the Leipzig
fell
own. The Gewandhaus still had the repupublic in a recital of tation of being the leading German musical society, and the post of
my
leader to this venerable institution appeared to
205
most
violinists as
CARL FLESCH the crowning achievement of their careers, despite the heavy demands that would be made on their services in the concert hall,
many well-known names and many parties among the intrigants i.e.
were opera house and church. There
the aspirants, social devotees of each candidate, but also the daily successful recital, for instance,
among
not only the press.
Upon my uncommonly
a Leipzig's foremost newspaper printed devastating notice, which, that far from achieving tendentious so was however, transparently its
aim,
it
resulted in
my enjoying a certain popularity in Leipzig.
There were powers
at
work behind
the scenes, then,
who were
discomfited at the thought of my Leipzig candidature. At the audition, I played the opening movements of Beethoven's Con-
and String Quartet, op. 59, no. 2. It was young Wollgandt, however, Nikisch's future son-in-law, who emerged victorious. certo
After the event, Nikisch explained to
me that the sole reason why
was the jury's belief that I would make a better soloist, and would be a pity if my individuality were allowed to wither in an orchestral post. Wollgandt was an efficient violinist and chamber-musician, and just the right man for an orchestra. As a soloist, he was not conspicuously active. He was known perpetuI
failed
that
it
change his instrument, to sell, buy and swop it the ideal customer for the international violin trade, always dissatisfied and in search of something better. Ultimately, this kind of mentality ally to
will always be found to be rooted in an over-estimation of the sheer timbre of Italian violins on the one hand, and in an under-
estimation of one's
own tonal flaws on the
other.
Thus the
instru-
bridge or sound-post, are held for every unsatisfactory result, technical or tonal. responsible Much money is wasted in this way and, at the same time, the
ment, or certain parts of it, such
as
prevented from perfecting his technique. Other competitors who failed included Carl Wendling and
player
is
Alexander Sebald. Wendling,
later the director
of the Stuttgart
Conservatoire (Landeskonservatorium), was one of the most prepossessing men as well as one of the most outstanding artists of the Joachim school, the shortcomings of which he did not
fail to
he consistently tried to overcome them by adopting more expedient and suitable methods. The fiddler recognize; in
fact,
206
BERLIN [1902-1903] Sebald had originally played the principal viola at the Gewandhaus, but had always wanted to become a violin virtuoso. He could claim the distinction of having been the first violinist to perform, in three successive recitals, Bach's six unaccompanied Sonatas and
with Paganini's twenty-four Caprices added for good measure. Always ready to be impressed by the mere magnitude of such an undertaking, whatever the quality of its execution, the Partitas,
stamped Sebald overnight as one of the greatest living In actual fact, however, he possessed no more than a inexact and ill-sounding. This pseudo-technique, ill-grounded, kind of mass reproduction must needs result in inferior interpretations, since the quantity of the stuff to be mastered becomes too great for an appreciable quality of detail. In view of his critics
violinists.
startling
with the
Sebald was presently engaged by the most prominent concert societies. Anon, however, the critics' overvaluation was exposed and, as he sank swiftly as he had success
press,
emerged,
back into the sea of mediocrity. He where he became a violin teacher.
later
moved on
to Chicago,
When my Leipzig plans had come to naught, I asked myself whether the moment had not come to reconsider my Viennese project, which I had rejected two years previously. The post of leader at the Vienna
Opera had remained vacant, and the thought place with Rose in Vienna's concert life seemed by unattractive. What made me doubtful, however, was the fact that lacking all experience of opera, I should have had to lead a body of musicians to which many of my old colleagues belonged, some of them still as second violinists. Naturally they of sharing no means
first
could be relied upon not to miss any opportunity of 'tripping me a prospect which was up' hardly alluring, especially under
Gustav Mahler's conductorship. I therefore proposed to the management of the Vienna Court Opera that I should be engaged as orchestral leader as from March i, 1903, but given leave of absence with
full
pay
until
September
i.
This would enable
me
to acquire the necessary routine for so responsible a post, for I should undertake to play, in the meantime, as a guest in sundryorchestras.
My
offer was,
however, turned down; the Court
Opera's treasury, could not apparently understand
207
why
I
should
CARL FLESCH
work which,
be paid for
So
benefit the institution.
moment
for the
at
any
scheme, too, had
this
rate,
would not
failed.
In the early spring of 1903, however, my prospects took a better: no fewer than three different plans
sudden turn for the
emerged, each holding promise of an existence free of care. The conductor Fritz Steinbach [b. 1855] until then at Meinin1 gen, was about to succeed old Wiifiner in Cologne, and I applied for the post of leader to the Cologne Municipal Orchestra (Kolner Stadtisches Orchester), which fell vacant at the same time. Steinbach
informed me, however, that he had appointed Bram Eldering, his former Meiningen leader, who was now teaching at Amsterdam, to lead the
Cologne band.
He
suggested that instead
I
should
apply for the post vacant at Meiningen. Since, however, he knew only by repute, he invited me to participate as leader in the
me
musical festival to be given at Meiningen upon the occasion of his departure, and there to take the opportunity of playing to him.
Quite apart from the fact that his proposal offered me very favourable prospects, I wanted to gain some personal experience of the inner workings of a then,
I
found myself
Orchestra.
At
German
orchestra.
For the next few days,
desk of the Meiningen Court played the opening movement of the
at the first
a rehearsal,
I
Beethoven Concerto to Steinbach' s great satisfaction, and after the festival was over I was a long-term officially invited to sign contract, according to
which
I
was to devote
six
months per year
to orchestral and chamber-musical duties, less a six weeks' leave for recital purposes. The proposed salary of 3,000 marks was a relatively high payment in view of my light duties. On the other hand, the small town of Meiningen did not offer any tempting
prospects to a young artist of ambition. It was a provincial centre which, thanks to the active musical and theatrical interests of its
duke, had gained an importance neither justiby the town's geographical position nor by its other institu-
artistically inclined
fied
Wiillner [1832-1902], pianist, conductor and composer, had likewise been Billow's successor: from 1869 till 1877 he was conductor of the Court Opera at Munich. His works include masses, motets, a Stabat Mater and a Miserere, Psalm CXXV for chorus and orchestra, as well as several other choral works with and without orchestra, a cantata for voice and orchestra, chamber music, piano pieces and duets, songs, etc.
208
BERLIN [1902-1903]
The orchestra itself, however, had attained a considerable standard under Steinbach. As a kind of prima donna, Richard Miihlfeld1 reigned supreme in it the famous clarinettist who had tions.
inspired Brahms to write his Clarinet Quintet and his two Clarinet Sonatas. Steinbach' s predecessors had been Hans von Billow and
Richard Strauss: a glorious past which was only once revived Max brief tenure. during Reger's
At
the beginning of the century, Fritz Steinbach
to be the only great
German conductor;
was thought
for Nikisch, Mottl,
Weingartner, Muck, Richter and Mahler
all hailed from various As a conductor, Steinbach Austro-Hungarian empire. contradictory personality. Heavy-handed in his beat, onesided in the choice of his repertoire, he yet was an important figure because, through his enthusiasm, he succeeded in bringing the works of Brahms to the masses; in the best sense of the word, he popularized what had at first seemed such dry, intractable music. He was also the first who, by of refined and
parts of the was a
way
dynamics of the works of Bach and Handel. Irascible and rude, he could be called a German edition of Lamoureux whom, however, he far surpassed as a musician and conductor. As a of his manual awkconsequence agogics, achieved 'effective' interpretations
wardness and his musical limitations, his development had, however, come more or less to a stop, and during his work at Cologne he was to extend his orbit only through his advocacy of Reger's music. At that time, the subtler art of Walter and Furtwangler had already begun to make itself felt in both the opera In June 1914, Steinbach suddenly fell from the heights where his good fortune had placed him. girl student accused him of misuse of his directorial powers and he was
house and the concert
hall.
A
obliged to resign. This most celebrated of all German conductors of his time died a few years later, in 1916, forsaken by most of his
and ignored. was still undecided whether
friends, alone
While
I
to follow the call to
Meiningen, a new project emerged which was not to be lightly turned down. The director of one of the most important German 1
Originally a violinist, Miihlfeld was self-educated as a clarinettist. 1896, he played the principal clarinet at the Bayreuth Festival.
i 8 56-1 907.
From 1884 till
209
CARL FLESCH conservatoires
made
discreet enquiries as to the possibility
joining the staff of his institute with a view to its
assuming that there I
direction.
were
The
snag about
my
gradually
scheme was, however,
it. While would not have dreamt of
certain matrimonial strings attached to
did not dislike the girl in question,
my
abandoning
this
my
of
Rumanian
fiancee
I
(whom,
at that time, I
still
had hopes of marrying) for the sake of material gain; but I had to admit that it was a pity to let slip this apparently unique opportunity to establish myself in Berlin. At that point, an event occurred significance for
my future.
which was to be of the greatest In the house of a 'cello-playing doctor,
had frequently played quartets with a young violinist, Julius Rontgen jun., known as 'Lula'. A pupil ofJoachim's, he came of a well-known family of Leipzig musicians his grandfather had been leader at the Gewandhaus, while his father was highly esteemed as one of Holland's leading musicians. One evening when I spoke to my colleagues of my indecision about the Meiningen project Lula, on the spur of the moment, said, 'Why not apply for I
;
Eldering's Amsterdam position, since he is going to Cologne with Steinbach?' Although I did not know Holland at all, Lda's
two of us immedion and hours later I found it, ately began forty-eight myself on the way to Amsterdam for my audition. I stayed with Lula's father, who later was to become one of my dearest friends. I gave my audition on the evening of my arrival, playing solos and seemed
idea
so eminently reasonable that the
to act
quartets.
sion
and
My I
performance obviously made a favourable impres-
had reason
to
few days in order while at the same time for a
various board meetings.
I stayed in Amsterdam the place and its people, engagement was being discussed at
hope
for the best.
to get to
my
The
know
three best
Dutch
violinists,
Koss-
mann (originally from Essen) and the two Amsterdamers, Zimmermann and Timner, had applied for the same post; hence a chauvinism had
its say, too. Nevertheless, I emerged triumand was able to leave Amsterdam with a three-year conphant tract in my I was to receive a fixed pocket. salary of 3,600 guilders, for which I would have to give twenty lessons the per week, and organize six recitals of chamber music
little
during
210
BERLIN [1902-1903] found the necessary energy, I would be able to triple my income by way of concerts and private lessons. winter season.
The overtime
If,
however,
did not
and healthy, I was thirty, strong future activities in strange but all the
worry me:
enterprising and eager.
more
I
My
promised a most stimulating life, all, the realization of my
interesting surroundings
the unfolding of new vistas and, above
matrimonial plans. interlude, then,
I
A
six
weeks
after the
unhappy Leipzig returned to Berlin a well-established 'Dutch'
my
professor, settled until I had to take father, a lonely
mere
affairs there,
up
and decided to spend the time
my position
man now,
at
in
my usual way
with
my
Wieselburg.
Looking back at what had passed since I had left Bucharest, I had every reason to be satisfied with the course of events. During
my
six
months' stay
at Berlin,
I
had
successfully reappeared as
had strengthened my standing in the musical life of Central Europe and laid the foundations of a solid material existence soloist,
which would enable me, on the secure
basis
of
my
to solo work. position, to devote myself increasingly
C.F.-P
211
permanent
AMSTERDAM Aged Thirty
to
[1903-1908]
Thirty-jive
HAVING spent the summer months with my father and,
at the
same time, prepared myself thoroughly for the forthcoming winter campaign, I left for Amsterdam at the end of August. The of my arrival coincided with the Queen's birthday: and that day
I
evening struck
me
was able to watch Dutch in the
in vain did
had
I
first
street life at its gayest.
search for the fashionably dressed person, such as
been accustomed to see in Bucharest.
thinks sense
towards the entirely directed
I
The average Dutchman
more of cleanliness than of sartorial
is
What
the inelegant look of the crowd: place was
chic,
and
his aesthetic
adornment of his home. For
the foreigner in Holland, it will always be a curious experience to the house of a proceed straight from the neglected streets into
where inherited and acquired art treasures, elsewhere only found in museums, bear witness to the centuries-old culture of the country.
Dutch
citizen,
At the beginning of the century, Dutch musical life was already dominated by the Concertgebouw. Founded by Willem Kes, the orchestra had been placed under the direction of Willem Mengelberg in 1895. In 1878, Julius Rontgen had settled in Amsterdam, until in 1886 he succeeded teaching the piano to begin with,
Johannes Verhulst as director of the Society for the Promotion of Music. This organization had existed for centuries. It served both educational and propaganda purposes and comprised a great
number of music to
cope with the
schools;
classical
its
well-trained chorus enabled
choral repertory.
With the appearance of
the youthful Mengelberg, Rontgen's position as conductor
become
increasingly
difficult.
it
Not only had he no
had
great talent
and conciliatory over large bodies of men.
for baton technique; fundamentally, his benign
was averse to ruling ruthlessly In the long run, then, a conflict was inevitable. Public and character
212
press
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] comparisons between the two conductors turned
all
too decidedly
to Rontgen's disadvantage and, by 1889, lie was forced to relinquish his position by the pressure of a public opinion that was
only very lukewarmly opposed by the board of the Society. Henceforth, Mengelberg was to control the two greatest concert organizations in the country, while Rontgen's activities were once chiefly confined to the piano. When, five years later, I
more
turned up in Amsterdam, Rontgen's wounded self-respect had not yet recovered, and two hostile camps had meanwhile emerged: the Rontgen party could not forgive the Mengelbergians the defeat of its protege, even though Rontgen's more sensible adherents would, of musical necessity, admit Mengel-
new position, I landed berg's superiority as a conductor. In best to steer a willynilly in this hornets' nest, and had to try
my
my
course between the warring factions, without offending either from the outset. Rontgen was my colleague at the Conservatoire
and
a
chamber-musical collaborator;
my job really had its root in
on the other on hand, depended primarily Mengelberg. Personally I was, from the start, far more attracted to Rontgen, in whose house I was soon to feel very much at home. In my whole life, Julius Rontgen [1855-1932] was the musician to whom I became most closely attached. In the course of the centuries, his family had migrated to and fro between Holland and Germany. His great-grandfather, a famous cabinet-maker, had his friendship.
My
future as a soloist in Holland,
lived in Neuwied, while his father Engelbert, born in Holland, had sat for many years next to David1 at the first desk of the Gewandhaus Orchestra in Leipzig. Julius himself was born in more than fifty years and Leipzig, but worked in Amsterdam for was made up of the character His Dutch citizenship. re-adopted In of nationalities. traits both most lovable appearance, he reminded one strongly of the type of German professor popularized by the humorous journal Fliegende Blatter stocky and corpulent, 1
Ferdinand David [1810-73], the Spohr pupil
who was
one of the
greatest
twenty-six, Mendelssohn brought him to Leipzig and made him leader of the Gewandhaus Orchestra, and his advisory role in the creation of the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto was similar to that of violin teachers
of all
times.
When he was
Joachim in the creation of the Brahms Concerto.
213
CARL FLESCH
The
short-sighted and absent-minded, droll and engaging.
bitter
experience of Mengelberg's rivalry had not diminished his characteristic kindness and enthusiasm. One felt irresistibly attracted to him,
and
all
who met him wanted
to be friends
with
him. Throughout his life, a genuinely touching friendship bound him to Grieg, and even the bristly Brahms could not resist his magnetic
attraction. "With Casals, too,
he was on intimate terms,
and musicians of all countries Joachim, Tovey, Percy Grainger, and many others found him a congenial friend. He seemed to emanate a world of goodness and charity which charmed all who approached him. He had retained the impulsiveness and ingenuousness of a child, and his optimism remained imperturbable even in the direst straits. But it was only through his relation to contemporary music that one learnt fully to appreciate his personality. His early creative gifts had aroused the highest hopes in Leipzig ;
he was in fact considered the successor of Mendelssohn. k soon became apparent, however, that he did not possess the necessary originality of invention. His creations lacked an at the time,
individual note: they
were honest enough in expression and
thoroughly craftsmanlike, but they remained characterless. In the course of his long life, he all too easily succumbed to the influence
of stronger creative scores
personalities. In chronological order, his revealed the traces of Brahms, Grieg, Cesar Franck,
Debussy, Reger, and even Strawinsky. His fertility, however, seemed unlimited. In his last period alone, he wrote annually dozens of symphonies, as well as a number of string quartets,
chamber music with piano, concertante works for piano, violin, and all these 'cello, and operas purely from a joy in composing, without any prospect of ever hearing the greater part of them in
them in print. Of lasting are his significance, however, settings of Dutch folk songs and folk dances which he saved from oblivion and presented to our public performance, let alone seeing
age in a
modern
guise that
was
at the
same time,
stylistically
true.
Most touching was artistic
which he acknowwherever he found it. He was significance the selflessness with
ledged genuine only eighteen years older than
I,
but from the outset
214
I felt as if I
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] had found
in
him
a second father.
The only cloud darkening our
relationship was the objective frankness with which I judged his compositions, and which remained unaffected by my feelings of personal friendship. So far as creative talent was concerned, I was much more interested in Dirk Schafer. No doubt Rontgen was hurt by my critical attitude towards his music, but such was the integrity of his character that he never resented frankness. In
my
his
valued, above aU, his ability to give himself unreservedly to a work's emotional content. His technique, on the other hand, was not flawless when judged by the highest
piano playing
what
standards;
manner,
his
i.e.
I
found particularly irritating was his arpeggio execution of chords and the I
'Leipzig'
delaying of thematic notes in the right hand. I have known few pianists, however, who would steep themselves so in the emotions completely
of a work, commune with its creator and forget the world. Through this gift of utter empathy he sometimes achieved highly penetrative interpretations denied to other pianists whose technique far outshone his own. For almost twenty years, we de-
voted ourselves,
and
later
to
to the wider chamber-musical combinations, exclusive sonata playing: as musical twins, we first
Our recitals only came to a gradual and when, with his increasing age, the differences in our technical equipment became all too noticeable, while at the same time Artur Schnabel aroused in me the need for technical as well as musical perfection, which Rontgen's technique was no longer able to satisfy. But we have remained lifelong friends. travelled
all
over Holland.
natural end
Shortly
before
I first
met him, he had married for
the father of six sons, of
the second time.
He was
whom five devoted themselves to music:
two violinists, two
'cellists and one pianist. The patriarchal family of the Rontgen home came to hold a strong fascination for me, increased by the congenial feelings I had for my host. On Sundays, we often made excursions on wheels, for we were both eager devotees of 'cycling. On these occasions, Rontgen always wore a cut-away whose tails, flying in the wind, formed a horizontal elongation of his person and lent his silhouette such a touch of the fantastic that 'Rontgen on his bike* soon counted among the popular sights in the streets of the capital. He remained a good
life
215
CARL FLESCH
German all his life, accent that, in
my
speaking Dutch with so pronounced a German I early days in Amsterdam, used to declare to
everybody's delight that
I
when
understood Dutch only
it
was
spoken by Rontgen. the beginning of September, I was officially introduced to new duties by the director, Daniel de Lange. predecessor, Bram Eldering, personally presented my new pupils to me. It did
At
My
my
me long to find out that my inheritance contained, two exceptions, no valuable material. Eldering, 1 who was
not take
with
born
in Groningen (Holland) in 1865, was to make an excellent name for himself in Cologne where, in 1903, he became professor at the Hochschule, especially as the teacher of Adolf Busch. Even
though
the sanguine cross-breed of the Rhinelanders shows, on the average, far more talent for the violin than do the stolid and
pure-blooded north Germans, one must nevertheless concede Eldering a specific gift for teaching, which was aided by his wide outlook
as a violinist
elements.
What
whose
style
distinguished
combined Belgian and German
him from
all
other violin teachers,
however, was his pronounced personal regard for his pupils, whom he approached primarily as a friend rather than a professor at times even to the detriment of their actual studies. In the class which he handed over to me, the catastrophic consequences of his kind heart and his inability to say 'no' were distinctly noticeable. There were one-eyed and deaf people, dwarfs, fiddlers with crippled hands and, above all, ungifted students. Eldering's kindness or should one call it weakness? had prevented him from delivering the salutary truth about themselves. de Boer, seemed to
Bram Mendes and Willem
above the average; subsequently, the
latter
Only two
me
pupils, to be talented
did in fact take a dis-
was only at a later stage of my activities at Amsterdam that I came to teach two further excellent Dutch violinists, Sam Swaap and J. LeidensdorfF; and in the later course of although, my appointment, I was to have a few more gifted Dutchmen as students, there is no denying the tinguished place in Swiss musical
life. It
!Hubay pupil at Brussels and Joachim pupil at Berlin. Viola player in the Hubay-Popper Quartet [1887-8], leader of the Berlin Philharmonic [1891-4], leader of the Meiningen Court Orchestra (1895-9), and leader of the Gurzenich String Quartet.
2l6
.
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] fact that generally speaking, exceptional talents for the violin are
a rarity is
among the Dutch. Their average talent, on the other hand,
above that of other countries. Thus
players that
Dutch
above
all as
orchestral
instrumentalists are highly thought
of all over
it is
the world.
From
the outset, then, I had to resign myself to teaching what and unsuitable material. was, by large, Owing to Eldering's jovial with his there was, moreover, no discipline to speak of. pupils way I put a stop to this state of affairs on my very first day: when,
merry tune, one of the star pupils entered the classremarked dryly, 'You must have mistaken the door. It is
whistling a
room,
I
the violin that tated to
is
taught here, not the
show the door
flute.'
In
fact, I
never hesi-
to impertinent students and, as a result,
my my
authority increased in no uncertain measure. At the start students viewed me with a mixture of fear and respect, but gradually they began to like me. What impressed them most was that I was always able to play them, without preparation and from memory, the current violin repertoire of studies and concert In the first years, beside my violin lessons, I had to teach pieces. chamber music with and without piano, and it was my pleasure to discover the talent of little Willem Andriessen, who was to become one of his country's most representative pianists. I had a very full time-table: my mornings were devoted to my own study
or to private lessons,
my afternoons largely to the
Conservatoire,
and my evenings to quartet rehearsals. Thus there were days when I made music for up to ten hours at a stretch. The Conservatoire was housed in a plain-looking building in the Nieuwen Achtergracht, one of the many small canals where Amsterdam's typical smells could be experienced at first hand. Furnished most primitively, the institute contained only a few classrooms, and a great many lessons had to take place at the Music School, a kind of preparatory institution. It needed an
effort
of the imagination to
realize
that Messchaert1
or
Johannes Messchaert [1857-1922] was one of the greatest concert baritones of he was famed as an interpreter of songs (with Julius Rontgen as his accompanist), and his Christus in the St. Matthew Passion is said to have remained unequalled. In 1914, Franziska Martienssen wrote a German book upon his his day;
methods.
217
CARL FLESCH
Noor dewier1 had been teacliing here, that it was here
that the great
originated under J. MosseL director Daniel de Lange, originally a 'cellist, later the the conductor of a famous a cappella choir, presided with paternal
Dutch school of 'cello playing had
Our
benevolence over an
institute
whose
staff far
surpassed
him
artis-
with dignity and Sporting a white imperial, overflowing was a past master at persuading bad pupils in the Finals to take up another profession, and at formulating the final 2
tically.
unction, he
so that the good name of the institute report of a mediocre student would not suffer. Thus 'Having studied at this institute for five :
has gone far towards being able to perform to a small years, Mr X
with some considerable prospect of success.' These final examinations, by the way, were free and easy events. They circle
time of the cherry harvest, and eating the sweet from a large pot under the table, concealed by the folds of
occurred fruit
at the
the table-cloth, helped us endure the tedium of the examination formed a little republic which recognized the director's
rites.
We
authority only conditionally; thus we retained the right to select our colleagues ourselves. All instrumental students had to learn a
second subject a practice pointing to the versatility of musical education in past times, which has, in our own day, again
wind
as
become
topical
owing
to the requirements
of light orchestras and
dance bands.
Among my colleagues, it was the 'cellist Isaac after
Rontgen,
I felt
most
closely attracted,
Mossel to
above
all
whom, we
because
played chamber music together. Mossel may be regarded as the founder of a specifically Dutch school of 'cello playing, the Dutch counterpart, as it were, of that great Belgian 'cello teacher, Edouard Jacobs [1851-1925]. His energy was boundless, enabling him to teach, if necessary, from eight in the morning to ten at night. Throughout the years, he succeeded in turning out a con1868, the
Dutch soprano
Aaltje Noordewier-Reddingius
was
a pupil
him, a member of the a cappella choir mentioned by Flesch in the next paragraph. She was equally famous as an oratorio singer and as a
of Messchaert and,
like
teacher.
*Member of a famous Dutch family of musicians, Daniel de Lange [1841-1918] himself formed the ensemble of eminent solo singers to which Flesch here draws attention, and which created a sensation with its Albert Hall concerts during the Music and Inventions Exhibition of 1885.
218
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] number of excellent 'cellists, most of whom not only far surpassed the average but came close to the ranks of the very siderable
I greatest. Since did not personally experience his teaching
methods,
have to content myself with surmises about his talent as an educator. Though an excellent musician and a gifted 'cellist himself, he passionately and conscientiously engrossed himself above
I
in his teaching. He did not merely pass on his instrumental knowledge to his pupils he sometimes crammed it down their all
He knew how
them a highly musical, if not from which very atmosphere, they eventually emerged fully armed for the artist's struggle for existence. He would perhaps have been an outstanding soloist too, if only he had found time for regular study, and had not been ruled by his curious comthroats.
to create for
ethical,
mercial instinct. All goods, mobile or immobile, material or concert engagements, spiritual, were objects of trade to him
... He possessed to a a the of inner restlessness high degree busybody, the giddy need for activity of a commercial traveller in musical articles. Naturally, 'cellos and violins were the trading objects closest to his heart. Italian instruments, fountain pens, cigars.
Transactions were ascribed to
him which were
often disarming
in their drollery. His pupil Smith in Rotterdam, for example, owned a Grancino 'cello, his pupil Brown in Amsterdam a
Gagliano. Mossel persuaded each that his instrument was useless, but praised the Gagliano to Smith and the Grancino to Brown. The respective instruments were duly examined and approved by their prospective purchasers who, of course, knew nothing of each
and upon the completion of the two deals an appropriate commission found its way into Mossel's pocket. Everybody concerned was satisfied until, one day, the two mutual customers happened to run into each other at a party, discussed their instruments, and gradually discovered the truth. Such side-lines was a good-natured fellow, ever ready to apart, however, Mossel his pupils, sound and safe as a quartet player, to father a help, other,
always unruffled, and a good entertainer. After a three years' collaboration, however, I separated from him, because I could no I wished longer bear the inartistic streak in his character; besides, to devote myself exclusively to
my
219
sonata duo with Rontgen.
CARL FLESCH
The two men were, moreover,
so different that
I
had
difficulty in
continually alternating between them. Upon the dissolution of our quartet, our personal relations weakened too. I came to see little
of him, and after
my removal to Germany I lost sight of him
He died, after an eventful life, at a relatively early age, a markedly beneficial leaving the memory of a man who exerted altogether.
influence *
Of my
on the development of 'cello-playing closer colleagues at that time,
I
in Holland.
need only mention the
of the Concertgebouw Orchestra. During my five years in Amsterdam, I knew no fewer than five of them Zimmermann, Spoor, Timner, Phal and Fielder. successive leaders
interruption, Louis Zimmermann held his a for almost thirty-five years. He had rounded, somewhat position
With one minor
effeminate (weichlich) tone and over-indulged in portamentos,
but
as
witted.
an orchestral musician he was experienced and quickHe was the first interpreter of the violin solo in Richard
Strauss's
Bin HeUenleben. Andre Spoor, a one-time prodigy, had
gradually lost his ability to perform in public a failing which surprising as he used to improvise with astounding skill offstage. Christian Timner, the most original and talented of
was the more
the five, seemed to spring, in appearance, from a genre painting of Ostaade. Early on, he had had the misfortune to over-strain the
middle finger of his
left
in his career.
hand, and consequently was considerably
He was quarrelsome, rough and rude,
hampered we got on well together and
but
sometimes gave him technical
I
advice.
His successor, the Frenchman Louis Phal, was to fall in the** he was a typically French violinist with a highly accomplished technique. Mentally, however, he was somewhat unbalanced. He took pleasure in hatching out the queerest of First World War;
schemes, which often brought him into conflict with the police. Living in ground-floor lodgings in a narrow street traversed by the tramway, he would practise target-shooting in his room at with the window wide night, open and the light full on. This drew
such a crowd of spectators to his
unable to proceed.
Or he
window
that the tramcars
were
invented, together with a friend, a sort
'
of 'stop-the-thief game in some busy street. One would race 220
after
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] the other until both of them were taken to a police station, where they would fall into each other's arms, exclaiming tearfully, 'Ah, cher ami, what joy to see you again!' Since, beside these escapades, he had frequent rows with Mengelberg, he was given notice at the end of the season whereupon he began to meditate an effective exit. Before the last concert in which he took part, and which included the first three movements of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, he invited me to observe closely how he would give Mengelberg a little something by which to remember him. And sure enough, throughout the concert he practised a well-planned an imperturbable passive resistance, unswervingly playing piano at the extreme point of the bow, even in the most powerful fortissimo passages. In this way, he drove poor old Mengelberg
into a positive frenzy; the more the conductor's ever more exaggerated gestures tried to force him to submit, the slyer and more
clown-like became Phal's wide-eyed glances, 'You one,'
they seemed to
if I don't
play the
say, 'sawing the
game
air
He
later
my
little
!'
Phal's successor, the Viennese Heinrich Fiedler, lent violinist.
see,
won't get you anywhere
took over
my
class at
was an
excel-
the Conservatoire,
but became mentally deranged soon after and was interned in an Austrian asylum. From the violinistic point of view, these colleagues did not offer
me much stimulus, and intellectually they were rather on the
social intercourse never rose above the primitive side, so that our bonhomie of an occasional pint or two. I had, however, formed a
floser association with Sylvain Noach, the second violinist of was to become leader in Boston, St Louis and Los quartet. He With Hofmeester, our viola player, I was likewise on
my
Angeles.
friendly terms;
But all my life, I from other departments;
peter.
he was an excellent trumhave preferred to mix with colleagues
by way of a
side-line,
for to me there is nothing more boring than unending shop-talk, the ruminations over past musical meals to be devoted to during a precious hour of leisure which ought I associated that relaxation. Thus it came about closely with the
and composer Dirk Schafer [1873-1931]. He had comConservatoire together with pleted his course at the Cologne pianist
221
CARL FLESCH the two Dutchmen sat down Mengelberg. At the farewell dinner, variations on some theme four-hand and at the piano improvised recounted Schafer, 'Mengelberg, who or other. 'Little by little/ to monopolize the keyboard, played the bass, began extreme top, until in the end I was altogether pushing me to the excluded: what had begun as a four-hand improvisation finished And he concluded bitterly, 'A symbol up as a brilliant piano solo.' his former Sure of our respective careers.' enough, Schafer loathed which hatred this was poisoned school-mate all his life, and it petty at the outset
his career
own
talents.
Dutch
some extent from developing his excluded himself from that sphere of
and prevented him
He
musical
purposely
life
to
which was connected with the Concertgeto piano and chamber confining himself
bouw and Mengelberg;
Mengelberg would have begrudged him his place in the sun; at times even, the famous conductor may have felt ashamed when he compared the public recognition accorded to himself on the one hand and Schafer on the other. In fairness to Mengelberg it must also be said that he tried again and music
recitals.
Not
that
to approach Schafer who, howagain, albeit unsuccessfully, and struck the pose ever, indulged in the pleasures of self-torment
of a victim even at^a time when he was duly appreciated and admired by his compatriots. He could not, after all, blame Mengelberg for anything bat circumstances depend
his better fortune.
to a great extent
on
But
one's favourable
certain character traits
which, although they may not count among one's more valuable one's career, and attributes, determine the outward course of these Schafer never possessed. Honest, frank and upright, he was obstinate and unsociable, avoiding fashionable society as a matter
of principle; he felt at home only in an intimate circle of close friends and kindred spirits. In vain did I try to widen his horizons. to whom I introduced him, received him with open Rontgen,
no discernible reason, Schafer never returned. had but few disciples, for he was surly, cross-grained and, But his friends knew that perhaps from shyness, unapproachable. arms, and yet, for
He
rough exterior. In 1904, he moved from The Hague to Amsterdam and tried to gain a foothold at the Conservatoire. But his appointment came to a noble, sensitive heart beat beneath his
222
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] his 'bad reputation' which sprang from his of habit Busoni-like staring after every pretty girl on his evening walks. This set-back only confirmed his delusions of being per-
naught owing to
secuted by the whole of humanity, with Mengelberg in the lead. Thus he kept apart from his colleagues, and I, who was his neighbour, was the only musician with whom he was friendly. With his old mother, whom he adored, he led the life of a typical Dutch Philistine. He was generous enough, however, to understand my loyalty to my pianist, Rontgen, and with a heavy heart he gave up
hope of ever playing with me in public. In 1905, he surprised me with the dedication of two violin sonatas which are among the best of their kind. 1 But even his genuine friendship did not prevent him from quarrelling with me for the most trifling of reasons as with so many of his friends. Before I moved to Berlin, I tried to show him the silliness of his behaviour in a letter, and did succeed in making him see reason. Thereafter, we remained good friends, although we met but rarely. Not before he had reached the age of forty did Schafer blossom
.in fact
giving a historical cycle of eleven recitals which impressed with both the construction of their programmes and their execution (and which he said had been inspired by my
out as a
own
pianist.
By
of five recitals a few years before) he sucone in in ceeded, moving up into the front ranks of contemstep, in and convincing his compatriots that there was porary pianists, historical cycle
another great Dutch interpreter beside Mengelberg. From then on, until his death in 1931, he held that place in the hearts of his his countryfolk which was his due by virtue of his talents and character. I consider Dirk Schafer the most outstanding Dutch
musician of his time even though he did not altogether as a
composer. If he
early promise instead of vegetating at
had
lived
fulfil his
somewhere abroad
home, the abundance of his natural gifts would have ripened and born fruit. The Dutch atmosphere does
not in
itself stimulate a healthy artistic development except perso rich with which Holland's in landscape provides painting, haps 1
Withhis
Suite pastorale, Javaansche Rhapsodie for orchestra, his String Quartet,
Piano Quintet and piano works, his Violin Sonatas have meanwhile established themselves
among his major compositions. 223
CARL FLESCH a
gamut of models. For
of the country are a
on each
the musician, however, the artistic cliques mental obstacle. Friend and foe tread
definite
other's toes, pettiness reigns supreme,
and the home-
grown product the order of the day. Depressive moods seem to be 'in the air', maybe owing to the fact that the country lies below is
sea level;
and the
resident foreigner
is
soon affected by the pre-
vailing mental climate. Stimulants are needed to raise one's hence the kopje kojfie which every Dutchman drinks midspirits
morning, or the Barrel (brandy) which many imbibe at about six in the evening. Schafer's creative energy, too, was sapped by a lack of stimulation, by the narrow outlook to which he con-
accommodated himself, and by his envy of Mengelberg on which he squandered a great part of his energies. He would sciously
certainly have had the mettle to join the long-interrupted procession of Dutch musicians of universal standing, had he only been
able to establish contact with the
world in which he
lived.
As
it
was, however, he remained a highly gifted eccentric with a touch of genius, a hypochondriac with a heart of gold, a little man of the greatest talent. All in
one
whom we
could
he was nevertheless a lovable character, spare from Dutch musical history of the
all, ill
early twentieth century.
Beside this
commanding
figure, all the other
Dutch
pianists,
with the exception of Rontgen, had to content themselves with minor roles. There was Johann Wysman, a Busoni pupil
who
Amsterdam Conservatoire and enjoyed some an accompanist; when he appeared as a soloist, however, he had to pay dearly for his ambition. Three days before the concert, he was already more dead than alive, with all his bodily functions disorganized. He rivalled Mossel with his talent for finding all sorts of opportunities for giving concerts, and even taught at the
reputation as
out-Mosseled him with the following stratagem. He persuaded Busoni to provide him with an effusive recommendation to a firm of Paris piano manufacturers, Gaveau, who were still in the habit
of paying, American fashion, for the use of their instruments in Gaveau agreed to pay Wysman one hundred Dutch
concerts.
guilders for each concert in
pianos.
With
which he would play one of their by this basic honorarium,
the security offered
224
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908]
Wysman was able to
engage
his
own artists and accompany them
for nothing; for the sake of appearances, he played a little piano solo somewhere in the programme. Thus, everybody concerned
profited except M. Gaveau who, to be sure, was wondering why he received so few orders from Holland, despite the great number of concert programmes Wysman sent him as evidence of his activities. When, however, he heard Wysman one day in a concert of his own in Paris, it dawned upon the owner of the firm that
he had
fallen victim to a testimonial
had
often
from an obliging Busoni, and
system came
to an abrupt end. practical Altogether, I occasion to observe that the nose for business of this old
Wysman's
trading nation readily pressed itself in the combining of art with my own part, I have always refused to take part in such combinations of music and merchandise, if because
commerce. For
only
one's
power of artistic concentration must inevitably
suffer
under
the weight of business cares, and because the intrinsic value of work always meant more to me than the reward I received for
my it.
made my highly successful bow to the public chamber-musician. The final judgment of the experts, how-
In the autumn, I as a
ever,
was reserved
until
my debut as a soloist with the Concertge-
bouw Orchestra, which was to take place in the new year. But one morning, the Concertgebouw asked me quite unexpectedly whether I would consider playing with the orchestra a mere three days later in Arnhem and Amsterdam. The female singer who had been engaged for these concerts had flopped in Haarlem the day before, and my appearance was to save the situation. I declared
myself willing, put Concertos by Bach (E major) and Paganini on the programme, and had a sensational success in both towns.
was something altogether new for the Dutch to call their a young violinist of apparently international standing. To I seemed far too for the teaching position that was my them, good main occupation, and they had the gratifying sensation that in me they had found a bargain. I had suddenly become the fashion, requests for provincial concerts and private lessons flowed in, and it looked as if my Amsterdam concert would be the beginning of It
own
a
new
chapter in
present of a
my
career.
trip to Paris
At
Christmas,
I
made myself
which had left seven years ago, I
225
the
thirsting
CARL FLESCH for
new successes. When, on the night of my arrival,
boulevards, beloved of old, the distance
I
I strolled
could not help feeling well
the
satisfied at
had meanwhile travelled. At the same time, I had the of walking the streets as a double; I was the same, and
I
eerie feeling
yet quite a different person from the youth who, thirteen years before, had first walked the pavements of Paris. return to Amsterdam at the beginning of the new Upon
my
year, I could not but notice that there was something wrong with the Concertgebouw. During the intervals of our quartet rehearsals, my three partners held conferences which disclosed that a strong anti-Mengelberg movement was afoot among the members of the orchestra. The moving spirit was Wilhelm Hutschenruyter,
the orchestra's administrative director and a former horn player. been a close friend of Mengelberg's, but of late the two
He had
and open enmity had developed. Mossel, too, sided against Mengelberg whose position, therefore, seemed seriously shaken. Today, 1 when the Dutch revere Mengelberg as a demi-
had
clashed,
it seems hardly credible that thirty years ago large sections of the public, not to speak of the overwhelming majority of Dutch musicians, had considered Mengelberg an inferior conductor:
god,
tempera mutantur. Though the battle of opinion raged to and fro, the Concertgebouw's executive committee, the most influential body, stood
At that point, the opposing party resolved blow which would clearly demonstrate
firmly by Mengelberg. to
strike
a
decisive
Mengelberg's inadequacy. Hutschenruyter engaged Weingartner for a Beethoven festival in which all the nine symphonies were to
be performed. Mengelberg, however, succeeded in drawing the sting out of the attack: not only did he refrain from actively opposing the project, but he actually invited Weingartner to live in his
own house, and proceeded to
attend the Beethoven cycle in what seemed a highly interested listener. Howemboldened by the extraordinary success of the concerts,
the capacity of ever,
the majority of the orchestra threatened to go on strike if Mengelwere not dismissed; whereupon the committee countered berg
with the threat that the existing orchestra would be dissolved and 1
About
1937,
226
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] a
new body
formed. As always in such
cases,
the orchestral
players beat a retreat and unconditionally surrendered. They were restored to grace after the ringleaders had been given immediate
above
notice
all
Hutschenruyter, Mossel and Spoor. Mengel-
berg emerged the undisputed victor in this struggle for power; thereafter, his path to the summit was clear.
The son of German
parents,
Willem Mengelberg was born
in
Utrecht in 1871; he received his musical education at Cologne Conservatoire. By both birth and education, then, he was really German. His father, a wood-worker from the Rhineland, had
among
carved,
other things, parts of the doors of Cologne
Cathedral. Mengelberg started as a pianist with a talent far above the average. Yet this small, agile man seemed cut out for the career
he
fell
of
a conductor. His features
down
changed for the worse
after
a staircase and seriously injured his face, but his
movements remained
precise
and
clear, his
technique exemplary.
and
autocratic, he had always felt called upon to dominate crowds of people a Napoleon of the baton, as effusive admirers were fond of describing him. Nor, with his strict Roman
Self-willed
Catholic upbringing, did he lack the gift for diplomacy in tricky administrative situations.
Add
to these qualities his exceptionally
as well as his energy and pernot surprising that he reached the top of his .profession chiefly by means of his innate talents. At the same time, he had a distinct gift for making converts, for assembling a
comprehensive musical knowledge
fectionist idealism,
and it
is
community that would go through fire and water for him, exalting him above all others and revering him as a unique phenomenon. After
my first appearance with Mengelberg in
in the course
of
thirty years,
all
1903, I played, kinds of music under him, in
Holland, Germany and America above all the Beethoven and Brahms Concertos. I think I knew him reaEy well, both artistically
and personally. We always were on the very best of terms with each other. I was familiar with, and gladly suffered, his idiosyncrasies and weaknesses, for I felt attracted to him despite our different characters; nor was he on his part sparing of expressions of sympathy for my personality. He might have become the very C.F.-Q,
227
CARL FLESCH if his artistic virtues had been rounded off greatest of conductors, a little more of that selfless, poetic, dreamy feeling and sensiby bility
which Jean
Paul's romanticism symbolizes
by the
'blue
flower' that escapes the casual glance and blossoms only for its own sake, without an external purpose. But he always had himself lost himself. Clamorous brilliance and unmuch more to his taste than inward, intiwere yielding rhythm mate feeling. It was this shortcoming, which one could sense but not prove, that was perhaps the only weak spot in his artistic make-up. As a man, however, he left a great deal more to be desired. He was too egocentric, uninterested in anything that was
under control, never
not immediately connected with
his art or his career
apart, that
and understanding of antiques, especially glassis, fault as an orchestral trainer was his painting (eglomise). His volubility during rehearsals. Once, when working with the Colonne Orchestra of Paris, he stopped as early as four bars after
from
his love
the beginning of Beethoven's 'Pastoral' for a quarter of an hour, to explain to the
Symphony and
set out,
sleepy musicians the manner of poetic images taken still
idea of the pastoral, pointing to all he had from pastoral poetry of the eighteenth century. finished, one of the players asked him drily, 'Pardon Monsieur,
When
ou piano?' With soloists he would rehearse, for or preferably not at all. the last fifteen minutes unwillingly, est-ce
que
c'est forte
and
he would
'You don't need
it,
the fact that
not the individual musician's
it is
I
certainly don't,'
ignoring but the har-
say,
ability,
monious interplay between soloist and conductor fons et origo of their common music-making.
that
is
the
Mengelberg was an expert on the technique of wind instruments, but as a typical pianist, he never showed much understanding of bowing. When in 1920, on the occasion of the great Mahler Festival that was given to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of Mengelberg' s conductorship at the ConcertgeI played at the second desk in his honour, I was
bouw,
very
surprised to hear that he asked the first violins always to stay at the point of the bow in piano passages, even in the most expressive cantilenas: he was apparently unaware that a rich piano tone
which
is
supposed to
'carry'
can well stand the use of the whole 228
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] bow,
if the point
of contact between
bow and string
is
shifted to
the proximity of the fingerboard. During one of these rehearsals,
which lasted two and a quarter hours, I amused myself by timing, watch in hand, the extent of Mengelberg's oratory. On balance, he talked for one and a half hours and made music for threeIf he nevertheless succeeded in making his orchestra quarters. one of the finest in the world and in developing it into a body of sound with a character of its own, it was only because unlimited rehearsals were at his disposal. Apart from his activities in Holland, he also regularly directed the
Museum Concerts in Frankfurt,
the Philharmonic Concerts in
New York and the London Symphony and Royal Philharmonic Orchestras in London. When, in 1930, Toscanini took over the 1
New York, the role that Mengelberg had played for ten years in the training of this orchestra was in the studiously ignored; this prompted me to a public protest was Vossische Berlin compensated, however, Ztitung. Mengelberg by the veneration of his countrymen which, in recent years, had in fact grown into an idolatry that hardly seemed justified by merits even as outstanding as bis; for however perfect an interit is, after all, never more than the recreation of a work, Philharmonic Concerts in
pretation,
something inevitably subordinate to creation itself. of Mengelberg' s great service to music was the popularization
and Mahler. The latter was particularly close to his heart; there was a time when he actually placed him above Beethoven. His New York appointment became, at times, a severe test of Strauss
tired of him and years, public and critics hostile atmosphere was intensified by This unjustly. the derogatory way in which he spoke about such colleagues as Toscanini or Furtwangler, his critical pronouncements spreading like wildfire through the village that was musical New York.
his nerves. After a
treated
few
him
Indeed, throughout his life, Mengelberg showed no appreciation of the achievements of other conductors. He was not, of course, alone among his colleagues in his rejection of uncongenial musical
He
1
started his regular
New York
seasons in 1921,
National Symphony Orchestra which on his Philharmonic Orchestra in the following year.
229
initiative
first
conducting the
was united with the
.
CARL FLESCH
The mentality of conductors is a dark, abysmal chapter awaits a historian. Conducting tends to spoil the charac-
characters.
that
still
ter.
When
which
all is said and done, it is the only musical activity in dash of charlatanism is not only harmless, but positively
a
where lies the border between legitimate, spontaneous exhibitionism and an all too conscious pose? Whatever the answer, Mengelberg must be regarded, in spite of every-
But
necessary.
then,
thing, as a towering figure in his sphere. He raised the orchestral standards (die orchestrale Kultur) both of his institute and, in effect, of the whole country to a level that before had been attained only
by some old-established societies abroad. And perhaps the somewhat exaggerated cult that his countrymen made of him did after all exert, indirectly,
a favourable influence
upon the
social status
entire musical profession in Holland. Even when time, the eternal leveller, had done its job of reducing his importance to the right proportions, enough of it will remain to secure Mengelberg a
of the
leading position among the conductors ofour time. [He died 1951.] Apart from the Concertgebouw Orchestra, there was The
Hague's newly organized Residence Orchestra, directed by Henry Viotta [1848-1933], an early Wagnerian and the founder
of the Dutch Wagner Society. 1 He was a conductor of only average gifts. The young Peter van Anrooy [b. 1879], under (in 1884)
whose
direction
flourish,
Utrecht,
was
(1917-35)
at the
time
the Residentie
still
Orchestra was to
a violin teacher in
Arnhem and Groningen
also
had
their
Amsterdam.
own
concert
orchestras, so that in this small country there were no less than five of them, all contributing to the public's musical education
without being hampered by the demands of opera an extraordinary state of affairs when one considers that in Germany for
were then only two important orchestras which devoted themselves to concerts, i.e. the Berlin Philharexclusively monic and the Kaim Orchestra in Munich. instance, there
The Concertgebouw
aside, Amsterdam's concert life consisted mainly of chamber music recitals given by Rontgen and myself, and of concerts by visiting soloists from abroad, most of whom I 1 Since give with
Wagnervereeniging was a private society, Viotta the first performance of Parsifal outside
this it
was in
Bayreuth (1905).
230
a position to
s
AMSTERDAM knew from
Berlin. The audiences at our recitals were the llite of Amsterdam's musical connoisseurs, many of them personal friends and followers of Rontgen, the sight of whom offered us the
agreeable illusion of playing within a larger family quasi-social character of these evenings resulted in
circle.
my
The
introduc-
numerous families. The milieu, though highly cultured, seemed stiff and formal to me, who had been used to the more uninhibited conviviality of Berlin. I was astonished, for example, when the cabman who took me to my first diner was instructed by tion to
our host's servant to
though impolite,
At first,
too, I
call for
me at half past ten:
a time-honoured,
Dutch custom. found the sound of the Dutch language repellent.
know then that correct Dutch as spoken on the stage or in educated circles sounds much less guttural than the dialect of the people, and it took me many years to accustom myself to the I
did not
sound of the language. Nevertheless,
Dutch quickly and thoroughly,
I
should have liked to learn
for in contrast to the
Ruma-
nians, the Netherlanders rightly insist on the foreigner's knowing the language of the country. When, however, I wanted to insert
an advertisement in a daily paper, which said that a young foreigner looked for a lady teacher of Dutch, it was refused on the grounds of 'indecent wording'. After that experience, I resigned myself to learning the language by way of reading and conversation, and at length I succeeded to a modest extent.
To
only real satisfaction lay in the exercise of my profession. Social life struck me as a bore, and the horizon of the young people I met seemed limited. Occasional concerts
begin with,
my
me to stand the monotony of the Dutch way of From that period dates my first acquaintance with BadenBaden, a town to which I felt strongly attracted from the outset, abroad helped
life.
-and where, in
fact, I
was to
settle
twenty-five years
later.
Ger-
many's more important concert organizations were not then accessible to me. I had to be content with appearing in the smaller towns, sometimes even in a mixed bill. In Holland, on the other hand, I had conquered the ground in one swoop by my exceeddiverse succession, ingly fortunate debut with Mengelberg. In I
played quartets,
trios
and
sonatas,
231
gave violin
recitals,
and
CARL FLESCH performed concertos with orchestra; indeed, I was well on the way to a position equal to that of any international celebrity.
Whenever
I
am
'How do you
asked the usual question,
find
answer with a perto the express proportion of connoisseurs centage which attempts contained in each such heterogeneous mass. Vincent d'Indy
Dutch, English, or American audiences?',
estimated their average
number
I
in France to
be about three per
slightly higher. The Dutch may Germany, a intricate somewhat compound. By *a good public represents
hundred; in
be
it
audience', an artist means, in the
first
place, a
crowd
that
is
recep-
succumbs to mass suggestion, whatever the actual musical standard of its members. But an audience may be very cultured musically and yet be 'bad', namely tive, easily roused,
which
unresistingly
and fault-finding. I think the degree of real musical education of a town's concert-goers depends on the intensity with
frosty, critical
which they cultivate chamber music in their own homes. The somewhat monotonous mode of life of the Dutch, their love of frequent music-making within the in family, especially provincial towns where public entertainments are a rarity. I myself have known music-loving Dutchmen who domesticity,
made
encourages
their children,
one
which would enable them
after another, learn the
to
form
instruments
a string quartet later on.
