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Joseph Joachim

Monthly Archives: June 2013

Joachim in Düsseldorf, 1855

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Pages, Reminiscences & Encomia

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From: The Musical Times, Vol. 50, No. 788 (October 1, 1908), p. 644

A correspondent who signs himself ‘Nimrod’ writes: ‘Being a Düsseldorfer, I was much interested in the Foreign Note in your September issue which stated that a tablet is to be affixed to the house in the Eilkerstrasse, in which the Schumanns lived for three years. Only I could not remember any Eilker Street in the fair garden city on the Rhine. Then it struck me that no doubt the Bilkerstrasse, named after the suburb Bilk, was meant. That street I know well, for as a little boy I went to school there. I connect it in my mind chiefly with sundry canings — no doubt well deserved — that I received, and with a fascinating baker’s shop where we children used to spend our Pfennigs on capfuls of broken pieces of confectionery. Perchance it was the identical shop that supplied bread and cakes to the Schumanns some years before I patronized it to the tune of an occasional farthing. Rather a dull street my memory recalls, but it leads at right-angles to the Haroldstrasse, facing the ornamental water, the Schwanenspiegel, where Joseph Joachim lived for a time in 1855 in rooms procured for him by his young friend Johannes Brahms. The latter was then living in Düsseldorf so as to be near Frau Clara Schumann in her great trouble and anxiety due to her husband’s tragic illness. Joachim’s rooms would be within two or three minutes’ walk from the Schumann’s house. I can well believe Herr Kalbeck’s statement in vol. i. of his Brahms biography, that many Düsseldorfers would forgather on the promenade along the Schwanenspiegel, outside Joachim’s rooms, to listen to the performances of quartets and other chamber music given by the young master-fiddler, his pupil K. L. Bargheer, a Danish friend, Waldemar Tofte, and a cultured amateur, Herr Assessor von Diest, who lived in the same house as Joachim, and was a violoncellist of sufficient excellence to play at the Lower Rhenish Festivals at the first desk.

______________

‘We may be sure that young Brahms — “der blonde Johannes” as his friends called him — profited greatly by these performances under so gifted a leader, for he had not previously enjoyed many chances of hearing classical chamber music. He would sit in the corner of the sofa, cover his eyes with his hand and utter never a word. Once, says Herr von Diest, during the playing of a Mozart Adagio he suddenly jumped up, walked with heavy steps to the door, and closed it behind him with a bang. He had felt like one seasick, he afterwards explained to Joachim, who remonstrated with him for h is “rudeness”; he could not possibly listen to another note, he was too full of music! When a pianoforte was required for the performances, the party met at Frau Schumann’s house. Brahms generally played the pianoforte part on these occasions, the hostess explaining her reluctance to take a share in the performances by remarking to Herr von Diest: “I do not like to play when Brahms is present. He is too severe a critic; and alas! he is always right.” While they are about it, why do not the Düsseldorfers affix a tablet to the house in the Schadowplatz where young Brahms lived at what was a turning point in his career? Are they perhaps ashamed of the notorious fact that when a new Musikdirektor had to be chosen in succession to Robert Schumann, they preferred a nonentity like Julius Tausch to the young genius then living in their midst who had been hailed as a “strong fighter” and the coming man in the clarion-tones of Schumann’s famous Neue Bahnen article?’

http://books.google.com/books?id=qpUPAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA644&dq=herr+joachim+1855&hl=en&ei=HIdXTJLuEYP-8AbPl7zUBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9&ved=0CE0Q6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=herr%20joachim%201855&f=false


See also: Gustav von Diest: from “Aus dem Leben eines Glücklichen” (1904)

 

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Otto Gumprecht: Joseph Joachim, der König der Geiger (1872)

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Pages, Reminiscences & Encomia

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Protected: Joseph Joachim to Felix