Thus,
the percentage of understanding music-lovers is usually higher among provincial audiences than in a big-town public which, in
any
case, includes a fair
number of snobs
for
whom a
concert
is
just another social event where, above all, one has to be seen. Perhaps the chief difference between audiences in Holland and is that the Dutch are ever ready to greet somewith enthusiasm, true to the proverb, 'new brooms
in other countries
thing
new
sweep
clean.' In
difficult to
Holland, it is as easy to achieve success as it is maintain it. For my part, during the thirty-five years
of
my
the
monuments of a
regular concert appearances in Holland, I took special pleasure in playing in the smaller towns. By day, I used to visit centuries-old architectural culture; by night, to whose festive frame of mind indicated that played people these 'musical offerings' were to them a special occasion, not to be and lightly forgotten. again, there were even concerts I
Now
232
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] in the large
room of a
village inn,
where
a paraffin lamp, sus-
pended from the middle of the ceiling, would form a strange contrast to the evening dress of the landed gentry from the neigh-
bourhood who made up the audience. Creatures of habit that they are, the
Dutch
will not
go without
customary evening kopje Thee even during a concert, for which purpose their programmes are divided into two parts by a their
half-hour interval. Once, in a recital at Hengelo, when I, too, fell in with this pleasant custom, the waiter serving me could not
immediately change the proffered guilder. The recital was to continue with the 'Kreutzer' Sonata. I had already poised my bow
above the
strings
when I heard a voice from the rear of the room:
'Mijnheer Mijnheer !' I stopped short and lo and behold, it was the honest waiter who, to the greatest amusement of the audience, proceeded to climb the platform and count out my change !
on to the lid of the piano.
Newspaper better
criticism in
Holland was, on the whole, neither
nor worse than elsewhere. Amongst
its
practitioners
you
and even
dilettantes. could find performers, composers, theorists, There were critics benevolent and malevolent, dry and eccentric; there were those who wrote for the sake of their subject, and those
merely wanted to be read. My own experience has taught me, however, that the standard of newspaper criticism would not improve if the job were left to us artists: we should have to be too
who
tactful,
me
too considerate.
him
to deputize for
artist
My director Daniel de Lange once asked as critic
whose performance
I
had
of an evening paper. The first was Willy Burmester.
to review
My honest opinion of him had always been an unfavourable one; him a harmful influence in every respect. But could I about an older colleague in public? Certainly not. Besides, readers would have doubted my own objectivity in the matter. The second case was that of a sonata recital given by Ysaye
I
considered
write
this
and Pugno which,
in spite
of their outstanding performance,
left
room for critical comment. But would it not have been tactless for
me to try and teach these two leading artists their business Thus I ?
moral cowardice can be due to modesty based came on thorough technical knowledge, in which dilemma you will not to realize that
233
CARL FLESCH even be able to clothe your embarrassment in ready-made cliches. Most of the countless blunders in newspaper notices are caused
by an inadequate knowledge of musical literature and of compos-
On
one occasion, for instance, Busoni played Beethoven's G major Concerto with the original cadenzas which, the Berlin critic Leopold Schmidt ascribed to Busoni and duly tore to ing
styles.
shreds.
The next
day, Schmidt
was
called to the telephone.
To his
question, 'Who's speaking?', a sepulchral voice replied, 'This is Ludwig van Beethoven.' 'My dear Schmidt,' it continued, 'it is not very kind of you to tear my cadenzas to pieces. However,
next time I'm born,
I
promise
I'll
try harder.'
Whereupon Busoni
put down the receiver. I
remember another tragi-comic
critical
A Dutch
lapse
which was
music
critic, kind grotesqueness. and high-minded as a man, but better versed in literature than in music, imbibed his professional wisdom chiefly from works of reference. For many years he had written for the Nieuwe Rotter-
perhaps unique in
its
dam* sche Courant, until he exchanged this post for that of critic on the Amsterdamer Handelsblad. Now, it so happened that two Casals
coincided with his move from paper to paper: the first on December 31, he had to review for Rotterdam, the recital, second, on January i, for Amsterdam. In Rotterdam, the main item on Casals' programme had been Bach's C minor Suite, in Amsterdam the G major. Fate would have it, however, that recitals
'cellist, persuaded Casals to repeat the C minor Suite in Amsterdam. Next morning, the poor reviewer opened his activities in the Handelsblad with a high-falutin comparison between the sombrely tragic key of C minor and the bright and serene G
Mossel, the
major, and proceeded to enlarge
upon
.,
the resultant differences in
between corresponding movements of the two suites. In the concert halls of Amsterdam, I met many old acquaintances, the Bohemian String Quartet, the Rose Quartet, Ysaye, Marteau, Thibaud, Serato, etc. It was there, too, that I came to character
1
know, and to like, Eugene Hayot and his Quartet, Johannes 1 Messchaert, Aaltje Noordewier, and Julia Gulp. Weingartner's mezzo
[b. 1880],
career during the Fkst
celebrated as a lieder singer.
World War.
234
She relinquished her
'
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] of Beethoven's
Fifth has remained a summit among of orchestral my experiences performances; whereas he was unable to convince me of the artistic necessity and inevitability of his chamber-musical compositions though in the course of a short concert tour, I succumbed to the charm of his lovable
interpretation all
personality.
The
artist,
however,
who made
the strongest
pression on me during sojourn in Holland was to inaugurate a new era of 'cello playing. Pablo Casals was not when I first
my
was
Casals,
im-
who
heard him; with yet thirty the excellent pianist Harold Bauer, he gave a sonata recital in
Amsterdam. Two years later, I gave several trio recitals with him and Rontgen. Soon afterwards, he founded a permanent trio with Cortot and Thibaud, while I formed one with Schnabel and Gerardy, who was later succeeded by Hugo Becker. Thus, to my regret, our Dutch trio recitals remained the only occasions on which we made music together.
Casals'
revolutionary influence on the development of 'cello is above all due to the fact that his playing technique permits him to play on this and weighty unwieldy instrument as on a violin. 1 Despite his small hand, he renounced all dubious glissandos
which
served merely to surmount long distances in comfort, not to realize any expressive need. No more of the usual
whining
effeminacy in cantilenas, complete with intolerable noises during those runs (not to speak of double stoppings) which every listener fears; no more babies' howls in high positions. Here, for the first time,
was
uncompromising 'cello playing, a noble, masculine style in both cantilena passages and accompaniments requiring technical brilliance (im technischen Beiwerk). Added to this was his gift for concentration which, supported as it was by a perfect technique and a tone that glowed with refined sensuousness, enabled him to the last out of a theme's emotional conwring
tent. Casals
may
drop be regarded not only
as
the most outstanding
^lesch is referring to the so-called 'Casals fingerings* which produce successive notes violin-wise, i.e. with adjoining fingers, as opposed to the hitherto usual omission of the second fingers in scale passages in all but the highest positions. Casals made these fingerings part of his teaching too: see Diran Alexanian (trans. Frederick Fairbanks), Theoretical and Practical Treatise of the Violoncello, Paris, 1922. ( Compiled in complete accord with Pablo Casals.')
235
CARL FLESCH artist
among 'cellists, but also as a great reformer of 'cello playing.
1
At
a later stage, his instrument failed to absorb all his musical Since I did not witness him energies, and he turned to conducting.
in this role, I never
found out whether the to the truth.
colleagues corresponded Viennese orchestral musician
sarcastic
Rumour
has
remarks of his it
that
when
a
was asked, before a concert under sure I don't what the latter was to conduct, he replied, know what Casals is going to conduct. We are going to play
Tm
Casals,
2 the "Pastoral" Symphony.' In any case, there are many who consider Casals not only the greatest 'cellist of our time, but
modern performers. altogether the greatest artist amongst Amsterdam existence, then, The circumstances of
were of the the Dutch had goodwill gained satisfactory. Professionally, people in the shortest time; as a result of my growing reputation my income was secure; and I was resident in the capital which offered ample stimuli of every type, even though its culture was
my I
rooted more in the past than in the present. Nevertheless, not happy. The disappointing outcome of my relation with
had left an unhealed wound. while aim. social life
I felt
lonely,
I
was
Anna
without a really worth-
Central European in me did not take easily to a hemmed in by conventions. Dutch hospitality is a
The
it knows nothing of improvisaof 'keeping an open house'. As for contacts with young people of both sexes, an innocent flirtation with a young girl was
matter of strictly observed hours; tion,
permitted only as a prelude
the shorter the better
to engage-
ment and marriage, and even a friendly companionship without ulterior motives was thought compromising. The young men into whose company I was thrown belonged without exception to well-to-do,
respectable,
middle-class families,
narrowness of living conditions in Holland had
but the left its
stifling
mark on
them too, had deprived them of that broad, cosmopolitan outlook which had become a need for me. My work done, I used to meet some of these young people before dinner at a reading club, Museum, and killed an hour in conversation that was
the Lees
1 In many ways, Casals and Flesch are, in fact, corresponding figures in the evolution of the modern violin family's technique. 8 Casals was not the only conductor about whom this rumour was circulated.
236
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] all.
Except for Dirk Schafer,
whose general
musicians
I
knew none among
cultivation
the younger
would have made their had no im-
closer acquaintance rewarding. In everything that
mediate bearing upon the practice of my
art, I
thus led a pretty
miserable existence.
Throughout nated
me
tried to
however, depressions have never domiseems that, unconsciously, I have always
my life,
for long;
it
compensate for such moods by intensifying my activities. I began to be drawn more and more to
At the present juncture,
the idea of the unadulterated violin recital. I anticipated that the true music lover would, in the long run, only be attracted by violin recitals whose programmes were designed to appeal to
more than
his mere interest in exalted acrobatics and a perfect technique. Hitherto, it had not been the custom in Amsterdam for resident violinists to fill an entire evening's bill, nor did intention to colleagues fail to warn me when I told them of
my
my
planned three programmes, each of
break with
this tradition. I
which was
to be devoted to a specific style and era
classical,
romantic-virtuoso, and contemporary. For accompanist, I chose
Louis Schnitzler, an agile and versatile Rotterdam pianist whose musicality and sensitivity to tone and colour made him an appropriate collaborator.
expectations.
The
The
success
pessimistic
of
my
enterprise surpassed
all
predictions were disproved, and
I
Amsterdam musical had dared to perform what
considerably rose in the esteem of both the
world and not least myself. I was then still considered the wellnigh unplayable great fugue from Bach's solo Partita in C major, together with the preceding of the then thirtyadagio, and to give the first performance year-old stood to I
had
Max
1 Reger' s solo Sonata, op. 42 , no.
great credit with public to admit to myself that
my
my
and
press.
i,
a deed that
None
the
less,
programmes did not yet
of violin give a coherent account of the historical development literature during the last two centuries. Gradually, however, my Editor's surmise, arrived at upon consultation with the Reger authority Donald Mitchell. Both Flesch's text and the original printed programme translated overleaf read 'op. 44, no.
i',
but op. 44 comprises ten instructional pieces for piano.
"The four solo Sonatas, op. 42, were written in 1900-1. There are another seven solo violin Sonatas, op. 91, which Reger wrote in 1906.
237
CARL FLESCH ideas
began to
clear
and
crystallize
around
a
firm centre, enabling
me to do justice to my intentions. By the beginning of the summer holidays
I
was resolved to give, in the following winter, five which would demonstrate, in chronologi-
violin recitals in Berlin
development of the violin repertoire, so far as the inevitable lack of an accompanying orchestra would allow. This cal order, the
was the
entire cycle: FIRST RECITAL
Italian
Composers of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
La Folia La Komanesca
Arcangelo Corelli 1653-1713 Folksong 1680
Minuet and Gavotte
Francesco
Aria
M.
Veracini 1685-1750
Pietro Locatelli 1693-1764 Giuseppe Tartini 1692-1770
Sonata No. 6
Francesco Geminiani 1666-1762
Sidliano Allegro
Lorenzo Somis I685 1
Sonata
Pietro Nardini 1722-1793
Gaetano Pugnani 1731-1798 Federigo Fiorillo 1753-1824 Antonio Lolli 1730-1802
Largo and Allegro Etude No. 28 Allegro
SECOND RECITAL German and French Composers of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Biber 1644-1704
Largo
Heinrich J.
Passacaglia
Heinrich J. F. Biber 1644-1704 J. S.
Allegro
Adagio ma non
tanto
J. S.
Sonata No. 6
G.
Sonata No. 5; Adagio Fugue from the Fifth Sonata for Solo Violin Bourrle the Divertimento
No.
i
Solo Violin
J.
J.
Religioso and Cantabile
^esch seems
F.
Bach 1685-1750 Bach 1685-1750
Handel 1685-1759
Bach 1685-1750 Bach 1685-1750 Telemann 1681-1767
J. S. J. S.
G. P.
Minuet from
Duo for
F.
K. Stamitz 1717-1761 K. Stamitz 1717-1761 F. W. Rust 1739-1796
to indicate the year of birth of Lorenzo, the brother of Giovanni Somis [1686-1763]. I have been unable to discover where he found this date; so far as my knowledge goes, the years of Lorenzo's birth and death are Battista
uncertain.
238
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] Presto
ma non
Franz Benda 1709-1786
troppo
Saraband
Jacques Aubert 1678-1753 Jacques Aubert 1678-1753 Francois Francoeur 1698-1787
Gigue Aria
La
Mondonville J. J. Mondonville J. J. Mondonville Jean Marie Leclair
chasse
J. J.
Aria Musette
Saraband and Tambourin
1711-1772 1711-1772 1711-1772 1687-1764
THIRD RECITAL
From]. B.
Viotti to
Concerto No. 19: first movement
H. W. Ernst B. Viotti 1753-1824 A. Mozart 1756-1791 L. v. Beethoven 1770-1827 J.
W.
Adagio from the Concerto No. 3 Romance, Op. 40 Concerto No.
7, Op. 38: second and third movements
Children's Song (
Romance from Bunte Reihe', Op. 30 Minuet (Etude) from Op. 53 for solo violin
La Basque
(Etude) from
Spohr 1784-1859
F.
David 1810-1873 David 1810-1873
F.
D. Alard 1815-1888
Op. 17 Ch. de Beriot 1802-1870 Ch. de Beriot 1802-1870 Ch. de Beriot 1802-1870
for solo violin
Etude No. 9 Octave Study (Etude) Fantasy on a Theme from Rossini's 'Moses', on the
L.
G string
N. Pagardni 1782-1840 H.
Concerto, Op. 23
W. Ernst
1814-1865
FOURTH RECITAL From Vieuxtemps
until
Our Time H. Vieuxtemps 1820-1881
Op. 43 Berceuse, Op. 16 Suite,
G. Faure 1845 [-1924] B. Godard 1849-1895
Canzonettafrom Op. 53 Havanaise, Op. 83
C. Saint-Saens 1835 [-1921
]
Joachim 1 8 3 1 [-1907 ] Bnich 1838 [-1920] Max Prisoner the Song of ax Bruch 1838 [-1920 ] Dance and 79 Op. from Song Cesar Cui 1835 [-1918 ] Cavatinafrom Op. 25 Antonin Dvorak 1841-1904 Mazurka, Op. 49 'Faust' H. Wieniawski 183 5-1880 Fantasy on Motifsfrom Gounod's Variations
J.
M
239
CARL FLESCH FIFTH RECITAL
Contemporary Composers
C. Sinding 1856 [-1941 ] Pauljuon 1872 [-1940] Tor Aulin 1866 [-1914] E. Bossi 1861 [-1925 ]
Suite
Op.
Berceuse,
28,
No. 3 No. i
Toccata, Op. 15, Romance from Op.
90,,
No.
i
Rhapsodie Piemontese, Op. 26 Three Simple Melodies (Drei Weisen),
Op. 18:
(Mailiedchen) ,
Little
Sonata for solo
May
Round Dance
Dusk (Wenn's dunkelt) Rondo scherzando, Op. 16 violin,
L. Sinigaglia 1868 [-1944] schlichte
Song
(Reigen),
Max Schillings 1868 [-1933 E. Jacques-Dalcroze 1865 [-1950
Op. 42* No.
Max
i
la
Reger 1873 [-1916] 1 844 [-1908 ]
P. de Sarasate
Malaguenajrom 'Spanish Dances', Vol.1 Scene de
]
]
Csdrda, No. 3
].
Hubay 1858-1937
The idea of a historical cycle of programmes for a solo instrument was originally Anton Rubinstein's who, about 1885, had arranged a
series
of such concerts in various
capitals as a close to
was concerned, however, the idea was entirely new, and owing to the disposition and variety of my programmes, if for no other reason, the announcement of the cycle made a great stir among my professional colleagues. The five recitals took place within the span of six weeks, with nine days between successive evenings. In these intervals, I had to return to my normal routine work in Amsterdam, prehis career as pianist.
So
far as the violin
paring myself for the next recital in my leisure hours. Today I cannot understand how I had sufficient mental energy to master
such a task without interrupting
chamber musician,
upon my
abilities,
a task that
my
made
and demands super-human
activities as a
truly
teacher
my memory and my mental flexibility.
It
was,
no fewer than seventy works, all, which and small-scale, largecomprised a great variety of styles extending over two centuries. But it seems that considerable if latent reserves of stamina were always at my disposal and could after
x
a matter of undertaking
See footnote on p. 142.
240
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] be called on
at decisive
moments,
as
was again shown
fifteen
when I drafted and completed my Art of Violin Playing. was thirty-two when I thus succeeded in winning the unani-
years later, I
mous and
enthusiastic approval
Joachim did not
fail
to attend
of public and press. Even Joseph one of the recitals; and he con-
me afterwards.
gratulated
Nor was there a lack of amusing incidents, two of which I /critic !
still
An
jtemember.
and had
unsuccessful violinist, Akos Laszlo had become a specialized in reviewing violin recitals and concerts
for the Allgemeine Musikzeitung. Alone amongst his colleagues, he reviewed concerts in great and unfavourable detail. What
my
dissatisfied
him was
was to be said against my of my programmes was utterly
that while nothing
actual playing, the arrangement
was known as a somewhat doubtful immediately suspected some ulterior motive which, sure enough, was presently revealed. After my second concert, he requested a private interview, during which he explained to me that my enterprise had a great future, that it might in fact be welcomed in all the capitals of the world ifand here he disclosed his cloven hoof the performances were combined with spoken historical expositions whose composition and delivery
unscientific. Since Liszlo
character,
would
I
him politely, but firmly, that I make do without his co-operation and that it was
best be left to him. I told
should have to
my intention
to continue as a 'soloist'.
The second case was of a different nature. Among the violinists who tried to come into closer contact with me was a teacher, Eberhardt, of whom it was generally said that he had been good player in his younger days, although I never met anyone -who had actually heard him. He was a charming and good-
Goby
a
looking teacher,
man in his fifties who spoke and wrote highly of me, As a he was one of those undauntable cranks who give them-
over to some fantastic system, swear by it for a while, and proceed to exchange it for another panacea, no less transient. I
selves
my youth, had been teaching for almost twenty could be regarded as fairly experienced for my age, with and years on the subject. I was already teaching according ideas own my ite theory of what were to become my Basic Studies^ though I
myself, despite
241
CARL FLESCH
Now
the elder Eberwas not yet thinking of their publication. out hardt, in the presence of his son Siegfried, contrived to of me the principles of simplified practising founded on the facts of physical movement, which I have meanwhile described in the Basic Studies. surprise when, a year later, I great was
worm
How my my ideas about left-hand technique printed word for word
found
one of Eberhardt's 'epoch-making' works, together with a footnote which pointed to the remarkable identity of his own. I have never worried about such principles and mine! However,
in
which, incidentally, came to show a striking increase after the publication of my Art of Violin Playing] I have always con-
cribs
no more than the caretaker of certain ideas which mature until they prove of wider communal benefit. The enormous demands which the planning and execution of my historical cycle made on my concentration and will-power had forced me to neglect everything that was not immediately connected with it. At last, however, I was to regain the composure which had been somewhat shattered ever since my sidered myself as
Bucharest disappointment.
The
desire to possess a
home came
and assumed concrete shape in the spring of became engaged to a young Dutch girl, Berta
strongly to the fore
when
1906,
I
*
On
her father's side, my bride came of oldwhich had provided Holland with some of her most notable lawyers and civil servants; while on her mother's side, she descended from an English family of merchants who had immigrated two generations before. I had the feeling (which the future was to confirm) that I was standing on the threshold of a new period of promise, and was completely happy. I was married at the beginning of the summer holidays, and my wife and I spentl our honeymoon in Paris, Jersey and by the Rhine. At the start of
Josephus-Jitta. established family
the school year,
we
of Amsterdam.
My
established ourselves in the musicians' quarter like a bad dream,
bachelor days lay behind
me
and through my marriage I met a large circle of people who, while they had nothing to do with music, were highly cultured in other respects. I came to know at last the good things of Dutch family life, the comfortable atmosphere of a home of one's own, the joy
of no longer being a
guest.
242
And my
greatest
hopes were
1
.
Leopold Auer
The author about 1914000 of the few
pictures attempting to
show him
as
an
'artist'
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] fulfilled in the birth
of a
child: one of a large family myself, I had were the ultimate always purpose of a marriage. As a consequence of the peculiar position of the artist in Dutch society, our friends and acquaintances were, in the main, restricted to music-lovers from the well-to-do middle class. While my wife would have had no objection to enlarging our circle with artistic personalities, it went against the grain of the Dutch to mix the felt that
children
social classes. In Holland, the artist ally in society,
however highly
marrying me, for instance, people to have committed a
is still
accepted only condition-
work may be esteemed. In wife was considered by some
his
my
mesalliance. If
we had
tried, then, to
smuggle some artists into our midst, the heterogeneous elements would not have blended at all. I regretted this fact all the more since I should have liked to draw two writers into my circle: one was Hermann Heyermans, the most important of Dutch dramatists, who was not socially acceptable because he had married his former mistress
making her the heroine of a supposedly its day, had created a great stir; the of the most outstanding novelists one Querido,
after
salacious novel which, in
other was Isidor
of his time, and an exponent of a kind of romantic naturalism; admittedly bombastic, verbose and prolix, he yet was touched by genius. Only in the smallest circle could one enjoy the company of these literary talents, a degrading limitation which did not fail to escape their notice.
Through
this lack
of fresh
intellectual air,
Holland had always been oppressed by heavy boredom, for which one was only in part compensated by an social events in
exquisite cuisine.
The sole social exception amongst my acquaintances was the Haarlem publisher J. L. (Jan) Tadema, at first my pupil, who became and remained one of my best friends. A Frisian by birth and a nephew of the well-known painter Alma Tadema, he was unique among his compatriots in preferring the company of artists to any other. What attracted me to him in the first place were neither any outstanding intellectual gifts nor his artistic understanding, but an inborn benevolence and kindness for which, in the course of the years, many needy artists were to
prove profoundly C.F.-R
grateful.
When 243
I first
knew him, he
suffered
CARL FLESCH attacks of depression; I succeeded in easing this tendency the prescription of weekly chamber music evenings, a medicine
from
by which he has taken ever
since.
For more than thirty years,
regularly played quartets with him several times a year. model amateur that all artists wish to have as a friend.
I
He
have is
the
still playing the Guadagnini violin I had acquired eight in Bucharest, an instrument that sounded well but before years was at times unreliable because the wood was not sufficiently
was
I
thick. I
had been persuaded to hand it over for repairs to a maker who had an unfortunate mania for
Diisseldorf violin
that 'lining' instruments,
By
this process,
many
is,
strengthening the
a valuable instrument
wood by insertions. was
spoiled, includ-
ing my Guadagnini, which returned from his workshop unmanageably rough in tone. It was natural, then, that I was seized
by the longing of every violinist to possess a Stradivarius. I considered two instruments, a Strad from 1722, named 'St. Lorenzo', with an inscription in black varnish, which belonged to the Paris firm of Caressa, and one from 1725, called 'Brancaccio', the property of Hammig, a firm in Berlin. After comparing the instruments for months I decided on the 'Brancaccio', which I acquired in 1907 for 43,000 marks.
I
played
this violin
without
interruption until 1931, and to it I owe some of the artistic reputation I gained from thirty-third year onwards.
my
In the
summer of 1907,
my my
father
and Joseph Joachim died in
father for the last time three months quick succession. I saw before his death. The awareness of approaching death which could be read in his face, the farewell which, as the doctor knew,
would be final, shook me to
the core.
He died happy in the know-
he had smoothed the future path of his children at no personal cost. The death ofJoseph Joachim was the occasion
ledge that little
of my writing an appreciation of his achievements in a periodical, Musik my first literary effort. In it I already that suggested
Joachim would survive more as a reformer of programmes and of the ethics of violin playing than as a teacher and founder of an important school. Shortly before,
had celebrated
Viennese teacher, Griin, birthday; I took part in a festive best-known pupils. At the subsequent ban-
his seventieth
concert given by his
244
my
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908] Goldmark which
quet, which Griin's pupils in his
virtues
attended,
I
made
a speech on behalf of former teacher's main
pointed out my emotional and technical integrity, which he also I
handed on to his disciples. I had the impression that my praises were thought scant for such an event. I was never able to suppress opinions, to sham enthusiasm or flatter. In the winter that followed my series of historically conceived
my true
I was, so to speak, knighted as a 'first-class* violinist I was deemed Wolff: concert agent worthy to take part as by my soloist in one of the Berlin Philharmonic concerts directed by
violin recitals,
My
Nikisch.
proved
a
appearance in so formidable an environment complete success, despite an enfeebling attack of first
influenza.
The
final,
public rehearsal of a Philharmonic concert, which
used to take place at midday on the day preceding, was justly dreaded by all artists as a trial of strength in the most uncomfort-
my own case, moreover, the day prerehearsal the happened to be the Emperor's birthday, and ceding and hooting of cars kept me awake till the crowds the noise of the
able of circumstances. In
time in early morning. For the first
my life,
I fell
a victim to that
well-known and dread fit of performer's nerves that brings out all one's feelings of inferiority. At five in the morning, I decided to call off the concert on the grounds of indisposition. With the coming of dawn, however, the spectres dissolved; by nine I was at work, and at noon I stepped on to the platform in a reasonably
composed frame of mind. On this occasion, I realized time in what an unnatural manner the artist tends to overrate for the
first
the difficulty of his task before his appearance, only to smile afterwards at his private ghosts as they are dispelled by the crowd until the next ordeal. applause of the
Not long after this engagement I met Max Reger, whose works
had begun to play as early as 1904. A lady, a pianist, engaged us for a Reger recital in Utrecht, in the course of which I was to play 1 with the composer his Suite im alien Stil and one of his solo Sonatas. The jovial man, with the chest of a gorilla, seemed to like
I
*Suite in the
before this
Old
Style, op. 93,
composed
recital.
245
in 1906,
i.e.
probably
less
than a year
CARL FLESCH he called
some my playing very well indeed. At the rehearsal, red wine, which he consumed in considerable quantities from a tumbler. When the promoter of the concert, who had partnered
him in his
Variations for
two
1
pianos,
for
asked for 'something nice'
he wrote the following flattering dedication: 'To of the excellent red wine which I drank at Miss X's/
for her album,
the
memory
a little mannered in his dynamics, favouring almost inaudible pianissimos, perhaps by way of the gentlest,
As
a pianist,
he was
2 Our relationship, which began so protest against his corpulence. not deepen across the years. Reger was suscepauspiciously, did whence he was surrounded by a host of parasites tible to
flattery,
who
pressed
him
for the dedication
of works which they were
I had much sympathy with Reger's style incapable of performing. and, above all, championed the solo Sonatas, of which he com3 I did not find him posed about a dozen. As a man, however, I remained content with impressive enough to seek his company;
as a composer. Two years being in the closest touch with Reger Concerto was given in Violin of his first the later, performance
Berlin
4 by Henri Marteau, who
invited
me
to dine with.
Reger
after the concert. Before it, the composer saw me in the hall, came forward and said, "I am most eager that you should play my con-
certo
of course, only if you
from the piano
many a detail,
I
like it/ I
followed the performance
though had to admit the beauty of was honestly shocked by what seemed to me the score and,
I
When, subsequently, I heard it played by Busch, it left me with a much more positive impression. After the Marteau
monstrous form.
this great master rather impolite than appear by shamming insincere, and preferred to disappear without taking leave of him. I know that Reger was deeply hurt by behaviour, and perhaps
concert, however,
I
had not the heart to deceive
enthusiasm.
even more by
I
would
my my silence. But he was far too noble a character to
and Fugue on a Theme of Beethoven', op. 86, composed 1904. Donald Mitchell, an authority on Reger, informs me that 'Reger's touch was famous for its sensitivity.' 3 Eleven, to be precise: op. 42 (four) and op. 91 (seven). *The first performance of the Violin Concerto (op. 101, composed 1908) took place at the Leipzig Gewandhaus on October 13, 1908, with Marteau in the solo the first in Berlin, perhaps? or part. Either Flesch means another performance he has got the town wrong. 11
a
Variations
Opinioris vary.
246
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908]
me
a grudge. When, some years later, I played with him at 1 Meiningen, he said quite simply: sorry that you don't play
bear
Tm
my concerto/
replied, 'Couldn't you cut it a little?' 'No, that's impossible, though I've thought a great deal about it. The work is, and will remain, a monster.' 'But a beautiful one/ said I, I
by
way of farewell. At
heart noble and refined, Reger had a curious weakness for coarse jokes which, in the eyes of many, made him seem
morally and puns was no more than an inevitable compensation for his ceaseless musicomathematical preoccupations. Never, not even in his sleep, did inferior. In reality, his love for anecdotes
Reger's brain cease to function. By the way, we may remind ourselves that Mozart, too, was fond of silly indecent jokes.
Much more
serious
was Reger's passion
for alcohol,
which
brought him to the grave at the age of forty-three. He really needed the strong hand of a friend to teach him to respect his natural gifts and protect
him from
panions whose amusement was
irresponsible drinking comto get him drunk before and after
concerts.
For me, the peculiar quality of Reger's creative
gift lies
not so
much in the cadential ambiguities of his harmony and the exploraof modulatory possibilities, as in the mosaic-like composition of his themes and the strangely archaic colouring of his melodies, which is at times reminiscent of the medieval gothic style. The tion
short-windedness of his themes demands a special kind of interpretation, i.e. frequent caesuraeand, generally, agogical differentiations, if the music's architectonic build-up
is
to be revealed.
With
This must have been the Meiningen Festival of 1913, when Flesch played the Beethoven Concerto. Incidentally, in the bill for all the soloists that took part in it, he topped the list with 500 marks. In this connection, two of Reger's letters to Duke Georg II of Saxe-Meiningen are of relevant interest. On April 23, 1912, he writes, apropos of his demands for a concert: 'Five (nine) soloists would be 1
for once, for 500 required Prof. Flesch who, for my sake, would probably play, marks, and who is nowadays regarded as the best interpreter of Beethoven's Violin * Concerto. (Reger's italics). Six days later: 'Now, as for soloists' fees, Prof. Carl Flesch, for instance, who is today regarded as the best interpreter of Beethoven's Violin Concerto, has agreed to come and play for 500 marks. (Flesch normally gets 800 marks.) I would humbly ask your Highness graciously to soloists I can get more cheaply!' (Reger's italics). approve this fee! All the other See Max Reger: Briefwechsel mit Herzog Georg II. von Sachsen-Meiningen t edited by Hedwig and E. H. Mueller von Asow, Weimar, 1949 the translations are mine. :
.
.
;
247
CARL PLESCH all
my admiration for Reger,
I
cannot deny that he was an over-
seduced by productive composer who,
his technical virtuosity,
often lacked the necessary self-control and self-criticismqualities to the highest degree. which Beethoven and Brahms
When, on
have akeady
I
artists'
myself to
I
listened from played one of his solo Sonatas, Reger I had for a little felt I and room, permitted uneasy, several additions in the shape of 'filling-in' parts, in order
mentioned, the
possessed the occasion of the Dutch concert
make
certain modulations implied in the
homophonic
line
To my question whether he had resented fully comprehensible. these liberties, he replied: 'But it was much better than the Brahms have said in such a case Reger, original P What would as opposed to Beethoven, I consider a composer who may be a very small minority of listeners, by an elite appreciated by only with a very definite cultural and racial background. Outside Germany, he is not really understood, and even in the German!
it is only the select few who admire him. He become a popular composer, even if, as I hope, there
speaking countries, will never
should be a Reger revival.
Of my remember
concerts abroad in the period under review, I well Zurich debut, which took place in extraordinary
my
circumstances. In those days, the composer Emanuel Moor was the fashion among virtuosos. He had written a violin concerto
Ysaye swore by was often to be found. In reality, however, he was a purveyor of claptrap, a manufacturer of pleasant themes dished out with a thin sauce of
each, for Ysaye, Marteau, Thibaud and myself. him, and in orchestral concerts, too, his name
developments of which one's palate soon wearied the Joachim Raff of the twentieth century. Now, for a subscription concert in Zurich, Ysaye had suggested the Violin Concerto which Moor
him, a choice which did not meet with the Volkmar Andrae, who wanted the conductor approval of the Beethoven Concerto. There ensued a lively exchange of telegrams which culminated in Ysaye' s cancelling his contract two days
had dedicated
to
before the concert. In his plight, Andrae followed the advice of his
my former quartet pupil,
principal 'cellist, Engelbert Rontgen jun., to engage me in place of Ysaye, though
248
I
was completely un-
AMSTERDAM [1903-1908]
known
in Switzerland.
On
the day of the concert, the audience
when
they heard of the alteration; but they calmed down and gave me an ovation, thereby flattering themselves that they had discovered me.
protested
The
of mental stimulus in Holland, combined with
lack
my
growing reputation abroad, gave me the idea (which appealed to my wife too) of moving to Germany. Since my marriage, my development as violinist had proceeded apace; I felt my wings growing. The narrowness of Holland's artistic canals could no longer contain my desire for a less cramped environment, and in 1908 we decided to live in Berlin. Nevertheless, on looking back over the past five years, I had every reason to thank the breeze of chance that had blown me to Amsterdam. Cured of a hopeless passion, I had found contentment there in a happy family life, in whose relaxed atmosphere my artistic gifts developed most favourably. I had come to love the country and its people, and I
hoped to to spend
my friends often again, even though I did not wish my life in surroundings so tranquil. At the beginning
see all
of the summer vacation,
I left hospitable
heart.
249
Holland with a grateful
BERLIN Aged
IN THE autumn Berlin
Thirty-jive
of 1908,
for good, as
I
[1908-1913]
I settled
to
Forty
with
my wife
and child in
the past eleven years, thought. During
I
had
almost always held some appointment; now, my own master, rid of external ties, I looked jforward to following my own talents inclinations. In
and
Germany
as
view of
well as the
my
steadily
growing reputation in
name I had made for myself in Holland,
I
was able to rely on a sufficient quota of concerts; students, too, soon emerged in plenty, and my life, free of financial cares, folround of work and social intercourse. lowed a pleasant
my
During
absence, the musical life
of the
capital
had con-
make Marteau, his career, the successor of Joachim. Indeed, of height Moser always needed an oak to which he, modest ivy, could tinued undisturbed. Andreas Moser had decided to
then
at the
Perhaps the primary cause of Marteau's decline, which set in shortly, lay in Moser's attempt to force his protege's developcling.
ment
to adopt a
was done in
its
to Marteau's at least half-French style, resulting at first
dilution,
Next
German, Joachim-like character; thus violence
and
later in its destruction,
to Marteau, Karl Klingler
Hochschule.
worked
An Alsatian by birth, he had,
at
as a teacher at the
the beginning of the
a ofJoachim and had occasionally been called century, been pupil in to play in his master's quartet. After Joachim's death, he founded his own quartet and soon succeeded in attracting the '
orphaned Joachim community about him. Klingler no doubt technical and musical talent which, however, did possessed great
and shortcomings of his training. His bowing technique was still dominated by the fallacious theory of the lowered upper arm and the loose' wrist, not
fully mature,
owing
to the peculiarities
not to speak of the unpleasant swells during his portamentos. His interpretative power, on the other hand, was considerable, and he 250
BERLIN [1908-1913] even inherited some of the holy
though
to the detriment
fire of his unforgettable master of his own personality. He stood, as
were, posthumously hypnotized by Joachim that
is
to say.
He
shaped
a revered tradition than
it
by the old Joachim,
his music more under the compulsion of with independent, personal imagination.
This influence, while possibly unconscious, was so deep that there was about him, even in his young days, something of the detach-
ment and equanimity of an old man. listening to his quartet because
reminded
me
I
myself always enjoyed
many an
interpretative point
ofJoachim, even though in technique and tone the
ensemble was
far surpassed by the 'Parisians', the 'Bohemians', the Capet and most modern quartets. As a teacher, Klingler achieved nothing, although he was at the Hochschule for more than thirty years. I do not know of a single
whose accomplishments are above the average. He seems to have had neither the talent nor the inclination for prac-
pupil of his
otherwise he would not have avoided arranging the customary pupils' recitals for his class at the Hochschule. But he is the author of a small thesis, The Fundamentals of Violin Technique? which, despite various factual errors and an inditical teaching,
is worth reading for its painstaking observation of movements involved in violin playing.
gestible style,
the
Of other violinists
of Joachim's school, I must mention Alfred musician and respectable player; and excellent an Wittenberg, one of Gustav Havemann, Joachim's last pupils, who started his career outside Berlin as an orchestral leader. About the remainder itself, the chronicler had better keep had emerged during my however, figures, absence Vecsey, Elman and Zimbalist. Franz von Vecsey [b. 1893], who died after an operation in 193 5, at the early age of forty-two, excited intense interest in Berlin as a Joachim seemed to take a particular liking to him and
of the old regime silent.
in Berlin
Three new
ten-year-old.
course of his comprehensively promoted the boy. The further aroused as a he had the not did however, career, hopes justify l Die Grundlagen der Geigentechnik, Leipzig, 1921. For details of Klingler's contribution, the German edition of Hesch's Art of Violin Playing, vol. I, should be consulted.
251
CARL FLESCH
He was seventeen when I heard him for the first time, and I was somewhat disappointed. Purely as a violinist, to be sure, he made a spotless impression: his tone production was brilliant,
prodigy.
movements were correct, and his technical ability altogether was of a high order. But his playing did not seem to contain much it was primitive and undistinguished musically. He seemed a pupil
his
:
of unusual talent with
all
the necessary spiritual potentialities
which, however, were destined to remain latent. He had been removed from the supervision of his teacher at too early an age, and his musical
and
ethical education
was
left
to chance
to the
life. The outcome was an impoverishment of which prevented his full artistic development. His
of concert
vagaries
his personality
years were wrapped in mystery. He rarely appeared on the concert platform, and it was not known quite how he spent his time. Thus the later part of his career stood in violent contrast to
last
appearance in the musical world. Of important works, he played, so far as I know, only the Sibelius Concerto, which the composer dedicated to him.
his meteor-like
new
In the persons of Mischa Elman and Efiem Zimbalist, there appeared for the first time in the limelight of Central-European concert
life
representatives
of Leopold Auer's school, whose
sovereign exponent was to be Jascha Heifetz. The Auer school has indeed exerted a lasting influence on the development of modern violin playing.
Leopold Auer [1845-1930] had led an eventful life. I met him in 1910, in Petersburg, and renewed our acquaintance in
first
1924, in
New York. We
discovered that in the 1 850*3, my greatgrandfather had been his divinity teacher at Veszprem in Hungary. In 1928, he succeeded me at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia. At
he was a charming, jovial, lively old man whom circumhad obliged to work hard to the end of his life. As a violin-
that time stances ist,
his chief virtues are said to
his elegance.
He had
have been
his clean
technique and
resided for as long as forty-eight years in
Petersburg before the musical world became aware of his import-
When trying to give an impartial and thorough of the latter, one must not forget that in the Russian judgment Auer had the best possible choice of ghetto, pupils at his disposal, ance
as a teacher.
252
BERLIN [1908-1913]
At the Berlin Hochschule, for instance, of forty students sitting for the entrance examination about four are above average, whereas in Petersburg the proportion is 90-95 per cent. Russia's violin students, moreover, have always exclusively congregated in Petersburg, while in Germany they are scattered in at least
half a dozen towns.
And
in any case,
the purely technical
preparation for violin playing has always reached a very high standard in Russia. Those 'in the know', therefore, will not be surprised to hear Elman or Heifetz admit in confidence that he to Auer fully trained and, after a very brief term of study
came ,
devoted to learning a number of standard works, embarked on a great career. But by all this I do not mean to question Auer's
importance
as a teacher.
There
is
no smoke without
fire,
and the
biggest talent can be utterly ruined by a bad teacher. Before deafness rendered him incapable of teaching, Auer placed the greatest stress on everything violinistic, e.g., purity of intonation and tone,
of technical execution, and taste. Through the fiery force personality, he was able to inspire his pupils and wrest top results from them. The typical Auer pupil, even if not of the neatness
of his
always evinces a high standard in matters specifically violinisIn this respect, the Auer school has substantially advanced vio-
elite,
tic.
and
lin playing
successfully halted the technical excesses
of the
Sevclk method.
good pupils which interested me above a and mellowness not easily to roundness possess be found elsewhere. From the outset, I was convinced that the It was
all: it
the tone of Auer's
seemed to
phenomenon must rest in some inconspicuous pecuof bowing or of the actual holding of the bow, and shortly
cause of the liarity
^before the First World
War I did in fact succeed in establishing by
exact observation that Russian violinists place the index finger about one centimetre higher on the stick (wrist-wards) than is
customary in the Franco-Belgian school. I presently adopted this way of holding the bow and described it in detail, as 'the Russian manner', in the first volume of my Art of Violin Playing* * But why is it that the musically fastidious listener senses a lack of *pp. 51
flf.
See also p. 68 and illustrations 19, ipa and 21
volume.
253
at the
end of the same
CARL FLESCH real musical content in these superb executions, that Auer pupils leave the musician cold while throwing the violinist into raptures ? I
believe that for
Auer
violin playing
came
first,
while musical
Technique and and tone were his main concerns; rhythm, agogics dynamics took second place. The typical Auer pupil values sensuous sonority and
considerations were of subordinate
an attractive smoothness of tone
significance.
much more
highly than the dif-
ference between strong and weak beats and the shaping of musical ideas as such. This is the failing of the school, one which results in
performances that seem
artistically
brilliant technical resources. If Auer
unbalanced despite
had attached
as
all
the
much import- ,
musical education as to the perfection of every have been the greatest teacher violin of technique, he might aspect
ance to a
strict
of all times.
of a series of great violin1891] was the first of the Auer school throughout the world. ists to spread the fame In appearance, he does not at all correspond to the popular ideal of a virtuoso an ideal, to be sure, which had already been shaken Mischa Elman
[b.
Elman
,
and inconspicuous; his by It is with his uncharacteristic. and features are ordinary playing that he has to conquer listeners every time anew. His tone proCasals'
bald head.
duction above fluence,
all,
an Italian
overflowing
as it is
with a sensuous melli-
bel canto in oriental dress,
stuns the listener. His intonation,
enhances the charm of his tone.
of his hand,
short
is
which is
impresses and at times further^
as clear as a bell,
Owing to the unfavourable shape
technique is limited, though conscientious study has enabled him to meet the demands of the repertoire, his left-hand
except perhaps the challenge of certain Paganini specialities. But bowing technique satisfies the most exacting requirements, %.
his
and variety of bowings. regard to both spotless tone production
As
for
temperament and
feeling,
Elman
is
never dull for a
moment. He is like a little volcano, ever bubbling and boiling. But these ideal resources are not always put to an end worthy of their own value. Elman's style rubs against the grain of many musicians, some of whom even consider him unmusical. This, of course, is nonsense; so close a union with music as Elman reveals is unthinkable without an extraordinary understanding of all 254
BERLIN [1908-1913] matters musical. In reality,
the Auerian emphasis on the purely violinistic element that offends the musician. First and foreit
most,
is
sixteen,
is
Elman's rhythmic or declamatory accents which
have made wide Elman's
it
circles
regard
him
as a
he was
mere
virtuoso.
A
career has been chequered. world celebrity at at to look on while Kreisler obliged, twenty-five,
artistic
slowly but surely ousted
him from
the favour of the American
public; simultaneously there grew up in Heifetz a formidable rival and ten years later little Menuhin emerged, conquering the hearts
of both worlds. Yet
all the time Elman must have felt that from other merits, he possessed an inner power of conwhich many others lacked. After his thirtieth year, he
quite aside
viction
turned for a time to quartet playing where, in spite of a typical soloist's attitude, he proved capable of outstanding achievements.
Elman's influence on his generation has been multifarious.
On
showed German violinists, through living works of art, how dry was their hitherto customary *Hochschule' style of tone production, while on the other hand his indifference to correct accents and his rhythmic unruliness would seem to have had a harmful effect. But when all is said and done, one would not the one hand, his tone
gladly miss this artistic figure in fact, it is hardly possible to imagine our art without him. Wherever his eventual development may lead him, the first fifteen years of his work have made a lasting impres;
Elman one of the most honoured of contemporary violin playing. places in the history At about the same time as Elman, the eighteen-year-old Efrem Zimbalist [b. 1889] appeared in Berlin. Although both come sion that will secure Mischa
from the same milieu, Zimbalist, at least superficially, is much more a man of the world. As a violinist, however, Ehnan is no doubt far superior to Zimbahst. When he was a young man, Zimbahst too possessed the brilliant equipment of the Auer school, but his playing offered no evidence of a significant personality. When I heard him in later years, his vibrato seemed to have become slower and broader. I must confess that he interested me least of the best Auer pupils, but there are many in America who
more highly of him. Perhaps hear him on his off-days. think
255
it
has been
my misfortune to
CARL FLESCH It was not difficult for me to settle once more as a married man and paterfamilias in Berlin, where formerly I had lived the more a bachelor. Soon after my arrival, I met the irregular life of
well-known banker Franz von Mendelssohn; a friendship last till his death. Franz, an developed between us that was to who did a great deal, always in outstanding and charitable man had been passionately devoted needier his for brethren, secret, since the days of Joachim. He played ever to playing quartet
second violin,
knew
all
the quartets intimately,
was musical
and showed great presence of mind. Unfortunately, however, he was incapable of vibrato whence his tone, despite his magnificent Stradivarius, had the dryness of a beginner's. Over the years, I made music with him on many hundred occasions and came to like him deeply. With a single exception, his musical gift
was not passed on
to his children. This exception
was
Lilly, a
charming young girl who later became my pupil and attained a fair degree of proficiency in spite of her inherited vibrato difficulties. At twenty, she married the German-Polish violinist and
composer Emil Bohnke, a highly gifted musician and an excellent man. Not long after their marriage, both were the victims of a car accident. I
could now afford the luxury of undertaking only such engage-
ments
as I enjoyed,
and not payment a long time and in
and of selecting my pupils according to talent was to adhere to subsequently for
a principle I
far less propitious circumstances. I satisfied
my
love of quartet playing by making music with some younger musicians on a fixed evening every week. Listeners were excluded, and by way of a crowning conclusion, a claret-cup was served
which I had prepared. 1 did not consider forming a quartet of my own: I was all too conscious of the difficulties in the path of such a venture.
I
had, however, played at various private musical
with Artur Schnabel, and was highly attracted by his whole approach to music. As he was not willing to share the gatherings
of a joint recital, I engaged him for a sonata proan agreed fee. After the extraordinary success of our gramme first appearance, he no longer hesitated to form a regular duo with me. A year later we founded a trio with Jean Gerardy. When, at financial risk at
256
'
BERLIN
[1908-1913]
the beginning of the war, the latter was compelled to leave Germany, his place was taken by Hugo Becker. In 1921, Carl
Friedberg took over from Schnabel, and subsequently I played with Schnabel only occasionally. 1 But for fifteen years we were in the closest artistic and personal contact, appearing together in public perhaps four or five hundred times. Artur Schnabel was born in 1882, at Bielitz, in a corner of Galicia where musical talent had always flourished. His background was very simple. But already as a boy he came to Leschetidsiy, whose displeasure he immediately aroused by his precocity and his independent views on music. The possessor of natural manual with unusual dexterity, coupled musicality, Schnabel could
safely
neglect mechanical exercises and develop his technique solely by way of practical music-making. This tendency was further a trend towards contemplation and indeed idleshunned any occupation that was outer prompted
strengthened ness;
he
by
by
necessity rather than stressed that his
an inner need. In
later years,
Schnabel often
contempt for any kind of virtuoso display sprang from an inner conviction; but he not have exclusively simply
may
enough in his young days to acquire that surplus techwhich alone can guarantee a complete solution of nique purely artistic problems. Thus, partly from conviction and partly from necessity, he tended more and more towards a kind of piano ^playing born entirely out of the spirit of music, in which the technical resources have no separate existence but are only made practised
available as required. I established a regular
When
duo with Schnabel he was,
though only twenty-six years old, already a dignified family man, who was conscious of his position in the world of music. At the age of twenty-three, he had married the contralto Therese Behr, an artist of uncommon appeal, who, even after the all too early loss of her full vocal resources, commanded great respect as an completion of his studies in Vienna, Schnabel, age of sixteen, had come to Berlin where, as the
interpreter. After the at the early
sspoiled darling
lf
of the well-to-do bourgeoisie, he led a bohemian
*In. 1930, he played Beethoven's Triple Concerto with a Courtauld-Sargent concert at Queen's Hall.
257
him and Piatigorsky
at
CARL FLESCH tours. He soon formed, a shortinterrupted by small concert lived trio with Alfred Wittenberg and Anton Hekking, and sub-
life,
the one with Jean G6rardy and myself, which sequently founded favour of the musical public. In those quickly won the uncontested
concert days, Schnabel's
confined mainly to chamber
work was
music and accompanying his wife's song recitals; as a soloist he orchestra. As yet he thought neither of comusually played with the occasional solo of recitals; he seemed satisfied with posing nor the between work a groups of his performance of larger piano wife's lieder recitals.
At times we were on tour
for
weeks on end,
in sleeping-cars. We would reach preferably travelling by night,
our destination early in the day and spend the morning attending Schnabel to the upkeep of his wardto our most urgent needs I went to robe, I to that of my technique. If, just before midday his
room
to take
him
for a walk,
I
found him
usually
in his
with the meticulous ordering of his clothes and pyjamas, busy linen. One day, I could not refrain from remarking 'Artur, you do nothing but put your things really idle away your life; you answered fatalistically, *it is a he 'I hotels/ in know/ straight
heritage
from
During the
my father who First
spent half his
life
in coffee-houses/
World War, when Schnabel was approaching
change came over him, the intrinsic seemed inexplicable. The urge to compose, which had seemed extinct since his boyhood, revived with extraordinary
his thirty-fifth year, a great
causes of which
intensity.
The
young Viennese salon composer leapt Brahms and Reger, Franck and stages of
erstwhile
across the intervening
of Strawinsky, Hindemith and Debussy, to join the company seemed to lack organic conwhich a development Schoenberg tinuity
living
were
and inner
and
necessity.
a rejection
With
of certain
really inappropriate
it
came
a
heightened delight in he had held, which"
ascetic ideals
to his youth. Also,
he
now wanted
to
back on pure chamber music. and turned give solo recitals to sympathize with the extreme left; with Politically, he began his
the endless, fruitless debates during our journeys he exasperated
the nationalistic
on
a
Hugo Becker to boiling point In
Nocturne for
Quintet; then
voice, he wrote
came
his first
1918, following major work, a Piano
a Sonata for solo violin,
258
piano pieces and
.
to
dm
Bre
,-"'
VV,
.'
Photograph given to the author by Thomas Edison:
see p. 291
Artur Schnabel,
Hugo Becker and
Carl Flesch during one of their recital tours,
191?
Gregor Piatigorsky, Carl Flesch and Carl Friedberg
at
Baden-Baden
(1930)
BERLIN [1908-1913] several String Quartets.
He
also succeeded in establishing himself
England and America, and entered into contracts with gramophone companies, the material results of which ensured him a in
carefree existence.
The personal and artistic contradictions of Schnabers life made him a riddle to most of his contemporaries. According to their
own
outlook, or their experience of him, people loved or hated Schnabel but never understood him. In a less pronounced personality, the contradictions of his character would have cancelled
With him, however, they freely existed side by come into action at need. As a pianist, he confined himself
out one another. side, to
exclusively to the well-tried classical repertoire; as a composer, on the other hand, he pursued the most devious, uncharted paths. He was fond of asserting that true art was its own reward, yet a
moment later would defend his high concert fees like a lioness her cub.
Simply for the love of music, he could
discuss questions of or for hours on end, yet not be interpretation pedagogic problems interested to teach a gifted but student. impecunious
Lacking formal education, he had acquired a pretty compreby means of diligent reading, quick intelligence, good memory and a pronounced gift for dialectics. He had a
hensive culture,
veritable passion for discussion in every form and on any subject; but what interested him was not so much the clarification of a
as
problem
fine-drawn
argumentation,
the
intricacies
of
reasoning, the crossing of swords. He loved contradiction, since it gave him the opportunity to busy himself dialectically, and he
was capable of dissembling his true opinion simply for the satisfaction of refuting his opponent's view which, more often than not, really coincided with his
Nor was
own.
co-operation with him always easy; he was too fully convinced of his own views to admit those of another. Yet his judgments were never allowed to petrify. On the contrary, his artistic
artistic
views always depended on
his
ever-changing inner
experiences. He had 'adagio* and 'presto' years, leaning, throughout a concert season, towards either slow or fast tempos. The
constant flux of his opinions, actions and emotions capricious and unreliable C.F.-S
since
one could never 259
made him seem
fortell
whether
(as
CARL FLESCH in a Punch-and-Judy show) the good or the evil principle, the angel or the devil, would pop up; he himself, incidentally, was
aware
of,
and
suffered under, the contradictions in his
make-up.
Schnabel's greatness as a pianist rested on the fact that his specific talent achieved a perfect synthesis of music and piano playing,
of feeling and technique, of intention and
realization,
such
as
no
other pianist obtained, although he suffered under certain technical difficulties such as defective speed control in quick passages. But these were of no consequence compared with the over-
whelming impact of his playing when his personal attitude was in harmony with a composition. To be sure, the dualism peculiar to him also entered his art, in the form of a battle between natural between heart and brain, sensibility and artificial casuistry; a duel in which, however, with the passage of time, natural feeling
gained the upper hand. Thus, he was capable of evoking impres-
whose grandeur at times recalled the memory ofJoachim. can be brief about Schnabel the composer: I have never been
sions I
able to understand the inner motivation of his composing. His change from the conventional to the modern atonal style was too inorganic. In doing so he not only passed by an important musical period, but failed to assimilate the technical development that had era. Thus I incline to the view that his was equipment simply inadequate for the great creative he set himself, and that here again, his musico-dialectical
occurred during that technical tasks
talent strove to replace a proper technical foundation. In the third a Sonata for year of his rebirth as a composer, he dedicated to
me
solo violin
whose performance took almost an hour. 1 Conceived
in touching ignorance of the nature of violin technique, the at first seemed to pose insoluble problems. After prolonged I
work study,
succeeded in penetrating the bizarre world of Schnabers imagi-
nation, and to grow accustomed to this strange mixture of talent and impotence, of originality and unnaturalness. Ten years later, however, when I took the work up again in a lonely hour, it seemed unbearable, and I could not bring my selfto play it to the end.
Considerably shaken, I stood before the ruins of an emotional world which, under the spell of friendship, I once had thought to under-
^ee
also p. 322.
260
BERLIN [1908-1913] >tand.
This personal experience makes me fear the worst for the last1
ing quality of Schnabel's compositions. Posterity will have tojudge. As a teacher, too, Schnabel believed in the subjection of tech-
nique to the spirit. Remembering his own development, he was an enemy of independent technical exercises. In maintaining that
technique should in every instance spring from the artist's expressive need, he sought to elevate his individual attitude to the status
He forgot that educational principles must to suit the average, not outstanding talents who usually
of a universal postulate. be
made
find their
own way. The basis
of any musical interpretation must
be the correct rendering of the text. If this basis
is
unreliable, there
danger of collapse. The essence of dilettantism much in a lack of high artistic intentions as in the is
consists
not so
fragility
of the
technical scaffolding. Schnabel left it to his pupils to acquire their technical equipment for themselves, and to know how to use it.
While strictly heeding the printed text, his teaching proceeded from the spirit of a work and consisted, in the main, in an attempt to influence the student artistically and intellectually. By virtue of the originality and subtlety of his thought, he was to a high degree
the capable of stimulating the pupil, of awakening and developing individuality, obstacles.
always provided that there were no technical
He was
not, therefore, a teacher in the strict
meaning of
the term, but rather a supreme stimulator. In that capacity he put me, too, greatly in his debt. As, curiously enough, he knew nothing of the violin and its technical requirements, his observations were to transalways of a purely musical nature, and it was left to me them into terms of violin playing. His teaching successes, then, always depended on the solidity of a student's technique,
late
which would enable him
to accept
and work over
his teacher's
SchnabeFs stirring influence suggestions. In such exceptional cases, would considerably widen a student's horizon, and the master's living example would work In the course of the years,
wonders.
were marked by many
my personal relations with Schnabel
vicissitudes. I freely
acknowledged
his
ln fairness to Schnabel, it ought perhaps to be mentioned that while his comhave not, meanwhile, increased in popularity, there is an increasing positions * number of competent musicians who hold them in high esteem. x
26l
CARL FLESCH unparalleled artistic
gifts,
his
his conspontaneous musicianship
and his wonderful ability to suming urge towards expression ensemble was that, coming from realize it. The secret of our perfect
we met in the middle. His art sprang from the opposite directions, consciousness, whereas unconscious and strove towards of consciousness and musical efforts were born in the bright light in the mysteries of the unconscious. sought to lose themselves
my
Our collaboration thus held much attraction
for either party.
We
more even had to make
rehearsals satisfied us far
stimulated each other, and our to be sure, I than our concerts. From the outset, character, to be conciliatory allowance for partner's tyrannical with his argumentatrveness, we in minor matters; otherwise, as he was, he have never started making music. Witty
my
would
knew how
me when he felt that he was in the wrong. when he insisted on a Artur,' I once remarked
to disarm
'But look here,
declared that a decrescendo even wrote it into was the only possible nuance at this point; you evidence In surprise, he looked at this incontrovertible part!' little a dejectedly, of his changeableness, and eventually remarked, older!' does one 'Oh well, get with his gift for
crescendo, 'only a fortnight ago
you
my
But what of
these foibles
by comparison
a phrase and this by last drop of expression from extracting the for the comhis wellnigh pedantic respect purely artistic means; and uncompromising written directions; his unconditional poser's
Beethoven or Brahms, immersion in a work of art. When, in over him, his mama Schubert or Schumann, the holy spirit came dissection vanished in a for unfruitful quibbling and destructive
In that
make way for the purest, indestructible sentiment. him to reach heights that were hardly blissful state, it was given to one forgave him the ever scaled by others; in such Sabbath hours, on week-days, cast a harshness, the artificiality, the pose that,
trice, to
him. There emashadow over the genuine and imperishable in both good and for nated from his personality a magnetic power, its even the reluctant at least temporarily under evil, that spell.
brought
He certainly remains one
of our time.
of the most remarkable musicians
1
"Flesch died,
of course, before Schnabel.
262
BERLIN [1908-1913]
Although I myself have not always been free from ambivalence towards him, I would not for anything have missed the influence that Schnabel has exerted on my artistic development. He was more than an episode in my life, he was an experience at once satisfying and disappointing, noble and base, exalting and disenchanting
During
a true reflection
the
first five
summer months
at
of his contradictory personality. of our stay in Germany, we years spent the
Rindbach, near Ebensee, in the Austrian
Salzkammergut. A small but select artists' colony had gradually assembled there, centring around Schnabel and swam myself. in the and our Traunsee, time in chamber music, daily passed card playing and rambles. The social centres were the hospitable homes of Franz von Mendelssohn, and of the
We
art-loving family
Grumbacher, whose mistress, Jeanette, nee de Jong, was considered one of the best Grumsopranos of her day. The
jovial bacher, a factory director and amateur 'cellist, had passionately embraced the study of old Italian violin varnish; the
though
information gathered in that ledge of German wines.
He
not quite equal his knowwas a crony of the equally epicurean field did
and together with him had invented a novel kind of 'quick service' for punch-drinking parties. pipe starting from the punch-bowl was laid all round the table, and each guest had a that had to be to the tap only opened dispense precious juice fresh violinist Halif ,
A
from the
much
source. The pleasures of the table, however, proved too for those two; their girth increased rapidly, and they died,
barely fifty years old, one shortly after the other. In the neighlived Julia Gulp, then at the zenith of her career, a
bourhood
woman and a fascinating mezzo soprano. About this time I made my debut as a writer on theory. For a number of years, I had employed for my own use a simplified method of 'playing myself in', exercises that had the purpose of charming
lubricating, as it were, all the joints used in violin playing. One day, a pupil remarked that I had no right to keep this idea to .myself.
not a that x
Thus, the
little
on
Ursttidien1
enriching, as a
came into
being, and I prided myself Hungarian, the German language by
word. Though some considerable time has passed
The German tide of the
Basic Studies (Peters Edition
263
No.
4340).
since the
CARL FLESCH publication of the little treatise, to have become obsolete.
tlie
underlying idea does not seem
My publisher, Franz Ries, had originally been a violinist and a pupil of Vieuxtemps, but had had to change over to the publishing business in consequence of a hand complaint. The descendant of a respected dynasty of musicians
Beethoven, he was
known by
who had the
been closely linked with nickname of 'Suite-Ries'. He
had composed some half-dozen
suites, played chiefly by Sarasate; a consalon pleasant, ingratiating pieces of value which enjoyed siderable vogue in their day. Their composer, a charming and
vivacious man,
who
number of valuable Stradivarius'
house
when
lived violins,
till
he was almost ninety,
and an Allongee.
I
Ries' son Robert, a
house, took over
its
owned
among them the well-known
a
'Ries
remained with
worthy
this publishing scion of that patrician
direction.
In the following year, I prepared with Schnabel a new edition of the selection of Mozart Violin Sonatas published by Peters. Our
was not always a pure joy. Schnabel would not dream of adapting himself to the peculiarities of violin playing and notation. With a stubbornness worthy of a better cause he insisted on the most trifling nuance provided it convinced him for five minutes and I was often compelled to use a different notation from his. These occasional inconsistencies mar an edition which might otherwise be considered exemplary for concert use. As two young musicians, Max Baldner. and Richard Heber, were guests in the Mendelssohn household, it was possible to play quartets at any hour of the day or night. Dry days were usually set collaboration
aside for excursions.
In those days, Ysaye and Kreisler were the foremost violinists in Berlin's musical life. Thibaud had not been able to follow
up and Vecsey seemed caught in an unproductive phase. But Elman had attained the height of his
his first success,
transitional
while the prodigy Jascha Heifetz was yet to appear on the platform shortly before the First World War. Szigeti, Kulenart,
kampf and Telmanyi were still developing. Recently, however, a unknown German violinist named Adolf Busch had emerged who had rekindled the hopes for a revival of German
hitherto
264
,
BERLIN [1908-1913] violin playing. After all, thirty years had now passed since its most distinguished representative, Wilhelmj, had laid down his bow. Adolf Busch [1891-1952] is above all a character, a
with
whom purely instrumental considerations are
personality,
secondary.
He
of Bram Eldering, whose style was a mixture of Dutch, and German elements, and his own technical equipment Belgian marks a decided progress in German violin playing, although it could not compare, in tone particularly production, with the French and Russian schools. His tone is not flexible enough: freshness and openness of predominate at the is
a pupil
expense gentleness extraordinary results he does occasionally achieve with his tone, especially in chamber music, must be attributed to his strong inner vision which temporarily overcomes his outer defects; of course, this will process only operate satisfactorily when he is more than usually in the mood. Busch does not possess a beautiful tone as such; he needs the divine afflatus to
and
restraint.
achieve
it.
The
How much
are even able to tune leads to routine
easier
up with
is life
for fiddlers like Kreisler
feeling
and emotional
!
Yet
this
who
very
facility easily inertia, since the 'beautiful tone as
such'
is apt to simulate feeling where in reality there is none. Thus, there are many fiddlers whose tone is vastly superior to Busch's, but few whose personality as a whole is as significant as his. I
myself prefer Busch the chamber musician to Busch the soloist, since in that role he can give himself over to his sentiment unencumbered by technical worries, and the flame that pure
in
him
even
will hide, or
efface,
many
a tonal defect.
glows
But
as a
he often gives way to excessively fast tempos, presumably owing to a lack of self-control His best solo performance is in the soloist
Violin Concerto
by
Max
know him too little as
Reger, whose close friend he was.
I
composer to be able to judge him; in the educational field, he must be considered more of a suggestive influence than a real teacher. By and large, he is the greatest purely German violinist of his age, a thoroughly sympathetic figure in a
every respect.
Together with Auer's leading pupils, there arrived in Berlin an Alexander Schmuller, who was musically
older Russian violinist
265
CARL FLESCH and
intellectually far
above
his
younger compatriots, though he
could not compete with them on the technical level. In 1914, shortly before the outbreak of the war, I recommended him to the
Amsterdam
Conservatoire.
He could not,
however, immediately
take up his position since, as a Russian subject, he was interned for some time in Germany. In order to keep his job open, I deputized for
him until he was released four weeks later. Soon after, he made
his
debut
at the
Concertgebouw with
surprising success; however,
my Dutchmen well enough last.
One of
I
knew
the
sensational and, to
me, 'new-broom theory' of
to realize that this success could
not
the earliest interpreters of Reger, Schmuller had,
of contemporary music. He was an extraordinarily adroit linguist, and a very master of conversation witty without being malicious, critical
above
all,
a
a great understanding
gifted writer,
He was,
in fact, too versatile to respond wholeheartedly to the tyrannical demands the violin makes on its more ambitious devotees. In 1933, Schmuller died suddenly, to the
without carping.
grief of the many friends he had made in Holland. His memory has remained alive there, because of his uncommonly captivating
and appealing
personality, rather than his playing and teaching. In a relatively short time, Schnabel and I had succeeded in becoming a decisive factor in German chamber music. As a sonata
duo we were unrivalled; not only for our achievements, but also because no other musicians of distinction were devoting themselves primarily to this branch of music. Less satisfactory was our trio
with Jean Gerardy [1877-1929]. A native of Belgium, he was age of twenty regarded as one of the best living 'cellists, an'
at the
opinion endorsed even by so strict a judge as Hugo Becker. When, in 1902, 1 heard him for the first time, I was frankly enthusiastic about this artist whose tone, technique, and delivery
seemed equally
perfect,
and whose very appearance was pre-
possessing. Like so many instrumentalists, he reached the zenith of his art before his thirtieth year; indeed, he had passed it when, in 1909, we began to make music together. Certainly, his cantilena was still of a seductive mellowness, but his was no
technique
longer quite insecure.
reliable,
and
chamber musician he was highly be on the alert in our trio, for he often
as a
We always had to
266
,
BERLIN [1908-1913]
no reason whatever, and only found it again difficulty. As a man, he had an inoffensive amiabi-
lost his place for
with great not without a touch of melancholy. He apparently suffered from an awareness of his artistic decline. Like Hugo Becker, he
lity,
had been automatically relegated to the second rank by the ascent of Casals. At the outbreak of the war he left Germany, and later on I had only casual encounters with him. Schnabel and I were never able to get on an intimate footing with him, but we appre-
him as a man and, to a certain extent, also as an artist. He died at a relatively early age. At the Hochschule, the more important teachers of the violin
ciated
were Marteau and Willy Hess, with taking
Klingler,
Moser and Markees
more passive roles.
Willy Hess [1859-1939], whose successor I was to become in 1928, had taken over from Halir in 1910. He was lively and enerin his late seventies he felt too getic to an advanced age, and even a was inactive. to be He passionate and inexhaustible teacher, young with solid, if obsolete, principles and a profound musicality; but his pupils complained that he was fond of playing in unison with them. I heard him only once as a soloist, in 1911, when he played in the Hungarian Style at a Philharmonic Concert under Nikisch, and when it was borne in on me how cruel our profession is to those who are not its sovereign masters.
Joachim's Concerto
Hess hurried wildly in all difficult cadenza at times even rolled three bars into passages, and in the one. This was his last appearance as a soloist, and afterwards he and the 'cellist Dechert. only played trios with Georg Schumann talents who had been ruined by the He was one of the
Overcome with
nerves,
great and the imprecise finger technique 1 school. the Joachim
wrong bowing
technique of
other Joachim pupil of the or rather, did not older generation, Henri Petri [1856-1914] meet him; for although (or perhaps because) I played the Beethoone season with the Dresden Court ven Concerto thrice
Outside Berlin,
I
met only one
during
me. Orchestra, whose leader he was, he studiously avoided greeting at the R.A.M., where he succeeded Sauret. the finest violins of J. B. Guadagnini. of one played
iprom 1903-4 he taught
267
He
CARL FUBSCH It is said that
he was a good
colleague he certainly wasn't.
but
his best
Petri.
young days; a good He wrote some well-made studies, 1
violinist in his
opus seems to have been
his son, the pianist
Egon
2
3
Griinfeld continued colleagues, Heinrich to hold the office of a musical jester. Countless are the anecdotes
Amongst our
'cellist
were invented by, or ascribed to, him. He was a harmless, the bad impression of a good-natured man who would dispel misfired passage by a well-turned joke. When, at the age of his farewell concert in Berlin, he wrote asking for he
that
gave seventy, collaboration in these words: 'Please do
my
honour of taking part
in
my
in his capacity as strictly insisted,
he
six inches in front
and honoured
as a
me
the penultimate
farewell concert.' In his trio recitals
But
promoter, on sitting some in spite of all, he was liked
of his partners. symbol of musical Berlin.
Much more important for the musical life of the capital was the not so much as a performer, Belgian 'cellist Marix Loewensohn; above all as a promoter of though he was an excellent player, but unusual with chamber music recitals programmes. I remember, for instance, a Cesar Franck recital with Ysaye, and a Faure recital with the composer and myself. As time went on, however, and while money, rehearsal time, and good artists grew scarcer, the number of recitals increased, their standard of performance went down. Eventually, an end came to this remarkable enterhad brought the people of Berlin a knowledge of prise which various composers previously unknown in Germany. Loewensohn himself had to leave Germany at the beginning of the First lived partly in Amsterdam and partly in Brusas an esteemed member of the Concertgebouw Orchestra.
World War, and sels,
My life in the years before the war, with its agreeable division between concerts and teaching, still left me some little leisure in which I pursued, first and foremost, my love for collecting books. other violin pieces and songs. He moreover edited the Concertos of Spohr, Bach and Mozart, David's Hohe Schule, and the Studies of Rode, Kreutzer
and
Viotti.
2
Perhaps
remembered
his other 'opus',
the lieder singer Helga (soprano), ought to be
in this context.
^Brother of Alfred Griinfeld [1852-1924], the pianist and composer.
268
BERLIN [1908-1913]
Amsterdam
had become interested in the illustrated ench romantics of the first half of the last century, and I now
[ready in
I
^gan to cultivate other fields as well, without, however, restrictg myself to a particular sphere. Apart from myself, there were
who chiefly who was all attracted above editions; Serato, by 1 who in on Quixote editions; Galston, delighted luxury editions; id Schnabel, who had a preference for the first editions of the ur bibliophiles
>llected
Berlin musicians: Busoni,
among
Dante
erman romantics. Ours was certainly not the proverbial illiteracy "
musical performers, even though collecting and reading are always the same thing. I myself continued to collect books
>t
my interest in the portraits of violinists :>main, closer to my profession. itil
My tie
or
close connection
me
took
with Schnabel resulted in
no contact with other
pianists.
to another
my
having
Schnabel suffered no gods
too, regarded our partnership as sacred. It was until after the war, when his whole attitude began to change
side him, and >t
I,
he conceived
of chamber music,
began to play above all, ith other pianists, such ith Friedberg; later with Gabrilowitsch, Josef Hofinann, and imond. Leonid Kreutzer had come to Germany fiom Russia together ith Schmuller, and had founded with him a sonata duo which as devoted in the main to the propagation of Reger's works, id
a dislike
that I
as Kreutzer, Eisner, Petri and,
reutzer,
who left Germany in 193 3 and later worked alternatively
Japan and California, did not succeed in attaining the position had hoped for, despite his outstanding qualities as a pianist and
>
usician.
n mar
His example shows how sometimes a single deficiency wide variety of excellent qualities: he lacked naive
a
the simple joy of living. He was a professional grumbler, ssatisfied with others and himself. At bottom, he was a good
slight,
though over-sensitive to the point of hysteria. Through ho ult of mine, he always seemed to a greater or lesser degree ffended', and so I never came to know him intimately. He was and conducL excellent, deeply musical and thoughtful teacher llow,
or,
1
a respectable composer and, above
Scepp. 270
f.
269
all,
a superb pianist.
CARL FLESCH was on much closer terms of friendship. A native of Vienna, he had been a pupil of Robert Fischhof there, which fact he regretted all his life. He received an honourable mention at the Rubinstein Concours in Paris, in 1905. Time was
With Bruno
when many But
so far,
realization,
Eisner
I
he
him
a greater hope than Artur Schnabel. has failed to find a balance between intention and
considered
between
feeling
and technique.
By
nature he
is
of his techvolcanically impulsive; but out of an over-awareness nical problems he developed inferiority feelings which not only inhibited the full deployment of his emotional qualities, but led
him into ceaseless experiments and neglect of essentials. As a human being Eisner is simple and modest. One
is
bound
him. During almost twenty years in Berlin we made it a habit to go for frequent walks together. At about six in the to love
we would
drop into the Romanisches Cafe, join the over by the painter Slevogt, and engage in regulars presided serious and light talk with Orlik, Mopp, Bruno Cassirer and evening,
others. Eisner's wife, a compatriot
many
good reputation constitution and is
of Schnabel's, has a
He
himself has a strong twelve years younger than I; thus he still has
as a
singing teacher.
every chance of reaching his goal and seeing his struggles crowned success he deserves. Another important pianist who attracted me more closely as a human being than as an artist was Gottfried Galston [b. 1879].
by the
name was
and he came from the Leschetyoung man, was considered Schnabel's superior. With the support of the coal magnate Eduard Arnhold, in 1909, he gave a series of five piano recitals 1 in several European His real
Galizenstein,
izky school. He, too, as a
capitals.
forty
Subsequently, during the war, he extended this series to lie programmes of which were tantamount to an
recitals,
encyclopaedia of piano music. But here again, it proved true that 'qui trop embrasse mal entreint'. Mass production must needs lead to superficiality; there
is
no time
for thorough preparation, and
performances tend to become somewhat slapdash in character, details
being neglected for the sake of the 'grand conception'.
x For these he published a Studienbuch explaining the to Brahms.
270
Not
development from Bach
BERLIN [1908-1913] have the five chronologically arranged violin recitals of 1905 remained a single attempt on my own part, too. It is only when such a venture belongs to the past that one becomes aware for nothing
of the dangers one has escaped, the shallows one has navigated with more good fortune than foresight. Galston was for years in straitened circumstances until, in 1926, he reached the secure haven of a permanent if subordinate position in St. Louis. Like Kreutzer, he belonged to the class of 'singing pianists' who, by humming the melodic line, essay to augment their expressive possibilities or of give themselves the cheap illusion of sustaining the brittle tone the pianoforte. It was always a torment for me to play chamber music with imitators of animal voices and to have to bear a
subordinate part in the form of a cat's miaow or a baby's whimworst offenders in this respect are the conducper. No doubt the tors. flat,
Even Toscanini whines the leading a habit
a part, at times
semitone
which, particularly in broadcasts, considerably
affects
the impact of his performances. Furtwangler mews and spits, while most of the others are content to bark on the accents.
Among
fiddlers
weakness
is
frequent. Their often irregular breathing or gasping, an inhibi-
and
more
'cellists
tion less audible, but scarcely
Among
these noises are
less
conductors, Nikisch
less
disturbing. still
reigned supreme. In 1910,
however, had played the Brahms Concerto in Liibeck with a young conductor by the name of Wilhelm Furtwangler [1886the impression that he was 'the coming 1954], and had formed man'. This was the first position Furtwangler held, the first time he accompanied a soloist, and only the second concert in his life. From that day dated a friendship which has survived all vicisI
situdes.
In the course of a conversation about conducting in general, I made no secret of my opinion that this profession like no other offered opportunities for false representation. Asked to substan'I have never I tiate apparently monstrous statement, replied were to put me now in front held a baton in hand, but if
my
my
you
*of a trained orchestra to direct the
singers
Overture,
I
Tannhauser or The Master-
should appear to do
way of appropriate
my job quite well and,
by
as stick-wagglings, impress the large public
271
CARL FLESCH Well now, an activity which one being a competent conductor. the knowledge can, at a pinch, exercise without actually having for it, must have a great deal of bluff about it. This is not required whole fraternity; I know there are great artists is no profession which among you. But on the other hand, there an impostor could enter more easily.' To this formulation of my had to agree with a laugh. seeming paradox, Furtw angler
to
condemn
the
of mind, rehearsing technique Apart from musicality, presence the individuality of an makes what and personal magnetism, the all eminent conductor is above predominance of one characof his colteristic trait which raises him above the rank and file
"
case of Nikisch, it was the Slav-German blend of leagues. In the with a touch of melancholy, while Steinbach had an sensitivity
brutal directness. Weingartner was uncomplicated and somewhat
distinguished
by
his classical poise,
Mengelberg by
his authorita-
tive rhythm, and Walter by his sensitive passivity, and Toscanini shows an incorruptible honesty and fidelity to the text and an
animation that spurns every extraneous effect. Furtwangler, a kind of sublimated sensuousness, according again, is driven by
words of St. Paul: 'Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as a sounding moment in his brass, or a tinkling cymbal.' There is no dead and rejoices. While music-making; it all lives, loves, suffers Toscanini sees the work of art through the prism of his personality, reveals his personality through the medium of the to the
.
Furtwangler
determined by two different characters. Furtwangler's pursuit of immediate acoustic satisfac-^ tion, his Don-Juan-like emotional restlessness, his striving after
two
work
different
attitudes
continual renewal of feeling, result in the listener being excited moved by his conducting. Yet in spite of his fifty
rather than
consider his development far from being closed. He will with a probably reach the zenith of his powers simultaneously 1
years,
1
certain erotic appeasement, attaining serenity with tl\e transmuof earthly into heavenly love. Furtwangler is nearest to
my
tation
heart
of all conductors. He
glorification, that 1
is
hallmark
quite free of megalomania of his caste; his genuine
Written 1936.
272
and
self-
modesty
;
BERLIN [1908-1913] manifests itself at times, even in the
Above
all,
the true
his
artist.
form of an inner
uncertainty. the child-like naivete that always distinguishes He is a simple, natural human being with a human is
and vices, and not the usual, tedious pseudoNapoleonic type of time-beater, lording it over a hundred musical being's virtues
slaves,
or convinced in his innermost heart that Beethoven
wrote the Ninth for his sake alone. Furtwangler is honest through and through; he may well become the greatest conductor Ger-
many has ever produced. Ernst
Kunwald
[b.
1868], a Viennese,
was
at that
time the
permanent conductor of the Philharmonic Orchestra, in so far as it was not under Nikisch's direction. A fine musician, well versed in score-reading
and time-saving
and sight-playing, with a good stick technique rehearsal routine, he yet did not succeed in gain-
ing a place in the foremost rank of conductors. He probably lacked personal magnetism, an attribute which defies analysis
and whose presence or absence can only be sensed, not demonstrated. This failing came to poison the life of this ambitious and self-assured man. Only once in his life did fortune smile on him, when, after a boring matinee of the Philharmonic Orchestra at Scheveningen before a few sleepy holiday visitors, an elderly lady as an emissary of the Cincinnati Symphony and Orchestra, engaged Kunwald on the spot at a salary of 20,000 dollars with six months' annual leave. In 1917, however, the Americans interned him for the duration of the war because of his provocative pro-German sympathies. He was one of the ablest and in this capacity his self-assurance pianists among conductors, was disarming. In Konigsberg, where he worked as conductor after the war, he said to me in so many words after one of our trio
introduced herself
recitals:
"You played the Adagio of Beethoven's op. 97 to per-
Your performance agreed as closely with though I had coached you in the work.'
fection.
^s
my
intentions
Yet another conductor deserves mention, not so much on the his unusual personstrength of his musical achievements as for 1 horn a Fried Oskar player, he had Originally [b. I87I]. Ility to conducting. Though he knew how to advanced gradually 1
A Humperdinck pupil and reputable composer. 273
CARL FLESCH the mental equilibrium impress people, he seemed to lack entirely
He let life buffet him hither and whole world, and was altogether a thither, had originality and temhe musician, disagreeable skill. real technical Apart from his early perament, but lacked in the conadvocacy of Mahler, he has left no noticeable traces so necessary in our profession.
was
temporary
As
war with fellow. As a at
scene.
the
1
my teaching, the promotion of impecunious talents my idealism; besides, it gave me pleasure to put even the
for
satisfied
to advance them gifted up a rung on the professional ladder, from orchestral fiddlers to leaders or even to soloists. It was not
less
in
my nature
as
advertisements of
to foster prodigies
my
and to use such hothouse plants
teaching capacities.
Like a zealous
doctor, had always been stimulated by difficulties and apparently insoluble problems, and mediocre talents seemed to me to have I
even greater claim on my support than the outstanding ones. Truth to tell, during my pre-war Berlin years I taught only three pupils
who seemed destined for a
solo career
Wolfstal, Gittelson
and Melsa.
when I took over his training. and let him play a few times him sixteen, but thought it wiser to put him into an orchestra for the
Josef Wolfstal was ten years old
When
he was
in public,
I
released
time being in order to widen his musical horizon. In quick succession, he sat at the first desk in Bremen, Stockholm and Berlin,
and became a teacher twenty-six, but died
at the Berlin
Hochschule
at the early
from the
after-effects
at thirty-one
"
age of
of
in-
He was already considered one of the finest violinists of^ Germany; his bowing particularly was near absolute perfection. Yet even granted a normal span of life, he would hardly have succeeded in reaching the highest flight, for apart from the fact that his playing contained no characteristic personal note, his human qualities did not equal his gifts as a violinist, and in the highest realms of art it is, after all, the man himself, and not the fluenza.
clever instrumentalist,
A 2
who
disappointment of
has the last word.
a different
kind was the development of
There are many, including Paul Bekker, Paul Stefan and Hugo Riemann, strongly disagree with Flesch's unfavourable estimate.
who would
274
BERLIN [1908-1913] Frank Gittelson, a young American from Philadelphia who was my pupil for three years. Not only I but many others, among them Nikisch and Godowsky, regarded him as a possible successor
by Walter Damrosch to play the Bach E major Concerto, which was quite unsuitable for an American debut and which, to make matters worse, he did not know too well, he suffered a sensational failure which caused a grave depression, to Ysaye. Forced
paralysed his will-power, and for years gave him a distaste for the concert platform. After the First World War, in which he was a radio officer, he
became chief teacher
Peabody Institute of the most talented violinist (not excepting Spalding) that America has so far produced, and that he was only prevented by a combination of adverse circumstances, by extreme bad luck, from taking the place he deserved in the musical life of America. Lastly, there was Melsa, whose name was a clever abbreviation of his original name of Mehlsack. He began as a pupil of Barmas, who was a slightly megalomaniac Joachim pupil, not ungifted as a
Baltimore.
Few Americans
great success,
he
is
Melsa made
his debut in unable to he was but subsequently
teacher, but insignificant as a fiddler.
London with
at the
realize that
hold his ground. 'three stars', I chiefly taught violinists of over to Marteau's pupils, too, began to come respectable average. me in such numbers that, with a view to maintaining my good
Apart from these
relations
unless presently refused to teach them to This me. them recommended precautionary
with Marteau,
I
he explicitly measure did not prevent his dissolving our friendship shortly after at his second wife's instigation and on some trivial pretext. My career as a soloist was at its most intense about 1910-12,
when I was not greatly hampered either by theoretical work or by the
demands of teaching. Free of material cares, I was
able to afford
development my goal in life. I had passed Although my fame as a soloist was of recent date my supreme test as late as 1907, at the age of thirty-three, in the Nikisch concerts I had in a short time become accepted in Ger-
the luxury of considering
as the leading German violinist. For the strange career has been that I, the German-Hungarian,
many and abroad thing about C.F.-T
my
my
artistic
CARL FLESCH trained in the Franco-Belgian school, and therefore a decided all life regarded opponent of the current German school, was
my
as
a violinist of purely
made by
Rivarde,
German feeling. Perhaps certain suggestions
on the occasion of his
me
stay in Berlin, helped
was concerned. to improve my tone production, For the extremely unfavourable elementary training I had received in my youth had left me with a life-long tendency to as far as
vibrato
vibrate too slowly; an obstacle that cost me much time and labour most important first performances during that to overcome. the Suk were Fantasy for violin and orchestra, op. 24, and
My
period
Emanuel Moor's Violin Concerto. Suk, 1 the second violinist of the Bohemian String Quartet, wrote his highly significant work at the
approximate age of twenty-six. Thematically of charming it is remarkable, above all, for its successful com-
national colour,
bination of variation
form and
classical
concerto form.
It
opened up new ways of writing for the violin which, unfortunately, have not been pursued by Suk's successors. Executants, too, have tended to avoid the work so that I have had a virtual monopoly of its performance all my life. Suk, a charming man, cultured violinist and composer of genius, remains in the memory of most of his non-Czech contemporaries as the fellow at the second desk of the 'Bohemians'. In his life-time he was often praised but Httle performed, since his chief works were too substantial for ordinary concert routine. In a few decades' time,
when the insignificant and
the transient have sunk to the bottom of the river, he
Emanuel Moor Raff-Godard
be one
may
rediscovered, perhaps together with Reger, and recognized of the greatest in the first third of the twentieth century.
as
will scarcely enjoy the same fate. He is in the the 'dazzlers', the inventors of easy-going,
class,
ingratiating themes surrounded, like a meagre table-d'hote dish, by attractive but tasteless aspics and jellies which are meant to distract attention from the poverty of the cooking. Moor was
then the height of fashion; Ysaye quarrelled with the Zurich Concert Society because they would not let him play the Concerto which Moor had dedicated to him. To this day, one car read in the .
visitors'
book of the Basle Concert Society the
182.
276
follow-
BERLIN [1908-1913] ing entry from the year 1907: 'Bach, Beethoven, Moor, voili plus
signed Pablo
grands',
Mengelberg and Rontgen
My own
esteem. in
him in disproportionate him was but transitory. In 1906,
also held
enthusiasm for
to write a concerto for me. He would me at eight in the morning in order to play me
Amsterdam, he began
often a
les
But Marteau, Thibaud,
Casals.
come
theme
to see
'fresh
from the wood'
that
had occurred to him during
the night; then he would sit on the edge of my bed and continue to compose, in other words, and busy himself with
concocting preparing the above-mentioned garnish. He did not devote himself to composition until the age of forty, but once started, he
evinced a rabbit-like fecundity and a dreaded, ruthless and importunate business sense.
He was
a restless, inventive spirit
whose
chief satisfaction was continual bodily and mental motion. In his later years, he occupied himself also with the invention of new .
devices in the construction of violins and pianos, again with negative results. In Berlin in 1907, I gave the first and last per-
formance of the Violin Concerto he wrote for me. Like everything else from his pen, it charms with the Hungarian tinge of its grateful themes and repels by their skpdash, padded development.
Notwithstanding
my
my
intensive
work
main occupation was sonata and
as a soloist
trio playing. I
and
teacher,
never played
string quartets in German concert halls, except for a short period in 1909 when I stood in for Hali? during his last illness; an
instructive experience which showed sufficient were the technical resources
me and
once again
how
in-
how
extravagant the music-making. In
of contemporary German was my partnership with Schnabel who, as I said was still simple and unspoilt, easily satisfied with modest
spiritual
claims
contrast, there
before,
financial results, but
demanding
in
all
artistic
questions.
The
gramophone was canned music for him then, and he refused to play chamber music in large halls. Over wily businessmen amongst in short, it artists he would amusingly pour the acid of his scorn seemed as if his uncompromising attitude would secure him, in of his own, next to Busoni's. I liked for he was entertaining and taught me the with him, travelling ethical respects, too, a niche
277
CARL FLESCH card-game of skat which sometimes absorbed us for days on end on our journeys. We arranged Beethoven, Brahms and Schubert cycles,
prestige that the
little
&
Flesch enjoyed such wide son of a friend of mine who happened to see
and the firm of Schnabel
some shop-window, found fault with my remarking that my first name was not Carl, but
signed portrait in
my
signature,
Schnabel. For the
rest,
my
contacts with professional colleagues
were in general confined to visitors from abroad. Outside Germany, I played mainly in Holland and the Austro-Hungarian empire, less in other European countries; yet even before the war, there was not one European country in which I had not appeared, except for Spain and some Balkan states. In Paris, I had the satisfaction of achieving a sensational success with the Brahms Concerto, with Chevillard conducting the Lamoureux Orcheswhich, twenty years before, I had sat at the sixth desk of the first violins. In London, too, I laid the foundation of my standing tra in
England with two orchestral concerts in which
in
concertos and the
I
played six
I
undertook
Suk Fantasy. 1
In the course of a concert tour in Russia which
together with Weingartner, I met Siloti, Glazunov and Auer. The Liszt pupil Alexander Siloti [1863-1945] was the conductor of the great Philharmonic Concerts in Petersburg. Through his wife, he
;
had
excellent connections in society, but he was not taken quite 2 seriously as a conductor. He has remained in memory chiefly through his mania for using, like Reger and Muck, indecent
my
expressions
and playing the boor. During the revolution he
abroad and eventually
settled in
New York
as a
fled '
piano teacher,
developing as a side-line an extensive practice as an arranger and Vemodeller' of classical works. 3 Alexander Glazunov I met on the occasion of a concert of Weingartner 's compositions at the Conservatoire, in which I played his two Sonatas. Originally a talent of the first rank, Glazunov would have achieved much more had he 1
Fkst performance in England. Sir Henry
1938) year.
Flesch one of
calls
The
2
violinists
who
other one, curiously enough, was
pupils (op. 8
two
cit.,
"Wood (My Life of Music, London, ^created a sensation in London' that SevcHk, who gave a concert with his
p. 253).
Though very much so as a pianist and teacher.
He had
taken up
this activity
long before he went to America.
278
BERLIN [1908-1913] not become
a periodic alcoholic. Several times a year, lie
'fell ill'
some weeks, only to emerge again from his drinking bouts as if nothing had happened, reappearing in public and his for
pursuing
profession quite normally until the next time. Many years later, a man knocked at door in Baden-Baden; he was wearing a
my
sports cap
who had
and looked
like a
travelling artisan.
It
was Glazunov,
decided to emigrate after years under the
Communist
regime. The kindly man with the naive, child-like mind was by then a physical wreck, unwieldy, hardly capable of walking or rising unaided from his seat in the car. But he was to live the life of a wanderer for another seven years.
In Helsingfors, I was deeply impressed by the Finnish musicians' with them after the capacity for holding their drink when I
supped
concert. Perhaps it is the climate of the country which permits its inhabitants to imbibe, without fear of delirium tremens, much
amounts of strong drink than a Central-European could and still reach a ripe old as is shown age, by Sibelius, and Cajanus Schneevoigt. greater
tolerate,
With my physical and artistic powers in their
hemmed
in
by the
prime,
I
began to
confines of the old continent and longed for the wider field of action that the World would offer me. feel
New
279
AMERICA
[I9I3-I9H]
Aged Forty F OLLO
WIN G the usual recipe for preparing an American tour, &
concert agency, Haensel a Jones, and got in touch with reputable Courier. Musical After I had had myself well advertised in the I
fulfilled all
my outstanding
European engagements,
we
sailed for
America around Christmas. Far be
it
from
me to
follow the lead of many tourists
who
try
comprehensive judgment on this multifarious and heterothe musician meets for the most part a specialcontinent: geneous
to give a
ized,
newly-immigrated stratum of society, rather than 'real' I wish to be no more than a chronicler and impartial
Americans.
observer of musical America, recording such impressions as caught reminiscences I shall first visit. Later in attention on
my
my
my
have ample opportunity to note down the changes in America's musical world ten years later.
I
encountered
had about twenty-five engagements, including appearances with all the great orchestras of the country, excluding California. I
In those days, one year before the First World War, the United States did not have the musical renown which they have gained
through the influx of foreign talent. As yet, few thought of making America their home. One stayed no
since, chiefly artists
longer than necessary, usually having booked a return passage on arrival. America was to the artist no more than a new market with
higher fees in exchange for which one had to be reconciled to the of being in exile. Among pianists, only Godowsky and feeling
who had
both entered the country while very young, had acquired American citizenship; among violinists, Kneisel and
Josephy,
ZimbaHst, the to the singer
being attached to the country by his marriage Gluck. Apart from these, there was a numbei
latter
Alma
of reputable musicians
who had
received their training in Ger-
many and to whom America owed its gradual rise from a countn 280
AMERICA [I9I3-I9I4] without any musical tradition to one of the world's musical centres. For this musical middle class saw to the training of a solid generation of teachers the chief determining influence on the musical standards of a country. Among them were the pianists Paolo Gallico and Alexander Lambert, the violinists Lichtenberg, the composer and theory Goldmark, the nephew of the composer.
Sam Franko and Sammathini, and teacher
Rubin
the domestic musicians, Franz Kneisel held an exceptional place. pupil of Griin, he had married Marianne Thoma, a of colleague of mine in Gran's class in Vienna, and at the
Among
A
age
twenty had accepted a call by Gericke to be the leader of the newly-founded Boston Symphony Orchestra which was maintained for many years by Colonel Higginson's self-sacrificing generosity. Later, he exchanged this position for that of a teacher at the Institute of Musical Art in New York, which was under the direction of Frank Damrosch. In building up his orchestra, Higginson followed the principle of skimming the cream off the European pool of musicians. The strings he imported from Vienna, the
woodwind from
France (among them the famous from Germany. He established the fashion, still prevalent among the American moneyed class, of coolly paying out from his own pocket an annual contribution of oboist Longy) and the brass
about 150,000 to 200,000 dollars for the maintenance of an orchesThe undoubted superiority of American orchestras in our day
tra. is
therefore
less
the result
of the
higher, demands
of the American
public than of the desire to go one better than Europe in this respect as in others. The case of Kneisel, to be sure, was not in
keeping with this general picture, for at the time of his emigration he was no more than a talented beginner on the concert platform. A German, born in Bucharest in 1865, he spoke a kind of Slovak dialect and was never able to speak English properly. An excellent music-maker without intellectual aspirations, he could be considered a counterpart of Rose1 (who was likewise born in Rumania), the difference being that Rose was the better violinist, Kneisel the better teacher. The real importance of Kneisel lies in the fact that he introduced quartet playing to
28l
CARL FLESCH America, blazing a trail for this branch of music; though as a teacher, too, he did fruitful work. With his outstanding musicality and the technical solidity acquired in the Griin school, he trained a
number of
Gordon,
who
excellent pupils, such as Jascha Jacobson and Jack were to form the core of a purely American stock of
violinists. It consisted originally
who were
soon acclimatized.
of immigrant
east
European Jews
myself heard Kneisel on only a
I
when he was playing quartets. I was struck by his tone beautiful production, but thought his playing somewhat effeminate and superficial, of small size. Owing to his great nersingle occasion,
vousness, he ended his playing career before his fiftieth year, and confined himself to teaching. He was the president of the 'Bohemians', a sort of lodge consisting almost exclusively of musicians
thought of America in terms of transit, Kneisel was friendly and trusting, chiefly 110 doubt in memory of our common teacher, whom he sincerely revered. But
and music
when I
lovers.
So long
as I
returned ten years later to teach at the Curtis Institute for
four years, he seemed to regard me as an unwelcome rival. Kneisel indubitably exerted a beneficial influence on North
America's musician.
From
musical
He
this
died in
development
as
a
teacher
and chamber
New York in 1926.
summary survey
it
will be seen that native violin
sparsely represented in America before the First the symphony orchestras of the country, the exception of the Boston, as yet a match for those of
playing was
still
World War. Nor were with
Europe. Within a few years this state of affairs was to change radically in favour of the New World but more of this later.
American press criticism was a chapter in itself. There was the one could buy, and then there were the apparently incorruptible reviews in the daily press. Beside its famous Grand National Park in which rare plants and animals are preserved, America seemed to preserve the rough customs of the wild west in its musical journals. Here, praise was quite openly sold accorda to fixed and thumbscrews were tariff, ing put on the recalcitrant until he was ready to empty his pockets. This extortion was criticism
the widely-held but erroneous belief, cleverly nurit was absolutely necessary to
facilitated
by
tured
interested circles, that
by
282
AMERICA [1913-1914] advertise in professional journals in order to get
from musical
societies.
On
die average, an
engagements had to pay an income to these
artist
annual tribute of about 15 per cent, of his total parasites.
Some
years before the First World War, there was even an attempt to transplant this system of blackmail to
Germany. A German-American critic who had to leave New York because of unsavoury machinations, took over the editordisreputable
of a much-respected musical journal in Germany. As European custom did not allow him to levy a tribute on artists in the open American fashion, he introduced a system of passive ship
blackmail.
He
concerts he
would
chose as his victims only affluent artists, whose criticize favourably at first, but later more and
more derogatorily. At the same rime, the administrative department of the paper intimated to the artist that he pay his tribute in the form of advertisements. If this delicate hint had no effect, the tone of the reviews would get sharper. When he began to try these tactics on me, I opened the proprietor's eyes to the attempted blackmail. The critic got to hear of this, whence I became the special target for his antipathy, which even expressed itself in Against an outstanding pianist he used the same methods with equal lack of success, and once was handsomely betrayed by his lack of professional knowledge. By numerous performances, the pianist and I rehabilitated the badly spiteful leading articles.
neglected Schubert Fantasy, op. 159, and it was the pianist's special pride that he could play the demi-semi-quavers of the four intro-
ductory bars not values.
as a
wild tremolo but with their exact note
Our amusement was
grace that a pianist
of such
great
when the review called it a
calibre should
dis-
be unable to execute a
Fortunately, this imported specimen of musical gutter journalist has remained a solitary instance in Germany.
rapid tremolo
!
Among the critics on the daily papers the most important were Henderson and Phillip Hale in Boston. Their knowwas about equal to that of their European colmusic of ledge tenor of their reviews was inspired by certain the but leagues, had nothing to do with the art itself. Above all, the principles that European artist must not be allowed to believe that lesser demands Krebiehl,
283
CARL FLESCH were made on him
in
America than in Europe. The
sidered themselves supreme judges
critics
con-
who could not be impressed by
anybody or anything. Every artist was considered inferior until he had proved the opposite. Much more stress was laid on purity of sound and technique than on individuality. It was no mere accident, then, that such characteristic personalities as Sarasate, Busoni and Mahler in no wise lived up to American ideals and were more less drastic 'flops' with public and critics alike. Joachim always declined to play in America, probably because he felt that there
or
was not enough
superficial
brilliance
impression 'over there'. But in
about
his style to
this respect, too,
make an
things have since
changed in America.
was but slowly able to register a complete dislike of showmanship, my short hair and pince-nez, I was not at all like the artist of popular imagination. A few months before my debut, my impresario, Mr. I myself, likewise,
success.
With my inborn
Haensel, wrote, 'Please send
wise
I shall
find
it
me a photo
impossible to secure
without pince-nez
;
other-
a single
you engagement/ Mr. Haensel was highly dissatisfied with my inability to cast myself in a role. 'Make more of yourself/ he used to say, 'or how can people recognize your worth?' One day, he telephoned, 'Could you play tomorrow on the occasion of a lecture at Harvard University? A brilliant opportunity for free adverAltogether,
tisement/ 'All right,' I replied, 'what programme is wanted?' 'That doesn't matter/ was the answer. I was taken aback, and on asking for further details about the occasion, I was amazed to learn that it was a lecture on acoustics dealing with Chladni's 1
Figures.
and
To
demonstrate these, a metal plate a violin
set vibrating
is
strewn with sand
bow
by drawing against it, whereby curious sand figures are produced owing to the nodes. Mine was to be the honour of bowing the plate. 'But that can be done by
any non-violinist/
I
annoyed and half amused. of the magnificent publicity
retorted, half
'Exactly/ came the answer, 'think value of its being done by a great violinist for the
history/
When
I
first
decisively refused to have anything to
time in
do with
^rnst Florens Friedrich Chkdni [1756-1827] was the father of modern acouThe actual scientific term is chladnische Klangfiguren.
stics.
284
AMERICA [1913-1914] this
ridiculous
affair,
Haensel accused
me of not understanding the
American mentality and maintained
that so long as that
was the
would achieve nothing in America. My New York debut was with the Beethoven Concerto, fosef Stransky [1874-1936] conducting. A native of German Bohemia, in Germany he was considered a mediocre conductor who by his first marriage to a woman of old Hamburg stock had :ase I
icquired wealth, including the means of financing a musical paper, who, therefore, enjoyed the latter's particular favour.
md
When, in 1910, an utterly exasperated Mahler, already marked down by death, gave up conducting the New York Philharmonic, i
representative of the orchestra
juccessor.
Someone got hold of
:>f
the
man and
Europe to find talked
him
a
into
who
the state of music in
For
sent to
remained in charge of the orchestra for annoyance of all musical people a sad indication
engaging Stransky, ;en years, to the
was
no one had any
New York
illusions
before the First
about
his musical
World War.
inferiority,
and
musicians did not stop short at making fun of him even in public. Dn one of the Bohemians' beer-drinking evenings, for instance,
;omeone had the idea of forming an ad hoc orchestra out of the nusicians present, in which everyone had to play an instrument le did not know. Casals was handed a flute, Harold .Bauer had to lurse the double bass, Elman beat the timpani and Paderewski officiated as leader on the violin. Finally, it was observed that the of conductor had not post yet been filled and, of course, Stransky was unanimously chosen. He, who owed everything to Germany, revealed himself during the war as a German-baiter of ;he worst sort, from purely opportunist motives. When, at last, nusical New York saw through him and he was removed from lis position, he became a picture-dealer for which, according to xustworthy reports, he showed more talent than for music. His colleague Walter Damrosch [1862-1950] of the New York Symphony Orchestra, with whom I played the Brahms Concerto, :ould hardly be considered a great hero of the baton either, ;hough he was a man of the world, of/good appearance, and an excellent speaker. Measured by European standards, he was hardly ibove the average of provincial conductors. Toscanini and 285
CARL FLESCH Bodanzki shared the musical direction of the Metropolitan Opera. More will be said of both later on. Outside New York, I have from viola pleasant memories of Frederic Stock who advanced player to conductor, and Ernst Kunwald who, as will be remembered, had found in Cincinnati the extraordinary position which
had descended upon him like a gift from the gods in his greatest need. The two most eminent conductors, however, with whom I came into contact at the time, were indubitably Karl Muck and Leopold Stokowski.
knew Karl Muck [1859-1940] from his work in Germany. As young man he looked so strikingly like Richard Wagner that the I
a
legend of
his
being the composer's illegitimate son was widely one find such agreement between out-
credited. Rarely does
ward and inward
qualities
as
with
this excellent
conductor. His face was sharply profiled,
his
musician and
figure at once well
shaped and spare, his mode of expression unsentimental, sarcastic: without and within, he was of a rugged, angular harmony. With Reger he shared a liking for scatological expressions, with the difference that Reger gave vent to this obsession in anecdotes friends, while Muck delighted in pithy interjections
among on the
concert platform, sometimes merely in order to suppress sentimental impulses. For the rest, he was a noble character endowed
with
all
good fairy can bestow, except benevolence and was a genuine misanthropist and had too about the world for his lack of imagination not to
the gifts a
a love of humanity: he
few
illusions
become noticeable in his
among
art too. Nevertheless
he must be counted
the great conductors of his time.
Leopold Stokowski [b. 1882] was still at the beginning of his an organist, he had successfully changed over to
career. Originally
conducting under the influence of his first wife, the excellent pianist Olga Samaroff. His is a Faustian character, consumed by inner restlessness, eternally dissatisfied and in search of something new, of the philosopher's stone whose possession may bring lasting
He would experiment incessantly,
repeatedly changing the of the orchestra, altering the elevation of the platform seating plan and the lighting arrangements, or abolishing the post of permanent orchestral leader and decreeing that all first violinists should peace.
286
AMERICA [1913-1914]
To
from coming late, lie might of comedy making the members of the orchestra, too, file in one by one during a Haydn symphony. In the vein of Biilow, he would give the upbeat to a piece the moment
lead in turn.
stop the public
stage a grotesque
he reached the steps leading to the rostrum. In turn, he became interested in the technique of the gramophone and radio, in exotic music and in
Buddhism. Among orchestral players he is one of the most feared conductors of his time. His slim, youthful figure and blond curls used to fascinate the female section of the public. As a conductor, his main concern is with the utmost technical precision. The violinists of his orchestra are, as individuals,
at it)
had
ample occasion to realize when teaching the Curtis Institute; but 'in the plural' (as Richard Wagner put they are, or were, in his hand, the most perfect instrument as I
average players,
imaginable.
was often marred by an ignorance started at the bottom of his profession. He learned his craft immediately on the platforms of big towns, unlike the great European conductors, most of whom spent their apprenticeship on the provincial boards. Stokowski is the most controversial conductor of the United States, if only because his experiments, innovations and threats of His approach to the
of
tradition, since
classics
he had not
resignation continually hold the public's attention. According to personal outlook, he is regarded as a genius or a shrewd talent, as all feeling
fractions
or
brain, as a great artist or a showman. All these reduced to a denominator if one wants
all
must be
common
of the problem of his character.
to find the solution
Stokowski
his individuality
is,
in
my
What
gives
mania for a
opinion, his
maximum of expression and effect in life as well as in art, his striving for the ne plus ultra, his perfectionism. His is a Promethean nature with egoistic motives. No other orchestra must sound like his,
climaxes must be of Himalayan
adumbrated
size;
the
whose expression the
still
poetry of an
listener
ought, as it were, to contribute) is unknown to him. He always reaches for the stratosphere. I once attended a rehearsal of the Tristan Prelude. feeling (to
The second theme,
in the 'cellos, did not
him; he gave
baton to the leader,
to
his
287
seem expressive enough went to the auditorium
CARL FLESCH and made them play the passage for half an hour, encouraging, He watched whether each praising and criticizing all the while. and more, until the forced his utmost player unrestrainedly gave he desired was achieved. This extracting of a lemon, has, indeed, always been a expression, as one squeezes who are often unfamiliar with the peculiarity of conductors, and powerful
effect
of matter, which, in any case, they do not have to should he exaggerate, will bestruggle with, whereas the violinist,
limitations
to scream. Nor are gin to scratch, the pianist to thump, the singer such excesses intended by the composer; they spring merely from
an attempt on the part of the conductor to make
his
Beethoven
The spectacles through impressive than his colleagues'. which he looks at a composer are frequently more important tc more
him than is the composer himself. One must have the unegoistical utterly artistic character
of a Toscanini to be
immune
to suet
moral infection. An artistic ideal which strives in the first place for the greatest possible effect will prove delusive in the long run; for the superlative is the highest degree only as long as one does not attempt to go yet higher.
To be sufficient unto mieux
oneself is true
wisdom for individuals and nations
*le
est
1'ennemi du
bien/ Stokowski, however blessed he
may be with
material and
,
will never be completely happy, since it is spiritual possessions, not^ in his nature ever to be satisfied. And yet I must confess that, after"
Toscanini and Furtwangler, he interests me most of all presentday conductors which only goes to prove that his personality is
powerful enough to draw even the resistant into its orbit. During the three months I then spent in the United States,
had
I
opportunity to hear anything novel or outstanding sq far as solo playing was concerned. In the public's little
judgment
was
at
was
overshadowed by Elman, whose impulsive tone the zenith of its brilliance. Ysaye, the ideal of days past, had
Kreisler
reached the
still
downward
ordinate themselves to
slope
where
artistic
intentions
must
sub-,
and attempts to cover bowing these up. Thibaud's habitual nervousness had so much increasecf through an affair of the heart in Europe that he decided, shortly after his arrival, to
defects
break off his tour and return to France.
recompensed by the
art
I
was
of Caruso, Destinn and Gulp. But
my
288
AMERICA [1913-1914] greatest
stimulation
I
had witnessed twenty
a
received
from Paderewski, whose debut
years before as a
member of
I
the Vienna
Conservatoire Orchestra. Here, once again, was proof of the of spirit over matter, of feeling over a partial lack of
supremacy
would have been grave enough in another to technique which subtle spell emanated from total result as inferior. the stamp
A
Paderewski's playing which made one gladly forget his technical insufficiencies and surrender to the hypnotic influence of this
powerful personality.
One day, I received an invitation from the Edison Gramophone Company to make five records for them. It was not the first time had come into contact with this budding branch of musical I had played for Odeon Records in industry. As early as 1905, Amsterdam some pieces on the Stroh violin, a cross between a silent violin and a trumpet which was then considered the most 1 efficient means of recording. In their day, Edison's machines were deemed the best of their kind. The discs were issued under the trade name of 'Diamond Records', and the steel needle was rethat I
t
by
placed
a minute diamond.
spend his leisure hours
The
great
perfecting this, his
Thomas Edison
liked to
most popular invention.
In spite of his deafness, whose effects he sought to mitigate by the use of appliances of his own making as complicated as they were
t
he was better able to register vibrations and interferences than people of normal hearing. I played for the company amongst other things Wilhelmf s well-known transcription of Schubert's Ave Maria. A few months later, at the beginning of the war, I was useless,
informed that this record was considered the best of all existing of the violin and was selling in great numbers, whereof
Recordings
some
dollar cheques, remitted before America's entry into the The world-shaking events of the pleasant evidence.
war, gave
following years
made me
quite forget
my
few wretched records
arrived a until one day in 1920 with my morning coffee less than no for enclosed letter from Edison with a cheque of about 10,000 gold marks, which still had the value
|5,ooo
^Invented
by
Charles Stroh in 1901; the
was replaced fiolin or 'cello) sbrved as amplifier.
by an aluminium
289
body of the instrument (whether a plate connecting with
horn that
CARL FLESCH as it was in view of the conditions was by no means an exceptional one for Germany, in 1913, had shown me his annual Elman, gramophone royalties. commission on the sale of his records in form of a 35,000 dolla^ received 175,000 cheque, while Kreisler, between 1924 and 1930,
marks. This sum, enormous prevailing in
1 dollars a year.
In spite of this auspicious beginning, my connections with the gramophone industry have never been very fortunate. True, I
have made
forty recordings for Edison, some of which the with best of their kind. But the firm itself was
close
on
could compete run according to entirely outmoded and unbusinesslike principles. 'The old man', convinced of the superiority of his products,
thought
it
even
undignified to advertise,
when
Victor and
Columbia began to surpass him in quality. Besides, the very diamond stylus that was Edison's pride was the greatest obstacle in the way of distributing the records, since they could only be played on the disproportionately expensive Edison set. His many an enormous income, and his patents, moreover, gave Edison was only a plaything, a hobby, and not a Gramophone Company milch cow. So the company quietly packed up after some years, and heaven alone knows what became of my records. In the meantime, I was past the age of fifty and had missed contact with thq
t
other great companies. Posterity, then, will hardly be able to playing from the few, often musically worthless discs judge
my
still be bought; in those days, one was compelled to play bad music. It is only recently that only significant works of music have begun to be recorded for an elite of music lovers. But until" then, the gramophone companies' only concern was with markets ing mass-produced articles, whose musical value was mostly nil.
that can
1
Flesch's figure seems to be indirectly corroborated by this passage from Louis P. Lochner's Fritz Kreisler (London, 1951, p. 269) 'The big financial returns came, :
however, not from
long works, but from his short, one-disc pieces. Authoritative figures on the sales of Kreisler records were unavailable, but a press item appeared to the effect that one year they exceeded those of Enrico Caruso, "whose royalties were $125,000 per annum." The reader may conjecture by analogy what the Kreisler records may have brought in in the course of years. When Fritz reached Rio de Janeiro on his 1935 Zeppelin trip, he was told again and again that his records were best sellers in South America.' Lochner does not give the date of the press item, but obviously the 'y ea r* to which it refers must have antedated the period indicated by Flesch: Caruso died in 1921. .
.
.
2pO
AMERICA [1913-1914]
The following experience was typical In 1925 I was engaged to make five double-sided discs for the Edison Company. The
choice of the ten pieces was to be Edison's own. see
him
at his laboratory at
wished to submit. could spite
I
Orange and
found an
to play
old, stone-deaf
I
was invited to
him
man
to
the pieces
whom
I
one
make
oneself understood only by a wearisome effort. In years, he had the clear, blue eyes of a child. I no fewer than sixteen small pieces which, his wish,
of his seventy
played
him
by were mostly chosen from the trash of the last century. His critical judgment was confined to two verdicts 'good seller' and 'no seller'. It was indicative of his taste that he declared TitTs Serenade to be the best of the
pieces, although I had included works by Bach and Handel. He could not bear octaves, since the scanty remains of his sense of hearing were so sensitive to interferences
that to
him even
the apparently purest octave did not seem to correspond exactly to the relationship of i :2. As a surprise, I subsequently played the Ave Maria without octaves for his private use; in return, he sent me his photo with the curious dedication 'Your last Ave Maria is fine'. Once, when the excellent pianist
Harold Bauer played
to
him, he stopped
his ears
and shouted in
a temper, 'I can't bear this !' Aghast, the pianist asked him the c reason for his displeasure, and Edison The notes
you
replied:
play are not sufficiently separated from each other. Whenever you strike a new key, you have not yet lifted the finger from the old one, so that the notes
merge into each
other.'
Now,
it is
a fact that
a perfect legato in the form of a mathematically exact, close succession of notes cannot be obtained on the but it needed
piano, peculiarity insufferable. For the rest, despite admiration for the great inventor, our two hours* meeting
h deaf man to find
my
confirmed direction
me
and
this
in the conviction that surpassing talent in one ignorance in another can well exist side by
total
side in the best-organized
mind.
Has the invention of the gramophone really saved the executant from swift oblivion? Will the disc enable the reproductive beyond his death, and transmit the unadulterated of his art to posterity? I do not believe it. The microimpress is too phone narrowly responsive to smoothness of tone and artist to live
C.F.-U
CARL FLESCH execution and far too insensitive to many of the higher values of to be able to transmit a true picture of an artistic
personality
tone which is best is a peculiar quality of performance. There a concert in hall, and vice versa. suitable for a recording but fails were unable to make satisfactory Joachim, Sarasate and Ysaye records although, in Ysaye's time, recording technique was already far
advanced.
The merits of their personalities were inaccessible to
mechanical reproduction. On the other hand, one often finds dance-baud fiddlers whose characteristics are enhanced by a recordOf well-known artists, Kreisler and Heifetz have recorded ing.
best;
5
even better 'canned
Szigeti sounds
than live; whereas in the
Elman, Busch, Thibaud and many others must be heard flesh in order to be properly appreciated.
of the purely educational value of the gramophone record? Can the conservation of an outstanding interpretation
And what
a beneficial influence, technically or spiritually, on the really exert I can hardly believe it. If I were of later
.performances to advise a pupil
generations?
who
is
studying, say, the Sibelius Concerto, to
exemplary recording, he would, as we know from experience, try above all to imitate the virtuoso's manner, and thus be in danger of nipping in the bud the development of his own personality, even if he succeeded in occasionally assimilatdevices of minor importance. Has the art of singing improved
listen to Heifetz's
ing
because of Caruso's records ? Of course during the last thirty years e in Caruso's voice has since become a the sob' not, even though
heavy gun in the technical equipment of the Italian or Italianizing tenor. The gold bar has been melted down to small change for 1 that's all you can daily use. 'How he hems and how he spits' learn from a record; the great interpretation, born of individual feeling,
My
must needs be immediate, spontaneous and unique. success in America grew from concert to concert, and
&
Jones wanted to engage me for a second tour in the following season. While I could not claim to have become a 'star', I had won great recognition, particularly with the real con-
Haensel
noisseurs, for
whom
is only a means to a higher rather rare type of musithe represented
the instrument
purpose. In their eyes,
I
^chiller, Wallensteins Lager.
292
AMERICA [1913-1914] cian with
whom virtuoso
display takes second place; an attitude to find increasing approbation with the growing musical understanding of the American public. Towards the York without any inkling that I would middle of April I left
which was bound
New
not return for ten years. Great was the joy of being reunited with my wife, who had gone back to our children a month before.
We
decided to spend" the summer by the sea at Zandvoort, starting the holiday as early as June. After the strenuous and exhausting
American interlude I doubly enjoyed my return to domesticity and the company of my dear friends, above all Rontgen and Tadema. By way of extended symposia, we underwent numerous drinking tests; we bathed daily in the wonderful North Sea, and altogether had a grand time. One morning, while still in bed, I read the news of the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand. My wife found me pale and disturbed as I envisaged the impending catasI trophe. When she anxiously asked what had happened, replied, World War/ die is to come But worse terrible. 'Something however, faded during the following weeks. Everybody's sense of responsibility was lulled by the dilettantish manner in which European diplomacy manipulated the fate of the
This
first
reaction,
world, until a dreadful awakening showed humanity the abyss to which it had been led by the frivolity and incompetence of its rulers.
ie
When, on July 31,
the town-crier of Zandvoort announced
general mobilization of the
irchaic
ceremony meant for
us
Dutch army, we knew
all
the end
ind the beginning of an era heavy with consequences.
293
that this
of happy, carefree years
THE
WAR
YEARS
Aged Forty
to
[1914-1918]
Forty-jive
O N August 4, Germany declared war on the allies, having crossed the Belgian border near Vise. that their
The Dutch were
own neutrality had not been violated,
greatly relieved
and proceeded to
It became the fashion on Sunday as spectators. regard themselves afternoons to make a trip to Maestricht and to watch the German
invasion of Belgium from a
hill
German With the
nearby; the
uniforms,
of and span, were generally admired. countless Belgian refugees, however, hostility towards Germany assumed serious proportions and it became dangerous to talk spick
German in public. The Germans have always regarded
the
Dutch
arrival
as
a sister
Middle Ages, there was hardly any between Middle High German and Dutch. Neverthe-
nation, chiefly because in the difference
invented the boche, the Dutch had long before the French coined the contemptuous expression MofffoT the Germans; they and fear them, but do not love them, for in the course of
less,
,
respect
the centuries the their languages
two
and
nations have
peculiarities sufficiently.
perpetual
fear
grown too
their social habits to
far apart in
both
understand each other's
On the Dutch side there is, moreover, the
of German invasion.
During the first weeks of the war, many well-to-do Americans were stranded in Europe for want of funds, as travellers' cheques
were not cashed in the initial panic, and the poor the main
on the charity of friends
rich
depended in
Frank Damrosch, for example,
on ours. Today it seems amusing that we were prepared to place no more than 150 guilders1 at the disposal of this enormously rich man: our funds, too, were at low-water mark, for our money was in
Germany and could not,
We
for the time being,
be negotiated.
decided to stay in Holland, to wait and see: financial
lA-bout
20.
294
j
THE WAR YEARS [1914-1918] had advised
us that the
war
could not possibly last longer weeks. Alexander than Schmuller, who was supposed to teach at the Amsterdam Conservatoire from September i, had been interned in Germany as a Russian subject, and force majeu\r experts
six
threatened to break his contract. In order to prevent this happening, I declared myself prepared to deputize for him till his release
which, in
With
fact,
my
ensued
nerves
few weeks later. edge, I had found
a
on
the
last
weeks
at the sea-
mornings I used to escape to Amsterdam in order to hear the latest news from the front at the earliest possible moment. Unable to do any kind of work, I surrendered to a life of side unbearable. In the
which wore
idleness
me down
balance. I even started to
smoke
and endangered
my
mental
I had previously tried in similar emergencies. When, towards the middle of September, I went to Berlin by way of reconnaissance, I discovered that the Germans were un-
a pipe, a diversion
aware of the fundamental deterioration the situation had suffered during the few days preceding. I was compelled to realize that it
would be
in
my interest to transfer my residence to neutral terri-
tory for the duration of the war, if only in order to secure the property of my wife. This egotistic consideration, however, conflicted
with
my
Germany, and I decided to take my soon as possible. All my subsequent date from this moment, all the difficulties and
loyalty to
family back to Berlin financial vicissitudes
as
which I could so easily have avoided if, like many others, could have brought myself to think of my future without regard
setbacks I
for
Germany's fate.
When we
returned to Berlin in early October, our friends us joyfully: they had already believed us lost to GerContrary to the fears that had been expressed during the
welcomed
many. weeks of the war, musical life had not only returned to normal but by way of spiritual compensation, as it were intensification. The Red Cross actually seemed in the process of nd charities of all kinds, including concerts for the wounded and soldiers on leave, made considerable demands on the artists'
first
they, powers but in this way the latter could have the feeling too, were contributing to the success of the total war effort. that
;
295
CARL FLESCH been brought to Hungarian subject, I had been
American concert tour had, of
My
course,
a naught, despite the fact that as for offered safe-conduct my journey to the States. live for an indefinite period in
what had
I felt
unable to
swiftly become
a strongly
I burned easy heart, then, Haensel tried to persuade me
Germanophobe atmosphere. With an
my
last boat,
otherwise,
I
and although Mr my American contract
redeemed
at a considerable
financial sacrifice. It
was the
'cellist
Hugo Becker who, from
the
war, took Gerardy's place in our trio. Musically the latter, he lent a unity to our ensemble which lacked.
As could be gathered from
first
year of the
far superior to it
had hitherto
his exterior alone,
Hugo
Becker was the product of an unusual racial mixture. One of his had been an Arab and, according to a rumour, great-grandfathers
body-Mameluke (Mameluke
in ordinary) to
Napoleon
I.
In any
his bronze skin and lean case, Becker's fine-cut, energetic features, as it were, without a bedouin's figure which was incomplete, a of oriental blood. His father, Jean dash to to seemed cloak, point
Becker,
who came from an old Alsatian family, was the founder of
the Florentine String Quartet; tradition has it that this was the first for the four parts, in contradistincquartet to aim at equal rights tion to the previous practice of having the first violin dominate to which the Joachim Quartet still subscribed. the other parts,
all his life. Economicof two magnificent owner ally independent had managed to he south estates in northern Italy and Tyrol, multiply his property, thanks to his friendship with the GermanBritish banker, Edgar Speyer. Artistically, he had the reputation of being the most outstanding 'cellist of his age, until Casals dethroned him and his competitors. He took the consequences in
Hugo
seems to have been fortune's minion
through his marriage,
he abruptly cut short his career as a soloist. For a further fifteen years, however, he remained active as a chamber musician, first as quartet player with 1908 under the pretext of a heart :
Marteau, then in our
trio.
At
disease,
the outbreak
of the war,
his
pro-
perty, deposited in England, was sequestrated a bitter blow for a spoilt favourite of fortune at the age of fifty-four. He now had to
take
good
care of himself financially,
296
and on our
recital tours
you
THE
WAR YEARS
[1914-1918]
him alight from the train laboriously with a rucksack even accommodated his dress-coat), and with his "cello in (which would
see
bag of oil-cloth, simply to save the porter. After the war, however, his friend Speyer, the banker, gave him a good before piece of advice: 'Weren't you born at a light
1870?
Strasbourg
According to the Treaty of Versailles you are to be considered as of French nationality and are therefore entitled to demand that the sequestration of your property be cancelled.' In due course, Becker was again in possession of his million marks in gold, though the Germans looked askance at this change of nationality on the part of a German super-nationalist. In 1929, at the of age
seventy, he left the Hochschule and eventually lived in retirement at the Starnberger Lake.
Hugo Becker was one of those their
prime
at the
age of forty, but
artists
I
who
reach or even pass
can well imagine
that, in his
he was justly regarded as the most versatile 'cellist of time. In order to be considered 'the greatest' too he would have
earlier years,
his
had to
possess that beautiful tone per se which, even at that early stage, Josef Hollmann and, later, Gerardy were able to produce to a high degree of perfection. His own tone was always somewhat
5
dry, while his vibrato was inert and did not grow spontaneously from his inner life; he depended on his inspiration for his ability to get the tonal reflection of his feelings across to the listener. But his
musicality surpassed that of all other 'cellists of the pre-Casals period. He was a born chamber musician, an ingenious teacher with the widest possible knowledge, and the first interpreter of Strauss'
|eertos
Don
Quixote and 'Cello Sonata as well as of the
of Dohnanyi and
Con-
D Albert. He was, however, far more of J
chamber musician than a soloist. After all, sheer sound and tone do not by themselves play such a supreme role in chamber
a
music his
performance; in fact, the 'cellist revelling in schwelgende* Cellist] can be rather a nuisance in an
as in solo
tone
'
(der
ensemble.
As opposed to Schnabel, Becker was of the opinion that the quality of performance depended above all on that of the technical
pe
When a player described an as an 'inner necessity', Becker or Arbitrary illogical interpretation
fresources at the performers' disposal.
297
CARL FLESCH 'You play it like this, not because you want feel it like that, but to, but because you have to; not because you correct the for means technical the way to play because you lack he thought what about it/ But he would not have any argument and obstinate the correct way. In this respect he was unbending, knew one He way of interpretation and
would remark
drily:
logical only mechanics only one kind of performing
pedantic.
his own. Of a tyrannical in every respect from submission slavish demanded he disposition, to teaching, his devoted his pupils. Although, he was passionately student advanced most feared rather than loved him. The
pupils
was forced to
start
from
scratch
and
alter his
bowing, even
when
the audible result of his technique was sufficiently satisfactory to there are very few make unnecessary. In consequence,
changes Becker pupils teacher. This
is
as a unreservedly acknowledge his qualities himself to to how for had he known adjust
who
a pity,
his pupils instead
of applying
ledge, ability, intelligence an exemplary teacher.
Stimulated by
his
knowwould have made him
Procrustean methods, his
and musicality
my Art of Violin Playing he published, eight years
later, a similar if less
extensive treatise for his
own instrument.
For
of a physiologist, whose
secured the services purpose, he had it was to give an exposition, scientifically well-founded, of, the technique of movement, while practical application of the
this
task
Becker himself. This bi-partite technique was explained by for the average instruapproach, however, proved unpractical, with mentalist cannot be bothered theory unless it is immediately connected with practical examples. Becker had hoped to revolutionize 'cello playing with his publication, to introduce a new era,j but in the event, the book was almost unanimously rejected by the profession. this
The sales,
ambitious and
too,
were negligible a bitter experience for man. Practical philosopher that
self-confident
he was, however, he soon succeeded in overcoming the
dis-
appointment.
him. myself always got on very well with to much thus had and deal a great experienced I
He had tell:
seen and
he had been
of our musical life from actively involved in the development with artists of four music had made and Wagner to Hindemith, 298
THE generations.
WAR
He combined
YEARS [1914-1918] a passionate nature with a
shrewd
opportunism.
The way in which practising musicians survived the war merits some comment. Unlike France, Germany spared her own musicians as far as possible during the war; they were but rarely sent to all the front. the musicians professions, probably showed the smallest percentage of casualties, since most of them wintered in
Of
bomb-proof shelters. The gifted and promising Rudi Stephan, who fell on the battlefield, was perhaps the only exception amongst well-known musicians. At the Berlin General Staff, there was a cartographical department headed by LieutenantColonel Joachim, JosefJoachim's
eldest son, where not only many but also a few musicians were working in peaceful painters, quite retirement, and thus saved from dying a hero's death. During the
war there was no end to the terms of abuse showered upon these 'home warriors, shirkers, skulkers, and clerical swines'. When the war was over, however, it appeared that Germany's policy had been justified, for alone amongst all belligerent nations, she found that her store of artists had scarcely suffered. In contrast to other professions, however, there were hardly artists. But in the neutral countries
any war profiteers amongst the there was a tendency, partly
patriotic
and partly
practical, to
before belligerent nationals. Zimmermann and Schmuller were thus able to stage a cheap, mass-produced series of violin concerts at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw for
favour native
artists
months every Sunday afternoon, bombarding each other with major and minor violin works, inadequately prepared, the sole being the audiences. This exception, however, only the rule that during the war musical production of every proved kind was engaged in dangerous rearguard actions. sufferers
I
know of only two artists who owed their careers to the battle
of the nations Erno (Ernst von) Dohnanyi and Ignacy Friedman. Like Enesco, Dohiianyi is versatile to a degree that places him in the category of universal musicians. He is equally outstandas a composer, pianist and conductor. The basic feature of his talent is his eminently natural and artless power of expression, which is coupled with a spontaneous technical facility. As a
ing
299
CARL FLESCH and
to be consciously retrogressive, composer, he has the courage his musical inventiveness he dares to and convictions of his dint by
atonal movement. He is perhaps can afford to do so, because his who the only musician of standing offer opposition to the
and his
gifts
abilities
modern
show such
and well-balanced
a harmonious
sound original rather than imitative development that his works in spite of their 'datedness'. This Mozartian element of having 1 without labour, is 'dropped from the sky', of achievement evident in his piano playing too, whose spontaneity has an immediate effect upon the listener. At the same time, there is a danger in
kind of talent: as years go by, the 'natural player' may develop 2 into a 'natural swimmer*, if the waning unconcern of youth is not
this
replaced into
takes the physical changes of aging the best musicians amongst conductors,
which
a training
by
account One of
him Dohnanyi commands an admirable eclectic skill which grants in tune the luxury of performing works that are not obviously with
his
He
own musical
really
owes
Bartok's or Kodaly's. personality, e.g.
his great career to the chauvenistic attitude of Professor at the Berlin Conservatoire
the Hungarian government. before the war, he had, as a civil servant, citizen according to Prussian law, without,
nationality. In 1915,
Hungarian
become
a
German
however, losing
when he went
his
to Budapest in
order to give a few concerts, the Hungarian government refused him permission to return to Germany because, as a Hungarian subject,
he was
the unofficial reason
liable to military service
they wanted to secure
being, perhaps, that artist's services for Hungary's cultural
life.
this distinguished
Thus, Dohnanyi was
and presently became
so popular by he had to appear almost daily as a pianist or conductor. For about six years, in fact, he held an unlimited and uncontested musical monopoly. Under the Bolshevist regime, he was appoin-
'discovered'
his fatherland
that
Vom-Himmel-GefaUenen' Flesch alludes to two German proverbs, fallt vom Himmer and 'Es 1st noch kein Gelehrter vom Hirnmel gefallen' literally, 'No master (or scholar) ever drops from the sky*. The approximate English equivalent is, 'There is no royal road to mastery (or learn14
des
:
'Kein Meister
ing).'
A pun on
2
a professional colloquialism : in
ming' denotes the kind of playing which, by technical insufficiencies.
300
German musical
skilful
parlance,
'swim-
musical means, covers up
its
THE
WAR
YEARS [1914-1918]
ted Director of the Budapest fugitive Jeno insurrection,
Academy of Music
in place
of the
1
Hubay. Upon the suppression of the Bolshevist he fell into disgrace with the 'Whites' and was
by Hubay who, thenceforth, did everything in his worry the life out of him. It was only when he was that he resumed his former leading position. In view of
again replaced
power
to
fifty-five
both
integrity and his personal charm, Dohnanyi may be counted altogether amongst the most prepossessing figures in our profession. his artistic
Friedman
Ignacy [1882-1948] belonged to the glorious band of those Leschetizky pupils who dominated the field of piano playing for an entire generation. The importance of Leschetizky's teaching can be gauged by the fact that he left his intact pupils' personalities
an achievement which
personally consider the final object of education. Friedman, too, was in a class by himself; of Slav-
all
I
Jewish descent, he was an elegant man of the world, with a wonderful wrist in both his art and life. He was a natural talent of considerable stature, interested in the excellence of his attainments
both for the sake of his inner,
artistic satisfaction
the gratifying practical consequences that
would
and in view of
ensue.
At
times,
however, he was not above subordinating the composer's intentions to his own views of the work in question. But although I did not always agree with him in matters musical, as a human being he was almost closest to me amongst all my professional colleagues, for his kindness, his ungrudging nature and readiness to help, his human and artistic epicureanism towered above the cerebral ways of many an accomplished apostle of utilitarianism.
"With Friedman, the human being came first, the artist afterwards an attitude of which only few amongst our professional colleagues may boast. His career during the war resembled
Dohnanyi's: he managed to survive the dangerous years in the snug nest of Danish hospitality, and exercised his own musical
hegemony at Copenhagen, where he gave dozens of piano recitals every year. After the war, however, Denmark became too narrow a field
of
artistic activity for
him, and he resumed
Who had become violin professor there as early as 1886,
1-
sight,
his
roving
life.
at the age of twentyhaving already held a previous professorship at Brussels from 1881.
301
CARL FLESCH
As for myself, I have to admit that I had no particular predilection for a hero's death either. Prepared to do duty without
my
undue pushing, I went through four medical examinations but, owing to my extreme shortsightedness, never passed muster. Gradually, however, my inactivity in face of world-shattering events unnerved me to such an extent that, by 1916, 1 felt I had to be active in some way or other for the general welfare, if merely as a polyglot interpreter. But at that stage, only men who were fit for military service were wanted, and so I had to content myself with frequent performances in aid of the Red Cross and for soldiers wounded or on leave. Only once it seemed as if I had been chosen to exert a decisive influence upon the course of events. Daniel Josephus Jitta, an uncle of my wife's, was one of the most outstanding Dutch lawyers of his time. A member of the Council of State, he was a specialist in the field of international civil law. At the Congress of the International Law Association which was held at Madrid in 1913, it was decided that the next meeting should take place at The Hague in August, 1914, and that the Peace Palace should be inaugurated upon this occasion. For this year, Jitta had been elected President of the Association. International collaboration came, of course, to naught in 1914, but he automatically remained President all the same. About 1917, friend and foe grew weary of the war, and the
whole world yearned
for peace.
in the
met on
The
diplomatic ballon d'essai was
neutral ground, but
nobody dared towards It was reconciliation. step generally thought that if one succeeded in gathering together distinguished the
air,
negotiators
first
representa-
of all belligerent nations, and offered them an opportunity to speak their minds, the first step towards an amicable arrangement exert an might well be achieved, and the various peoples tives
enormous pressure upon their put an end to the massacre.
respective
might governments in order to
My plan was conceived in view of this state of affairs. I intended to persuade our uncle to convoke, in his capacity as its President, a of the International Law Association at The
meeting
which Britons and Frenchmen
Hague, at resume wanted to
could, for the first time,
contact with the Germans. In the
first
302
place,
however,
I
THE notify Dr
WAR YEARS
[1914-1918]
German envoy
at The intenHague, of to me his opinion on the matter. For this tions, asking give purpose, I composed a little memorandum and submitted it to the
Rosen, the
my
him
envoy through
his attache,
Roland Koster,
become the German ambassador
in Paris.
I
who later was to was informed that
while the envoy approved of my plan, he himself wished to remain in the background, but that I could always confer with Koster.
Now the attack on the good uncle could be launched. On one of our usual walks in the small wood near The Hague, I impressed him that he be destined to become one of the greatest upon might benefactors of crucified humanity if he took the initiative in sum-
moning the most distinguished lawyers amongst the belligerents to which he was, after all, entitled as acting President of the Association. Visibly moved, he followed the a
meeting
a step to
exposition of
my plan. Some time later he gave me his
decision:
If I were merely a private individual, I should gladly take up your suggestion. But since I am also a member of the Council of State presided over
by the Queen, I belong, as it were, to the government and could only play a mediatorial role at the Foreign Minis-
request a role which, for the moment, I do not deem desirable/ Despite ill success, however, I did not throw ter's
my
yet up the game, but decided to secure the co-operation of his wife. Aunt Caroline was a simple and thoroughly kind-hearted creature to
whom it seemed quite clear what a blessing the success of our plot would be
whole world. She was in fact able to overcome her husband's resistance: a few months later, when I was again in Holland, Uncle Daniel informed me that he had performing sounded various English colleagues on the matter, Lord Parmoor among them; their consultation with the British government, however, had resulted in a negative reply because, meanwhile, America's entry into the war had, of course, considerably increased the chances of the Allies. Thus ended a beautiful dream, ^nd I have never again acted as an amateur diplomat. for the
In 1917, however, an Austrian commissioner of police tried to enlist me in the Austrian espionage service in Sweden. I objected that the technique
of this profession was quite unknown to me, 303
CARL FLESCKC wasn't
as difficult as all that: all I
whereupon he explained that Hotel des Anglais, had to do was to put up at the Stockholm established had nations all of fourth floor, where the spies ^their conditions internal the about to try and get news and headquarters, Since I did not in Russia (this was shortly before the revolution). to test my abilities as an at the hotel, I had no opportunity it
stay
upon my return, bitterly disappointed my employer. for the rest, of a My feelings towards the belligerents were, mother whose tongue subject discordant nature. As a
emissary and,
Hungarian
was German, I had, of course, Germany's victory hate the other hand I could not summon up any in fact,
owing
to
my
French education and
at heart,
but on^
against France;
my German
senti-
My
nations. stood right in the middle between the two of the continuation policy of Charlecredo was the political 1 a for and Napoleon, the desire genuine and unconditional
ments,
I
magne
two great Separated a monstrous misunderstanding, they are destined to
collaboration between the centuries
form It is
by
.
for
nations.
each other peacefully. complement and penetrate them that love but spurned apart. I consider keeps rare still example of a convinced and, alas, very
a unity, to
not hate,
myself a perfect German-Frenchman. During the war,
I
in always refused to play
because the importation of German artists^ occupied territory, a few years into enemy country was, I felt, just as provocative as, in Orchestra Conservatoire Paris the of occupied concerts later, the
Mainz.
The summer of 1915 we Lake,
whence
Partenkirchen.
acquainted
me
we
spent at Tutzing
often took a
weekend
on the Starnberger trip
to
Garmisch-
was there that the pianist Gottfried Galston* with the technique of mountaineering. Towards It
as it were, accomplished my masterpiece with I climbed which Little Waxenstein, conquering the notorious of Artur Schnabel and two guides. In spite my forty-two years, I
the end of summer,
I
withstood the exertions of what
is
perhaps the most fascinating
my
health. detrimental effect upon sport without It was in Garmisch, too, that I made the acquaintance of the Rosenheim family, whose Berlin home was a musical centre for *Karl der Grosse ('Charles the Great'), 768-814.
304
THE WAR YEARS [1914-1918] Sunday evening from six to eleven, it 'offered, by turns, good food and sometimes even better musicmaking. There hardly was an artist at that time whose name was not to be found in the Rosenheims' musical album-cum-diary of 1 programmes. Here was chamber music at its finest, string and piano music of every kind, whereas solo performances were or so: every thirty years
the exceptions.
among
were Artur Schnabel, later
The
on, myself.
The
pillars
of
this
musical
community
the violinist Wittenberg and, extremely kind-hearted and beneficent
his wife,
who
reached the age of eighty-six, played the part of a in particular, her final handshake was greatly appregood fairy;
'hostess
by various young artists, since its central purpose was the salon must "negotiation of a twenty-mark piece. The Rosenheim ciated
have been the
last
remnant of the golden age of Hausmusik in
.Berlin.
in
The summer months of the last two years of the war we spent The Hague. With the increasing scarcity of food in Germany it
was important to let the children have at least a few months' I myself adequate and healthy nourishment. At the same time, "felt the need for recreation, for diversion from the gnawing worries about the outcome of the war.
The wife of Dr Rosen, the
excellent pianist, a granddaughter of Moscheles. Together, we gave a recital at the German legalgnaz for German children, in the tion in aid of the
^German envoy, was an f
^presence of various |e.g.
holiday camps German naval officers interned in Holland,
the Emden, the young Captain MuUer, the commander of
and many
Tirpitz,
^ We
others.
attended the stayed near Scheveningen and regularly concerts there, which were then directed by the French
symphony
conductor Rene-Btton. He dared to make music with me, an which at that time would still be considered "fenemy alien an act da
mortal sin in France.
The
foreign holiday-makers
were mainly
*A free translation of Flesch's Hausmusik (domestic music and music-making, for which there is no English term; opposed to music for public performance), American dictionaries list and define the German word. Technically speaking, my translation is really incorrect, for not by the widest stretch of the term 'chamber the ;foiusic' could it come to include vocal music. In the present context, however, Js
'chamber'
is
the point.
305
CARL FLESCH spies
and
whom neutral
of all nations, with a few artists among them, had offered an opportunity to breathe Thus I made the acquaintance of the pianist, Vera
deserters
their profession air.
Schapira, and her husband, Richard Specht. Vera Schapira was one of the most curious artistic types I ever met. Here was an outward talent of the highest calibre which
stood in an unnatural contrast to her morbid character. It was said that owing to her kleptomania she had once come into conflict
with the
police,
and
that Specht
had married her in order
tc
rehabilitate her.
She was an unequalled interpreter of virtuoso music of the cold brilliant, glittering kind.
While
she
was
able to offer exhaustive
Concerto or Strauss' Burlesque for* renderings of Liszt's Eb major was she and orchestra, capable of this kind of remark before piano '
playing Beethoven's
G
major Concerto: 'Mark
this
passage,
v
where I shall employ an upward glance which will exactly correspond to the modulation and will therefore increase the effect tenfold/ At the same time, hers was a typically Viennese esprit, sparkling and cynical.
eighteen years later, coming to an end.
A lovable adventuress, when
she rightly
felt
she poisoned herself that her career
wa?
Her husband was a grandchild of Vienna's golden age of the. whose unequalled classics were Hanslick, Kalbeck, feuilleton, few exceptions, their gifted sucand Speidl; with very Spitzer cessors indulged in verbal pyrotechnics for their
the most of
effective phrases
and exotic
own sake, making*
adjectives.
But
it
cannot
be gainsaid that Specht belonged to a higher class of his epigonic kind than most, for he evinced a thorough musical education, and*:
was very well informed about contemporary music owing to his personal acquaintance with such musicians as Mahler, Johann Strauss and Richard Strauss. In the long run, however, no talent?* can
resist
the paralysing influence of the Viennese cafes'
all
too
1
world
until
4
'A Viennese won't be anything in the^ he leaves Vienna
comfortable atmosphere In reply to
!'
my
question whether he had yet been to see the
x<
Aber der erschlafTenden Gemiitlichkeit der Wiener KafTeenausatmosphare^ kann kein Talent auf die Dauer widerstehen.*
306
THE
WAR
YEARS [1914-1918]
Specht said quite candidly: 'How could I possibly? I always have to take Vera's dog for a walk.' Utterly docile, he was the hen-pecked husband par excellence, dazzled by her vivid personality. Shortly afterwards,
famous
their
art collection at the Mauritshuis,
marriage was dissolved.
A culinary inspiration for
one's concert tours abroad
was the
chance of smuggling foodstuff into Germany. Argus-eyed allied were posted at the neutral frontiers, lest a bar of representatives chocolate might reach
German
territory.
of my double violin case served abled
me
The
well in
loose leather cover
this situation: it
en-
me to import chocolate by the kilogram.
new year of 1918 had arrived, but the of the gravity of the situation. At to admit refused Germans a dinner party in 1917, I had aroused general indignation when In the meantime, the
I
an early armistice, shyly ventured to suggest that in the interest of to for advisable Germany agree to a minor terrimight prove
it
torial sacrifice in Alsace. In 1918,
for such a step.
The American
however,
it
was already too
contribution
grew
ever
late
more
big spring offensive failed; Foch began his counterthrust; and Germany was finally driven into the defensive. Thus effective; the
the fated
month of September approached. Ludendorff
lost his
head, advised peace, and immediately revoked his opinion. home front was in despair.
In early Aeries
7
November, Schnabel, Becker and myself had
of trio
and sonata
recitals in the
Rhineland.
The
to give a
On November
we played at Bonn. Back at our hotel after the recital, we heard
rumours about
a revolt in
Cologne:
sailors
from Kiel were said to
of mental adjustment to Jiave proclaimed the republic. By way the desperate situation, there was, at that time, a general atmos1 decided to seize this opportuphere of Galgenhumor, and we, too, to watch a revolution a kind of event which we only knew
nity
from history books. Next morning at Cologne station, however, we saw how the common sailors tore down the shoulder-straps from the officers' uniforms, and we grew conscious of the gravity
We
decided to Evaporate' as speedily as possible; Becker the on any case, railway services were gradually stopping. 1 merriment. Lit. 'gallows-humour', i.e. grim humour and reckless
of the
situation.
C.F.-X
307
CAUL FLESCS
'^s-i"-
-'
we
L gp emoze A
ttain
a five
t
not morning in order
tc
,
nss
our demobilized ssoldier in to him: four weeks, had not come as a surprise collapse to the front, and of i
troops had tad to direct a transport bolted. had men the three-quarters of Re :~n-l to igned to The Gottingen recital, too, went according plan. the future to wait and see what sad thmgs tbekftte people seemed from Gassel, w, witnes.ecl for them. Travelling back e
m
?in
i
an incident which
;
.
,
at a later
to assume symbolic sigmstage came
THE
WAR YEARS
[1914-1918]
The communistic tide which had risen overnight and threatened to destroy Germany had created the impression of amongst holders of fourth-class railway tickets that the concept a classless society might profitably be applied to railway classes
ficance for us.
Three such 'revolutionaries' appeared in our second-class that compartment and proceeded to explain to the conductor too.
were no longer any 'class distinctions'. The conductor, however, was a Prussian of the traditional kind, for whom railway were eternal and revolutions transient; he would not regulations be intimidated and actually succeeded, with a few vigorous words, there
in getting the men back to their fourth class, 'Notwithstanding all rhetoric and big words', I remarked to Schnabel, 'this nation is
the German's need is to constitutionally incapable of revolutions: belief in authority is inobey; he loves to be ordered about. His eradicable/
October 9, 1918, I had completed my forty-fifth year. A dark and gloomy future lay before all of us who had remained faithful to Germany during these last years. Thanks to my healthy constitution, however, I felt sufficiently young to be able to hope
On
Tor better days. After a troublesome journey, Schnabel and and faced the future with calm resignation.
309
I
returned home,
THE POST-WAR YEARS Aged Forty-six
to
[1918-1923]
Fifty
THE long-feared catastrophe, then, had happened: Germany had was disbanding. The war, the Kaiser had fled, and the army called Spartasocialists had come into power; the communists,
lost the
contested their victory.
cists,
The
trial
of strength took place in
round the the revolution of 1919. Despite the bullets that whistled to with, in all demonstrations against corners, I begin
participated,
the Spartacists, though I took to my heels when I became scared or less life. After a few weeks, with the help of more for
my
the revolt was crushed. regular troops, The seductive influence of Bolshevist theories excitable
mind
is
easily
a separate story, as instructive as
it is
view of the subsequent political sloughings of various concerned. Schnabel's excursion into extreme leftism ended*
delicate artists
artist's
upon the
ia
somewhat abruptly with his ascent to the sphere of the 'stars'. The 1 was infected with the Spartacist^" composer von Reznicek, too, that time, he had just heard me play the 'Hungarian At epidemic. and, strongly impressed, had decided to Concerto of 9
Joachim
write a violin concerto for me. 'Mind you, something popular^ accessible to the multitude, as he put it. I easily comprehensible,
was
attracted
for a chat
by his noble personality and he,
between working hours.
and amused perplexed mother's
side,
latest rulers
too, liked to
On these occasions, I was bothi
to note that this aristocrat
descended from Prince
before Carol
I,
drop in
Stirbei,
who, on
his
one of Rumania's
turned out to be a radical anarchisf
destruction of existing conditions regarded the out-and-out as the sine qua non of a future and better world. He was completely
who
impoverished,
and
his
wife earned their livelihood
by giving
Emil Nikolaus von Reznicek [1860-1945] was an Austrian conductor and^ composer with a great deal of stage experience. He wrote, amongst other things, 1
ten operas, Diejungfrau von Orleans (after Schiller) and Holofemes (after Judith)
among them. 310
HebbeM
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923] bridge lessons; in his desperate situation, the annihilation of the existing social order seemed to him the only possible solution, Russia serving as a shining example. In contrast to these confused dreams of the future, his Violin Concerto proved to be a reactionary salon piece, intentionally shallow, and showing a confounded
resemblance to de Beriot's students' concertos. As hehadaskedme of my unreserved opinion, I gave him a candid
for
description the crushing impression his work had made on me. He seemed to share view, for he committed the manuscript to the flames. 1 While the post-war years were not a favourable for the
my
development of
ideal values,
it
was perhaps
reaction to the anti-artistic state of affairs that
period unconscious
my
prompted
two important
steps
Violin Playing,
and the foundation of the Hilfsbundfilr
the decision to write a
me
work on The Art
to
of
deutsche
Musikpflege (an association to help German musicians). In 1919, 1 had frequent opportunities to meet Max Dessoir, the vriter on aesthetics, and to talk with him about of
problems
idolin
technique.
)f some
He seemed impressed by the novelty and daring
of views, and thought it would assuredly be important or the great community of violinists if I ordered thoughts and loted them down with a view to them at a later stage, publishing replied that I had no idea of the technique of writing, whereipon he suggested that I should make a beginning by jotting down ny ideas as they came to me, and leave their systematic arrangenent until later. It was at Schierke in the Hartz on a sunny summer
my
my
norning in 1919 that, strictly according to instructions, I bought nyself a copy-book, walked into the wood, duly sat down on the ;tump of a tree and patiently awaited the onflow of inspiration. Anon, however, I had to realize that this unsystematic and primitive way of writing books was of no avail, at any rate for
time-honoured text-book method of developan initial string of cues into a ing general outline remained the best. myself, arid that the
Once defined, my route directed my ideas and prevented me from digressing, and presently I was able to show Dessoir a general preface wherein I
expounded
my
syllabus.
^e may have had another copy, for a Violin Concerto of von Reznicek's exists in print.
311
CARL FLESCH Dessoir was an inestimable adviser. So far as the actual sub-
book was concerned,
stance of the
to be sure,
he was more of a
recipient, but for the arrangement of the subject matter and the exclusion of inessentials, his wide and profound experience proved
of extraordinary value. Fanatical purist that he was, he
removed every foreign word from
my
pitilessly
manuscript for which a
German equivalent could be found, thus making me appreciate the importance of preserving the purity of the German language. style attracted him from the outset. Ready cliches and stale
My
were indeed odious to me, and since I had something to found the form in which to cast my thoughts. Dessoir's was the opposite of a one-track-mind. A doctor of medicine and philosophy, well versed in all the arts, he was a polyglot student of aesthetics, a Germanic scholar, musician and violinist, a highly finished stylist and conversationalist with just an
phrases
say, I easily
who further occupied himself, by way with unmasking spiritualist mediums. He was a noble and kind-hearted man of great integrity. His movements and gestures were not altogether free from a kind of stiff pedantry atavistic
of
dash of histrionics,
a side-line,
;
indeed, he
not have been to everyone's
many, he seemed a somewhat precious and effeminate eccentric, and among his closer professional colleagues he had the reputation of a Jack1 and Once a-dandy Jack-of-all-trades. you put up with some of his superficial whims, however, you discovered a wise and wideawake man of the world, a comrade whom you could trust and whose companionship was as instructive as it was enjoyable. My
own
career
may
he influenced decisively
taste: to
as accoucheur
of The Art of
Violin Playing.
The Hilfsbund filr deutsche Musikpflege, on the other hand, owed its birth to a more accidental inspiration. With the progressive devaluation of the German mark, the material lot of the musical profession had noticeably deteriorated, for musicians' salaries had not risen in proportion to the cost of living. As early as 1917, it will be remembered, I had given, together with the wife of Dr Rosen, the German envoy at The Hague, a charity concert in aid of German which had holiday camps, yielded the approxi1
The German
phrase,
Hans
in alien Gassen, rolls these
312
two Jacks
into one.
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923] net proceeds of 5,000 guilders. Now, in the winter of 1920, the recital with her, it vhen partner invited me to repeat truck me that the impoverished German musicians might profit tiate
my
and
so
hould go
to
>y
it,
agreed on condition that half of the net proceeds needy colleagues. 2,200 guilders fell to my share,
I
the thereupon I invited to a meeting Professor Georg Schumann, of the editor lirector of the Singakademie, Paul Schwers, the illgemeine
Musikzeitung,
Kestenberg,
musical
adviser
to
the
Felix Deutsch, the General Manager of the vlinistry of Education, 1 \.E.G. Union, and a certain Dr Richard Stern, a reputed adminisfound an rator, and informed these gentlemen that I intended to distress purpose of alleviating the growing the was prepared to offer necessary imongst musicians, and that I
issociation for the
>asic capital.
In due course, the association was officially registered, zealous members' contributions, lotteries, and
my
ind donations,
America
steadily increased its resources. Eventually, subsidized to be by the government itself so that, during
reflections in
t came he first twelve years, we were able to distribute several hundred 2 ;housand marks in gold among impoverished musicians, and ;hus to save many literally from starvation. In the course of time, iie committee expanded and came to include, amongst other 3 and Geheimrat4 Hinrichsen of Dersonages, Georg Schxinemann
the music publishers. When, in 1933, the anti-Semitic laws :ame into force, I, the founder of the association, was not rejected to the board and was disposed of by way of a conventional of 'the interest I had shown' in the venture. Peters,
My acknowledgment since I :ase was perhaps of more than the usual charming irony, kad happened to be the only musician in Germany and a the bargain who had helped his less fortunate foreigner into at that critical stage with deeds rather than German colleagues
with euphonious words. At the time of the Spartacist revolt and its after-effects, had become a somewhat uncomfortable country to live
Germany in. I
did not believe in the
The German
x
bloom of proletarian
equivalent of, say, s,o Q Q 100,000 marks equalled See p. 315 f., text and note. 4 Privy Counsellor (even literally 2
*The General
m 8ld. so).
313
Electric*.
art; it
seemed to
CARL FLESCH me, on the contrary, that centuries of a musical culture which had been kept alive by surpassing talents were about to succumb to a to a levelling-down process that would do for rage
equalization,
when I away with anything disturbingly outstanding. Therefore, intended to Music of learnt in 1919 that the Vienna Academy which had entrust to me the master class for violinists a position Otakar Sevcik's remigration to Czechoslovakia, I was attracted by the I initially left off, i.e. of estabhad Bohm idea of continuing where Joseph school of international significance in Vienna after lishing a violin and of redirecting to the conof about
been vacant
since
felt
inclined to accept the task.
stagnation, seventy years cert hall all the valuable talent which, for decades,
devoted
itself to ensemble
work from
When
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.
that the authorities papers, however, offer die post to myself or to Rose
had mainly
the Schrammels I
1
to the
read in the Viennese
were undecided whether to who, in point of fact, was
2 as a teacher notwithstanding his great absolutely untalented musical and technical merits, I was forced to conclude that respon-
Vienna had no inkling of the finer nuances of to stay in Berlin, where fewer gifted teaching. Thus, I preferred violinists were to be found, but where there was a greater underof what constitutes good violin teaching. In 1921, 1 took sible quarters in
standing
weeks' master course at the Hochschule. Upon charge of a twelve the other violin teachers' protests, the description 'Special Course'
which, however, did not stop among them, and as twenty-four pupils, outstanding with the result that the listeners, from attending my class, (Sonderkursus)
had to be chosen
violinists
many
course was repeated in the following spring with the same artistic success. The material upshot of my work, on the other hand, was negligible.
For since
the summer,
I
did not receive
my salary before the end of
by which time the German mark had
fallen to a
1
See footnote on p. 26. There is no question here of professional jealousy on the part of the author; I have checked his observation very thoroughly and all my reliable evidence, including that of a loyal and successful Rose* pupil, entirely confirms his diaga
nosis. It is significant, too, that not a single great fiddler has emerged from Rose*'s not so much because a good teacher makes a good pupil, but because a
school
potentially great violinist will usually find out soon
314
enough
that his teacher
is
bad.
.
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923] catastrophic degree, I received no more than about four marks in gold for two hundred lessons. 1
hundred
At that time, the Hochschule was headed by Franz Schreker and Georg Schiinemann. In the last resort, Schreker was the victim of Paul Bekker's overestimation: though otherwise highly judicious, Bekker regarded Schreker as the successor of Richard Wagner and tried to influence public opinion accordingly. In reality,
however,
Schreker was only an extremely gifted musician of great technical 2 ingenuity for whom colour came before everything else. Personally,
I
have always
felt
that Schreker's music sprang
from
a
superficial rather than an inner impulse; his inflated fame was bound to burst like a children's balloon. As administrative director
of the Hochschule, in any case, he was altogether useless. His main activity was to sign the official documents prepared by Schiine-
mann. He
rarely put in an appearance at the Hochschule, which Havemann to the observation that
the violinist Gustav
prompted on the first of each month, Schreker was 'The Treasure-Seeker', 3 whereas for the rest of the time he was 'The Distant Sound'. 4 Fundamentally, he was a 'good sort' who, if his existence had been more narrowly and realistically circumscribed e.g. if he had remained Vienna's musical ruler could have fulfilled his task as creator of time-bound values. For the rest, he seemed to me an
exemplary teacher
who knew how
to keep a pupil's personality
unimpaired.
The Hochschule was
really
run by Georg Schiinemann, 5 the
per hour. can be objectively stated that this is hardly a fair appraisal of Schreker's output: it seems that Flesch's sober reaction against Schreker's exaggerated reputation drove his judgment towards the other extreme. Whatever the purely musical value of Schreker's works, their historical significance is considerable and verifiable. Arnold Schoenberg has described the role his harmonics have played in the 'emancipation of the dissonance* ; besides, it must be remembered that he was the father of the modern chamber orchestra (hear his ballet, The Birthday of the from Schoenberg's First Chamber Infanta, after Oscar Wilde's fairy story) which, Symphony to Strawinsky's 'third period' chamber ensembles or Benjamin Britten's and Boris Blacher's chamber operas, has come to dominate the widest H.e. 2s.
2
It
.sector
of the contemporary
scene.
*Der Schatzgraber, Schreker's fifth opera. *Der Feme Klang, Schreker's second opera, and perhaps his most famous. 5 at Berlin Unil884~i945, musicologist and flutist, a pupil of Kretschmar in 1907. He started his career as a flute versity, where he took his doctor's degree
315
CARL FLESCH
who later became head Vice-Principal (stellvertretender Direktor), State Library's Music Department, after Prussian the of (Direktor) he had devoted all his energy to the Hochschule for thirteen years. Thanks to his many-sided talent he had succeeded, in the course of short period, in raising the status of this conthis comparatively
servatoire to such an extent that as the
it
presently
most distinguished educational
came
to be regarded
institute in the
world.
Schiinemann represented an ideal combination of theoretical in every knowledge, practical ability and administrative skill;
home. His zest for work and knowledge of people, coupled as they were with a lovable perand a self-sacrificing devotion to sonality, a winning modesty artistic
sphere he
music in
all its
felt
forms,
equally at
won him
as
much
esteem for his adminis-
State Library's Music Department as, previously, he in the capacity of director of the conservatoire and enjoyed
tration
had
of the
was all the more remarkable university lecturer. His versatility since his exhaustive knowledge of his several subjects would have him the luxury of specialization. Owing to the amalpermitted
gamation of all these isolation, his
gifts
which,
was the strongest
only be found in
in German music. single influence course I liked Alma Moodie best.
the pupils in my Australian and Irish origin, she had studied, as a child, with
Amongst
Of
as a rule, will
C&ar Thomson and Oskar Back at Brussels. In 1914, Max Reger sent her to me, but she did not commence studies because she had to leave Germany: her mother feared that they would both be enemy aliens. Without the benefit of any regular kind she of study, stayed at Brussels until the end of the war, living from hand to mouth without any aim or purpose. In 1918, she interned as
on the last train from Belgium. By had badly deteriorated, though her talent had not greatly suffered. She now started lessons with me and worked most intensely; two years later, her debut caused a sensawas lucky enough
to escape
that time, her fiddling
Although, subsequently, she did not always succeed to the same degree, she must nevertheless be regarded as the most tion.
virtuoso and music
critic. His works include studies of the history of conducting, of choral music, musical autographs, etc. ; he also wrote a biography of Carl Friedrich Zelter.
German
316
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923] outstanding female violinist of her time, a worthy successor of
Norman-Neruda not least in view of her general musical endowment. Her lasting importance rests upon the fact that, between 1920 and 1930, she stimulated modern compositions for the violin in a similar
before her. Pfitzner alone,
way
Amongst
as
Joachim, Sarasate and Ysaye had done
other works, the Violin Concertos of Hans
and Ernst Kfenek,
as
well as
many
sonatas for violin
owe their existence to her art. 1
Amongst
my
other pupils, the sixteen-year-old
Max
Rostal
and the thirteen-year-old Szymon Goldberg were by far the most 2 outstanding. Rostal came to acquire a thorough orchestral experience as a leader at Oslo, whereupon, in 1928, he joined the staff of the Berlin Hochschule as my deputy. Two years later, he succeeded Wolfsthal, who had meanwhile died. Szymon Goldberg, who had become my pupil at the early age often, started out as an orchestral leader; in this capacity, his five years with the Berlin Philharmonic under Furtwangler constituted an absolutely unique achievement. In the sphere of chamber he has formed a sonata team with Lily Kraus, with music,
Exemplary results.
My colleagues at the Hochschule tended to watch my 'intrusion' with mixed
feelings. At the time, these well-paid violin teachers descended, without exception, from the Joachim school, and they regarded the fresh air of contemporary principles of violin still
playing as a threat to the comfortable routine of their existence. Only Gustav Havemann, the youngest among them, seemed to
my point of view. In more favourable circumhe might well have become Adolf Busch's counterpart. His personality as a violinist was essentially that of a pleasant daredevil. If he had perfected his technique instead of playing in orchestras before the war and, thereafter, joining in the harlequin's dance of sympathize with
stances,
ultra-modern string quartets up to the time of the Nazis, only to eventually rather than his instrument who
practise politics
knows whether he would not have become one of the ^orn at Brisbane in
1900,
Alma Moodie
died at the early age of forty-two at
Cologne, where she had married a lawyer. 2 Unfortunately, Flesch did not live to describe these
317
leading
artists'
subsequent careers.
CARL FLESCH exponents of in him.
German
violin playing.
He
certainly
had the
stuff
and the resultant pessimism Increasingly hopeless conditions end-of-the-world an that at time, produced had, atmosphere in
Germany which manifested itself, materially, in a disgusting race for pleasure and, on the artistic side, in an utterly anarchic and little of, purely cerebral decadence. It was a period which thought the imperishable values of the past and only valued modernity,
however of string
inferior. Publishers, conductors,
music
critics,
leaders
they all joined in this wild chase after nervequartets as early as racking ugliness. Looking back on these years, I wrote Art of Violin Playing [translated 1926 in the second volume of
my
by Frederick H. Martens]
:
A group
of interested persons [has] gathered around conmusical production, which largely desires the cultitemporary vation of
modern compositions for other than purely artistic first among them critics of a certain type, for
considerations;
whom the belated recognition accorded Beethoven^ Wagner, Brahms^ Strauss and Reger is a warning example. Posterity, so they think, will be less apt to take it amiss, if they raise ten unworthy artists on their shield than if they fail in the immediate recognition of one who is worthy. Older works to be reviewed are dismissed with a line, while every bit of modern 'trash' is
whose
given columns of space. This, again, induces all those on public opinion conductors and
existence depends to cultivate interpreters reasons.
ditioned
modern music, if only for practical The engagement of an executant artist is conon the performance of some specified modern work
.
.
.
of whose artistic value or lack of value the conductor is hardly aware. ... I am far from barring the door against all that is
new as a matter of principle. Hence, no hitherto unusual combination of tones frightens me into giving up the attempt to out the inner value of a work. ... In spite of
search
my
honest endeavour to
move with
the times, however,
it still
seems most regrettable to me that linked with the exaggerated and indiscriminate cult of all that comes into being today, is the neglect of the valuable music of yesterday. I have in mind, in particular,
Max
Reger
(d.
1916), this already half-forgotten
318
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923]
Who
still plays his chamber music ? And who among the disciples of modernism has any knowledge or understanding of Beethoven 's last string quartets and piano sonatas
master.
which, so far all
as
that has since
the revolutionary spirit
been written
far
is
concerned, leave
behind them
1
to the devaluation of the German mark, concerts and abroad had become particularly desirable for German
Owing recitals
As early as 1920, I had pointed out in a letter to the that foreigners were in a position to Musikzeitung Allgemeine industrial not only products, but also spiritual goods at a acquire executants.
price far below their actual value. I suggested founding a teachers' union to control fees the members of this cartel would pledge :
themselves to
made
demand
foreign fees in foreign currency.
When
I
the suggestion was found whimsical, exaggerated and but a year later it was carried out with a rare degree pessimistic, it,
of unanimity meanwhile, I had formed my own one-man union. said and done, it was the foreign concerts that ;
But when all was were particularly
from the economic point of view: to maintain a family for a whole would suffice a single concert fee month. At the time of the Kapp putsch and the ensuing railway strike, for instance, I tried my utmost to get from Hamburg to The Hague, where I was expected for a series of concerts. Although I had to travel in stages and had to avail myself of to every conceivable means of transportation from a locomotive a mere hours' with a horse-cab, I did reach The Hague thirty-six attractive
delay.
The
was a journey strangest experience of this sort, however, to Berlin via Aix-la-Chapelle. I was loaded with
from Maastricht
about half a hundredweight of food, mainly sausages, cheese and chocolate, which I proposed to smuggle through the French
and British zones.
My
adventures on the
way would have been
funny film. I bribed the French officials was stopped by morally with my knowledge of their language, the British, had to spend the night in a gambling den, and conindustrial tycoons to discover suitable means spired with several an inn run by of Together, we tried to put up at
good enough
for a
transportation.
Spartacists,
but decided upon a speedy escape
319
when it seemed that
CARL HJSSCH
my
companions were recognized
class.
When I finally
arrived
at.
the
members of the exploiting Anhalter Bahnhof in Berlin I
as
found that all my foodstuffs had vanished. Pure art, the ideal of the best possible public performance for which you could prepare yourself at leisure, had become a thing of had turned into an unpredictable the past. Concert-giving adventure: the last hours before a concert
you had to stand in a that there was no room in found arrival and train, you upon your the hotel At the concert itself, you had to play by candle-light because of some strike, and after a great success you were unable to get to bed because the cabbies refused to drive an exhausted artistic risks artist home. At times one even had to take purely as conmuch as have never would one which, in normal times, Beethoven two I for instance, sidered. At Munich in 1921, gave recitals with Bruno Walter without any rehearsal and without ever having played with him before, because Rose, who was to have played with him, could not get to Munich owing to a
way
rail-
strike.
My property, too, had dwindled in consequence of the general slump and my lation.
By
my losses by specubankruptcy: my of the mark credited me
ill-advised attempts to recover 1 realized that I was approaching
1921
balance at the time of the stabilization
with about 4 per cent, of my original property. The thought of in the case of my death having failed to provide for my family was unbearable, whence I had to consider another concert tour to America. For the moment, to be sure, I was still doing very well. were filled with foreign I foreign pupils, my pockets taught chiefly banknotes which, reckoned in marks at that time, seemed to an enormous fortune, while a few months later,
represent
reckoned in gold marks, they amounted to a very modest sum. Thus I got in touch with the Judson concert agency in Philadela series of concerts during phia, and we concluded a contract for
months of 1923-4, the receipts from which were to sei on a healthier basis. my Meanwhile German concert life had entered a state of stagnation, whence it passed into a catastrophic decline that was soon t< reveal all the symptoms of a complete dissolution. It had becom the winter
finances again
320
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923]
moreandmore difficult to accept new engagements, or to fulfil existing ones, since, owing to the steadily progressive inflation, the agreed fee often did no more than just pay the cost of the journey. Artur
Schnabel had resigned from our
trio
True, in Karl Friedberg [b. 1872] to him, but in the 1922-3 season soloists
were concerned, died
soon
after the
end of the war.
we
gained a worthy successor German concert life, so far as
a natural death. For myself the activities was the most painful
renunciation of chamber-musical experience of the time.
Karl Friedberg was equal to Schnabel in his musical and techbut as a personality he was completely different. His
nical gifts,
technique was no longer at
its best owing to his having suffered of symptoms paralysis which, however, he had largely overcome; and he made up for any disablement by his fine-nerved, subtle, natural and unaffected temperament, poetic in the best sense of the word, which allowed him to communicate to the listener the intimate mood of a work, undamaged by intel-
from
serious
At such moments his features acquired a spiritual almost made him appear beautiful. He somewhich expression ^what resembled Voltaire and had a slight lisp. He was adaptable and capable of great enthusiasm, but his intense artist's imagination manifested itself in his daily life, too, with the result that one lectual dissection.
could not always take
at their face
value the promises or assertions
for something. Becker and I were he was the only possible successor to Schnabel, but, ^agreed that as Becker said somewhat maliciously, 'You must be ready for
%e made when he was
all afire
the possibility that if Friedberg writes you a letter and if you write him a letter he won't receive it'.
it
won't
Our
arrive,
collabora-
tion, so enjoyable in the purely artistic sphere, was often spoilt by of our friend's ardent imagination. But our friendthe
pranks
and my admiration for him withstood these pinpricks. He had been trained in the good old school of Klara Schumann, in an age when more weight was still given to the principles of correct phrasing than to maximal technical efficiency. It was -remarkable how Friedberg, after his right hand had been para^ship
Jysed, set to facility,
work with unbroken
which
will to regain his technical he cleverly adapted to the anatomical changes
CARL FLESCH which
his illness
most lovable
had caused. His
woman
wife,
of considerable
born a von Waetjen, is a both artistically and
stature
human
being, not a little responsible for strengthening his be remembered as in position society. Friedberg will always the most outstanding pupil of Klara Schumann, and as the most as
a
personality among German pianists of the preSchnabel generation. As a kind of parting token, Schnabel had dedicated his Sonata
interesting
1 unaccompanied violin to me. It is an interesting monstrosity, to which takes nearly an hour play, and offers a sample card of all
for
the contradictions of its composer's personality. Its accumulation/ of minor seconds, augmented sevenths and diminished tenths pro-
duced such an studying
it I
irritating effect
had
a
on
my nerves that in the middle of"
nervous breakdown which manifested
itself,
above all, in acute insomnia and drove me away from my summer holiday. The first performance took place in my home before an invited audience.
The
effect
was crushing.
It
was here
that the
otherwise not very commendable music critic Rudolf Kastner, uttered the famous bon mot: 'Dem Schnabel ist der Vogel hold 2 gewachsen/ A second performance followed in connection with an exhibition of modern pictures organized by the Gurlitt pub-
lishing X
company. Since
then, so far as
I
know, only
my
pupil
have not touched the passage following here or the somewhat parallel one on p. 260 because it seems to me that Flesch's double account of this work is' too important to be rolled into one or otherwise edited. 2 An excellent, but absolutely untranslatable pun. The allusion is to The Mastersingen, Act II, end of scene 3, where Sachs rounds off his soliloquy on I
Stolzing's artistic de"bicle:
Dem Vogel, der heut' sang, Dem war der Schnabel hold gewachsen; Macht er den Meistern bang', Gar wohl geel er doch Hans Sachsen (The bird
who
Has got a throat that rightly waxes; Masters may feel dismay, But well content with him Hans Sachs Vogel means bird, Schnabel
is
!
sang today
a bird's bill (replaced
by
is
!)
'throat' in the free translatior
quoted above). But in colloquial German, to have a 'Vogel' means to be cracked 01 I think the joke is still funnier if it avails itself of Wagner's complete
crazy.
sentence,
melody included
:
Dem Schnabel, der heut' sang, Dem war der Vogel hold gewachsen. 322
</)
"o
2. W)'
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923] Stefan Frenkel,
who had
an extraordinary
talent for
performing
problematic compositions, has played the Sonata from memory in public. It did not appear in print and would doubtless have fallen into oblivion but for the fact that I included the third
movement, complete with a commentary, among the of my Art of Violin Playing^ I
interpretation in Vol. II
studies in
regret the
tremendous trouble which, for years, I took with its execution, and for which nobody, not even the composer, ever thanked me.
Amongst conductors with whom I got into closer touch in I chiefly remember Hermann Scherchen, Georg
post-war years
Schneevoigt, Fritz Busch, Fritz Stiedry, Leo Blech and Heinz Unger. Originally a viola player, Hermann Scherchen [b. 1891] caused something of a stir towards the end of the war, when he conducted the first performance of Schoenberg's Pierrot lunaire, whose financial support was due to my endeavours. 2 His talent reveals itself
above
all
in contemporary works. His
is
a Faustian
nature, striving for ever greater differentiation of expression, and he knows how to impose his will his others, be
upon they generous patrons or orchestral players, by keeping his voice down to a hypnotic pianissimo. Though he began as a 'cellist, Georg Lennart Schneevoigt [1872
is a natural conductor. As a matter of rehe principle, indulges in conscious exaggerations of that 50 per cent, of any given degree of dynamics, considering
-1947] undoubtedly
markable
loudness or softness
is
lost
on
the
way from
the orchestra to the
audience. In his opinion, that is, the conductor's ff changes into mffor the audience, and his pp into p; hence he must always
ensure a stronger or weaker
volume than
that
which corresponds
^Supplement, pp. 223fF.
though this passage must be based on a multiple slip of memory, I am leaving stands because I find it impossible to substitute the true version, and in the hope that Flesch's very mistakes will eventually help to establish what he wished to communicate. The facts as I know them are that (a) Pierrot was first performed under Schoenberg at Berlin in 1912, the work and production being financed by Albertine Zehme (the reciter) and her husband; (b) Scherchen, who was twenty-one at the time, played, at the outside, a very subordinate role in the preparation of the production that of an odd-job man; (c) Fritz Stiedry, whom Flesch also mentions in his list above, did direct a well-known production of the work. it as it
C.F.-Y
3 23
CARL FLESCH
own perception. Although
to his
theory, taken
as a
there
whole it is marred in
is
a grain of truth in this view by the disadvan-
my
tage of conscious design, instead of a subconscious necessity of expression. But Schneevoigt at times achieved extraordinary effects
with
his principle, so
youthful fervour. As a
was combined with his a somewhat stagey wag, disarm-
long
man he is
as it
ingly funny.
Busch [1890-1951], Adolf's brother, is profoundly frank and honest, an enemy of all pose, straightforward, musical, uncomplicated and unsentimental, a typical German conductor in Fritz
one of the [b. 1871] though most conscientious and musical conductors of his generation, at his best in opera, perhaps only failed to achieve an international reputation in the concert hall, too, because he lacked the fascinating exterior of a Weingartner, Muck or Stokowski. Heinz Unger's artistic intentions are more significant than is his education: he has not risen from the ranks. The orchestral the best sense of the word. Leo Blech
member, like the simple soldier, carries a baton in his knapsack: Hans Richter was originally a horn player, Nikisch sat among the second
Stokowski played the organ, Koussevitzky the
violins,
double
bass.
my activities as soloist and teacher my work on of my Art of Violin Playing was rapidly advancing, driven
Alongside Vol.
I
How
I by an irresistible inner impulse. managed to combine these three fundamentally different activities remains an enigma to me. I sometimes devoted as much as ten hours' work a day to the book,
though
at
the cost of
my health;
but
I
had the
of hav-
satisfaction
ing the work ready for the printer towards the end of 1923 published by Ries
.
It
was
& Erler and achieved an uncommon success in
professional circles. Translations into English, Dutch, Italian and French soon followed, while I was unable to follow up suggestions to
have
it
translated into Russian, Spanish, Portuguese,
Hungarian, Czech and even Chinese, owing to the lack of suitable publishers.
A year later it
a rejoinder entitled Flesch and Eberhard appeared; dilettante named Schroeter, an
was written by a
sounding substitute for
his original
324
name of Schlesinger,
Aryanwhich
in
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923] 'method' was roundly condemned in favour of Eberhard's. 1 Siegfried Eberhard was the son of the Goby Eberhard who took
my
such a fancy to the idea of my Basic Studies, which to
him
in a private talk, that
1 had explained he published them under his own
name. His son Siegfried continued the paternal tradition in that for years on end he appropriated my ideas during walks or in until he he had sufficient material to publish cafes, thought independent efforts. He began with a treatise on the vibrato, in which, out of kindness, I helped him a great deal. Then he turned to changes of position, the holding of the violin, the 'disposition
of the body'
heavy tomes, mixtures of bombastic phrases and which he repeatedly attempted to force me into polemics by attacking me. But 1 did not take up the game, and would not enter into any discussion with him. He seemed to have developed a kind of hate-love for me and, more than anything, he would have liked to 'collaborate' with me. But notwithstanding his intolerable garrulity, he was not lacking in intelligence which, however, he chiefly used for the purpose ofinventing some fantastic surrogate for his own impotence as a violinist, which was platitudes, in
to take the place of the solid craftsmanship
he lacked. Despite his megalomania he was perhaps ultimately an honest dreamer, and certainly the most outstanding among the 'faith-healers' on the violin that have sprung out of the ground during the last decades like toadstools, to reach the apex in Josef Klein, who invented a system of study without the aid of the bow. Incidentally one cannot but wonder why there are far more charktans of the violin in Germany than loathsome hunt
in
all
after publicity
and
his
the other countries taken together. Probably because techniwere a secondary consideration in German violin
cal foundations
playing during the latter half of the nineteenth century: the spirit was left to dominate over the fragile matter; the artistic intention
was regarded
as the
main
thing,
and the
result in
sound
as
un-
important.
mediocre teacher, Josef Joachim, the interpreter of genius and
was
chiefly to
blame for this
state
of affairs. While the Hochschule
*K. Schroeter, Flesch/Eberhardt: Naturwidrige oder naturliche Violintechnik?, pp. 39, Leipzig, 1924.
325
CARL FLESCH were urged to be present at Joachim's public quartet in their own rehearsals, they were virtually left unsupervised as dishonourable, was 'technician' term studies. The regarded students
die only thing that mattered, even when in scraping noises. Hence the they found outward expression search for the philosopher's stone as ersatz for the absent solid found it successively in the vibrato, in craftsmanship. Eberhard in an unnaturally twisted body and c>f the changes position, naive to believe that this condition! finally in the physical
the
artistic intentions as
How
which indeed we all seek, can be produced by a or through the idle fixe of predetermined position of the body 'contact between instrument and body' It arises of itself when the player possesses the feeling of technical certainty, when in he can allow virtue of his mastery of the instrument
artistic solution,
!
sovereign himself to be spontaneous and full-blooded, to submerge himself in the spirit of the work without being troubled about the technical course
of events.
My American tour was to start in the second half of December. I had to sail on a urgent concert engagements definite day, on which only the French liner Paris was available for Powers were not yet journey, and subjects of the Central
Because of
my
my
on French ships. But my route was December 1923, after eleven years' absence I saw fixed, in the food shops, where the fiveabundance Paris again. What franc piece was the main coin in use, as opposed to starving Germany, where people reckoned in billions of marks The average Frenchman had no suspicion of the hopeless conditions welcomed and
as
passengers
so in
!
in Germany. If one tried to enlighten him, he shook his head incredulously, smiling ironically. It that during voyage I thought at
my
territory, for despite
soon scented
my
was not first
surprising, then, that I was in enemy
my Hungarian passport my fellow travellers
German outlook, and I was duly boycotted. The
whom I occasionally exchanged a few words were the pianists Edouard Risler and Ernst Schilling. Joseph Edouard Risler [1873-1929], the most distinguished pupil of only people with
326
THE POST-WAR YEARS [1918-1923] Diemer, was Marteau's counterpart a German-French mixture of Alsatian origin, with the German element predominating. His playing was genuine in sentiment and musical in expression, if a little on the slow and heavy side. I had lost sight of him for close on fifteen years, and was deeply shocked by the unmistakable 1
of his physical and artistic decline. He had resorted to drink, or apparently to deaden some unbearable pain, whether
signs
physical
mental. Ernest Schelling [1876-1939], of Polish origin, claimed have been Paderewski's only authentic pupil. He was the typical gentleman artist, having achieved independence through a wealthy marriage. He devoted himself to the organization of children's concerts, with the aim of teaching the young to become listeners a most laudable understanding undertaking, for in our of and canned of radio and music, age cinema, any attempt sport to save children's souls from the seductive powers of thoughtless and comfortable inactivity is welcome. At the beginning of the
Henry
to
I had suffered intolerably from sea-sickness and only after some days acquired the minimum immunity necessary to be able to appear in the dining-room and on deck. My deckchair neighbour was a Frenchman, with whom I soon entered into conversation, for we were brought together by our common sufferings. He introduced himself: Le Braz/ 'Anatole?' I asked. 'But do you know me?' he exclaimed in joyful amazement. 'Of course/ I replied, 'you are from Brittany and the themes of your novels are taken from the life of your own district/ Rather touched, he
voyage
remarked: 'So I'm
known even
in
We
Hungary;
I
shouldn't have
were thus brought closer together, and soon thought that/ our conversation turned to politics. I did not hesitate to tell him the plain truth about my German sentiments, as well as about conditions in Germany, of which he had to confess he had had no suspicion. Later, together with Risler and Schelling, I took part in a concert for the benefit of the ship's crew, and was invited to the for an captain's table, a quite special distinction at that time enemy alien who had dared for ten days during the occupation of iLouis
Diemer (Dimmer)
[184.3-1919], French pianist, teacher
327
and composer.
CARL FLESCH the Rulir to
make pro-German propaganda on French
soil.
Soon
the Statue of Liberty announced the immediate proximity of the American mainland. At the age of fifty 1 stepped on to American soil
for the second time, after
there
my first attempt to establish myself
had been interrupted by
the outbreak of the First
War.
328
World
AMERICA Aged I
ARRIVED
in
[1923-1928]
Fifty to Fifty-jive
New York
before Christmas,
had not changed a great deal since 1914.
Still taller
The metropolis skyscrapers,
still
louder illuminated advertisements, the absolute reign of the
motor-car musical
these
were the most
striking impressions. America's
had remained much the same, except that the leading orchestras showed great technical improvements owing to the immigration of numerous outstanding artists from Europe, too,
life,
conductors
as
well
After a time
as instrumentalists.
noticed another change the preponderance of Eastern Jews executant musicians. Before the war, amongst Eastern Jewry had been only represented by Elman and Zimbalist. In the course of and after the war, however, a number of outI
standing virtuosos had taken out American naturalization papers; at the same time, a considerable proportion of the violinistic
middle
class
form the
phony
had immigrated from Poland and Russia, and came to
staple elements in the string sections
orchestras
which were
distinguished of those MishakofE
We
owe
by
Burgin, Piastro and
as
above all, to the example of these three excellent an orchestral career is no longer felt to be a humiliat-
it,
violinists that
ing
led
such
fiddlers,
of the great symsome of the most
come-down for a fiddler who
numerous than
this elite,
started out as a soloist. Far
however, was the
whose natural, in fact racial,
talent
class
more
of mediocrities
could not be denied, but whose
make-up was distinctly modest. They fiddled of them, even though many landed eventually in bands and the like; but of an ultimate artistic purpose they
general cultural well, almost cafe
all
knew nothing. They showed no
interest in
immediately connected with the four repelled me all the more
since the
329
anything that was not
strings,
an
attitude
which
company of Schnabel, Busoni,
CARL FLESCH and Furtwangler, Galston, Petri, Eisner accustomed
many
had one of
others in Berlin
me to regard our position first and foremost as
of the broad mass of our profession. It was at that time that Josef Szigeti first appeared in America. He was born at Munkass in 1894 ofJewish parents, and his original A pupil of Jeno Hubay, he started his concert name was
artistic leaders
Singer. career at an early age. At sixteen he was supposed to become of the war, his father moved with him pupil, but at the outbreak
my
A
few years later, at the early age of twenty, at the Geneva Conservatoire. His activities as Szigeti was teaching a soloist ever widening, he moved on to Paris and devoted himself exclusively to his virtuoso career. Like so many violinists of school all too early and was left his
to Switzerland.
generation, Szigeti quitted to his own devices. In former times, fiddlers used to concentrate on their studies for many years before they stepped on to the concert platform, even when they had already achieved a great deal in their boyhood. Sarasate, for instance, won the first prize at the Paris Conservatoire at the age
three
when he
of Ysaye,
Kreisler,
tion; whereas
of fifteen, but he was thirty-
started his great virtuoso career.
and most well-known
nowadays the boys leap
The same
is
true
of my generafrom the classroom
violinists
direct
to the concert platform. violinist who has reSzigeti is our time's only distinguished tained the low right upper arm and the rectangular relation of
arm
wrist and lower
arms
his conservative
from
that
were usual
his
ago; allegedly, his
childhood habits.
His left-hand technique a
fifty years
modern posture, but the real reason for bowing is that he had no teacher to wean him
are too short for the
little
is
to the point
heavy
distinguished,
of
though
unreliability
at times it
when he
is
is
not in
other hand, is purity of his intonation, on the the at a tone has chaste piano level, especibeauty exemplary. His ally when heard in mechanical reproduction. In forte passages,
good form. The
however,
it is
accompany
his
not always free of scratchy noises, which also quick detache and spiccato, both executed too
close to the bridge. But in the main his technical ability is most further characteristic feature of his way of playing distinguished.
A
330
AMERICA [1923-1928] on accented beats, his head goes into independent action, instead of an integrated reaction of the entire body. As an interpreter, he feels strongly and sincerely, and is alive to his artistic individuality. In general, one gets the impression that is
that
antiquated technical resources have prevented the complete
development of his outstanding personality. Thus, Szigeti's real significance for contemporary musical life does not lie in the purely violinistic field, but in that of original and progressive programme-building. Ever in search of new, unknown, or halfforgotten works, he may, up to a point, be regarded as Joachim's heir in this particular respect, except that Joachim strongly objected to arrangements for the violin. Szigeti's industry is proverbial;
he
spares
no trouble when pursuing
a chosen purpose.
Once he has decided
to play a certain work in public, he does not hesitate to practise it daily for several years, nor does he fight shy of admitting the fact. His deliberate one-sidedness is not without
charm. The violin means everything to him; it is the world in and for which he lives. Violin playing is such a great pleasure for him in itself that he is often unable to refuse concert engagements which are out of keeping with his professional rank. He has undoubtedly served as a ferment opposing the increasingly humroutine of programme-building and exerting a laudable influence in this respect. From the purely instrumental point of
drum
I have always regretted that he did not spend two of his under my supervision. I could have normalized years youth his bowing within the shortest space of time, broken him of the habit of his head-accents, and taught him methods of study which would have reduced his excessive working time to a
view, however,
minimum. If, despite his unfavourable bodily build, Szigeti was able to reach such a high artistic level, how much more even could have become of him if he had been educated understandwith due respect for the distinctive traits of his musical
ingly,
character
!
Extraordinarily lovable as a turally
and
socially,
human
being, adroit both cul-
Szigeti enjoys general popularity,
and
I
have always taken great delight in his presence. In the development of our art he represents the great outsider, neither member 331
CARL FLESCH owing to his highly individual style whose innovatory programmes have had
nor
founder of a school, a
highly stimulating,
if not indeed a revolutionary effect. concert activities were very successful In the meantime, not financially. For the so-called 'American musically, though crown-tour' to which many young artists look forward as to the
my
illusion. It only proves rewarda ing of their careers is really great 1 the thousand-dollar limit. exceed fees whose 'stars' the ing for For the others, the expenses turn out to be so high that they often devour the fees. While one's expenses in Europe are usually in the
the total fee, they amount to neighbourhood of 25 per cent, of 60 or 80 per cent, in America. I seem to remember, for instance,
no more than 2,500 dollars from the 20,000 American tours. It is true earnings of one of his early
that Szigeti retained dollars gross
that the expenses decrease in proportion as the fees increase, but there are extremely few artists who are able to fill a big American hall with a concert
of their own.
When giving a concert in Philadelphia I made the acquaintance of John GroUe, following years.
who was to influence my career He had emigrated from Holland in
during the the 'nineties
and was at first active as an orchestral fiddler, until he was entrusted with the directorship of the so-called Settlement School of Music, a kind of people's conservatoire. The circumstances in which he relinquished his orchestral career were symptomatic of the state of musical affairs as it then obtained. The conductor of the
symphony appending two which did not,
which Grolle played insisted on tonic chords to the end of every orchestral piece orchestra in
in his opinion, close with sufficient splendour, in order to let the audience know that the piece was over. Grolle
refused in rehearsal to participate in this outrage, and though threatened with dismissal he did not play the chords in the concert
by way of open protest.
He was
a socialist with rather confused ideals, aiming at humanity's redemption through art. Among those who helped to subsidize his conservatoire was a Mrs Mary Bok, a society lady,
of
whom
more anon. Like
Grolle, she
^re-war dollars.
332
was inspired by vague
AMERICA [1923-1928] artistic
aspirations without giving
was Grolle
bility. It
who
much
thought to their
feasi-
suggested to her the idea of founding an
whose task would be to raise a new Money would be no consideration, the would be engaged, and the should
ideal educational institute
musical
llite
in
no
time.
world's best teachers
pupils
live solely for their studies,
without financial worries. Grolle,
who remembered me from my a great deal
first American tour in 1913 and of me, proposed to Mrs Bok that I should be
thought put in charge of the violin classes. Since, however, the lady did not know anything about music and was unable to form a proper idea of my teaching methods, it was decided that I should be
engaged for a trial period so that my educational gifts could be tested, and I was invited to take charge of a course often weekly I that teaching days of six lessons each. Greatly surprised,
replied
had not really been my intention to teach in the United States at all, and that my fee for a teaching day would have to be as high it
concert fee, to wit 500 dollars. 1 1 did not realize at the time that I was demanding four times the normal top fee. eventually agreed on 4,000 dollars for the ten days, a record fee, which as a
L
We
came
to cause a little revolution
amongst music teachers through-
out the country: they, too, began to ultimately their conditions
raise their fees,
improved owing
to
my
so that
innocent
day must yield the same financial result as a concert engagement. The exaggerated remuneration I received in this instance was solely due to the fact that Mrs Bok belief that a teaching
was immensely
rich
and regarded any
businesslike calculation as
superfluous.
few details about teachers' fees may be of There seem to be extremely few extant documents relating to fees for music lessons in the seventeenth or eighteenth centuries, but we do know the financial basis on which Anton In this connection, a
interest.
Stamitz livres
taught Rudolf Kreutzer: Stamitz received eighteen francs) a month for twelve lessons, that is, one and a
(i.e.
half livres per lesson.* Turning to our own time, I started to teach as a boy in Vienna for a fee of fifty kreutzer (twenty American a
Pre-war dollars. *See Joseph Hardi, Rodolphe Kreutzer,
Paris, 1910.
333
CARL FLESCH cents),
while Vienna's leading violin teacher,
five gulden
much
as
(two
dollars)
ten gulden
per
lesson,
1
J.
M.
Griin, received
and Leschetizky was paid
the highest possible fee at the time.
as
The
average fee, however, was never more than one gulden. In Berlin, meanwhile, Joachim already received twenty marks
and Marsick in Paris twenty francs. While at Buchamyself was paid between ten and fifteen francs for a lesson. Before the First World War, Berlin's top fee was twenty marks. for a lesson, rest, I
After the post-war inflation, however, there was of course a rapid rise; between 1925 and 1930, Schnabel and I were paid 100 marks
per lesson, though subsequently top fees fell to sixty or forty marks. In America, prior to my employment at the Curtis Institute, Philadelphia, the upper limit was twenty dollars, afterwards forty to sixty dollars. When I moved to England in 1934, I succeeded in raising the standard to four guineas. As for institutional fees, neither then nor at any later time did
the Paris Conservatoire pay more than five francs for a lesson, at the State Hochschule in Berlin, the principal teacher
whereas
received a fee in the neighbourhood of sixty or seventy marks. York, paid at the rate of forty Juilliard Foundation,
New
The
and teacher at, the Curtis Institute, Philadelphia, drew the bagatelle of 100,000 dollars per annum. At the Dutch educational institutes, the average fee for a lesson was five guilders, 2 and the corresponding fees in dollars,
while Josef Hofmann,
as a director of,
England were ten shillings to one guinea. In the meantime, my 'trial class' at Philadelphia proceeded according to plan. Most of the pupils were members of S tokowski's orchestra. Once again, I thus had an opportunity to observe how rarely the individual elements of a famous string band fulfil more
than ordinary requirements. Although the Philadelphia Orchestra
was
still considered to be the best in the States, only a single violincould claim to possess more than an average talent. teaching methods, new to America, seemed to appeal so strongly to all concerned that I was presently engaged as a teacher and
My
ist
principal
head of the violin :
A
*8s.
class
of the
Continental lesson takes at
least
institute that
one hour.
4d. at the time.
334
was about to be
AMERICA [1923-1928] founded. In the
first year, I was paid no less than 25,000 dollars and a half months' teaching. In New York, I had again met quite a few of my European to hear too. colleagues, some of whom I had an
for three
opportunity Despite his divine carelessness in all matters technical, Kreisler still seemed to me to reign supreme so far as tone and tone-
modulation were concerned musical character
was
(klanglich), whereas Thibaud, whose of a young rather than a mature man, former excellence. Disputatious as ever,
that
was unable to retain his Mischa Elman, whose playing was scientious
phrasings,
as
fiery,
technically con-
and tonally sensuous as it was unscrupulous in had meanwhile devoted himself to the string
liming, in the
its
quartet,
first
violin part, at a concertante style
of unprece-
dented perfection. He had indeed achieved his ambition, if at the expense of a simple and selfless chamber music style. Despite their external perfection, his interpretations left
one unmoved: they were calculated to rouse the gallery rather than adapted to the ;hamber. His chamber-musical activities did not in fact spring
xom an inner need,
but from the conscious intention of revitalizng development as a soloist. Thus he ceased playing quartets is abruptly as he had started. Nevertheless, it has to be admitted his
hat from the purely instrumental point of view, his
he string
first
violin in
quartet was the acme of perfection.
Jascha Heifetz [b. 1901], originally a pupil of his father, had tudied for a short time under Auer and first appeared in public in Berlin before the First World War, at the early age of twelve. With-
he represents a culmination in the contemporary of our art. What we have to admire above all is levelopment lis technical 'readiness' he can always start playing withunfailing >ut any preliminary practice; his fingers and bow function like a nachine which runs at its maximal capacity as soon as you press a mtton. His tone has a noble substance and is of a magical beauty, md there is not the smallest flaw in his technical equipment. He Irives what I have described as the 'Russian style' of holding the >ow (touching the stick with the first joint of the index finger) to )ut question,
:
ts
utter extremes, exaggerating it, in fact, in a way that would it useless for ordinary mortals. His gramophone records are
ender
335
CARL FLESCH his fame for amongst the most perfect of their kind, ensuring a human being, he is reticent and a little inhibited, posterity too. As off-hand. In his early years he seemed at times even
consciously
superficial,
velop as
his
but
as a
mind.
grown man he was
Superficially,
phlegmatic. His
his
to deeager continuously described be might
temperament
facial features are
marked by a certain
rigidity,
the purpose of hiding his reactions to both inner and outer events. For the importunate crowd he is inaccesas if he wore a
mask for
*
sible, butamongst friends hereadily opensup.
His general musicality
has reached an unusually high degree of development, which is parmanifest when he sits at the second desk in a string quartet. ticularly
Nor
is
would
a sense of humour (the very last attribute one him with upon superficial acquaintance) he is in
he without credit
;
fact capable of side-splitting imitations of mediocre pupils' efforts. In view of this range of superior qualities, unquestionably
to ask ourselves how unique in its completeness, we are compelled it is that many people remain unaware of the purely artistic aspect
world.
of his achievements, whereas as a violinist he delights all the Now, for one thing, he shares with most Auer pupils a bad
in cantilena dynamic habit, i.e. an unmotivated decrescendo on forte a renewed down-bows, followed by every intervening^ manner: in the following approximately upbow,
His interpretations thus come to depend on certain technical and do not exclusively obey musical laws or the dej peculiarities
mands of individual feeling. His unswerving use of one and the same kind of portamento falls into the same class of mannerisms which produce a certain monotony :
In London, in 1936, inhibitions
of
my criticism
1
* Iftoudibt* note drew his attention
his natural expression,
a
to the first
proof of his superior mentality. 336
of these twc
and he readily acceptec
<
AMERICA [1923-1928]
The
basic reasons for the
occasionally problematic impression playing makes upon musicians, however, lie in the peculiar course which his artistic development has taken. From the purely instrumental point of view, that is to say, Heifetz was wellnigh his
perfect at the age of twelve. Unlike everybody else, he never had to struggle for his technique. Everything came to him easily, in the
Mozartian way, like a gift from heaven. Thus he was soon led towards neglecting, to some extent, his personality; his unparalleled routine seemed to suffice. He got used to playing often with his hands alone and rest. allowing his mind a Sleeping Beauty's
When, however, it was roused by the Prince ofinspiration, a work of art of the very first rank came into being, such as his interpreof the Sibelius Concerto, to whose transcendental
tation
qualities
the gramophone record bears witness, too. When, on the other hand, he played without inner participation, then a marble statue, perfect but mercilessly cold, was the result.
The enemy
absolute infallibility of his technical apparatus is his worst because it promotes a certain emotional inertia. As a
he invariably is ready for everything, inwardly he isn't. some, even his immaculate technique becomes positively
violinist
To
irritating it
:
spotless perfection tends to
be a perfect
People would
produce uneasiness, whether
the art of a juggler, or Goethe's art of life. forgive Heifetz his technical infallibility only if he face,
made them forget it by putting his entire personality behind it. He a living example of the relativity of a virtue which, when it overshadows something more essential, may come to be felt as a
is
For the rest, one might reproach Heifetz with his exaggerated tempi which are induced by his unprecedented technical facility and precision; in the last movement of the Mendelssohn defect.
>
Concerto, for instance, the wind instruments are no longer able to keep pace with him. At the turn of the century, it was customary to play quick passages in Kubelik's manner, i.e. clearly
and none too '
possessed by Heifetz is
fast. Since Heifetz' appearance, young fiddlers are the devil of speed and are trying to establish records. now [1940] forty years old and at his zenith; he will
no doubt hold
many
years to
the office of the high priest in our profession for come. He fully deserves the position; there has
337
CARL FLESCH probably never been
a violinist
who has approached the summit of
more closely. If, in maturer years, he will play not only perfection the violin superlatively, but in the first place his own self, then his will become a landmark in the history of like name,
Kreisler's,
violin playing, and the second quarter of the twentieth century will bear his stamp. Toscha Seidel Amongst the other Auer pupils I heard then, mentioned. be to Hansen Cecilia and [b. 1898] ought [b. 1899] rank of" front the in included often is not Toscha Seidel
Unjustly, the Auer school.
I
do not know him sufficiently as a man to be able reasons for this underestimation, but one
to judge the deeper the quality of his tone is one of the most thing I do know that career. Technically, too, he is excelbeautiful I have heard in
my
lently equipped,
whence
I
regard
it as
an
injustice
of
fate that
not considered the third in a triumvirate with Heifetz
he is Elman.
and
Cecilia Hansen's playing, on the other hand, I would always father see than hear: she is one of the very few violinists whose
,
to the laws of perfect physical posture and movements correspond to the harmony. Like Zimbalist, however, she does not belong a has Auer school. She charming personality*; super-class of the
way outstanding as a fiddler; her appearance to forget her artistic flaws. listener the helps Mishel Piastro 1892] devoted himself to the career of without being in any
[b.
orchestral leader. Instrumentally, he is aura is, of course, far weaker.
personal Erica Morini
of Heifetz'
class,
while his
1908] studied with Sevcik and Rosa HochmannRosenfeld. In her case, this combination has yielded excellent results: to
[b.
Sevcik she owes her technical grounding, to her female
teacher her well-balanced interpretations. She doubtless is an uncommonly talented artist, utterly musical and conscientious technically; all
somewhat anti^ development has come to
one can hold against her
quated technical
style:
her instrumental
is
her
of the Grtin school. I retain the most enjoyable memories of her playing, however, particularly of her interpretation of Spohr's Violin Concertos; in fact, without leaving male fiddlers out of account, I consider her the greatest a partial standstill in the traditions
338
The Carl
Flesch
Medal for Excellence in Violin Playing, designed by the sculptor Benno Elkan
December XBtfa 1944
Reference: 03/&/1CB
1 I want just to say * Thank you very much indeed for so kindly letting me take part in that charmingly planned tribute on Saturday and friends in that equally for allowing me to come with you and join your I so ntuch enjoyed it and hope that if there is .delightful evening, Father's with memory about which your ever any other matter connected know. you think I could be a help you will unhesitatingly let Ete
I have just had an interesting letter from Dr. Geissmar, who says, In amplification of; Hi tier's talk with Fiirtwangler at Berchtesgade; that the main contention was Turt'wtagler C a defence of your Father and She also says that it was FurtwSngler effort to keep him in Berlin. 7 Tho had a good deal to do -with getting your Father s removal from Holland to Switzerland, but I daresay you know all about this.
pV
:>U--
c <v-*
1
C. 7. Flesch, Eso^., 41, Avenue Mansions, 503, Flnchley Road,
London t Letter
from
Sir
Adrian Boult to C.
F. Flesch
/>*. -V**?^-.
"'"
'"
r'
The
first
of which from Otakar Sevcik to Carl Flesch, a translation page of the letter on pp. 371 f. appears
AMERICA [1923-1928] :ontemporary exponent of this master, whose music has become foreign to present-day generations. The Kneisel school, too, has provided America with several
amongst whom I liked Jacques Gordon best. Sascha Jacobson could likewise claim to be one of America's most outstanding fiddlers, if we may count the Eastern Jewish immiexcellent violinists,
experience, the question of for the violin is in fact a racial one the position here American talent
grants
among
the Americans. In
my
:
is
similar to that in Poland or Russia.
lent violinists
As against the countless excel-
of Jewish descent, there
Gentile in America,
i.e.
the
is
a single representative
Thomson pupil Albert
his aim, has reached a
Spalding who, remarkable standard
steadily pursuing without, however, belonging to the first rank. Leopold Auer himself was very friendly to me at the beginning
by
of my American sojourn. He had come to the States in 1917, at the same time as Heifetz, by dint of whose success he immediately became the most sought-after teacher in the country. For this with the Curtis exceptionally favourable contract could to his a blow was in Institute reputation. One Philadelphia waited he in his notice attitude; not, however, any change reason,
my
patiently
for his time to come. Sure enough,
Europe he became
at the
age of eighty-four
upon
my
my return to
successor at the
Curtis Institute. Before moving to America he had married his niece, The chief condiherself a skilful business who
manager.
proved
tion of admission for a prospective pupil consisted in his ability to the student had, 360 dollars for six lessons. With this amount
pay
same time, bought his right to describe himself as an 'exponent of the Auer Method' and maybe even to found an 'Auer Auer's Conservatoire' in his native town. In other respects, too, name was exploited to the full. Thus I saw in a certain shopa common Markneukirchner fiddle complete with window at the
quite
bow,
resin,
mute, and a
case, advertised as
'Auer
outfit' for fifteen
dilution of his pedagogic dollars. Apart from the inevitable to suffer for this inartistic made not Auer was reputation, however, that he did not enjoy a traffic in his name. One only regretted rest at the end of his life, instead of continuing
well-deserved to
work. In C.F.-Z
particular,
the
exhausting railway journeys
339
to
CARL FLESCH lessons which stretched over many hours,
Philadelphia, followed by must have had a cruel effect
upon the eighty-six-year-old man. Man of the violin, representing an Old He era that had, by then, become legendary; he and Hugo Heermann were the last survivors from the age of Paganini. died in 1931, a Grand
Among the violinists resident in America who have not so far been mentioned, Paul Kochanski [1887-1924] played an outstandhe was a friend and collaborator of ing part. A Thomson pupil, he was considered the most music of whose Szymanowski's, He died of an incurable disease at an all too authentic exponent. used to play one of the most beautiful Strads, the early age. He so-called 'Greffulhe, which later came into the possession of my
(The correct name of the instrument
Briselli.
pupil
may
be
Mr
Tenucci, the expert of Messrs. Hug 'Greville', for according to of the the are Co. in Zurich, who present [1940] owners *Greffulhe*, this violin was never in Kochanski's possession; cf. also
&
The Grevilk
Stradivarius of 1726,
New York,
1
Kochanski's
I839.)
he was, moreover, an inimitable as an excellent arranger, of little Spanish violin In the more extended forms he was less successful, because pieces. on the concert platform he often suffered from nerves. Nevertheless, I remember a truly exemplary rendering of Brahms' Double
tone captivated by interpreter, as well
its
sweetness;
Concerto, with Kochanski and Salmond conversationalist; as a raconteur
charming
as Griinfeld, Rosenthal, or
as soloists.
Thibaud. Thus he would,
his greatest success after a concert when,
He was at times,
left a
human and all
too
human
gap in American musical
In the course of the
last
life
class
have
having had their artistic fill,
the music lovers had a wine withhim and wanted to hear
about the
also a
he was in the same
side
of the
artist.
that has not yet
decades, conductors
2
something His death
been
filled.
have tended to
play the public role that was previously assigned to primadonnas. species show indeed a common characteristic: they are^
The two
easily liable to 1
The
wear and
tear.
With primadonnas
it is
the voice
by Kochanski during the latter part of his career was neither of those suggested by Hesch. It was sold to him by W. E. Hill & Sons of London, prior to the First World War, and was an inlaid instrument dated 1687, known at Strad used
that time as 2
The Spanish'.
Allusion to Friedrich Nietzsche's two-volume 'book for free
All Too
Human (Menschliches
t
Allzumen$chIiches, 1886).
340
spirits',
Human,
AMERICA [1923-1928] that
soon goes the
way of nature,
while conductors,
whom
the
crowd
usually judges by their appearance and gestures, become boring after a time because the concert-goer wants to see some-
thing new. 'Look at his silhouette;
wonderful?' I once Stokowski concert. An
isn't it
heard a lady whisper to her neighbour
at a
orchestral player alone is in a position to gauge the intrinsic value of a conductor's work, to appreciate his ear during rehearsal and his power of suggestion in the concert hall. The listener is all too
readily impressed by the visual aspect of stick-waggling and, on the other hand, tends to make the conductor responsible for certain unpredictable accidents, especially horn squeaks. This is the reason why, paradoxically, the very best conductors rarely maintain their success in one and the same place, while the less
outstanding
members of the
species evince a
remarkable persever-
when supported by critical coteries. Josef Stransky New York Philharmonic Society for ten long years as
ance, especially directed the
Mahler's successor, and Frank Damrosch conducted the New York Symphony Orchestra for twenty years. The excellent pianist
Rudolph Ganz was appointed conductor in St. Louis, and it took the public three years to discover that he had never before manipulated a baton. Mahler, on the other hand, was harassed to death by the
New
York
critics,
who
also ferociously attacked
and
dis-
couraged both Mengelberg and Furtwangler. At the time of my second American tour, the chief conductors there were Artur Bodanzki, Bruno Walter, Fritz Busch, Otto Klemperer, Wilhelm Furtwangler, Willem Mengelberg, Serge Koussevitsky, Leopold Stokowski, Frank Damrosch, Fritz Reiner, Frederick Stock, Alfred Hertz, Pierre Monteux and, last but not
least,
Arturo Toscanini.
Artur Bodanzki
[b.
1877],
whom I knew from my childhood
had become when we had conductor for the German operas at the Metropolitan Opera in New days
both studied with Back, in 1915
York, an appointment which he retained, despite various vicissitudes, until his death in 1939. He was an excellent musician and a of Mahler. He opera conductor, as well as an apostle passionate
was charmingly friendly and easily made you feel at home in his house, which seemed a Central-European oasis in that sphere of 341
CARL PLESCH
New
York's social
life
which was
accessible to musicians.
As
a
conductor in the concert hall he was of less significance; both his interpretations and his gestures were somewhat limited. But he finding, in Mrs Lanier, a generous in 1918 founded the Society of the Friends of patroness Music for the special purpose of offering him opportunities for
had the good fortune of
who
concert
many
work which proved
years his
influence
numerous
upon
who
time held an appointment in another of those conductors who feel more at ease in
the theatre than in the concert as well as
in every respect rewarding; for performances exerted a stimulating
New York's musical life.
Fritz Reiner [b. 1888],
Cincinnati, is
first
at the
hall.
He is one of the best musicians
one of the most thorough orchestral experts
ductors, but he lacks, to
among con-
some extent, that personal aura that creates
sympathetic resonance in the audience and thus largely determines the effect an interpreter makes upon his listeners. After a teaching
term
Philadelphia, where he directed the he found again a permanent post in Pittsburgh. Furtwangler, Mengelberg and Stokowski have already been discussed, and are too well known to stand in need of more than a brief mention here. Furtwangler did not feel at home in New York; he was unable to learn even pidgin English, for which at the Curtis Institute in
orchestral class,
reason he had his social
difficulties too.
His
first
concert was a
sensational success which,
however, did not prove enduring; after his second he turned his back upon America. 1 season, already left America after a short time and returned Mengelberg, too, to Holland. Owing to some tactless remarks about Toscanini he
had become highly unpopular though the treatment which he received on this occasion from the American critics did not by any means cover them with glory. Stokowski I had met again after a span of ten years. In the he had cast off meantime, his slough: the modest thoroughly organist had grown into America's most popular conductor. He had separated from his wife, an excellent pianist who was known under the name of Olga Samarov, and to *It
whom he owed
a great
must, however, be added that he repeatedly returned to the States: he
regularly toured the country from 1924
till
342
1927.
AMERICA [1923-1928] of his musical development as well as of his social success. Surrounded by mysterious obscurity, he lived in Philadelphia as a much-courted bachelor. His New York concerts were deal
regarded
the climax of the season; the technical precision of balance and blend (des Klangkorpers) which he achieved was unprecedented. as
His actual music-making, however, was not sufficiently He did not serve his art it served him.
selfless.
:
Busch continued in the style of Fritz Steinbach, though conducting was far more flexible and universal in taste. Alfred Hertz [1872-1942], the conductor of the first American Fritz
his
production of Parsifal, conducted the San Francisco Orchestra, while Frederick Stock [1872-1942] was in charge of the symphony concerts in Chicago. The latter had originally played the viola in
Theodore Thomas's
orchestra,
and had subsequently become
his
He could pride himselfon being the American conductor with the longest single appointment. He was an exceptionally solid, successor.
sincere
and experienced musician without any
star-like qualities,
external or internal.
Boston was
still
ruled
by
Pierre
Monteux
[b.
1875], later
succeeded by Koussevitsky. It will be remembered that Monteux had been a colleague of mine at the Paris Conservatoire; he
took up the viola and, eventually, the baton. The only French stature, he is at the same time an ideal
later
conductor of international violinist's
accompanist.
He and Ansermet were
the
first
conduc-
whose
perfect interpretations produced a measure of popular for Strawinsky's Kite of Spring. After he left Boston, r recognition he became for a time Stokowski's deputy conductor in Philators
delphia,
where he felt very ill
at ease.
When an artist leaves America in order to return to
Europe, he he duly praises America's usually interviewed, whereupon and its culture and social musical customs, in the most exalted life, terms. Monteux, however, thought that he would not return to the country, and that he could therefore afford the luxury of a
is
1
little
prank.
He
described the American continent as highly bar-
baric, without any real culture, and American concert-goers as uneducated snobs. Although people were, in a sense, impressed it *>y his effrontery,
did seem as if his return to America was 343
CARL FLESCH But at present [1940]. impossible. Los in Angeles. ducting
Monteux
is
once again con-
Otto Klemperer [b. 1885] I knew from the days when he was a coach at the Prague Opera and had to play the piano accompani'second items' in the popular symphony concerts. collaborated with him in his capacity as Curiously enough, I never a conductor. Furtwangler, Walter and Klemperer have been considered the most outstanding conductors of their generation.
ment
to
my
Klemperer
is
be an artist of high and serious ideals, I personally have not searching and changing. his career beyond 193 3 when it seemed to me
known
always striving,
to
Mow
been able to that he had not yet fully found himself. Bruno Walter [b. 1876] indisputably is to be counted among the most valuable conductors of the last thirty years. He, too, is more >
at home in the theatre than in the concert hall.
he had,
He may
for
be
An excellent pianist, with Arnold Rose.
sonata years, given described as the lyricist among conductors, at times recitals
many
somewhat over-dreamy, were, rather than 'out
recreating his music 'into himself', as it is '. why his concerts are not
of himself This
In the opera house, on the other hand, always sufficiently effective. he is Mahler's real successor, without the latter's sternness and 1
contempt for the individual orchestral player. Walter was one of the few Jewish musicians to Nazis' accession to
power
whom
offered the opportunity for
an
the
artistic
renaissance. In the years preceding, he had annually conducted a series of subscription concerts in Berlin, which were financially
concert agency and invariably landed guaranteed by Wolff's themselves in a deficit. Consequently, the agency declared that the concerts would have to be abandoned from 1933. In othei
Walter's position in Germany seemed to have respects, too, had lost his Leipzig appointment, and as a become shaky.
He
much in demand. Then came guest conductor he was no longer the rescue. The Nazis cancelled his last Berlin concert on March 6, 1933, and Walter immediately
left
Germany
for Holland where,
*As a boy, I heard the composer Franz Schmidt talk with the deepest enthusiasm about his experiences as a 'cellist in the Vienna Philharmonic under Mahler he said the only thing ofwhich Mahler was 'contemptuous' was a player's tendency to place routine above art.
344
AMERICA [1923-1928]
new
regime, he was received with princely honours. In due course, all the democratic countries wanted to as
a victim
of the
for the insults to which he had been subjected in and thus it came about that, quite innocently, he Germany, Nazi persecution. Nobody begrudged the the from profited artist this curious joke of history. outstanding
make amends
In Boston, Koussevitsky [1874-1951] took the helm after Monteux. In his younger days, he had been regarded as the most the successor of his time outstanding double-bass player of Bottesini. He used to play on a small Italian double-bass, on
which he achieved 'cello-like effects. He married a rich Russian to possess ten million roubles in gold), and lady (she was said anon his activities seemed to him all too narrowly restricted. He decided to become a conductor, and in order to acquire the necesand experience, he hired a huge river-boat, assemsary qualities bled an orchestra, invited a crowd of friends who had to play the and sailed the Volga with his boat. While part of the audience, with his band, and at larger towns he went travelling he rehearsed ashore in order to give concerts and thus practise his conducting. The guests on the boat, chiefly journalists, were treated with
and had to take care of the necessary publicity. the time he reached the end of his journey, the newly-fledged
lavish hospitality,
By
conductor was ready to continue
he was considered merely were regarded as the hobby of
first
his activities
on dry ground. At
a gifted dilettante: his activities a rich man who kept orchestral
musicians instead of racehorses. In the Bolshevist revolution, was forced to earn his however, his wife lost all her money and he
own
living.
When, in 1924, he was appointed to direct the Boston musical world awaited his activities Symphony Orchestra, the with mixed
feelings.
one of those musicians on whom verdicts of ranged between the extreme
He was
'contemporary judgment
cannot offer any personal opinion, for did I ever hear him. I thus have to I never played with him, nor established and confine myself to the observation that he firmly 'genius'
and
'charlatan'. I
trained his orchestra consolidated his position in Boston, having that his I .there to a high degree of perfection. imagine
345
must have
CARL FLESCH been an extremely strong original talent, though at the outset been difficult for him; he cannot have score-reading must have wind instruments. But his the of had any knowledge technique of and manual talent as well as his vigour general musicality must
have been there from the fully
did.
When,
start.
The
he had to
and
success-
acquire by many years' experience. a hundred years ago, people talked about violin playing, above all of Paganini; the concept of piano playing
they thought used to be closely linked with the
nowadays
rest
name of Liszt; and when we
of conducting, we think first of seems to be the prototype of the per-
discuss the subject
Toscanini [1867-1957], who fect conductor not only to the broad mass of music lovers, but also
to the majority of musicians. What distinguishes him above all from his colleagues are certain character traits which do not generally
of conducting, a profession that a man's character and to induce megalomania,
seem to go with the
tends to spoil
business
for the individual. All too a Napoleonic attitudes and contempt falls a victim to the hallucination of conductor the being easily, alone responsible for the re-creation of a work, whereas in reality
another hundred-odd people participate in the process. In addition, circumstances usually call for a
man who knows
at least as
much
about pulling strings as about bowing them. Toscanini's character does not show these deficiencies. In Italy, he preferred to face threats of physical violence to playing the Fascist anthem in the
middle of a programme. He would rather renounce a concert an imperfect performance. In his demands altogether than risk
both on the individual orchestral player and indeed on himself, he unrelenting to the point of cruelty. Musically he represents, in
is
in the
first place,
interpretative
a reaction against the baton virtuoso, against
'views'
(Tempoverschiebung).
and unmotivated
He
exclusively
distortions
confines
of tempo
himself to
the
written text, to die composer's own expression marks, and demands of the orchestra the greatest possible precision and tonal perfection (klangliche Vollkommenheif). His artistic ideal, then, work speak for itself by way of a perfect execution. His interpretations are distinguished by an consists in letting a
incorrup-
tible sincerity, a
complete absence of claptrap 346
effects,
and a burning
AMERICA [1923-1928]
He
rhythm as the primary force in music, and seems once correct to him he tempo fanatically adheres to it. If an agogical modification appears to him to be necessary, he intensity.
regards
a
executes
it
so unobtrusively that the listener hardly becomes far as his beat is concerned, he tends towards the
aware of it. So
old school which considers precision and clarity to be of overriding
importance, the sine qua non of the individual player's exactitude and of the simultaneity of orchestral entries. His single beats take the
form of a wide
arm.
The listener
ellipse,
described with the help of the whole with a unique personality and,
feels face to face
unresisting, submits to
amount
its suggestive power. the brilliant sure, light of his qualities creates a certain of shadow, and exaggerated virtues easily turn into vices.
All too
literal faithfulness
To be
to the text degenerates into pedantry the possibility of misprints, wrong metronome disregards marks, or even inaccurate beats of the metronomic pendulum.
when it
Again, while his colleagues have abused their calling by their 'personal' interpretations
which contradict the composer's inten-
tions, Toscanini, by way of extreme reaction, shows a certain distrust of his own inner impulses he would rather suppress them than expose himself to the supposed risk of disobeying the rigid :
to the letter. He hates sentimentality, principle of always adhering and in order to avoid it, his tempi in slow movements will often
too quick. His artistic credo is the highest possible degree of the expurgation of all subjective feeling. More objectivity and than any other conductor, he needs an orchestral body of the very
be
all
first
:
rani in order to
realize his artistic intentions.
orchestra he does not
knowledge and ability to raise an orchestra's merely lacks the patience. He may be described
Throughout
With a mediocre
know where to begin. Not that he lacks the
his career,
technical standard:
he
supreme teacher of interpretation. Toscanini has been regarded as the most of re-creative art. The world has as a
distinguished representative his personality in its entirety, gladly overlooking its less attributes. It is this uncritical idolatry on the part of the perfect the experts' contradiction. 'broad masses that has
judged
provoked
In particular
it
is
untrue to say that with
347
him
the art
of
CARL FLESCH conducting reached
its
zenith. In actual fact Toscanini
is
in the
and only in the second place a great place a great man, of evaluation is reversed, the critic order this If conductor.
first
out that, for instance, Nikisch was rightly point Toscanini s technical superior so far as his heat was concerned, that Biilow introduced a new era of conducting, or that Mengel-
may
and many others have, unlike Toscanini, proberg, Steinbach of modern composers. But if we consider him music the moted first
and foremost as
influence
a
man,
we must all acknowledge his purifying
the regrettably turbid atmosphere surrounding his was he who reinstated the composer in the dominat-
upon
profession. It ing position that
is due to him, and who accepted for himself the a servant. He represents the consummate personificaof position tion of the artistic principle of selflessness, and in this capacity he
will survive as a shining
WITH a 25,000
example for his colleagues.
my
next season in pocket, of conscious to return Europe, happily journey my next the for about to not have would I that the fact money worry
I
dollars contract for the
embarked on
few years. On the boat Deutschland, Kreisler, Friedberg, Elly Ney and I gave a concert for the crew, to which the painter Emil Orlik contributed an illustrated programme. Orlik, a Sudeten German from Bohemia, lived in the same Berlin house (Liitzowplatz 12) as I. With him, drawing was not only a
gift,
but a downright mania. Wherever he found himself,
he had to manipulate his pencil. In Berlin I often met him in thei Romanische Cafe, at a Stammtisch whose white marble slab served Orlik as an ersatz drawing pad, and over which the painter Max Slevogt presided. He used to draw everything and everybody; the painter Mopp once reported that Orlik was engaged in illustrating the telephone directory.
of kindness, a
a routineer in his art
and
very distinctive personality. For the fourth time running,
on
I
he was the soul and an eclectic without
For the life,
rest,
spent the
summer with
my
Riigen, an island in the Baltic which particuto me, as I was a passionate swimmer. This time, larly appealed
family at Sellin
348
AMERICA [1923-1928]
we noticed there the first signs of the anti-Semitic wave which later was to flood the whole of Germany. To begin with, bowever, it
itself in the shy request, 'Jews, get out!', usually the walls of public lavatories; one of the addressees of wrote under it: 'Don't worry, we won't stay hereT
manifested
posted on this bill
was Incidentally, the lack of culture among nearby landowners a I had Beethoven after played amazing. At a private recital, sonata,
one of diem asked me,
'Tell
me, in which cafe do you
actually play?'
had brought along a poor little Jewish boy, whose education had taken in hand. He came from Odessa, and his name was Isaak Briselli. On our way to Sellin we decided to rename him, on the assumption that it would be difficult to find 1 accommodation for him under the name of 'Isaak'. Henceforth he was called Iso', and it was under his new name that, round Christmas, we took him along to Philadelphia. He was to join my class at the Curtis Institute; a rich silk merchant had undertaken I
as a violinist I
to provide for his material existence. travelled in the company of Furtwangler.
We
The weather was
I bad, the cold piercing, and since I slept with the hatch open, Iso was refused lumbago. At the passport control, little
caught
to American law, children permission to land because, according the enter could sixteen under country when accompanied by only all the until wait to had blood relations. passengers had dis-
We
Ellis Island,
the
Mr Grolle, purgatory for undesirable immigrants. our arrival, accompanied us in order to try to extricate Thanks to the intervention of an interpreter who knew me,
us.
embarked, whereupon a policeman escorted us to
who had met
-us at
we
which eventually rethe boy would leave that oath on leased us, after I had promised state of excitement, The months. "the United States within four however, into which this episode had thrown me caused my to deteriorate into a proper neuritis, and I arrived in succeeded in bringing together the tribunal
lumbago
man. Philadelphia a sick
My complaint caused me a great deal of
and at night I could only sleep in four After weeks, moreover, at a symphony sitting posture. 1 Always a Jewish name on the Continent.
trouble; I tried all sorts of cures, *a
349
CARL PLESCH concert in Minneapolis,
I
suffered a relapse
which forced
me to sit
down
during my performance of the Brahms Concerto, wherethe critics described me as a hero. For the rest, Iso's fosterupon looked after him very touchingly they later adopted him parents ;
and bought him three famous
violins, the
renowned
'Greffulhe'
Strad (or 'Greville' Strad) among them. illness did not prevent me from entering on my duties at the Curtis Institute. Its president, Mrs Mary Louise Bok, was the
My
only daughter of the famous newspaper magnate Curtis, the proprietor of the Saturday Evening Post, Ladies' Home Journal and Country Gentkman.E6.ward Bok, her husband, a self-made
man of
Dutch descent, had developed the Saturday Evening Post, of which he was editor-in-chief, into a highly flourishing concern. Mrs Bok was the principal shareholder; the family property was estimated to amount to about 200 million dollars. It was therefore easy for her to
twelve
endow
the conservatoire that bore her father's
million
dollars,
especially
since
this
name with
investment also
offered considerable advantages from the point of view of taxafew years, the endowment was increased to fifteen
tion. After a
million dollars, so that the Curtis Institute disposed of an annua] income of 600,000 dollars. A magnificent palace had been rebuilt for the purpose, and valuable sculptures and pictures as well as' Persian and Chinese carpets graced the foyer. There were no school fees on the contrary, needy pupils received a weekly allowance of twenty dollars. They were examined at regular* medically intervals, and I remember almost an epidemic of both dental and tonsiUar extractions, at the time when these parts of the body^ were held responsible for all kinds of bodily ailments. When, at a ;
later stage, the Institute
produced a number of outstanding pupils,
organized and financed their
first public appearances. The dtbuwere, moreover, presented with valuable Italian instruments, and sent to Europe in order to give concerts there at the Institute's expense. In short, it was the music student's El it
tants
:
Dorado,'
an
institution
of which
many had dreamt
as
of an unattainable
ideal.
The piano teachers were Josef Hofmann and, in quick succession,Moritz Rosenthal, Wilhelm Backhaus and Benno Moiseiwitsch.^ 350
AMERICA [1923-1928] br the first four years, I was in charge of the violin classes; I was ucceeded by Auer and Zimbalist. Marcella Sembrich, Sarah Valuer and Grogorza taught singing, Felix Salmond the 'cello, .nd Louis Bailly the viola. The Institute even went so far as to lave a special harpsichord class, for which Wanda Landowska, the >est exponent of the instrument, had been engaged. The instrunental and vocal classes had their own accompanists. The lirector's office, on the other hand, was entrusted to less outtanding figures. The founder of the whole venture, the aforenentioned John Grolle, was an honest idealist and indeed somehing of a Utopian; he did not retain his post for more than a year, rlis
successor "William Walter, a former orchestral manager,
was
competent administrator, but without any musical knowto make way for Josef Hofmann, .edge whatever; he soon had i
iie
there were several personal friend of the president. For the rest, who were familiar with the ins and outs of such
efficient assistants
in organization. The supreme commander was Mrs Bok who, with die best of intentions, was touchingly ignorant of both the
and the re-creative aspects of the art of music. Marcella Sembrich [1858-1935], the once celebrated drew for ten lessons per week an annual salary of 40,000 :reative
There
is
no doubt
singer, dollars.
that she brilliantly acquitted herself at her task,
even though she was apparently unfamiliar with the development of modern opera from Wagner onwards. Apart from her there was Sarah Cahier, equally outstanding in oratorio and opera, and the best exponent of the contralto part in Gustav Mahler's possibly
Song of the Earth. Michael Press was for
one
year.
When,
installed as
my assistant,
at a later stage, I
but he only taught
recommended
that pre-
be instituted, three of my former pupils paratory classes should were appointed for the purpose, i.e. Frank Gittelson, Sascha Berlin assistant Richard ff acobson and Emmanuel Zetlin, while my for my own class. In preparatory teacher the piano department there were continuous changes, for Josef directed the Institute from JHofmann, who at that time already other gods at his side. Betolerate not did fcehind the scenes, easily
Hartzer was engaged
as
tween 1925 and 1928, no fewer than three pianists 351
Moiseiwitsch,
CARL FLESCH Backhaus and Rosenthal succeeded each other, none of them stand an atmosphere pregnant with intrigues. Of willing to I cannot say much more than that he was Moiseiwitsch 1890]
[b.
an excellent
pianist,
almost equally accomplished
as a card-player.
to return to Europe, sojourn of about six preferred months. His successor Moriz Rosenthal [1862-1946], the doyen of after a
He
with Emil Sauer [1862-1942], one of< piano virtuosos and, together was widely feared because of his Liszt the last surviving
caustic
pupils,
humour.
At the outbreak of the First World War, Ysaye escaped to in a fishing boat, and there were reports in the papers that
England he had almost perished on the way. Rosenthal confirmed the news and added, When Ysaye arrived in England, the tragedy had his compositions had been saved too.' already happened: Rosenthal survived as the last representative of pure virtuosodom into an age which regarded the instrument as but a means *
towards the musical end. His
style, therefore,
made
a
somewhat
and I personally did not take to it. Schnaantiquated impression, bel was his pet aversion, for he could not understand that tech-^ of musicality rather than an independent nique could be a function achievement. His urge for perfection, however, was admirable.* he still tried to pursue a new and? advanced in
Although
years,
and even sued, those obstinately fought, the value of his not did to his mind, who, fully recognize art An untiring worker, he sacrificed his life to the piano. Bui| he never tried to found a school and hand down to posterity his
more
artistic course.
He
critics
no doubt valuable technical principles. His artistic role in the fielq of piano playing was not dissimilar to Huberman's in the art of violin playing.
His successor Wilhelm Backhaus
[b.
1884]
was of a
different
and as a man: stamp. have a high regard for him both as an artist, he his In spite of proved unable tq great successes, however, attain the position that might have been his in the artistic life 1
I
time. His technical equipment was overwhelming, his musicality of the first rank, but there was one thing he lacked in
of our
his art as well as his life:
he was uncommunicative, incapable oj he was inhibited in every respect
psychic exhibitionism; since
352
AMERICA [1923-1928] is
rich reservoir
of emotions had no
Vhen
in company, he would ig his mouth. As a pianist, he
access to the outer
world.
sit for long hours without openwas regarded in most countries as
istinguished but cold, a moderately sensitive musician without lemental feeling, a sovereign craftsman who, however, lacked hie
gift
of sweeping the
listener off his feet.
The principal teachers at the Institute felt that they were Dmewhat overpaid and that they therefore ought to make an dditional contribution to Curtis :ellist
its
prestige.
It
was thus
Quartet was born. Apart from myself,
Salmond,
the
viola
player
Bailly,
it
that the
conssited
and
of the
Emmanuel
]etlin.
A Londoner by birth, Felix Salmond [1888-1952] occupied the wo most important
teaching posts in America: at the Curtis Foundation. He is justly regarded as an ex-
istitute and the Juilliard
ellent artist ofprofound musical culture,
who possesses an engaging
ersonality. Louis Bailly [b. 1882], an outstanding representative f the highly developed French school of viola playing, was disall for his special knowledge of the technique of hamber music, which he had acquired during his many years with le Capet-Flonzaley Quartet. Emmanuel Zetlin, too, was up to is task, and since we got on well with each other, had no financial worries, and loved to play quartets, our efforts reached a con-
nguished above
.derable standard within a comparatively short time. la the course
f one year,
we only gave three or four recitals, playing chiefly the
Beethoven quartets. After my departure, the ensemble disanded and its name was adopted by a quartet consisting of former upils of the Institute; coached by Baifiy, they achieved excellent
ite
erformances.
So far as sonata playing was concerned, I formed a short-lived uo with Josef Hofmann [b. 1876], my future director. Rubin;ein's last pupil, he had originally been a phenomenally gifted liild prodigy. As a young man he was the acknowledged ivourite of Russia's high society, and until the First World War, e confined his
concert activities almost exclusively to that
ountry. In Moscow and Petersburg alone, he gave dozens of oncerts every year.
353
CARL FLESCH which made
His well-shaped face stowed a childlike softness that had survived into manhood. His you think of a baby's head while on the other hand he mind, too, evinced infantile features, to the artistic had a special gift for higher mechanics. Transferred sphere,
mixture of these contrasting traits resulted in a strange
calculation. Elemental and rousing explosions spontaneity and cerebral punctiliousness. would, surprisingly, give way to purely as a indeed almost overpowering, talent In view of his unique,
he might have climbed to the very top of his profession, but for certain obstacles in his personality. His chamber-music had a smack of dryness, of unnatural forcedness that made
pianist,
playing an almost droll impression and all but concealed the great soloist. was sceptical: His attitude towards higher musical schooling his ultimate was teachers 'There are no good only good pupils',
wisdom. If this
dictum were
true, it
would be impossible
for a
compean
or for tent teacher to raise a mediocre talent to a higher level,
ruin a great talent; but experience has incompetent teacher to such pro~< the contrary in either case. However, clearly proved dilettante's educational for the excuse nouncements are a good
with pupils of average talent, while they also seem to prov^ those teachers right who devote themselves exclusively to outwas only natural, then, that Hofmann claimed standing talents. It the cream of all available pupils for his own class and left the rest failure
to his colleagues Backhaus, Moiseiwitsch or Rosenthal. Lacking a real knowledge, he tried to replace most of pupil' s,
any
teaching
his
own and to
personality by a compulsive influence to
know from
already Busoni's teaching.
It is
stimulate
him towards
imitation
which a pupil easily submits, the examples of Joachim's, Ysaye's
as
not surprising, then,
'
we
and that Hofmann showed
little understanding for teaching methods. I have always tended to occupy myself even more intensively with the averag^!
my
pupil than with the talents is like a
As long to his
two
as
elite.
A teacher who
man who
only interested in great"
only seeks the company of rich people. to confine his aristocratic inclinations
Hofmann had
own class, he was unable to
years,
is
do much harm. But when,
he was appointed director and proceeded to 354
afte
let his
AMERICA [1923-1928] whole Institute, its decline had begun. was teacher no longer required to guide his pupil, step by step, towards the summits of his art; instead, there was an all-out effort to attract mature young artists from all over the world, to let them shine and thus contribute to the glory of the Institute and its founders. Anon the rumour was rife amongst American musical students that to enrol at the Curtis Institute meant a lucrative post for the present and an insurance for the future; the lessons by the greatest specialists were regarded as a pleasant addition that one got into the bargain. By way of parallel development, an advertising drive was started, American in an unfavourable sense, whose leading motive was not the artistic result, but circumstantial claptrap. The orchestral class, for instance, was at one time under the direction of an eminent conductor, who, however, did not deem it worth while to direct the rehearsals in his own illustrious person, asocial principles rule the
The
*
;
but contented himself with walking about in the orchestra as a kind of chief inspector, dropping an occasional remark or two to one of the players.
One
could hardly blame the students
the circumstances, they were above 1
all
intent
upon
having a
if,
in
good
time, gradually losing sight of their original artistic aim altogether. I saw the catastrophe coming and tried to prevent, or at least to
'
delay
In a detailed
it.
branded
as unsocial
and recommended
memorandum
addressed to
Mrs Bok,
I
the Institute's addiction to easy star-breeding, that preparatory classes should
*in order to educate talented pupils
be introduced
from the elementary
level
upwards. My suggestions met with complete incomprehension; in the ^probably I was even regarded as a spoil-sport, a foreign body organism of the Institute. It now only needed a minor stimulus for me to devote my artistic energies to more serious activities. Amongst the numerous Russian emigrants in that period, there
f
*was Lea Luboschiitz
'An Auer since she
In
[b.
in America. 1889], who tried her luck she Odessa until in lived emigrated, and
pupil, she had talented fiddler she
was a
had enjoyed
a certain esteem.
New York,
she was at first supported by beneficent art lovers, met Josef Hofmann, who took an interest in her and gave few sonata recitals with her. Although she had never taught
until she *a
before,
he decided to engage her
C.F.-AA
as a
355
teacher for the Institute. For
CARL FLESCH as Lead of the violin departpurpose he required my consent ment which he obtained after our lady president had exerted some this
pressure Institute
the future of the
upon me. I now had definite proof that would be determined by personal relationships and
and I firmly decided to leave. Sure enough, intrigues of all kinds, from that time, Hofinann engaged his teachers for all sorts of inartistic reasons;
and in the autumn of 1927, under the pretext of
to concert-giving in wanting to devote the following years Europe, I handed in my resignation. The following years were to show that my forecast had not The eighty-four-year-old Auer and Efrem been too pessimistic.
Zimbalist
[b. 1889],
who had never taught the instrument, became
my successors. The great crash on the stock exchange in 1929 and the ensuing depression, moreover, reduced the Institute's funds to a considerable extent. Thus the Juilliard Foundation soon gained the
N
built upon an equally geneupper hand, an institute that had been rous financial basis which at the same time consisted of more solid
The teachers, too, were sounder and took their work more seriously, and the director, the pianist Ernest Hutcheson, was averse to any kind of bluffing and knew what he wanted. The pupils who had been entrusted to me at the Curtis Institute were mostly Americans, but there were also a few particularly it were ordered from gifted Europeans whom the Institute had as die Old World at its own expense. Apart from Briselli, whom I have already mentioned, there was above all Henry Temianka, who did great credit to the Institute: both musically and technia model collection of talents. If he continues to cally, he possessed grow emotionally too, if he develops his spontaneity and selfforgetfulness, he may well come to play an important part in America's musical life. 1 1 also remember a girl fiddler of German investments.
descent, Loys zu Putditz, who at first raised great hopes which, however, did not materialize. Most of the rest of my class were not above a decent average excellent future orchestral players. One of them, Gama Gilbert, later changed his aind became
profession
second critic on the New York Times. "While at Philadelphia *He
now leads
I
worked at the completion of the second
the Paganini Quartet.
356
,
,
AMERICA [1923-1928] volume of The Art of
and supervised the English translation of the first volume. In the latter task, I was most ably assisted by Gustav Saenger, my publishers' (Fischer's) music editor: his practical knowledge of violin playing together with his mastery of both German and English proved invaluable. Most of all, I liked to work during railway journeys, when I was able to do as much as ten hours a day. Teaching and writing inevitably reduced my interest in concert-giving. Since I made a point of making up for any lessons I missed it was very difficult for me to embark on longer journeys, case, high and regular salary made it unnecessary to look for additional sources of income. Besides, the
and in any for
me
Violin Playing
my
strange circumstances in which one sometimes had to practise one's profession were disagreeable to an inveterate European.
Admittedly, there were a few rays of light, such as the sonata with Gabrilowitsch in California, but on the other hand,
recitals
one had to contend with conditions of the Wild West variety. Thus, one day, I had to play in Texas in a place of about 15,000 inhabitants. Upon my arrival, I was confronted with a complica-
had held a revival meeting in a big wooden shed holding 5,000 people, which had been for the purpose. One thousand five hundred chairs specially built had been taken there from the concert hall, while the rest of the believers had to content themselves with primitive wooden benches. The 'stalls' consisted of enormous quantities of shavings and sawdust which covered the naked ground. Since there was tion: a
few days previously,
a ranter
number of people to get the chairs the recital had to take place in the shed unless I wanted to desert, a course of action which in view of the
neither time nor a sufficient
back to the concert
hall,
customs obtaining in Texas might not have been without dangers. At the other end
its
of the social ladder, I gave a concert at the White House, where I met Coolidge, then President of the United States. On Sunday mornings, we usually initiated the new week with a concert at die house of my friend Rudi Polk, originally a veryconcern of good violinist who was working in his father-in-law's 357
CARL FLESCH After a generous American breakfast, we in the morning right into the afternoon. The played from ten of chamber music and were improvised, a motley programmes small orchestra. These a with even violin concertos, sometimes
department
stores.
most pleasant morning matinees have remained among my rare enjoyments, memories from that period. Apart from such American with at home feel not colleagues. did I my however, could not stomach my high salary, and the atmos-
They simply
with intrigues and was not even mitigated by phere was heavy such beneficial institutions as the Beethoven Association. The of this music club was Harold Bauer. Its financial means president
drew from half a dozen concerts, in which members played gratuitously. Bauer himself had
it
its
most famous
a originally been
I violinist and had turned to the piano relatively late in the day. on with Casals, at Amsterdam, playing first heard him in 1903 whom the older artist is said to have exerted a very favourable influence. Bauer certainly is one of the most sensitive musicians
amongst
pianists,
as
well
as
a
most lovable person, the right
for bringing his colleagues together, at
any
man
rate for a social
evening.
However, despite the great number of musicians with whom I became acquainted at that time, I did not feel particularly attracted towards any of them on a purely personal level. Perhaps it was my own fault. I was, after all, preoccupied with my creative work. The German, English, Italian, Dutch and French editions of the
volume of my magnum opus had already been published, under my own supervision. In 1928, the second volume
first
partly was to appear in German, and in other languages soon after. With interest the continuous mental tension in which I lived, even
my
in the practice of violin playing was temporarily superseded by attempts to get at its theory, to establish its inner connections and analyse its external, physical elements. Thus I came to feel
my
upon completion of the second volume, a re-orientation of my existence, such as would be necessitated by transferring my activities once again to my European home, would have a benethat
ficial all,
influence
as
early
the practical development of 1926 the Berlin State Hochschule
my
upon
as
358
art.
After
had asked
AMERICA [1923-1928]
me whether I would consider succeeding Willy Hess, who was approaching the age limit. The negotiations in the following year proved successful, and I undertook to teach at the Hochschule from October 1928. For six months a year, I was to give eight lessons per week, and to make up for any lessons I missed. For the remaining three and a half months, I could name my own substitute. My salary amounted to 12,000 marks per annum, which meant about sixty marks for a lesson. My pupil Max Rostal was appointed my deputy. Thus the die was cast, the Curtis Institute gave a big reception in my honour and had a plaquette coined in memory of my activities there; and at Easter I returned with my wife to Europe. In the spring of 1925, still weak from my neuritis, I had been ordered to convalesce at Baden-Baden, and in view of the beauty of this place, which I already knew from previous concert tours, I had decided to live there for that part of the year which I spent in Europe. A year later, I had bought a handsome house in the most beautiful part of the town, and had moved in a few months after, shortly before my return to America. It was to lovely Baden-Baden, then, that my wife and I now returned. [END OF CARL FLESCH'S MS.]
359
THE LAST SIXTEEN YEARS [1928-1944] by C.
F. Flesch
ON his return from the U.S.A.
my
father attracted to
Baden-
He always and believed in having gradually extended in this idea until it was correct to say that he actually taught 'classes'. For the pupils themselves this was good training for
Baden
a circle of pupils
from
over the world.
all
listeners at his lessons
?
in public; many regarded these lessons as a more severe playing test than a concert, since the audience consisted entirely of experts ;
the listeners learnt
but
also the art
much, not only about the
art
of violin playing
of teaching.
Baden-Baden
is
an expensive spa but
my
father succeeded in
number of private householders to let rooms to his inducing at moderate prices, and during the summer months one a
pupils
could hardly take a walk without identifying Flesch pupils by the from various houses. The informal sound of
coming
practising
atmosphere at Baden-Baden, its swimming pools, Kur Garden, and the wonderful surroundings must have made many students'
an ideal time for them from every point of view. My father found this method of class teaching so successful that
stay
he kept
it
up
after
he had moved
to
London,
as
well as during
summer holidays in various Belgian spas. It would be name any particular pupils of this period, especially
unfair to as
many
attended only for a few 'finishing' lessons, but mention should be made of Ida Haendel, Ginette Niveu, Ricardo OdnoposofF,
Henry
Szering, Bronislaw
whom
studied with
my
Gimpel and Joseph Hassid,
father for several years. Hassid
doubt one of the strongest violin Fritz Kreisler, after hearing
fiddler such as
him
at
X
talents
my
of
all
of
was no
his time. Indeed,
father's house, said:
'A
(mentioning a very famous name) is born every 100 years; one like Hassid every 200 years/ During the last war
360
,
THE LAST SIXTEEN YEARS [1928-1944] he made, whilst
a boy, a very successful debut in London with but Henry Wood, shortly afterwards he developed schizophrenia from which he never recovered: he died a few years later in an institution. He has recorded only a few small genre pieces but even these show what a loss the violinistic world has suffered still
Sir
through his early death.
The
number of pianists who collaboone of them the young Franz Reizenstein for father even then predicted a very distinguished future.
courses also attracted a
rated with pupils
whom my
But to return to pre-Hitler days: whilst at Baden-Baden father organized Chamber Music Series with Carl Friedberg and Felix Salmond, whose place was later taken by Gregor Piatigorsky. These concerts became important annual events and the revival
my
of his chamber music
gave him immense satisfaction. During the winter months my father moved to Berlin and divided his time between teaching at the Berlin Hochschule, private lessons and concerts. He was at the peak of his success artistic as well as material
when
activities
out of the blue the
My
New
York Stock Exchange
crash
had invested all his savings in American securities and much worse had bought a great proportion of them 'on margin', i.e. he had paid only a small percentage of their actual price. "When the 'bottom fell out of the market' he not only lost all his money but a great deal more, occurred in 1929.
father
ending up with a debt of at
He owed
this
money
least
100,000 marks.
to his friend, the banker Franz
von
Mendelssohn (see p. 256), and seeing no possibility of repaying it, he wrote him one day and offered his Stradivarius in full discharge of the and so
debt.
Von Mendelssohn was good enough
to accept this
had
to part with the instrument which had been 1 his constant companion for the greater part of his career.
my
father
However, with
his natural resilience
shock and from then onwards used
his
he soon overcame
this
second violin, a Petrus
Guarnerius, with great success. His mode of living did not change because his income con-
it
1P The violin was kept by the firm of Mendelssohn as an investment but I gather was later destroyed during an allied air raid on Berlin.
361
CARL FLESCH his tinued to be high, and he was even able to begin to rebuild
depleted resources. His house whether in Berlin, Baden-Baden or Londoncontinued to be a point of attraction for any musician who hapand many are the evenings of pened to be passing through town, chamber music which under strict exclusion of strangers
produced combinations of
artists
such as will never be heard
I remember a quartet evening in together on a concert platform. Felix Salmond, others in London and Kreisler Baden-Baden with several with Emanuel Feuerand with Heifetz and Max Rostal, It is an rnann, to mention but a few of the most outstanding ones. eternal pity that the tape recorder was practically unknown at that time, though it is certain that my father would not wittingly
on these occasions when all those down. musically speaking, were letting their hair
have permitted
its
use
present,
made
for a very interesting time for us, the younger a curious thought, incidentally, that whilst so generation. It is much has been written about prominent men, the story of their It all
families' reactions
man
is
still
by no means
awaits easy,
its
author. Living as a son
of a great
and comparisons, particularly with
and not always altogether satisfying. The * And do you also play question from strangers after each concert, die violin?' became so annoying that Stefan (son of Artur)
pupils, are inevitable
I proposed to appear at one of our fathers' sonata with a placard round our necks proclaiming, 'No, I don't play the violin (piano) Unfortunately we never carried out the idea.
Schnabel and
recitals
.'
Children also tend to get somewhat distorted ideas of the standing and importance of friends of the family. Famous people become commonplace and so it happened that my brother, at the age of eight, on being told one day that he would not be allowed up for supper because guests were expected, replied con-
to stay
temptuously:
'But
who
is
coming
after
Schnabel, Nikisch. . . .' In the literary field my father undertook
He
all
just
Kreisler,
no major works,
prepared a second edition of his Art of Violin Playing, edited a number of concertos and sonatas (some together with Artiu wrote two small treatises the Problems of Tone ProducSchnabel),
362
THE LAST SIXTEEN YEARS [1928-1944] tion in Violin
How
to Practise
Bruno
hand
at the
arias.
Playing and Eisner also tried his
One of them-Prayer
Menuhin, has, of this genre.
I
think, a
and with the
pianist
transcription of six Handel recorded amongst others by Yehudi
permanent place in the music
literature
The advent of Hitler in 1933 did not immediately change his The authorities were only too anxious to keep a number of
career.
distinguished Jewish artists and teachers Tor show', and so father continued until 1934 to teach and give concerts. His last
my
appearance was as a soloist with Furtwangler in Berlin on the evening of the Reichstag Fire. I still remember the early editions of the morning papers (appearing at about midnight) bringing the first sensational news, and the chief editor of the Vossische Zeitung,
Georg Bernhard, who was in the party of friends at an after-concert supper, asserting that this would mean the end of the Nazis one of the many miscalculations to which Democratic Leaders at that time were so prone. Incidentally, the coincidence of this concert and the fire on the same evening is mentioned in Lion Feuchtwanger's famous novel The Family Opperman which describes these events.
In 1934
my
father inevitably
came
could no longer stay in Germany.
to the conclusion that he
He
sold his house
and
after
some exploratory journeys settled in London, where he continued to teach and give courses to a large number of pupils. Although he had originally decided to stop playing in public after his sixtieth year, economic conditions forced him to keep up his :oncert career, and it was a source of pride to him that his powers lis lis
le it
He ascribed this to the soundness of methods and he continued to play in public until shortly before death. In fact, in a letter written just a few days before his death, mentioned that he had never felt so successful as a soloist as
a performer never waned.
is
that time.
When war broke ngagements
out
in Holland
my father fulfilled a number of concert at that
time neutral
and then decided
o stay there and follow an invitation to give a course of lessons. People in Holland were completely blind to the dangers of a
Jerman invasion and the event caught 363
my parents unprepared, in
CARL FLESCH of our warnings by letter and telegram to return in time. As a matter of fact, I managed, on the first day of the invasion, to obtain the British through the good offices of Sir Adrian Boult, to the Vic-Wells attached be to Consulate s consent for them in Holland, and which was Ballet which happened to be on tour evacuated to London via Spain. However, I was unable to get father himself and he never thought of asking the word to
spite
my
British Consulate for help to return.
Thus both
my parents stayed
on in Holland. of course, not allowed to teach or play and a new edition of the Kreutzer occupied most of his time with Studies and a large work, the Art of Fingering, which he regarded as exceeding in importance even his Art of Violin Playing. This book is shortly to be published by Messrs. Curci. Incidentally, when he left Holland he had to leave the manuscript behind with
My
father was,
bombing raids, but was suddenly discovered have been attacked by mice luckily without any permanent
friends. It survived all
to
damage.
were made for my father to be allowed to he was offered a teaching post in the U.S.A., but the Germans declined to give him an exit permit. Meanwhile the Nazis began to round up Jews and put them into Repeated
efforts
leave Holland; for instance,
concentration camps with a view to eventual extermination. Both father had been lucky my parents were arrested twice but
my
enough to have in his possession a letter from Furtwangler, his lifelong friend, recommending him to a German official in quite a different connection. This spoke of him in the highest terms and when produced made such an impression on the German authorithat parents were released almost immediately. Nevertheless, in the long run, even Furtwangler would
ties
.;
my
have
been unable to prevent their extermination, in particular since~ they had meanwhile lost their
German
well as their Hungarian nationality and stateless Jews were the first target of the Germans. Here, however, two colleagues came to my father's aid, the as
Geza von Kresz and Ernst von Dohnanyi, who managed Hungarian authorities' consent to reinstate my father's^ nationality. Upon diverse protracted applications he was perviolinist
to get the
364
,
:
THE LAST SIXTEEN YEARS [1928-1944] Germans
Holland and by the Hungarians The journey took my parents straight through war-time Germany and was one of the most nervetnitted
by
the
to leave
to enter their country.
racking experiences of their life. It is probable that it was the origin of the heart disease from which my father eventually died. In Hungary, which at that time was only just beginning to be
dominated by the Nazis, my father gave one concert in which he played both the Beethoven and Brahms Concertos, with sensational success. However, when he advertised a second one, quite a number of anonymous letters and telephone calls were made to the police to prevent it, and he therefore preferred to cancel it. He managed to earn a living through a new edition of the two Bach Violin Concertos. Again, however, he could recognize that conditions
At
would rapidly deteriorate.
that time the Basle Conservatoire
had decided to open
a
separate Conservatoire at Lucerne, and my father, through the good offices of Ernest Ansermet, was able to secure a Swiss visa and labour permit (a great feat at the time) and was engaged to
take over the violin
class.
The head of the Lucerne
Conservatoire
soon came to be on very was Paul Eger, with whom my friendly terms. He taught and played with great success for one father
and a half years, and, political and world conditions apart, was happy in his work and surroundings. Violin playing in Switzerland had never been of a generally high standard, and it was my father's aim, in time, to create a new the excitement of generation of young Swiss violinists. However, to fail. Examiyears had taken its toll and his health began nation by a specialist confirmed that the heart was seriously
the
last
damaged. The
specialist
discussed with
my
mother
how
far to
to continue playing and teaching, but they came to the conclusion that for an active man like him, this would be
forbid
him
tantamount to
a death sentence.
They
therefore decided to allow
him to continue in his work unchecked.
One day he contracted 'flu,
cancelled his lessons for a
few
days,
but recovered very quickly. He therefore wrote several postcards next lessons, and on retiring to :o giving the dates of their pupils, his last
:>ed,
words were, 1
feel
completely well again.'
365
CARL FLESCH During the same night on November
15, 1944,
he died in
his
sleep.
In spite of the world's preoccupation with war, the news stir in Switzerland and it was broadcast the same morning
caused a
to the great consternation father's postcards
I
of those pupils
who
received
my
on the following
evening. British agencies picked up the broadcast from Switzerland and myself read of his death the next morning in the papers tele-
grams at that time took anything from twenty-four hours upwards to arrive. Memorial concerts were held in Switzerland, in Holland in and in London, where Sir spite of the German occupation Adrian Boult and Mr Edric Cundell spoke, and Max Rostal and the late Franz Osborn (with the help of a small string orchestra composed partly of former pupils) played. After the war, Yehudi Menuhin gave a concert in his memory in Berlin. At the instigation of Max Rostal and Mr Cundell the Guildhall
School initiated a Carl Flesch medal 'For Excellence in Violin Playing' which is now an annual prize coveted by young violinIt is a fitting memorial to a man for was the most teaching important part of his work.
ists all
over the world.
366
whom
APPENDIX
I
HUBERMAN by Hans
Keller
LJESCH and Huberman were
t
Huberman
is
opposite musical characters, and the one in this narrative towards Flesch is figure
whom
i
unable to maintain his uniquely objective attitude, shown, for instance, in his characterizations of such and opposites as Rose 49
^Heifetz (see pp. 335
^which
I
happen
to
ff.),
(see pp. ff.) description of Joachim's playing, of idea from a very old record, and with
or in his
have some
which, paradoxically enough, Huberman's
style
seems to have had
much in common. seems moreover likely to me that Flesch had last heard Huberman long before I heard him first, for not even his purely technical observaIt
tions
apply to the
Huberman I knew:
since
Huberman's was a strongly
developing personality, Flesch and I may at times be talking, as it Vere, about different artists. At the risk of momentarily extending my 'editorial function, then, I feel that I
might profitably offer a rejoinder and some complementary comment to Flesch's observations. Huberman was one of the greatest musicians I have ever come across. Right or wrong, mine line
of artiste has
is
not altogether an eccentric impression: a long stature as an artist, violinist towering
testified to his
knd man, including such vastly different musical character types Brahms, Toscanini, Bruno Walter and Furtwangler,
as
In general, Huberman's technique seems to have undergone various in the course of his It was in:hanges
development.
iividual, ^ff-days.
and to some extent
certainly
always
depended on his mood, on his on- and When he was *on form', both hands evinced a virtuoso techit
lique of the utmost brilliance and an almost uncanny verve. More in particular, when I heard him, he did no longer hold the
in the old
manner
,
nor did he 'whisper'
at a
low dynamic
bow
level.
Typical of his ever-changing interpretations was a tendency towards he sharpest possible characterization and, consequently, an occasional
extreme pianissimo of the greatest I have never intensity. again heard he entry of the second subject after the cadenza in the first movement >:
the Beethoven ....... ,__
Concerto pkyed so
367
softly
and
intensely, yet
APPENDIX
I
restrained!/ and without incidental noises, (Unluckily, I never heard a Flesch concert.)
He no longer used a 'pure finger vibrato' when I heard him, norindeed was his finger vibrato like other people's. It was determined, on the one hand, by his very original sound-ideals, and on the other hand, by the peculiarities of his left hand which, so far as 'trembling* movements were concerned, seemed to function in a highly individual man-
he would execute the fastest and clearest possible and stretched fourth finger, by way of a vibrato-like stiff
ner. For instance,
shake with a
motion. His records show that his vibrato, far from being inadequate, was capable of the subtlest differentiations. In view of his records, the reader will be puzzled by Flesch's remarks on Huberman's intonation. It was the very opposite of a 'welltempered' intonation; in fact, I do not know of another violinist whc adjusted his intonation so consistently to harmonic and melodic requirements. Naturally, with a violinist whose technique can be erratic, critical appraisal will easily be one-sided if his development is not closel) followed. While Flesch prefers Huberman's left hand to his right, Grov t
IV
speaks of his 'excellent technique, especially of the right hand* evidently, it all depended on when you heard him. Nor did I find an^ 'neglect
of elementary
emphasis Huberman
rules
lays
of
upon
articulation', his
own
and
as for 'the over-
personality',
a
powerfu
we do
not take to will always seem to us egocentric personality Huberman's musical character had affinities with that of Furtwangler one of his profoundest admirers, whose own intense personality like wise aroused the impression of self-centredness amongst those wh< reacted against it.
As a
man, finally, Huberman showed his passionate intellect an integrity in his fight for a United States of Europe, in his famou l accuse (1933) in reply to Furtwangler's invitation to play in German
f
after the Nazis
had assumed power (see Curt Riess, Wilhelm Purtwanglei most important, in his founding, in 193 ) and,
London, 1955, pp. 117 (after
about a year's strenuous
efforts
entailing
innumerable auditions
what has meanwhile become the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra achievement which Toscanini helped to bring to fruition.
368
a
APPENDIX
I
HUBERMAN by C. A.
Mr
S
F. Flesch
Keller so rightly points out, his note is not stricdy within his However, since I was anxious not to suppress his
editorial functions.
same time not to have my father's viewpoint dison the somewhat unorthodox step of an additional torted, agreed comment on my part. The fact that there can be opinions on Huberman which are so at the Dpinion, but
we
diametrically opposed
shows
that his
was a strong personality of many
facets.
am not qualified to judge the purely technical aspects of his playthat his technique underwent fundamental changes ing: it may well be I
hi later years and could be erratic, though I may be forgiven if I rely father's judgment than on that of Mr in these matters more on
my
Keller or Grove IV.
to
As to interpretation, however, I know from numerous discussions which I listened in our own home that many prominent artists
of playing. For my fundamentally disagreed with Huberman's style was the overriding intentions father the realization of the composer's
Huberman, no doubt, frequently put
consideration whereas personality
before the
work he was
his
own
interpreting.
connection the experience of Artur Schnabel is perhaps he began instructive. After many years of co-operation with my father, last long and, did not association The Huberman. with to play sonatas a foregone conclusion for all I believe, was artistically not a happy one who realized the extreme difference between the two artists' approach
In
this
to their work.
no enmity between Huberman and my Huberman had the greatest respect for him as a teacher. From conit is clear that Huberman once in
There was, father.
incidentally,
my
'correspondence
possession
for the
*
"
of his
express purpose young violinist's expenses for lessons with my father. London to coming Both were sometimes united, too, in their aim to help colleagues
tributed to a
trouble, such
as,
for instance,
Rose; Huberman's
bears witness to reproduced below,
no doubt two great
It is
tion,
in
letter to myself,
this.
a healthy sign that there could be, in the same generaa classical works in so different artists
approaching
manner and yet both with such outstanding success. 369
APPENDIX
II
TRANSLATION OF A GERMAN LETTER FROM BRONISLAW HUBERMAN TO C. F, FLESCH BRONISLAW HUBERMAN
London,
May
10,
1939-
Scheveningen,
May
29,
I939
SECRETARIATE
1
Oranje-Hotel, Villa 12.
Mr. C. 54,
F. Flesch,
Baker
Street,
London, W.i.
Dear Mr.
Flesch:
Enclosed please find a cheque for .10.0.0; kindly use it for the Rose Fund, according to our agreement. It goes against my grain to send this cheque personally to the old
gentleman. I think it is only logical that the initiator of the undertaking.
it
With
should go via your father
best wishes,
Yours,
Bronislaw
Huberman2
*It seems to me that the London date refers to the dictation of the letter whicl was probably signed in Scheveningen, during a concert engagement. It wa received on May 31. Tr. 2 The signature, incidentally, might help to put an end to the frequent mis spelling of the name ('Hubermann'), e.g. in Grove IF and F (Flesch, too, employ
the double
V in
his manuscript).
Tr.
370
m
APPENDIX
TRANSLATION OF A GERMAN LETTER FROM
TO FLESCH
SEVCIK (cf.
facsimile
between pp. 338 and 339).
Pisek,
May
5,
1924.
very dear master,
My
With your work1 you have provided violinists with a bible to which teachers
and players will continue to
refer as
long
as there is violin
the world. playing in violin playing has been left Nothing connected with the violin and out of account, and to every question you have found a convincing
answer.
Hats off to the great master standing,
what
!
work! Should not
we
had no
who
others,
violin, get together in order to I
What knowledge, what artistic undermaking of this
has gone towards the sagacity
gigantic
have perpetrated things for the
commit auto-da-fet
idea of this latest fruit of your genius; otherwise I should
not have failed to congratulate you. I
am much obliged for your kindly sending me the work which the
has beautifully produced, publisher, too,
and for the
your letter of April 30. So far, most great violinists have taken me.
I
am,
therefore, particularly impressed
the great, but one of the greatest [the
temple of our]
art. I
has
warm words
special pleasure
in hanging
the fact that not
by
come to
in
one of
a little niche in grant me
am infinitely grateful to you for this courage.
With the Czech translation one might wait a little. of Czechoslovakia, which alone can be taken into
In the big towns
consideration, people
to send copies on approval your publisher ought to Bohemian music shops too As the interest in the work increases, # the translation should be embarked upon.
know German;
only,
!
iThe Art of Violin Playing.
C.F.-BB
371
APPENDIX
III
and am kept going until the end term the of the academic thought of my holiday in Prague. by I
now live permanently in Pisek1 I
remain,
my
dear master, with
Yours very
my kindest regards, sincerely,
Ot. Sevok.
^e died there ten years later at the age of nearly eighty-two.
37*
INDEX Art of Violin Playing, The, 8, 2i., 33/1., 39., 44n., 86, 174, 241, 242, 25i.,
^BBIATE, LOUIS, 98
.ccompanying practice, 64
ma non
dagio
tanto(J, S. Bach),
238
357i 362, 364,
118 dagio Religioso (Thome"), Oskar, 20.; Quartet, Baron, 168
.diet,
20.
Asow, E. H. Mueller von, 247. Asow, Hedwig von, 247.
G
Aubert, Jacques, 239 Audiences compared, 232-3
vani (Vieuxtemps), 46 ix-la-Chapelle, 319 lard, D., 16, 38, 42, 239 ir
Auer, Leopold, 139, 153, 252-4, 255, 265, 278, 336, 338, 339-40, 351, 355, 356;
London
253-4, 339^40; death, 34; exploitation of name in U.S. A., 339; fees, 339; school, 139, 252-4, 255, as teacher,
lexanian, Diran, 23 5. S. Bach), 238; (J. (Lorenzo Somis), 238
Jlegro
(Lolli),
238;
203,
241,
157,
265-6, 336, 338; technique, 252 Aulin, Tor, 240 Austria, 12-59, 73. 127 Autobiography (Spohr), 2
313,319 Honge*e instruments, 264 Isace,
translations of,
Asnieres, 100
.gogics, 209, 247, 254 ir on the String, 48
Musikzeitung,
37i.;
Artot, 196
.gogical expression, 51
.llgemeine
312, 318-19, 323, 324*
324, 358
.erenthal,
Jbert Hall. See
3H,
253, 298,
284^.
.coustics,
Ave Maria
307
(Schubert), 289, 291
Jtenburg, II
Jtmann, Linati
Dr Wilhelm, 204
instruments, 55
B
Vmerican
tour', the, 332 onsterdam, 14, 26, 38, 45, 46, 82, 90, 112,
151, 175, 186, 190, 198, 208, 210,
212-
ACH,
j.
s.,
22, 23,
27.,
32,
3<5,
40, 48,
50, 80, 81, 83, 104, 115, I3i
i39-
160, 162, 177, 202, 207, 209,
2i7.,
225, 234, 237, 238, 268n., 270/1., 277, 291, 365; sonatas, 36; sonatas and
49, 266, 268, 269, 289, 295, 299, 358;
concert life in, 230-1 ; Concertgebouw Orchestra, 212-13, 220-49, 266, 268, 299; Conservatoire, 212-49, 266, 295; Lees Museum, 236; Music School, 217-18; Nieuwen Achtergracht, 217; rivalries within Concertgebouw Orchestra, 226-7; Society for the Pro-
motion of Music, 212; strike threat by Concertgebouw Orchestra, 226-7
partitas,
violin,
207; sonatas for clavier and violin concertos, 365;
40;
violin sonatas, 23 Bachrich (viola player), 52 Bachrich, Berthold, 26, 29
Back, Adolf, 13, 16, 341; as composer, 14; slow vibrato of, 14; teaching methods,
Lndrae,
14 Back, Oskar, 14, 3i<5 Backhaus, Wilhelm, 350. 352-3, 354
todriessen,
Baden-Baden, 38, 231, 279, 359,
[msterdamer Handelsblad, 234
Volkmar, 248 Willem, 217 ijorooy, Peter van, 230 tosermet, Ernest,
343.
3<55J
interpreta-
^ria
(Francoeur),
Baldner,
42 239;
(Mondonville), 239 btihem, 225, 230 behold, Eduard, 270 brangement, 'Paris', 102 Irf
Baillot, 62, 64,
196
Bailly, Louis, 351, 353
tions, 343
^rb6s, Fernandez,
3<5o-i>
362
of Fingering, The, 364
(Locatelli),
238;
Max, 264
Ballet Scene (J. Hellmesbefger, sen.),
24
Baltimore, 275; Peabody Institute, 275 Balzac, 87
Bardeleben,
von
(surgeon), 165
Barmas, 275 Bart6k, 83., 300
373
INDEX Basic Studies, 8, 241-2, 263,
314-26, 334, 358-9, 3<5i-3; Mendelsat Prize Hochschule, 105; Molique Prize at Hochschule, 105; music in after First World War, 319;
325
sohn
Basle, 60, 276, 365; Conservatoire, 365;
Concert Society, 277 La (de Beriot), 239 Bassermann, Hans, 92
Basque,
life in, 133-4; Philharmonic Choir, 151; Philharmonic Orchestra, 44, 105, 127, 140, 144, 148, 149, 150, 156, 195, 2i6., 230, 245, 267, 273, Philharmonic Society, 202; 317; Reichstag fire, 363; Royal Academy of Arts, 30; Singakademie, 200, 313 State Opera, 25, 105; teachers' fees in 334; treatment of foreign artists in 105-6; University, 3151*. Berliner Borsen-Zeitung, 157 Berliner Tageblatt, 4, 139, 140, 157, 158, 203,
musical
Bauer, Harold, 235, 285, 291, 358
Bayreuth, 29, 48,
167*1.,
Festival,
230;*.;
20Q. Bazzini, 143
Bebung, 120 Becker, Hugo, 35, 80, 235, 257, 258, 266, 267, 296-9, 307-8, 321; as chambermusician, 297; as teacher, 297, 298; has book on 'cello playing, 298; interpretations, 297; on technique, 298; on quality of performance, 297-8; physical appearance, 296; tone, 297; vibrato,
204 Berlioz, 75, 112
297
Bernhard, Georg, 363 Berthelier, 68
Becker, Jean, 181, 296 Beethoven, 2, 2on., 227*., 24, 27, 32, 33, 36,
Besancon, 99
39, 40, 47, 53, 75, 7<5, 80, 84, 93, 94, 97, 104, 124, 140, 145, 151, 152, 163, 164, 167, 169, 179, 183, 200, 206, 208, 221, 227, 228, 229, 234, 235, 236, 239, 246/1., 247., 248, 257., 262, 264, 267,
Biber, Heinrich J. F.. 238 Bielitz,
Bismardi 28
^73, 277, 278, 285, 288, 306, 308, 318, chamber 319,^320, 349, 353, 358, 365; music, 97; piano sonatas, 319; quartets, 40, 93, 164, 353; sonatas, 36, 145, 308; string quartets, 319; symphonies,
76
Bittner, 55 Bizet, 127
Blacher, Boris, 31571.
Blech, Leo, 73, 323, 324 Bodanzki, Artur, 13-14, 286, 341-2; inter-
.
'Beethoven*
Rondo
(Kreii
21),
pretations, 342 Boellmann, 76 Boer, Willem de, 216
124
Behr, Therese, 257, 258 Bekker, Paul, 203, 274n., 315 Belgian school, 45, 196
Bohemian
String Quartet, 31, 78, 181-2, 234, 251, 276 Bohemians (U.S. lodge), 282, 285
Belgium, 14, 266, 294, 360 Benda, Franz, 239 Berber, Felix, 34, 139, 143-4, 205; lack of self-control, 144; technique, 143 Berceuse, op. 16 (Faure), 239; op. 28, no. 3
Bohm, Joseph, 314 Bohnke, Emil, 256 Bok, Edward, 350 Bok, Mrs Mary Louise, 332-3, 350, 351, 355
(Juon), 240
Bokay
Berg, Alban, 2611. Berger, Otto, 182/1.
Bergonzi instruments, 157; prices
of,
Cfcu de, 19, 42, 196, 239, students* concertos, 311
311;
i77- 184, 1 86, 2i6n., 223, 229, 230,
127, 132-60, 169, 173,
231, 234, 238, 244, 245, 246, 249, 25078, 295-309, 310-26, 330, 334, 344, 348, 351, 358, 3<$i-3, 366; Bechstein Hall, 136, 140; Beethoven Saal, 200; bibliophiles among musicians in, 269;
Conservatoire, 300; Court Orchestra, 195; Flesch memorial concert, 366;
General
Staff,
Bordeaux, 71, 127, 196 137 Bossi, E., 240
157
Berlin, 19, 25, 30, 34, 37, 44, 66, 69, 78, 84, 85, 89, 90, 93, 98, 105, 113, 119,
I95-2H,
(lawyer), 147
Bonn, 307
Be*riot,
193,
257
Bilse, 78; Orchestra, 44, 98 Birthday of the Infanta, The, 31 $n.
Borsenkurier,
Boston, 20, 144, 221, 281, 282, 283, 343, 345-6; Symphony Orchestra, 20, 281, 282, 345-6 Bottesini, 345 Boucherit, Jules, 88, 108; as teacher, 88; technique, 88; tone, 88
Boulangerism, 129 Boulogne, 114 Boult, Sir Adrian, 364, 366 Bourrfa (Telemann), 238
Bowing,
299; Hochschule, 28.,
30-8, 89, 105, 127, 138, 139, 145, 147, 152, 195, 203, 250-4, 267, 274, 297,
374
18, 33-4, 3<5, 39, 44, 51, <5l, 64, 6 7, 78, 79, 90, 93, 95, 121-2, 131, 154, 177. 197, 228-9, 250, 253, 267, 298, 330; by Franco-Belgian school, <$5,
INDEX V>AF MUSIC, 68, 92, 102-4, 105 Cahier, Sarah, 351
253; 'Russian* style, 253, 335; slowmotion, 51; stiff, 4; tremor, 81 Brahms, 20., 24, 2y., 36, 37, 41, 46, 51,
Cajanus, 279
53, 75, ?6, 84, 104, 146, 149, 154, 178,
California, 269, 281,
203., 209, 2I3., 214, 227, 258, 262,
Camondo, Count,
270/1., 285,
Cantacuzene, Constance, 163, 170 Cantata for voice and orchestra (WuUner),
318, 340, 350, 3^5, 367; 209 ; double concertos,
clarinet sonatas,
208tt.
340 Braz, Anatole
le,
Cantilena, 266
327
Bremen, 201, 274
Canzonetta, op. 53 (Godard), 239 Lucien, 48/1., 88, 74, 92-4, Capet, 101-2, 145; and cafe music, 102; as author, 93-4; as quartet player, 93; as teacher, 93 bowing, 93 ; death, 93 ; early hardships, 92; editions of classical works, 94; Joachim's influence on, 94; love of quartet playing, 92; mysticism of, 94; popularizes quartet playing, 94; Quartet, 74, 93, 182, 251; recordings, 93 ; style, 94; technique, 93 Capet-Flonzaley Quartet, 353 Caressa, Albert (violin dealer), 113, 244 Carl Flesch Medal for Excellence in Violin
Brennerberg, Irene von, 54, 57 Breslau, ion.,
Brisbane,
204
3I7. 340, 349-50, 356
Briselli, Iso,
;
Benjamin, 315/1. Broadcasting. See Radio Britten,
Brodsky, 156; Quartet, 156 Bruch, Max, 39, 53, 64, 80, 88, 104, 142, 154, 239; and development of violin concerto, 154 Bruckner, Anton, 27, 148 Brun, Alphonse, 88 Brussels,
357
62, 71
14,
45, 78, 79,
83, 2i6n., 268,
30i., 316; Conservatoire, 45, 78;
Playing, 366 I, King, 164-9, 168, 310 II, King, 169 Caruso, Enrico, 288, 2OO., 292;
Quartet, 182 Bucharest, 25, 27, 39, 40, 42, 89, 92, 117, 128, 135, 159, 161-91, 193-4, 195, 196, 200, 205, 211, 212, 242, 244, 28i; Atheneum, 162; Conservatoire, 117, 135, 159-60, 162-91, 193-4; Conservatoire orchestral concerts, 185-6; court concerts, 164-94; court life in, 164 rT.; Metropolie, 162
Carol Carol
phone 292
Casals, Pablo,
in,
214, 234, 235-6, 254,
267, 277, 285, 296, 297, 358; as conductor, 236; as teacher, 23 5.; fingering, 235/1.; glissandos, 235; influence
on
Budapest, 49, 60, 127, 139, 152, 153, 186, 300-1; Academy of Music, 153, 154, 301; Conservatoire, 186 Bulow, Hans von, 32, 127, 133, 148, 2o8., 209, 287, 348 Bungert, August, 167 Bunte R.eihe, op, 30 (David), 239 Burgin, 329
'cello
playing,
Cassirer,
Bruno, 270
297 Chabrier, 76
Chaconne
(J.
S.
Bach), 32,
265; recordings, 292; tone, 265 Busch, Fritz, 323, 324, 341, 343 Busoni, Ferruccio, 80, 154, 155, 156, I97-, 201, 202, 224, 225, 234, 269, 277, 284, 329, 354; as author, 155; as composer, 155; as pianist, 155; as teacher, 155; influence on musical development, 155; influence on students, 155
Chasse,
50/1.,
52,
i88.
48/1.,
50, 115,
131, 139, 1 60, 162
Changes of position, 326
Friedrich, 27,
technique,
Castrone, Marchese de, 116 Cavatina, op. 25 (Cui), 239 'Cello Concerto (D' Albert), 297; (Dohnanyi), 297; (Grieg), in; (R. Strauss),
playing, 143*, physical appearance, 141; 'pieces', 142; rhythm, 141; style, 141 ; technique, 141 Busch, Adolf, 216, 246, 264-5, 292, 317, 324; as composer, 265; as teacher, 265;
Buxbaum,
235;
235; tone, 235 Cassel, 308
Burlesque (R. Strauss), 306 Burmester, Willy, 3, 119, 127, 139, 141-3, 195, 233; arrogance of, 141; bowing, 141; death, 142; influence on violin
personality,
gramo-
royalties of, 290/1.; recordings,
Chaplin (medal designer), 106 Charlemagne, 304 Charlottenburg, 204 Charpentier, Gustave, 76, 126-7
La (Mondonville), 239 Chausson, 197 Chevillard, 73, 76, 278 Chicago, 84, 201, 207, 343; Conservatoire, 201 Children's Song (David), 239 Chladni, Ernst Horens Friedrich, 284-5; Figures, 284-5 Chopin, 201, 202 Choral Fantasy (Beethoven), 163
375
INDEX Symphony
Cincinnati, 78, 273, 286, 342;
Orchestra, 273
Cinema,
56,
327
Clarinet Quintet (Brahms), 209 Cohn-Hollander family, 118 Cologne, 208, 209, 210, 216, 221, 227, 3078,
317^.; Cathedral, 227; Conserva221, 227; Hochschule, 216; Orchestra, 208; revolt in
toire,
Municipal (1918), 307-8 Colonne, Edouard, 72, 75 ; interpretations, 72; Quartet, 72 Columbia Gramophone Company, 291 Concertante style, 335 Concertgebouw Orchestra,
Dancla, 61, 62, 68, 74; bowing, 61
See Amster-
status
as teacher,
Dante, 269 David, Ferdinand, 30., 213, 239, Debroux, Joseph, 87, 112
as
61;
268.
Debussy, 80, 82, 178, 214, 258 Dechert, 267 Decrescendo, unmotivated, 336 d'Harcourt, Viscount Eugene, 76; certs,
dam
Con-
76
Delsart, 98
Deluge, Le, 196
Concerto in the Hungarian Style (Joachim), 31, 32, 33, 36, 41, 135, 267, 3io Concerto romantique (Godard), 77 Conductors as solo players, 324; differences
between, 272; individuality of, 272; mentality o 230; music, 151; 'singin success of, ing', 271; variations 340-1 Conductors and conducting, qualities of, 288 Constantinople, 71 Coolidge, President, 357 Copenhagen, 301 Corelli, Arcangelo, I, 36, 238; sonatas, 36
124.
Cousine Bette, 87
Cracow, 117 Crickhoom, 82 Criticism and critics,
2, 3,
85,
107, 136,
157-8, 163, 168, 16970, 186, 199-200, 203-4, 207, 212-13, 215, 229, 233-4, 241, 282-4, 3l6., 322, 341. 342, 352, 35<5; artists' over137, *39>
I4>
estimation o
Deman, 105 Demuth, Leopold, 27 Denayer, 87
Denmark, 301 Deroux (violin dealer), 113 Dessoir, Max, 311-12; assists with The Art of Violin Playing, 312; influence on Hesch, 312 Destinn, 288 Detache, 330 Detroit, 137 Deutsch, Felix, 313 Deutsch, Maurus, 57-8, 6o~i, 62, 69, 104, 113, 115, 125, 170
Deutschland, S.S., 348 Devil's Trill, the, I
Cortot, 99, 234 Country Gentleman, 350
Couperin,
Damnation of Faust, 75 Damrosch, Frank, 281, 294, 341 Damrosch, Walter, 275, 285; conductor, 285
192; Berlin Press
com-
pared with Paris, 157-8; in U.S.A., 282-4; knowledge of music of, 284 Csdrdds Scenes (Hubay), 154 Cm", Cesar, 239 Gulp, Julia, 234, 263, 288 Cundell, Edric, 366 Curci, Messrs, 364 Curtis, Cyrus H. K., 3 50 Curtis Institute. See Philadelphia Curtis Quartet. See Philadelphia
Dickin, Mrs, 172 Dickin, Walter, 172 Diemer, Louis, 70, 327 d'Indy, Vincent, 75, 232 Dinico, Demeter, 27, 162, 163, 164, 169, 172, 182-3, 194; Concerto, 183; refuses to play with Flesch, 170 Divertimento No. I (Stamitz), 238 Dohndnyi, 6, 108, 150, 154, 297, 299-301, 364; as composer, 300; as conductor,
300; Hungarian Government's treat-
ment of, 300-1 Don Juan (Strauss), 75 Don Quixote (Cervantes), 297 Dont, Jakob, 37 Door, Anton, 27 Doret, Gustave, 77 Double Concerto (J.
Double stopping,
S.
269; (Strauss),
Bach), 8 1
33, 235
Czechoslovakia, 371
Dm
JL) 'ALBERT, 297
Dresden, 25, 89, 267; Court Orchestra, 267 Dreyfus affair, 129 Dubois, Theodore, 82, 90, 200 Duo for solo violin (Stamitz), 238
dalTOrso, Edgar, 164, 166, 168, 170; influence over Queen Elisabeth of
Durham, L., 3 on. Dusk (Schillings), 240
Rumania, 166-7
schlichte
Dtisseldorf,
Weisen (Schillings), 240
244
INDEX Dutch instruments,
55,
113,
development of violinteachers' fees in, 334 Epstein, Julius, 27 Ernst, Heinrich Wilhelm, 31, 45, 53, 239
I4O., 15?;
in,
prices of, 157 Dutch Wagner Society, 230 Dvorak, 26, 40, 46, 90, 104, 124, 183, 239
191-2;
playing
'Eroica'
Dynamics, 254
204
(Fiorillo),
238
Etudes harmoniques (Sauzay), 62 Eureka (Marsick), 66
Execution, effect of microphone on, 292 Exner, 35 Expression, 183, 188
;
325; treatise
;
Essen, 74, 210 Essence of Music and Other Papers, igjn. Etude No. 9 (de Beriot), 239; No. 28
_b STRING, OPEN STEEL, 4 Ebensee, 263 Eberhardt, Goby, 241-2, 325; as teacher, 241; plagiarism by, 242, 325 Eberhardt, Siegfried, 242, 325-6; 'faithhealer* on the violin, 325 plagiarism by,
193
Symphony, 151
Ertel, Paul,
on
in,
violin playing,
325-6 Echo de Pans, 157 Edison, Thomas, 4, 289-91 ; effect of deafness on, 291; musical tastes of, 291; Company, 289, 290-1 Eger, Paul, 365 Ehrlich, Heinrich, 157 Bin Heldenleben, 220 Eisner, Bruno, I46., 269, 270, 330, 363 Eisner,
Mme,
Eldering,
iAIRBANKS, FREDERICK, 23 5. Falsch spielen, 2in.
Family Opperman, The, 363 Fantasy, op. 159 (Schubert), 283 Fantasy for violin and orchestra (Schumann), 32; (Suk), 150, 276, 278 Fantasy on a Theme from Rossini's Moses on the G string (Paganini), 239 Fantasy on Motifs from Gounod's Faust
270
Bram,
34, 35, *95, 208, 210,
216-
265; as teacher, 216; misplaced kindness of, 216; style, 265 17,
Elgar, 8 1 Elisabeth,
Queen of Rumania,
39, 42,
(Wieniawski), 239 Faur6, Gabriel, 99, 239, 268 'Faust' Fantasy (Alard), 16; (Sarasate), 16
162-
164-9, 182-3, 193; as author, 167; as patron of music, 164 flf.; as pianist, 164; emotional character of, 167;
F& d'Amour (Raff), 39
musical judgment and knowledge, 167, i<58; poems, 167-8; personality, 168; preference for organ music, 164; unhappy married life, 164-5
Feme
3,
Fenermann, Emanuel, 362 Ferdinand,
Ellis Island, 349 Elman, Mischa,
Prince, 165, 168
Fingering, 36, 38, 95, *8o, 235, 267, 368; 'Casal', 23 5n. Finland, 279
17, 81, 251, 252, 253, 254264, 285, 288, 290, 292, 329, 335, 338; as quartet player, 255; bowing, 254; chamber-musical activities, 335; 5,
compared with Zimbalist, gramophone royalties of, 290;
Crown
Klang, Der, 31 $n. Feuchtwangler, Lion, 363 Fiedler, Heinrich, 220, 221 Fifth Symphony (Beethoven), 151, 235 Fin de siecle, 197
Fiorello, Federigo, 18, 238 First Chamber Symphony (Schoenberg),
255;
3i5-
inter-
leftpretations, 335; intonation, 254;
First
hand technique, 254; physical appear-
First
Symphony (Brahms), 149 World War, 25, 69, 77, 89, !35-
*43
144, 186, 192, 201, 220, 234., 257, 258, 264, 266, 268, 275, 280, 293, 294-
ance, 254; recordings, 292; rhythmic unruliness of, 255; style, 254; tem-
perament, 254; tone, 254, 255, 288, 335 Etnden, 305 Enesco, Georges, 68, 88, 94, 171, 178-81, 299; as accompanist, 180; as composer, 178, 1 80; as conductor, 178; as pianist, 178; as teacher, 180-1; character, 179-
309, 335, 340rt., 352, 353 Fischer (pianist), 52, 105; (publisher), 357
Fischhof, Robert, 270 Flesch andEberhard, 324-5 Flesch,
C.
F.,
360-6
Flesch, Carl, passim; a small-town
over-refined 1 80; 80; fingering, pianissimos, 180; personality, 179; 1 80; tone, style, 179, 1 80; technique,
180 audiences England, 191-3, 259, 278, 296;
377
man by
nature, 71; acquires Storioni violin,
55; anxiety about artistic development, 173-4; appears in public for time, 16; artistic personality of, 59; as chamber-musician, 70-1, 225-6, 230-1, 266; as concert artist, 111-12; first
INDEX as critic, 233-4; as Marsick's private pupil, 65-8; as quartet player, 182-4,
185; as soloist at Berlin Philharmonic Concerts, 245-6; as teacher, 44, 55~9 iio-n, 114, 126, 129, 162-93, 216-49, 256-79* 3H-26, 333-5* 339^ 35O-9, 3601, 363, 365; assesses Gr tin's teach-
ing abilities, 21-2; at a Stammtisch, 204-5 at Cremerie du Conservatoire, Paris, 99-100, 104; at Curtis Institute, 282; at lecture on Chladni's Figures, 284-5; attends chamber music class, Paris Conservatoire, 97 ; awarded premier accessits, Paris Conservatoire, 96; becomes engaged to Berta Josephus-Jitta, 242; befriended by Maurus Deutsch, *>
57-8, 60-1, 62; befriends Iso BriselK, 349-50; Berlin d6but, 136-^7, 173", birth, 6; birth of his first child, 243; borrows Lewinger's violin, 136-7; boycotted during voyage to U.S.A., 326; bowing, 64; buys a Stradivarius, 244; Capet's advice to, 101-2; Casals' impact on, 235; collects books, 268-9; composes cadenzas for violin con-
by Joachim, 241; death, 366; debt to Hellmesdebt to 86-7; Rivarde, berger, 23; dbut as writer on theory, 263 ; debut on concert platform, 54; depressed by Sauzay's teaching methods, 64-5; describes Bohemian Paris, 63-4; describes Paris Conservatoire contests, certos, 27; congratulated
95-6, 104-6; describes Sauzay's class, 69-70; describes Schon's exercises, n;
during First "World War, 294-309; during Second World War, 363-6; effect of Griin's style on, 57; effect of Marsick's teaching on, 67; effect of seven years in Vienna, 58-9; enters
gymnasium, 11; enters school, 19; fascinated by Rivarde's playing, 86; feels artistically Altenburg Griin*s
158-9;
dissatisfied^
184;
first
pupil,
first
publication, 55-6; first violin
9-12; forms a duo with Hofmann, 353; founds Hilfsbund fur deursche Musikpflege, 312-13; founds string quartet with Dinico, 170, 172; given title of Royal Rumanian Chamber Virtuoso, 193 ; gives private lessons in Bucharest, 170-1 ; gratitude to Marsick, 66; habitual portato, 67; has nervous breakdown, 322; Helllessons,
mesberger's antipathy to, 22-3, 53, 57; his Aunt Regi, 14-15, 29; his brothers and sisters, 9-10, 131; his cousin Risa, 14-15; his father, 6-12, 16, 53, 55, 57, 61, 71, 96, 102, 107,
130-2,
160,
170,
21 1
no, ;
117, 127,
his
father's
378
death, 244; his French-Swiss nurse, 7; his grandfather, 6, 1 3-14* 56 ; his greathis great-grandgreat-grandfather, 6; father, 6; his longing for Paris, 158; his
mother, 6-12, 13-15, 16-17, 55,
59, 7i, 96, 102, 107, U7, 127, 130-2; his mother's death, 8, 189; his opinion of Mo6r, 248; his violins, 55, 100-1,
H3, 127-8, 135, 138-9, I40., 185, 244, 361; illness of, 349-5O; im-
106,
pressed
by Nikisch, 147; in Amster-
87, 175, ipo, 210, 212-49, 295, 339; in Asnieres, 100; in Baden-Baden, 279, 359, 36o, 362-3; in Berlin, 66-7, 69, 9L 93, 132-53, 157-60, 186, 195-211, 245, 2,50-78, 295-305, 310-26, 348, 361, 362; in Bohemian Paris, 126-7; in Bonn, 307; in Bucharest, 89, 92, 161-91, 193-4, 200, 212; in Budapest, 152-6; in Cassel, 308; in Cologne, 307; in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, 304-5; in Gottingen, 308; in Helsingfors, 279; in Leipzig, 205-7; in London, 191-3, 278, 336, 362, 363; in Meiningen, in in 350; Minneapolis, 247;
dam,
45, 46, 82,
Montmartre, 63-4, 69; in Munich, 320; in Nancy, 108, 112; in NewYork, 67, 179, 329, 335J in Paris, 60117, 126-9, 225-6, 278, 326; in Philadelphia, 186, 282, 332, 349, 350-9; in
Rundbach, 263; in
St. Petersburg, 278; in Schon's violin school, 1012; in The Hague, 305, 319; in Tutzing, 304-5; in U.S.A., 280-93, 329-48, 349-59; in Vienna, 88, 117-26, 187, 190; in Wieselburg, 6-12, 71, 107, 130-2, 173, 189, 193; in Zandvoort, 293; income in Paris, 114; indebtedness to Maurus Deutsch, 115; interested in Auer's pupils, 253-4; interned in Holland, 364; invents the phrase 'applied technique*, 53 joins Lederer ;
Quartet, 70-1; joins Sauzay's class, 61; Kreisler's influence on, 17, 118, 1 88; left-hand technique, 64; love affair with Anna, 188-91, 210, 236; makes gramophone records, 289-91; marriage, 242; Marteau's influence on, 174, 188; Max Dessoir's influence on, 311-12; meets President Coolidge,
357; meets Thomas Edison, 291; nearly drowned in Danube, 58 ; York dbut, 285; on arrangements, 124; on concert agents, 200-1; on Eastern Jews as musicians, 329; on
New
Ellis Island,
349;
on his role
as teacher,
274-5 ; on influence of gramophone, 291-2; on moral reputation of Paris Conservatoire, 69-70; on Parisian
INDEX standards, 88; on Rtigen 348; on shop-talk, 221; on social life, 231; on teachers at Paris Conservatoire, <5i, 65, 67-8; on teachers* fees, 333-4; opposes Hofmann at Curtis Institute, 354-6; partnership with Schnabel, 257, 25960, 277-8, 307-9; personal relations with Lamoureux, 76; personal relations with Marteau, 91; personal relations with Schnabel, 261-2; physical exercises, 100; plays viola, 112; publishes Kreutzer*s studies, 184; quarrel with Dinico, 169-70; Russian concert tour, 278; relations with Hasselmanns family, 97-9, 104, 108; relations with U.S. colleagues, 358; resigns from Lamoureux Orchestra, 76; results of Vienna de"but, 125-6; Sarasate's influence inSchnabel*s on, 43; fluence on, 263; shakes, 53; shortsightedness, 23; sight-reading, 103, 105; slow vibrato, 67; staccato, 53; studies at Paris Conservatoire, 61-117; studies at Vienna Conservatoire, 1655; studies under Adolf Back, 13-14; studies under Marsick, 96-7, 101, 104, 106; studies under Maxintsak, 17-19; studies under Sauzay, 64, 69-70; style, 82; teaches at Amsterdam Conserva-
violinists*
Island,
Florentine String Quartet, 181, 296 Foch, Marshal, 307 Folia, La, 238 Folk music, 41-2, 171, 203/1., 214, 238 France, 57, 60-120, 126-9, 186, 196, 281, 288, 304; audiences in, 232; treatment
of foreign artists, 105-6 Franck, Cesar, 75, 78, 80, 82, 98, 146, 154, 163, 178, 197, 199, 214, 258, 268 Franco-Belgian school, 35, 276 Francoeur, Francois, 124, 239 Frankfurt/Main, 84, 108, 229; Hoch Conservatoire, 108 Museum Concerts, 229 Franko, Sam, 281 Franz Josef, Emperor, 22, 161 Frederick the Great, 116 French conductors compared with Ger;
mans, 73 French school, 68, 70, 75, 87, 88, 192, 196, 265 Frenkel, Stefan, 323 Freud, ijn. Fried, Oskar, 273-4
Friedberg, Carl, 257, 269, 321-2, 348, 361; collaborates with Flesch, 321; technique, 321 Friedberg, Mrs Carl, 322 Friedlander, Max, 203-4 Friedman, Ignacy, 203, 299, 301 Friedrich Wilhelm, Prince, 200 Fritz Kreisler, I22n., 290*1.
toire,
216-49; teaches at BadenBaden, 360-1; teaches at Berlin Hochschule, 314-26, 361; teaches at
From
Curtis Institute, 339, 350-9; teaches at Bucharest Conservatoire, 162-93; teaches at Lucerne Conservatoire, 365; teaches in Berlin, 256-79; teaches in London, 363; teaches in Philadelphia,
Fundamentals
Fundamental
ness of, 272; naivety, 273
Violin
Playing,
362-3;
writes The Art ofFingering, 364; writes
The Art of
Violin Playing, 9, 311-12, 324, 356-7, 358; writes Urstudien, 2634; Ysaye*s comment on his bowing,
81; Ysaye's influence on, 82 Flesch Competition, 153*1.
Hesch memorial
concerts, 366
Flesch, Gyula, 56, 107, 159 Hesch, Mrs Carl, 242-3, 249, 250, 263, 293,
27.
;
personality,
272
7; writes Basic Studies, 9; writes How to Practise, 363 ; writes Problems of Tone in
line, 27^.; structure,
of Violin Technique, The (Klinger), 251 Furtwangler, Wilhelm, 73, 148, 209, 229, 271-3, 288, 317, 330, 34-1, 342, 344* 349, 363, 364, 367, 368; compared with Nikisch, 148; emotional restless-
333-5; technique, 53, 67, 103; Thibaud's impression upon, 197-8; tone, 53; transcribes arias, 363; unhappiness in Amsterdam, 236-7; Vienna debut, 115, 117-26; Wirth*s opinion of, 146-
Production
My
Life (Smetana), 182 Fuchs, Robert, 27
VJTABRILOWrrSCH, OSSEP SOLOMONOVTTSCH, 137-8, 203, 269, 357 Gagliano instruments, 55, 157, 219; prices of, 55, 157 Galgenhumor, 307 Calico, Paolo, 281 Galston, Gottfried, 269, 270-1, 304, 330 Gand & Bernardel instruments, 106, 113 Ganz, Rudolph, 341 Garcin, 61, 88 Garmisch-Partenkirchen, 304-5 Gartenmelodie, 31
359, 3<53, 364, 3<$5 Fleurs du mal, 127
Gauthiers-Villars, Willy, 157
213 Honzaley Quartet, 182
Geloso, 74, 78, 93, 145 Geneva, 29, 84, 89, 330; Conservatoire, 89,
FUegende
Blatter,
Gaveau (piano manufacturers), 224-5
330
Florentine Nights, 3
379
INDEX George
n
of Sachsen-Meiningen, Duke,
2477*.
266Jean, 91-2, 235, 256-7, 258, 297; cantilena, 266; personality, 266-7; technique, 266; tone, 266
G&ardy,
7, 296,
Gericke, 281 German instruments, 136-7, 157; prices of,
157
German
school, 33, 35,
3<5,
276
73 129, 132-60, 195-211, 213, 220, 227, 230, 231, 248, 249, 250-78, 280, 281, 283, 285, 286, 290, 294, 295-309, 310-26, 344, 345, 15, 35, 48n.
Germany,
348-9,
359,
Grandval, Vicomtesse de, 116 Graz, 127
Gregorowitsch, 34 Grlvilk Stradivarius 0/1726, The, 340 Grieg,
Groningen, 216, 230 Grove IV, 368, 369, 3?on.; V, 37on. Grumbacher family, 263 Griin,
Mme, 145 Geyer, Steffi, 181 Ghika, Princess, 116 Gigue (Aubert), 239 Gilbert,
Gama,
M.), 17, 19-21, 22, 25, 40,
21-2; bowing, 21; 21 fees, 334; finger 21; interpretations, ;
20; 'Jokes', 19, 22; mordent, 20; personality, 19-20; physical appearance, 19; school, 281, 338; technical specialities, vibrato,
21-2; technique, 20, 21; tone, 20. Grundlagen der Geigentechnik, Die, 25i. Griinfeld, Alfred, 181, 268.; 'octaves', 181 technique, 181 ; tone, 181 Griinfeld, Heinrich, 145, 268; as musical ;
35<5
Gimpel, Bronislaw, 360 Gipsy Melodies (Sarasate), 41, 42 Gipsy music, 41-2; musicians, 162, 171
jester,
Alexander,
278-9;
268
Guadagnini,
Gittelson, Frank, 274, 275, 351; as teacher,
275 Glazunov,
(J.
teacher, 19, 20, failure as violinist,
232; charlatans of the violin in, 325; concert life in, 320-1; during First World War, 89, 295-309; treatment of foreign artists in, 105-6; students in, 253 Gernsheim,
Jakob
46, 50, 52, 53, 54, 5<5-7, 64, 7O, 117, 135, 186, 193, 244-5, 281, 338; as
368; after First 310-26; audiences in,
36o-3,
World War,
in, 214
Grogorza, 351 GroUe, John, 332-3, 35IJ artistic aspirations, 332-3; as orchestral violinist, 332; influence on Flesch, 332
violin
278 Glissandos, 235 Gluck, 203M. Gluck, Alma, 280 studies,
Godard, Benjamin, 77, 97, 98, 239, 276; as composer, 97; death, 97 Godowsky, Leopold, 201-3, 275, 280; as 'combinator', 201-2; as composer, 201 ; 201, 202; Bach arrangements, 202; Chopin arrangements, 201 ; style, 201 ; technique, 201 as teacher,
J.
B., 267/1.
Guadagnini instruments, 55, 267.; prices of, 159, 185 Guarneri (violinist), 77 Guarneri, Andrea, 55
185,
244,
Guarneri, Joseph, 55 Guarneri, Petrus, 55 Guarneri instruments, 200; 55, 157, 'd'Egville', 200; 'Guiseppe del Gesfc', 55, 200; prices of, 157
Guarneri Quartet, 182 Gurlitt (publishers), 322 Giirzenich String Quartet, 2i6. Guttmann, Albert, 115 Gyor, 152
Goethe, 337 Gofriller
instruments,
184,
185;
prices
184 Goldberg, Szymon, 317 of,
Gottingen, 308 Goulue, La, 63-4
225 Habeneck, 76 Haendel, Ida, 360 Haensel (impresario), 284-5, 296 Haensel & Jones (agents), 280, 292 Hague, The, 135*1., 222, 230, 302-3, 3057, 312-13, 319; Peace Palace, 302; Residence Orchestra, 230
Gound,
Hale, Phillip, 283
,
Goldmark, 51, 104, 150, 245 Goldmark, Rubin, 281 Goldschmidt (impresario), 41 Goldschmidt,
Jules,
172
Gordon, Jack, 282, 339
ii 8; suite, 118
Grainger, Percy, 214
Gramophone,
4, 93,
Halif, Karel, 31, 34, 49, 139, 145, *95, 263,
124, 137, 259, 287,
289-92, 327, 335-6, 337, 361, 363, educational value of, 368; 292; royalties,
289-90
Grancino instruments, 55, 219;
prices, 55
267, 277 Halle, 139, 152
Lady, I45n., 317 Halld, Sir Charles, I45n. Halle",
Halpen, Fernand, 101
380
INDEX Hamburg, 186, 285, 319 Hamburg, Mark, 203 Hammig, Hermann, 156-7, violinist,
Hellmesberger, Joseph H., jun. (Pepi), i8., 22, 24, 25, 147; as teacher, 25 Hellmesberger Quartet, 18, 24, 26, 53 Helsingfors, 25, 127, 138, 279; Symphony Orchestra, 138 Henderson (critic), 283 Hengelo, 233 Hermann Quartet, 108
200, 244; as
156
Handel, 209, 238, 291, 363; arias, 363 Hanover, 19, 22, 201 Court Orchestra, 19 ;
Hansen
(impresario), 118
Hansen,
Cecilia, 338 Hanslick, Eduard, 22, 32^., 116, 306 Hardi, Joseph, 333/1. Harold in Italy, 1 12
Hertz, Alfred, 341, 343 Herwegh, Marcel, 88 Herzogenberg, Heinrich von, 36, 146 Hess, Willy, 34, 35, 195, 267, 359; as teacher, 267; bowing, 267; fingering,
Hartz, 311 Hartzer, Richard, 162, 163, 169, 185, 351; as teacher, 186; death, 186; style, 162 Harvard University, 2O3., 284 Hasselmanns (conductor), 97-8, 104, 108
Hasselmanns (harpist), 98, 108 Hasselmanns, Louis, 97-8, 104, 108;
267 Heyermans, Hermann, 243 Higginson, Colonel, 281 HHfsbund fur deutsche Musikpflege, 311, 312
Havemann, Gustav,
34, 251, 315,
Hindemith,
32/1.
20; tone, 2O. Hochmann-Rosenfeld, Rosa, 338 'Hochschule' style of tone production, 255 Hoffmann, E. T. A., 3 Hoffmann, Karel, 181
Hochmann, Mrs,
317-18;
Hermann, Jose as
354 Hofmeester
(viola player), 221
Hohe
Schule Pavid), 268n. Hohenlohe, Prince, 140
Hugo, 78, 83-4, 340; as teacher, 84; Paris d6but, 84; style, 84; tone, 83-4
Heidenroslein, 29
Heifetz, Jascha, 17, 39, 199, 232, 253, 264, 292, 335-8, 339, 362, 367; bowing,
exaggerated tempi, 337; 335; interpretations, 336, 337; personality, 336, 337; portamento, 336; recordings, 292, 335-6. 337; sense of humour, 336; technical infallibility, 337; technical 'readiness', 335; technique, 335, 337; tone, 335 Heine, 3 Heissler, 50 Hejre Kati (Hubay), 154 33<5;
lingering,
Hekking, Anton, 112, 258 Hekking, Ge'rard, 112 Hellmesberger, Ferdinand H., i8n., 22, 25 Hellmesberger, Georg, sen., i8., 22 Hellmesberger, Georg H., jun., i8., 22 Hellmesberger, Joseph H., sen., 16-17, l8., 19, 21, 22-5, 28, 50, 53, 55, 57> 112, 118; as composer, 23-4; as conof,
201, 269, 350, 351, 353-5; chamber-musician, 354; as teacher,
354-5*, fees, 334; physical appearance,
Heermann,
24; 'Griin Jokes' Vienna's debt to, 24
340.
83,
Hitler, 363
Hayot, Maurice, 66, 68, 78, 84, 87, 145, 234; changes of position, 87; technique, 87 Hayot Quartet, 234 Hebbel, 31 on. Heber, Richard, 264
ductor,
E.,
I97., 258, 298 Hinrichsen, Geheimrat, 313 Viennese Concert Life, History of
technique, 317 Haydn, 6, 28, 183
335,
W.
Hill, Messrs.
as
conductor, 98 Hasselmanns, Marguerite, 98-9, 104, 108 Hasselmanns, Mme, 104, 108 Hassid, Joseph, 360-1; London d^but, 361; recordings, 361 Hausmann, Robert, 31, 35 Hausmusik, 305 Havanaise (Saint-Saens), 115, 131, 199, 239
Holland, 14, 87, 93, 210, 212-49, 250, 278, 292, 294-5, 302-3, 305-7, 332, 342, 344-5, 363-4, 366; audiences in, 2323; during First World War, 293-5; during Second World War, 363-4; musical life in, 212-13, 233; position of artist in, 243; teachers* fees in, 334; under German domination, 364 Hollmann, Josef, in, 297; tone, in
Hollywood, 26. Holofernes, 3io. Homerische Welt, Die, i67.
Houflack, 74
How to
Practise,
363
35, 139, 153-4, 181, 2i6., 240, 301, 330; as composer, 153, 154; as quartet player, 153 ; as teacher, 153 ;
Hubay, Jeno,
individuality of, 153 ; part in development of violin playing, 153; school, 139, 181
Hubay-Popper Quartet, 2i6n. Huberman, Bronislaw, 17/1., 174, 176-8, 196, 352, 367-70; and United States
19;
381
of Europe, 368; bowing, 177, 367; C. F. Flesch on, 369; development of, extreme pianissimo, 367-8; 177;
INDEX 284; double-stopping technique, 33; editions, 36; fees, 334; fingering, 36; influence on Klinger, 251; influence on violin playing, 31-2; intellectual and moral character, 37; intonation, lack of vibrato, 30; jealousy of, 37; 30; mordent, 33; programme-making, 32; 'Pupil', 146; Quartet, 31, 34., 35- 127, 144, 181, 182, 250,
Hans Keller finger vibrato, 177, 368; intonaon, 367-8; individualism, 178; tion, 177; interpretations,
178, 3^7-8;
177, passage work, 177; personality, 177', 178, 368; recordings, 368; runs, stature o 176; style, 176, 177, 3<5p; tone, technique, 177, 367* 368, 369;
177
& Co.,
Hug
340
296; recordings, 292; school, 36, 45, 49, 139, 206, 267, 317; spiccato, 33;
Human, All Too Human, 340^.
Hummer,
52
technique, 30, 79, 144'^tone, 30, 33, 144; unhappy married life, 37
Humperdinck, 273-
See Con'Hungarian* Concerto (Joachim). certo in the Hungarian style I2 7 130-2, 148, Hungary, 6-12, 30, 57, 7*, 154, 159, 171, 1 86, 252, 365;
Joachim, Lieutenant-Colonel, 299 Jocelyn (Godard), 97 Jong, Jeanette de, 263
under
Joseph Joachim: Bin Lebensbild, 30 Berta. See Flesch,
German domination, 365
Josephus-Jitta,
Hutcheson, Ernest, 356 Hutschenruyter, Wilhelm, 226, 227
Jimpressions International of,
Italic,
76
Law
Association,
Joska, 55-6 ion. jWirfi (Hebbd), 3 Judson (agency), 320 Jungfrau von Orleans, Die,
Congress
122, 177, 253, 254
JA.AHN, ROBERT, 146 Kalbeck, 306
Philharmonic Orchestra, 368
Italian instruments,
55,
127-8, 184, 185,
Kapellmeistermusik, 151 Kapp Putsch, 319
206; prices, 55 Italy, 45,
3io.
Juon, Paul, 240 Jupille, 179
302-3
261, 292; Interpretations, 40, 95, 96, ^3*. inferior, 207; 'personal*, 347 Intonation, 18, 30, 40, 43, 47, 5*, <$5, 79, Israel
Mrs Carl
Josephy, 280
49
Kassel,
I39-
Kastner, Rudolf, 322
J* accuse (Huberman),
Keller, Hans, 367-8, 369
3<58
Kes, Willem, 212 Kessler, August, 138 Kessler, Ernst, 156, 157
218 Jacobs, Edouard, 61, Jacobsonjascha, 282, 351 JafiS,
Sophie, 69, 88, 96, 145
Kestenberg (musical adviser), 313 Kiderlen-Wachter, 168
24
Jansa, Leopold,
Japan, 269
Kiel,
Jardin, Silva, 62
Kittsee,
Javaansche Rhapsodic (Schafer), 223n. Jitta,
Caroline, 303
Jitta,
Daniel Josephus, 302-3
30
Klafsky, Katharina, 6,
Jersey, 242
Joachim (Moser), Joachim, Joseph,
307
Kiel, Friedrich, 36, 146
Jassy, 50
I47-
Klangliche VoUkommenheit, 346 Klatte (critic), 204
3
22, 28, 29, 30-8, 41, 44, 45, 47, 48, 49, 52, 53, 65, 79, 82, 90, 94, 112, 115, 120, 123, 127, 135, 137, 138, 139, 141, *44> 145, 146, 155, 157, 175, 177, 181, 195, 197, 204, 206, 3, 19,
210, 214, 2i6., 239, 241, 250, 251, 256, 260, 267, 275, 292, 299, 310, 317, 325, 331, 354, 367; as composer, 36; as conductor, 37; as quartet player, 30, 33; as teacher, 34-6, 325-6; bowing, 33-4, 36; cadenzas, 36; clique in
Klein, Josef, 325 Kleine Journal, 157
Klemperer, Otto, 341, 344 Klengel, Julius, 35 as Klinger, Karl, 34, 82, 94, 250-1, 267; teacher, 250, 251; bowing, 250; influence of Joachim on, 251; interpretations,
250-1;
portamento,
250;
Quartet, 251 Kneisel, Franz, 20, 43, 280, 281-2, 339; as
Berlin, 146; death, 35., 37, 147, declines to pky in U.S.A.,
244;
382
chamber-musician,
282;
as
teacher,
281, 282; introduces quartet playing to U.S.A., 281-2; school, 339; tone,
281
INDEX Lambert, Alexander, 281 Lamond, 269
Kochanski, Paul, 45, 340; as raconteur, 340; death, 340; interpretations, 340; tone, 340 Kodaly, 300 Kolisch Quartet, 182 Kombinator, 2Qin.
Lamoureux, Charles, 72-6,
84, 85, 92, 104, 128, 148, 152, 209, 278; as conductor, 72-6; as orchestral trainer, 74; at rehearsals, 73-4, 75, 76; churlishness of, 72, 76; composition of
Konigsberg, 273 74, 78, 210 Koster, Roland, 303 Koussevitzky, Serge, 324, 34*, 345-<5
Orchestra,
Kossmann,
74-5;
kck of
73; Orchestra, 72-6, 85, 92, 104, 278
talent,
Lamoureux,
Kraus, Lily, 31? Krebiehl (critic), 283
Mme,
Kreisler (Lochner), 3w. Kreisler, Fritz, 16-17, 23, 25, 29, 37, 57,
Landowska, Wanda, 351
195, 255, 264, 265, 288, 290, 292, 330, 335, 338, 360, 362; arrangements, 123-5; as composer, 123-5; attitude
Lange, Daniel de, 216, 218, 233 Lanier, Mrs, 342
towards
Largo (Biber), 238 Largo and Allegro (Pugnani), 23 8
practice,
Lasner, Karl, 147 Laszlo, Akos, 241 Laub, Ferdinand, 32 Lechat, Mme, 99
Berlin 122; preparation, debut, 37, 119; bowing, 121-2; contrasted with Sarasate, 122; defects in intonation, 122; disbelief in regular 122 ; early career, 1 18 ; family 117; finger
gramophone
Jean Marie, 239 Lederer, Dezso, 70; Quartet, 70
Leclair,
technique,
royalties, 290;
im-
125; influence on pro123, 124; interleft-hand technique, pretations, 122; 122; modulation, 335; mysterioso mezza voce, 122; 'pieces', 142;
portance
Lefort, 68
of,
Legato, 20, 54, 67; perfect, 291
gramme-building,
Leidensdorff,
'Leipzig*
Lemaire, 111-12 Lemberg, 127
195 tremnitz, Mite, 165 Crenek, Ernst, 317 resz,
Fritz,
Lembock,
Leningrad. See St Petersburg Leonard, 65, 88, 90, 196
G6za von, 364
269; studies, 364 Sreutzer, Rudolf, 333 Kreutzer* Sonata, 142, 233 Criiger, 'old', 204-5 iCubelik, Jan, 44, I74~<5, 188, 191, 337; left-
pizzicato, 175; physical appearpractice ance, 175; rhythm, 175*, sl
w
of runs, 175; technique, 175, 176; tone, 175, 176
ECulenkampf, 264 ECunwald, Ernst, routine, 273
;
rehearsal 286; technique, 273
273,
Gabriel, 55
Lener Quartet, 187
tretschmer, 315/1. Creutzer, Leonid, 18, 53, 64, 104, 105, 184, 196, 268/1., 269, 364; as teacher,
hand
216
Gewandhaus Orchestra, 213 manner of piano playing, 215
121, 123; tone, 119, 121, 122, 335; vibrato, 120, 121-2, 123
Mrs
).,
Leipzig, 25, 30., 89, 139, 150, 152, 156, 205-7, 210, 211, 213, 214, 246/1., 344; Gewandhaus, 30/1., 205-7, 210, 246/1.;
portamento, 122; recordings, 124, 292; rhythm, 119, 122; style, 119-20,
Creisler,
84,
75
61, 81, 85-6, 88, 117-25, 139, 140, 142,
122;
77,
Landau^ Dr Felix, 204 Landecker, 202 Landi, Camilla, 156 Landler, 10
Krebs, Karl, 157, 204
background,
technical
Leschetizky, The"odor, 28, 113, 201, 203, 257, 270, 301; as teacher, 203; fees, 334; importance of his teaching, 301; school, 28, 270, 301 Lessmann, Otto, 157, 203 Lewinger, Max, 20, 25, 28, 117, 135, 136-7, 138, 159, 162
Ley, Rosamond, 197/1. Lichtenberg, 89, 281 Liebestod, 75 liebig, Mrs, 27 Liebling, Georg, 154 Lieder, 124, 203, 234/1., 258
Liege, 44, 66, 179 Ltegeois, 112 Limoges, 102, 105
Lindner, Adalbert,
Ladies'
Home Journal, 350
Uforge, 66, 108 Lalo, 80, 104, 197-8
142/1.
Ulntransigeant, 63 Liszt, Franz, 6, 29, 155. 201, 278, 306, 34<5,
352
.
383
INDEX May
Ltafc
Song
(Schillings),
Locatelli, Pietro, I,
Marseilles, 127
240
238 3-, I22., 29 n
Lochner, Louis P., Loebel (viola player), 183 Loewe, Ferdinand, 27
M. P., 21, 35, 44, 61, 65-7, 68, 106, 107, no, 78, 84, 87, 96, 101, 104, 112, 114, 126, 145, 152, 164, 176, 178,
Marsick, -
179, 196; as teacher, 66-7; bowing, 65; changes of position, 65 death, 67; fees, memorial con334; intonation, 65; cert, 179-80; physical appearance, 65; ;
Loewengard, Max Julius, 157, 158
Loewensohn, Marix, 268 74.
Lohengrin,
Quartet, 66, 87; staccato, 65; system of finger exercises, 66; technique, 65
Lokalanzeiger, 157
Antonio, 238 Lombardini, Signora, 2 Lolli,
London,
24*., 48, 49,
Mme, 65 Marteau, Henri, 88-92, 96, 105, 119, 139,
Marsick, <Si,
80,
85,
I45,
140, 145, 174, 188, 195, 200, 234, 246, as 248, 250, 267, 275, 277, 296, 327; as teacher, 89, 92; composer, 90-1;
267^., 191-3, 198, 2l8., 229, 257"., 366; 275, 278, 336, 3<52, 363-4, Albert Hall, 2i8n., as centre of musical Board Course, world, 192; Associated I7tt.;
2 57
.;
bowing,
War,
concert, Courtauld-Sargent Guildhall School of Music,
personality,
R.C.M., 7., 85; Royal Philharmonic
(oboist),
Massart, 50, 6r, 62, 65, 68, 76, 85, 118, 196 322. Masttrsingers, The, 152, 271,
281
Materna, Amalie, 75 Mathilde, Princess, 62 Maurin, 61, 92, 93
Los Angeles, 221, 344 Lotto, 61
Louis XVI, 92 'L'Ouvreuse du Cirque dEte
,
Max Reger, 143 Maxintsak, Josef, 17, 18, I59J as teacher, 18; bowing, 18; physical appearance,
157
Leys, 66 Liibeck, 271
18; technique, 18
Luboschiitz, Lea, 355-6
Mayseder, Joseph, 18, 29, 32.; polonaises,
Lucca, Pauline, 28 Lucerne, 365; Conservatoire, 365 Ludendorff, 307
Ludwig, Lugano,
Professor,
World
Martini, 124
Symphony Orchestra,
229
Longy
First
interpretations, 91, 195; 91 ; school, 275 ; technique,
vibrato, 90 90, 91; tone, 90; Martens, Frederick H., 2i., 318 Martienssen, Franziska, 2I7.
366; music in 1930s, 192; Queen's 267*1. ; Hall, 257n.; R.A.M., I7., Orchestra, 229;
during
90, 91;
89;
32W.
Mazurka, op. 49 (Dvorak), 239; (Zarzicki),
26 Meiningen,
45, 46
(1913),
Lula. See Rontgen, Julius, jun. Lupot instruments, 55; prices, 55
Festival 75, 208-10, 2i6.; 247.; Court Orchestra, 208,
2i6n.
Melba,
Lutschg, 105 Lyons, 105, 127
Dame Nellie,
Melsa, 274, 275;
37,
London
Mendelssohn, Felix,
76 delmt, 275
20/1., 39, 53, 80,
105,
2I3.
214, 337 Mendelssohn, Franz von, 256, 263, 361 142, 198,
MAASTRICHT,
294, 319
Maggini instruments,
55, 90; prices, 55
MagidofF, Robert, 3. Mahler, Gustav, is., 5, 52,
H9,
l8 7, 207,
209, 229, 274, 284, 285, 306, 341, 344, 351; as conductor, 187-8; Festival,
228 MaiHedchen
(Schillings),
240
Mainz, 304 Malaguena (Sarasate), 240 Mandiczewski, Eusebius, 55 Manon, 112 Marchesi, Mathilde, 116 Maria, Crown Princess, 168 Markees, 35, 267 Markneukerchen, 156; instruments, 339 Marschalk, Max, 157, 204
Mendelssohn, Lilly von, 256 Mendelssohn, Robert von, 135, 138, 146, 157, 264 Mendes, Bram, 216 Mentstral, 107 Mengelberg, Willem, 46-7, 212-13, 214, 221, 222, 223, 224, 226, 227-30, 231-2, 272, 277, 341, 342, 348; as conductor, at 226, 227; as orchestral trainer, 228; rehearsals, 228; character, 227; effect on orchestral standards, 230; egocen228; misunderstanding of, tricity about bowing, 228-9; physical apwith Rontgen, pearance, 227; rivalry 212-13, 214; rhythm, 228; service to music, 229; technique, 227
Menschliches Altzumenschliches, 34on.
384
INDEX Yehudi,
Menuhin,
3.,
255,
363,
366;
Menzel, Adolf, 205 Meran, 84 Mercure de France, 4 Messchaert, Johannes, 217-18, 234 Metropolitan Opera. See New York Metternich,
Princess
Pauline,
24,
131,
2o8n.,
230,
320;
Court
Musette (Mondonville), 239 Musical Courier, 280
Musical instruments.
charity concerts, 28 (painter), 104, 108-9 Meyer, Waldemar, 49, 145
See under makers'
names and countries of origin
28;
Musical interpretation, 173-4 Musik, Die, 204, 244 My Life of Music (Sir H. Wood), Mysterioso mezza voce, 122
Meyer
Michalowicz, 176 Microphone, effect of on execution, 292 Mierzwinsky, Mieczyslaw, 29 Minneapolis, 350 Minuet, op. 53 (Alard), 239 Minuet and Gavotte (Veracini), 238 Misere royale (Scheffer), 166 Miserere (Wiillner),
Munich,
Opera, 2o8.; Kaim Orchestra, 230 Mimiera (Sarasate), 42 Munka'ss, 330
recordings, 363
278/1.
JN ACHEZ,
TTVADAR, 49 Nadaud, Edouard, 88 Nancy, 108, 112, 114 Napoleon I, 296, 304 Napoleon III, 28, 62
2o8.
Mishakoff, 329 Mitchell, Donald, 23 7.
Moiseiwitsch, Benno, 350, 351-2, 354 Molique, Bernhard, 28, 105
Nardini, Pietro, I, 81, 238; tone, i Naval, Franz, 27 Nedbal, Oskar, 182 Neo-classicism, 197 Neo-Paganini-ism, 174-5 Neruda, Wilma. See Norman-Neruda
Mondonville,
Neumann
Mittelmann, Dr S., 47 Moderne Kunst, 15771. Modiani, 62
J. J.,
239
Montagnana instruments, of,
55,
157; prices
157
Monteux,
New
Pierre, 73, 106, 341, 343-4, 3451
interpretations, 343
157
York, I3.,
14, 20, 43, 49/1., 67, 98,
179, 201, 229, 252, 278, 281, 283, 8,
Musical Art, 28 1 Juilliard Foundation, 334, 353, 356; Metropolitan Opera, 14, 98, 286, 341; National Symphony Orchestra, 229n.; Philharmonic Concerts, 229; Philharmonic Orchestra, Philharmonic Society, 341; 285; ;
Mopp
62
285-
293, 329-48, 335, 341, 343, 355', as Institute of music centre, 285 ;
Montreux, 84 Moodie, Alma, 185, 316-17 Mo6r, 89, 248, 276-7; character, 277 (painter), 270, 348 Morceau de Concert, op.
(critic),
Neuwied, 213 'New World* Symphony, 124
(Saint-Sae'ns),
40 Mordent, 20, 33 Morini, Erica, 338-9
Hall,
Symphony
Moscheles, Ignaz, 305
Steinway
Moscow,
Orchestra, 285, 341 ; teachers' fees in,
139, 151, 153, 353 Moser, Andreas, 3, 30, 35, 36, 48, 91, 250, 267; as teacher, 3; finger vibrato, 3;
technique,
3
Moson, 6-12
334 York Times, 356 Newman, Ernest, 124
New
Newspaper
Mosonyi, 6 Mossel, Isaac, 218-20, 224, 226, 227, 234; as teacher, 218-19; commercial transactions, 219; death, 220; influence on Dutch 'cello playing, 220
Motd, 209 Mozart, 27, 32, 36, 87, 90, 97, 104, 115, I35tt., 169, 174, 183, 187, 199, 239, 247, 264, 268., 300, 337; adagio, 187; quartets, 87; violin concertos, 36, 90, 174, 2<58.; violin sonatas, 264
ijn.;
notices.
See
Criticism
and
critics
Ney,
Elly, 348
Nibelungen, 189 Nice, 112
Nicholson, Louisa Margaret, 29 Nietzsche, Friedrich, 34O. Nieuwe Rotterdam' sche Courant, 234
Nikisch, Artur, 6, 73, 81, 127, 147-50, 195, 206, 209, 245, 267, 271, 272, 273, 275, 324, 348, 362; ambitions, 148; as accompanist, 150; as conductor, 14850; at rehearsals, 149-50;
Muck,
compared
Karl, 209, 278, 286, 324 Mueller, Felix von, 134-5 Miihlfeld, Richard, 209
with Furtwangler, 148; death, 150; influence on orchestra, 149; improvi-
Miiller, Captain, 305
sations, 149; intellectual standing,
385
148;
INDEX 304, 326, 330, 334, 343; 'arrangement', 102; Bohemian, 99 &, 126-7; Cirque d'te, 72, 73; Colonne Concerts, 196; Colonne Orchestra, 228; Commune,
149; interpretations, 149; personality, technique, physical appearance, 148-9;
148 Nikita, 29
Ninth Symphony (Beethoven),
spiritueb, 3;
221, 273
200., 330, 334, 343; ConservaContoire competitions, 95-6, 104-5 servatoire concerts, in; ConservaConservatoire Orchestra, 88, 304; 196,
Noach, Sylvain, 221 Nocturne for voice (Schnabel), 258
;
Noordewier, Aaltje, 218, 234
Novacek, Ottokar, 154,
toire premier accessits, 96-7, 106, 114; Conservatoire premier prix, 95-6, 106;
145, 3*7
Notice sur Rode, 2 i55-<5; as
as innovator, poser, 156;
Cremerie du Conservatoire, 99-106;
com-
63-4; Jardin Elysee Montmartre, Madeleine, 77-8; d' Acclimation, 20on.; Muse"e d'Albi, 63/1.; Op6ra, 67, 74; Opera Comique, 98; Operetta, Orchestra, 81; Philharmonic 68;
156
O
67-8; Salle
concerts, 68, Pleyel, 80, 128; Sunday fees in, 334; treat72, 77-8; teachers'
ment of foreign artists in, Trocadero, 109; Varied, 68 Paris, S.S., 326 Paris-Plage, 114
Octet (Svendsen), 40 Odeon Record Co., 289 Odessa, 69, 349, 355 Odnoposoff, Ricardo, 360 *s OndHcek, Franz, 46-7, 7, 83, 174', teacher, 47; on left-hand technique,
Partser Bezetzung,
105-6;
I02.
Parisian Quartet, 281
Pannoor, Lord, 303
47; tone, 46
Opera, 207 Orange, U.S.A., 291 Orlik, Emil 270, 348 Osborn, Franz, 366
Parsifal, 29, 230/1.,
343
Partita in
(J. S.
C
major
Bach), 237
Pasdeloup, 76 Passacaglia (Biber), 238 'Pastoral'
Symphony
(Beethoven),
228,
236
Oslo, 317 Ostaade, 220
'Pathe"tique'
Pedro, Dom, of Brazil, 62 Pepi. See Hellmesberger, Joseph, jun. Perpetuum Mobile, 156 'Peter of Mantua', 55.
202',
*Peter of Venice', 55Peters (publisher), 22, 23, 47, 264, 313
202
Paderewski, 28, 113, 203, 285, 289, 32?; Vienna debut, 113 62, 82, 106, 115, Paganini, 2-3, 44, 45, 49, 118, 131, 135, 141, 16, I(5 2, *74, 200, 207, 225, 239, 254, 340, 34-6, 35<5 : ; Paris acrobatics, 175; caprices, 207; debut, 62; Quartet, 3^6.; renaissance
of his style, 174; Pamplona, 41
Petri,
Egon, 34- 268
Petri,
Helga, 26 8n.
Henri Wilhelm, 34, 267-8, 269, 330
Petri,
35, 105, 139, 195,
Petrograd. See St Petersburg Petschnikoff, Alexander, 127, 139-41, r 43, Berlin debut, 195; as teacher, 141;
style, 3
140; stance, 140; tone, 140 Pfister,
scandal, 129
77
Pfitzner, Hans, 154,
Paraphrases (Wilhelmj), 49 Parent, Armand, 87 Paris, 3, 7, 17, 29, 38, 39, 40, 41,
148, 149
177
Paul, Jean, 228
N, WLADIMIR VON, 201, of,
Symphony,
Patti, Adelina, 115,
'Othello* Fantasy (Ernst), 31
Panama
at Conservatoire,
salaries
CHS, SIEGFRIED, I5I-2 Octaves, fingered, 44, 53, 82; Griinfeld, 181 Octave Study (de Briot), 239
clowning
61-117, 118, 126, 135, 152,
59,
38,
Niveu, Ginette, 360
Norman, Ludwig, I45Norman-Neruda, "Wilma,
d'Harcourt, 76; concerts Conservatoire, 17^., 29,
in; Concerts
2, 75, ?o,
3*7
Phal, Louis, 220-1
5,
55, 57,
58, 59-117, 118, 126-9, 130, 134, 135, 136, 139, 145, 152, 157, 158, 161, 166, 167, 178, 180, 181, 184, 200H., 205,
1 86, 252, 275, 282, Philadelphia, 28, 117, 287, 320, 332-3, 334, 339, 340, 342, Curtis Institute, 128, 343, 349, 350-9;
224, 225-6, 228, 242, 244, 278, 303,
386
186, 252, 282, 287, 334, 339, 342, 349,
350-9; Curtis Quartet, 353; Orchestra,
INDEX 334; Settlement School of Music, 332-3; teachers' fees in, 333, 334~5 Pianissimo, 367; over-refined, 180
271 Piano Concerto (Grieg), in; (Novacek), 156 Piano Concerto inE flat major (Liszt), 306 Piano Concerto in major (Beethoven), 234, 306 Piano Quintet (Schafer), 223 n.\ (Schnabel), 258; (Schumann), in Piano Trio (Godard), 97 Piastro, Mishel, 329, 338 Piatigorsky, Gregor, 257^., 361 Piatti, 135 Picnic", Gabriel, 78 Pierrot lunaire, 323 Pisek, 372 Pittsburgh, 342 Pizzicato, left-hand, 175
Queen's Hall. See London Querido, 243
Pianists, 'singing*,
G
Pleasants,
Henry, 22n.
Poland, 329, 339 Polk, Rudi, 357-8 Pollak, Louis, 63 Pollak, Robert, 185
139, 144, 152, 181, 344; Theatre, 152; Opera, 344; Philharmonic Orchestra, 152 PralltriUer, 2on. 127,
German
Prayer (Handel), 363 Press, Michael, 351 Press notices. See Criticism Pressenda instruments, 49 Presto
Reigen (Schillings), 240 Reiner, Fritz, 341, 342 Reizenstein, Franz, 361 Religioso and Cantabile (Rust), 238 Rmy, 78, 84, 87 Rene-Baton, 305 Reszke, Jean de, 116 Reuter, Florizel von, 92 Reznicek, Emil Nicolaus von, 310-11 Reznic"ek, Mrs Emil von, 310-11 Rhapsodic Piemontese (Sinigaglia), 240 Rheims, 111-12
Rhythm, 175, 254 Richter, Hans, 6, 26, 73, 88, 151, 152, 209,
ma non
troppo (Benda), 239 Pro Arte Quartet, 182 Problems of Tone Production in Violin Playing,
Gramophone
Reger, Max, 51, 83, 89, 90, 142, 2oin., 209, 214, 237, 240, 245-8, 258, 265, 266, 269, 276, 278, 28(5, 316,318; agogical as composer, differentiations, 247; 247-8; death, 247; fondness for coarse jokes, 247; interpretations, 247; violin sonatas, 245, 248
Reichmann, Theodor, 29
Portamento, 79, 87, 220, 250, 336 Portato, 20, 21, 54, 67, 154 Pougin, Arthur, 2, 107 Praeludium and Allegro (Pugnani), 123 Prague,
JtvAAB, 152 Radio, 137, 143, 271, 287, 327 Raff, 39, 85, 248, 276 Rappoldi, Edward, 3471. Ravel, 99, 179 Reber, 77^. Rebner, Adolf, 20, 107-8; as teacher, 108; tone, 108 Records and recordings. See
362-3
324
Riemann, Hugo, Ries
Prume, 42
39,
Music Department,
316
CXXV
orchestra
m,
m; technique, no
Pure sound, disregard Puttlitz, Loys zu, 356
of,
145
T, op. 130 (Beethoven), 124 minor (Schubert), 24 Quartet in Quartet playing compared, 181-2 Quartets, op. 18 (Beethoven), 24 Quatuor de Paris, 87
D
C.F.CC
264
Ries, Robert,
264
Riesenfeld, Paul, 56
for chorus and
(Wullner), ao8n. Pugnani, Gaetano, 123, 124, 238 233; delicate touch Pugno, Raoul, 81, of,
324
Ries, Franz ('Suite'), ion., 39, 264; suites,
Prussian State Library's
Psalm
2$n., 51**., 27411.
& Erler (publishers),
368 Rindbach, 263 de Rio Janeiro, 290/1. Riess, Curt,
Risler,
Joseph Edouard, 326-8
Rite of Spring, 343 Rivarde, Achille, 46, 74, 78, 84-7, 145, 193, 276; as critic, 85; as teacher, 86; criticizes Kreisler, 85; Flesch's debt to, 86; mechanical practising, 86; technique, 86; tone, 85 Roberts, Earl, 168 Rocca instruments, 49 Rochefort (editor), 63
Rode, i, 2, 1 8, 19, 53, 64, 196, 268. Rodolphe Kreutzer, 333. Romance (Svendsen), 85
387
INDEX Russia, 69, 98,
Romance, op. 40 (Beethoven), 239; op. 99, no. i (Bossi), 240 Romance For violin and orchestra
Rome, 49 Rondo in B minor (Schubert), 40 Rondo scherzando, op. 16 (Jacques-
SAENGER, GUSTAV, 357 St Louis, 221, 270, 341 St Matthew Passion, 217^.
Dalcroze), 240
Rontgen, Engelbert, 210, 213 Rontgen, Engelbert, jun., 248 Rontgen, Julius, sen., 210, 212-16, 218,
St Petersburg, 139, 153, 252-3, 278, 353;
Conservatoire,
music, 97 Salmon ('cellist), 73, 74, 7 Salmond, Felix, 340, 35*, 353, 3<5l, 362 Salzkammergut, 263 SamarorT, Olga, 286, 342-3 Sammathini, 281 San Francisco Orchestra, 343 Saraband (Aubert), 239 Saraband and Tambourin (Leclair), 239 Sarasate, Pablo de, 4, 16, 28, 29, 30, 33,
214; technique, 215
210
Rose, Alexander, 85, 115, 118 Rose", Arnold, 19, 22, 49-52, 115, 119, 144, 187, l88rc, 207, 281, 314, 320, 344, 367,
369; as orchestra leader, 51; as quartet as soloist, 51-2; as player, 50, 51; teacher, 52, 314; bowing, 51; changes
38-43* 78, 79, 83, 85, H3, 120, 122, 123, 139, i<5 8 174, 192-3, 240, 264, 284, 292, 317, 330; bowing, 39; as composer, 39, 41-2; contrasted with
editions of classical position, 50; works, 52; individuality, 52; intona-
of
tion, 51; left-hand technique, 51; of phrasing, personality, 52; power 51; programme building, 51; Quartet, 24, 26, 27. 50, 52, 182, 234; school, 51; the *cold*, 52; 'tone 3140.1
Kreisler, 122; effect on audiences, 39; infingering, 38; his violins, 41; fluence on violinists, 38, 43; interpre-
style,
unpopularity
of,
tations, 40; intonation, 33, 40, 43; physical appearance, 38, 41; personality, 43; recordings, 292; staccato, 39; technique, 33, 39, 79', tone, 33, 39, 43;
52;
Rosen (composer), 115 Rosen, Dr, 303, 305, 312 Rosen, Frau, 305, 3 12 Rosenheim family, 304-5 Rosenthal, Moritz, 340, 350, 352, 354; caustic humour of, 352 Rossi, Marcello, 29 RostaX Max, 105, 317, 359. 3^2, 366 Rothschild, Lord, 116-17 Rotterdam, 234, 237
Round Dance
(Schillings),
Royal Rumanian Chamber Virtuoso, 193 Rubato, 79 Rubinstein, Anton, 133, 164, 240, 353; as
Sautilte,
4
Sauzay, Eugene, 61-2, 64-5, 68, 69-70, 96, 198; analyses of string quartets, 62; as composer, 62; as teacher, 64 Sauzay, Mme, 62 Savate, 106 Scena cantate (Spohr), 2O. Scene de la Csdrda, no. 3 (Hubay), 240 Schafer, Dirk, 215, 221-4, 237; as pianist, 223; personality, 222; violin sonatas,
223
composer, 164 Rudolph, Crown Prince, 29
Schalk, Franz, 27, 152, 153
Schapira, Vera, 306
RudorfF, Ernst F. K., 36, 146 Riigen, 348-9
Rumania,
vibrato, 38, 40; Vienna de"but, 38 Saturday Evening Post, 350 Sauer, Emil, 352 Sauret, fimile, 37, 42, 192, 196", 2670.
240
Rousillon, Mile, 105 Rovelli, Pietro, 18
Philharmonic
Saint-Saens, 39, 40, 64, 80, 90, 97, 104, 115, 131, 138, 196, 197, 199, 239; chamber
;
spinning', 51; vibrato, 51
278 ;
Concerts, 278
219-20, 222, 224, 230-1, 235, 277, 293 ; as composer, 214; character, 213 interpretations, 215; personality, 21415; physical appearance, 213-14, 215; rivalry with Mengelberg, 212-13, Julius, jun.,
269, 278, 304, 311,
Rust, F. W., 238 Ruzitzka, 52
Pvorak), 46 Romanesca, La, 238 Romantic Pieces (Dvorik), 90, 124
Rontgen,
in, 253,
329, 339, 345, 353 Russian school, 35, 253, 265
39, 40, 41, 42, 50, 161-94,. 281, 310; folk-music, 171; race-mixing in, 171 Runs, 51, 235; slow practice of, 175; virtuoso, 41
Schatzgraber, Der, 3i5. SchefFer, Henry Ernst, 166, 326,
327-8
Schenker, Heinrich, 26-7 Scherchen, Hermann, 323-4 Scheveningen, 273, 305 Schiedenhelm brothers, 99, 111-12
388
INDEX 314, 338, 371-2; as teacher, 175; technical principles, 176 Sextet (Weingartner), 151
Schierke, 311
278/1.,
Schiller, 292/1., 3 ion.
Schillings,
Max, 240
Schmidt, Franz, 5on., i88rt, 344/1. Schmidt, Leopold, 4, 203, 234 Schmuller, Alexander, 265-6, 269, 295, 299
Shakes, 53 Sibelius, 252, 279, 292, 337 Siciliano (Geminiani), 238
Schnabel, Artur, 105, 155, 202, 203, 215, 235, 256-63, 264, 266, 267, 269, 270, 277-8, 297, 304, 305, 307-9, 321, 322, 329, 352, 362, 369; as chamber musician, 258; as composer, 258-9,
Siegfried,
260-1
;
as teacher,
187
Sight-reading, 95, 103, 105, 114 Signals, 169 Siloti,
Siloti,
261 character, 259-
Alexander, 278 Mme, 278
Silvestre (violin dealer), 113
;
334; influence on Flesch's interpretations, development, 263 261; personality, 262; piano pieces, 258; recordings, 259; repertoire, 259; string quartets, 259; technique, 257,
Sinding, C., 240
260, 261
Slavonic Rhapsody, 124 Slevogt, Max, 270, 348 Smetana, 182 Society des derniers quatuors de Beethoven,
60; fees,
Sinigaglia, L.,
;
Slavonic Dances
Artur, 305 Schnabel, Schnabel, Stefan, 362 Schneevoigt, Georg Lennart, 279, 323-4 Schneller, 2on.
Sofia,
Schradieck, Henry, 37, 184 Schrammel, Joharm, 260.
Schrammelquartet, 26, 314 Schreker, Franz, 105, 315; as teacher, 315 Schroeter, K., 324-5 Schubert, n, 24, 29, 40, 203/1., 262, 278,
Spanish Dances (Sarasate), 41-2, 240 Specht, Richard, 306-7 Speyer, Edgar, 296, 297
283, 289, 291 Schulthess (impresario), 181
Spiccato, 33, 330
Schulzen-Asten, Frau, 36 Jchumann, Klara, 321, 322 Jchumann, Professor Georg, 267, 313 Jchumann, Robert, 24, 31, 32, 75, 87, 97, ill, 179, 203/1., 262; chamber music, 97; symphonies, 75 Schunemann, Georg, 203, 3*3, 3i5-i<$
306 Spielmann, 50, 112 Spitzer, 306 Spiedl,
2, ion., 2O., 21, 31, 53, 116, 142, 213/1,, 239, 268/1., 338; autobiography, 116; staccato, 21, 33; violin
Spohr, Louis,
concertos, 338 Spoor, Andre*, 220, 227
Schuppanzigh, 24 Schwers, Paul, 203, 313
Sein,
Sprechstunde, I38. Stabat Mater (Wiillner), 2o8w. Staccato, 4, 33, 53, 65, 95; flying thrown, 39; maTtele*, 2i., 39.; strong, 65.
Alexander, 206-7 Symphony (Brahms), 75 World War, 363-6 Toscha, 338
$tadler, Jakob, 131
II5.
Sellin,
Stamitz, Anton, 33
348-9
Sembrich, Marcella, 28, 351; Septet (Schoenberg), 26".
186
Semis, Giovanni Battista, 238/1. Somis, Lorenzo, 238 Sonatas and Partitas for unaccompanied v&lin (J. S. Bach), 22 Song and Dance, op. 79 (Bruch), 239 Song of the Earth, 351 Song of the Prisoner (Bruch), 239 Sonority, 254 Spain, 278 Spalding, Albert, 45, 275
Schoneberg, 204
Seidel,
(DvoHk), 40
93
237 Schoenberg, Arnold, 2O., 26., 51, 258, 315, 323 Schon, Moritz, 10-11, 13; exercises, n; school, 10-11 Schnitzler, Louis,
Second Second
2.
Sivori, 42, 143
Mrs
>ebald,
240
Sirmen, Maddalena,
fees,
Arrigo, 139, 143, I95 technique, 143; tone, 143
Serato,
351
234, 269;
Stavenhagen, Bernhard, 29
Serdet (violin dealer), 127 Serenade (Schoenberg), 26/1.; (Schumann),
179; (Titl), 291 Serenade Fox', the, 27 Sev&k, Otakar, 37, 46, no, I75
Stamitz, J. K., 238 Statnmtisch, 204-5, 348 Starnberger Lake, 297, 304 Steel strings. See E string Stefan, Paul, 274/1.
Steinbach, Fritz, 208-9, 210, 272, 343, 348; as conductor, 209; interpretations, i?<$,
253.
389
209; repertory, 209
INDEX for Symphonic Variations
Stepban, Rudi, 299 Princess, 29 Stephanie, Crown Stem, Eugen (concert agent), 200, 204 Stern, Dr Richard, 313
1
Stock, Frederick, 286, 341, 343
Stockhausen, Julius, 36
Stockholm, 274, 304 Stokowski, Leopold, 286-7, 3^4, 334* 34*. to classics, 287; as 342, 343; approach at rehearsals,
342;
technique,
331; practising, 331; personality,
with
prices, 113 Stradivarius instruments, 20, 41, 55, 62, 88, loo-l, 113, 135, 138, 139, 157, 185, 198, 244, 256, 264, 34, 350, 36U
113;
caccio', 244;
41;
'Boissier',
'Chant du Cygne', 88;
Tannhauser, 97-8, 271 Tappert, Wilhelm, 157 Tarantella (Sarasate),
'The 264; *St Lorenzo', 244;
Teachers' fees, 333~4
2 2 97 Strasbourg, 98, 139, *5
Johann, 75,
Strauss, Richard, 75,
Technique,
3 06 7<>,
U9>
181-2
Stroh vioHn, 289 Studer, 153 Studienbuch (Galston), 270/1, Studies (Kreutzer), 184
Treatise
17, 58, 62, 67, 68, 70, 93,
94, 99, 102, 106, 114,
H9,
139, 179,
195, 196-200, 234, 235, 248, 264, 277, 288, 292, 335, 340; and cafe music,
102; as exponent of new style, 197; 197; interpretations, 196; intonation, 196; left-hand technique, re197; physical appearance, 197;
C
bowing,
Bach), 234
Suite, op. 43 (Vieuxtemps), 239 Suite pastorale (Schafer), 223 . Suk, 150, 1 8 1, 276, 278
cordings, 292; repertoire, 199; rightstyle, 197, 198;
hand technique, 197;
Svendsen, 40, 85
technique, 196; tone, 196
Swaap, Sam, 216 Sweden, 303 'Swimming', 300*1.
THbaud, Joseph,
Switzerland, 45, 48ft., 249, 330, 36$-6'> violin playing in, 365 of Sylva, Carmen. See Elisabeth, Queen
Thomas, Ambroise, 90, 105, 106 Thomas, Theodore, 343
Rumania
,
of the
23 5.
Thibaud, Jacques,
Suite (RafT), 85; (Sinding), 240 Suite im alien Stil (Reger), 245 minor Q. S. Bach), 234 Suite in S.
and Practical
Violoncello,
82
G major (J.
f
,
Theoretical
Study no. 7 (Paganini), 206 Stuttgart, 25, 206; Conservatoire, Such, Henry, 117, 118; Vienna de"but, 117
Suite in
31, 38-9, 79, 82, 93, 103,
Telemann, G. P., 238 Telmanyi, 154, 264 Temianka, Henry, 356 Tempi, 95; exaggerated, 337 Tempoverschiebung, 346 Tenucci, Mr, 340 Texas, 357
(Smetana), 182
Strings quartets compared, Stroh, Charles, 289n.
3,
critics* ignor298, 352; 'applied', 53; ance of, 4; left-hand, 47, 5*, 64, 65, 20 79, 122, 154, 193, 197; right-hand, de rarchet, La, 93 Technique superieure
206 i
3,
143, 144, 173, 174-5, I7<5, 177, 181, 183, 187, 188, 196, 201, 254, 2<5i, 284,
209, 220, 229,
297, 306, 318 Strawinsky, 197*1., 214, 258, 315/1., 343 String Quartet (Debussy), So; (Schafer), 2.23tt.; (Weingartner), 151 no. 2 (Beethoven), String Quartet, op. 59,
String Quartet, no.
42
Tartini, Giuseppe, I, 238 Tchaikovsky, 80, 81, 148, 149
Spanish*, 340^. Stransky, Josef, 285, 341 Strauss,
building,
1 ADEMA, ALMA, 243 Tadema, J. L. (Jan), 243-4, *93 Tag, I57-
'Bran-
'I* 'Greffiilhe' CGreville'), 340, 350; ; SiciHen', 101; prices, 20, 55, 157. 244 *Ries',
pro-
33 1 ; recordings, technical ability, 292; spiccato, 330; 330-1; tone, 330
gramme
287-8;
egoistic motives, 287 ; experiments orchestra, 286-7; perfectionism, 287 Storioni instraments, 55, 113, 127-8, 136;
*Betz',
(Boell-
198, 199 Symphonic Espagnole (Lalo), Syzmanowski, 34 Szering, Henry, 360 154, 264, 292, 330-2; Szigeti, Joseph, 3as teacher, 330; bowing, 33, 331 detached 330; head-accent habit, 331; intonation, 330; interpretations, 331; 330; method of left-hand
Stiedry, Fritz, 323 Stirbei, Prince, 310-11
organist,
'cello
mann), 76
Third
Symphony
70, 128
(Brahms), 75
Thoma, Marianne, 281
Thome", 118
390
INDEX Thomson, Cesar, 44-6,
66, 98, 141, 174, 196, 316, 339, 340; as teacher, 45-6;
Utrecht, 227, 230, 248
bowing, 44; fingered octaves, 44; interpretations, 44; overshadowed by
V ACARESCU, HELENE, 165-6
Ysaye, 45; physical appearance, 45; 'pupil*, 46; technique, 44; tone, 44 Three Simple Melodies (Schillings), 240
Valkyrie, The, 75
Variations (Joachim), 239 Variations and Fugue on
Timner, Christian, 210, 220 Tirpitz, 305 Titl, 291 Toccata, op. 15, no. Tolstoi, 159
Tone,
i,
I
20., 22, 30,
(Aulin), 240
in, 119, 121, 122, 144, 154, 175, 177, 1 80, 181, 196, 253, 254, 265, 276, 291-2, 297, 330, 335; 176;
2.;
differential,
phone on, 291 ing,
;
i;
tone, 252
Verlaine, 127
mov-
spinning,
Versailles,
51;
341, 342, 346-8, 367^368; beat, 347; interpretations, 346; views on rhythm,
347 Touche, 87 Tovey, 214 Tracol, 99 Trattato del principii deV armonia musicale, 2n.
and
Isolde,
112-13, 114, 115, 117-25, 126, 128,
257.
I3i, 134, 135, 159, 162, 172, 177, 178, 181, 1 86, 187, 190, 201, 204, 207, 257,
287
Tzigane (Ravel), 179 Tua, Teresina, 49, 143 Turkey, 71 Tiirr, 116
258, 270, 273, 281, 289, 306, 314, 315, 333-4, 344.; Academy of Music, 314; as centre of German musical
113; Bosendorfer Hall, 49, 115; Conservatoire, 16-59, 104, 117, 118, 162, 172, 178, 201, 204; Conservatoire Court Orchestra, 289; Chapel, 19, 25; Court Opera, I3., i8., 19, 20, 23, 25, 26, 50, 117, 119, 187, 207; Gesellschaft der Mtisikfreunde, 1 6, 22, 23, 24, 29, 115; Gesellschaftkonzerte, 23 ; Philharmonic Orchestra, 23, 27., 49, 73, 314, 344-; Philhar-
world,
Tutzing, 304
Twain, Mark, 137
U
NGER, HEINZ, 323, 324 Urban, 'old' (critic), 157 Urlinie, 2jn.
Vrsatz, 27/1.
monic
Urstudien, 263
US. A.,
297
finger, 3, 120, 177; slow, 14 Vic-Wells Ballet, 364 Victor (Record) Company, 291 Vienna, 7, 8, 12-59, 73, 78, 85, 104, 107,
(Tchaikovsky), 80
Triple Concerto (Beethoven), Tristan
of,
326, 368; atrophy of, 123 ; broad, 181; continuous, 120; correction of faulty, 86-7; corrective, 21; faulty, 46;
Toulouse-Lautrec, 63 n.
A minor
Treaty
Veszpre'm, 252 Viardot, Paul, 88 Viardot, Pauline, 88 Vibrato, 21, 30, 38, 40, 51, 54, 67, 79, 90, 120, 121-2, 154, 193, 276, 297, 325,
summational, 2n.\ 'sweet', 39 Toscanini, Arturo, 229, 270, 272, 285, 288,
Trio in
E
Venice, 77, 152 Veracini, Francesco M., 238 Verhulst, Johannes, 212
combination, in.; effect of micro-
effeminate, 220;
resultant,
i;
Theme of
Vecsey, Franz von, 154, 251-2, 264; personality, 252; technical ability, 252;
33, 43, 46, 48, 53, 79,
83, 85, 90, 103, 108,
astringent,
a
Beethoven (Reger), 246 Variations for violin and orchestra in minor (Joachim), 36 ^
45- 49-
Society,
i8.;
teachers* fees in,
91, 102, 126, 142, 144, 156, 221, 227,
333-4; University, 56 Vienna's Golden Years of Music, 1850-1900,
229, 255, 259, 269, 270, 275, 280-93, 329-48, 360, 364;
Vieuxtemps, 46,
i.,
4, 43,
29<5 313, 320, 326, as musical centre,
67, 74, 78, 89,
280-2; Beethoven
Association, 358; expenses in relation to fees in, 332; maintenance of orches-
22n. 53, 771*., 78, 79, 80, 81, 95, 154, 185, 192, 200, 239, 264; school, 78 Violin Concerto (J. S. Bach), 32, 268,,
tras in,
281; 1929 depression in, 356, 361; payments to critics in, 282-3; Russian emigrants to, 355; superiority of orchestras in, 281; teachers' fees in,
333*334
391
365; (Beethoven), 2on., 22., 32, 33, 36, 39, 47, 80, 84, 94, 140, 152, 179, 200, 206, 227, 247., 248, 267, 285,
365; (Brahms), 2on., 41, 46, 84, 2I3., 227, 271, 278, 285, 350, 365; (Bruch), 142; (Dohnanyi), 150; (Dubois), 90,
INDEX Vossische Zeitung, 137, 157, 204, 229, 363
200; (Elgar), 81; (Franck), 78; (Gold317; 150*. 51, (Krenek), mark),
Vuillaume instruments,
prices, 55
(Mendelssohn), 20., 39, 142, 198, 213"-, 337*. (Mo6r), 248, 276, 277; (Mozart), 32; (Pfitzner), 317; (Reger), 311; 265; 246, 90, (Reznicek),
VV ACHMANN,
337; (Spohr), 142, 268n.; (Tchaikovsky), 81; (Viotti), 36; (Sibelius), 252, 292,
(Weingartner), 150, 151 minor (Molique), Violin Concerto in 28; (Vieuxtemps), 192, 200 Violin Concerto in B minor (Saint-Saens),
A
D
Violin Concerto in
major (Paganim),
Wallensteins Lager, 292*1.
Violin Concerto temps), 81 Violin Concerto in
persecution of, 344-5 "Walter, William, 351
E
Violin Concerto in
major
S. (J.
Washington, D.C., 357 Weingartner, Felix, 73, 150-2, 195, 209, 226, 234, 272, 278, 324; as composer,
Bach),
E
flat
major, K.2<58
151; egocentricity of, 151; interpretaappearance, 150;
(Mozart), 199 Violin Concerto in
F minor (Lalo), 197 Violin Concerto in F sharp minor (Ernst),
tions, 151; physical
rhythm, 150; sonatas, 151; technique, 151
31,45 Violin Concerto in G minor (Bruch), 88 Violin Concerto No. 2 (Spohr), 31 Violin Concerto No. 3 (Mozart), 239 Violin Concerto No. 5 (Vieuxtemps), 95 Violin Concerto No. 7 (de Beriot), 19 Violin Concerto No. 19 (Kreutzer), 104; 239 Concerto No. 29
Weintraub, Jacques, 204, 205 Weissmann, Adolf, 204 Wendling, Carl, 35, 206 Wentfs dunkelt (Schillings), 240 Werden, H5. Wessely, Hans, 20, 193; as teacher, 193; left-hand technique, 193; vibrato, 193 Wied, Prince zu, 164
(Viotti),
Violin Violin Violin Violin
(Viotti),
101
Wieniawski, 30, 49,
Concerto, op. 23 (Ernst), 239 Concerto, op. 38 (Spohr), 239 Sonata (Bartok), 83*1.; (Franck), 80, 98, 146, 154, 163, 199; (Nardini), 238; (Reger), 240; (Schnabel), 258, 260-1, 322 minor (Schumann), 87 Violin Sonata in Violin Sonata No. 2 (Enesco), 178 Violin Sonata No. 5 Q. S. Bach), 238 Violin Sonata No. 6 (Handel), 238;
countries of origin Violinschule (Joachim),
36
Viotta, Henry, 230 Viotti, J. B., i, 2, 4, 18, 36, 53, 64, 101, Viotti et r&cole moderne de violin, 2
294
Vivaldi, 179; triple concertos, 179
Vogrich, Max, 49 Voigt, 55 Voltaire, 321
239
61,
164,
239;
Wieselburg, 6-12, 13, 15, 16, 30, 55, 57, 63, 71, 107, 117, 128, 130-2, 147, 173,
189, 193, 21 1
;
Geselligkeitsverein,
16
Wietrowetz, Gabriele, 34, 145 Wihan, Hanus, 182 Wilde, Oscar, 315/1. Wilhelm Furtwcingler (Riess), 368
Wilhelm II, Kaiser, 308 Wilhelmj, August, 30, 32, 44, 47-8, 174, 192, 193, 265, 289; as arranger, 48-9;
238
Violin Sonata, op. 27, no. I (Reger), 237 Violin Sonatas, op. 42 (Reger), 142 Violin Sonatas, op. 91 (Reger), 237. Violin Study No. 6 (Mayseder), 29 Violins. See under makers' names and
54,
staccato, 33
D
(Tartini),
148, 152, 157,
Bruno, 73, 209, 272, 320, 341, 344-5, 367; as pianist, 344; Nazis'
minor (Vieux-
80, 225, 275; (Paganini), 225
Vise,
I47,
"Walter,
D
169,
i67., 187, 189, 230, 271, 286, 287, 298, 315, 318, 322rc., 343, 351
200; (Nardini), 81; (Wieniawski), 49, in
163,
6, i6n., 26, 28, 29, 37, 48, 49, 53,
74, 75, 76, 97-8,
49, 106, 115, 118, 131, 135, 160, 162,
54
l62,
Waffelghem, van, 74
Wagner,
X38
?
EDUAIUD,
185; during rehearsals, 185-6 Waetjen, Fraulein von, 322
as teacher, 48; physical appearance, 48; tone, 30, 48
Wirth, Emanuel, 31, 34, 35, 89, 145, 146; bowing, 34; wrist exercises, 31, 145, 146 Witek, Anton, 144, 145; first uses steel E string, 144 With Strings Attached: Reminiscences and Reflections (Szigeti),
3.
Wittenberg, Alfred, 34, 251, 258, 305 Wolff Concert Agency, 85,. 133-5, 152, 344 Wolff, Hermann (agent), 133-5, 137, *39> 150, 151-2, 154, 159, 200, 245; influence on Berlin concert life, 133
392
INDEX "Wolff, Luise, 152
ance, 83; portamentos, 79; quartet playing, 81; recordings, 292; rubato, 79, 80; sonatas, 83; superiority over contemporaries, 80; tone, 79; vibrato, 79, 120; Vienna debut, 78; violinists' debt to, 82
Wolfstal, Josef, 181, 274 Wolfstal, Max, 181 Wolfsthal, 105, 317
Wollgandt, 206 Wood-Dove, The, 26 Wood, Sir Henry, 2787*., 361 Wozzeck, 26n. Wiillner, Franz, 208
Ysaye, Theo, 83
Wysman, Johann, 224 /-/ACH, 55 Zajic, Florian, 145
Yehudi Menuhin (MagidofF), 3. Ysaye, Eugene, 17, 28, 38, 40, 43, 44, 45, 49, 66, 78-83, 85, 90, 91-2, 98, in, 113, 120, 123, 125, 139, 140, 150, 155, 175, 192-3, 195, 196, 197, 198, 233, 234, 248, 264, 268, 275, 276, 288, 292, 317, 330, 352, 354J and his disciples,
82; as composer, 79, 82-3; as conductor, 79-80; as teacher, 81-2; bowing, 79J bowing defects, 288; bowing tremor, 78, 81; brutality of, 83; compared with Joachim, 82; faults in technique, 81; interpretations, 79; intonation, 79; left-hand technique,
79; modulation, 79; physical appear-
393
Zandvoort, 293 Zarzicki, 54
Zehme,
Albertine, 323/1.
Zelter, Carl Friedrich,
3i6.
Zemlinsky, Alexander, 27 Zeppelins
erst
grosse Fahrt, 16712.
ZetUn, Emmanuel, 351, 353 Zigeunerweisen (Sarasate), 41, 42 Zimbalist, Efrem, 251, 252, 255, 280, 329, 338, 351, 35<5; compared withElman,
255; vibrato, 255
Zimmermann, interpreter,
Louis,
220;
210, 220, 299;
portamento,
as
220;
tone, 220
Zurich, 69, 248, 276, 340; Concert Society,
276
c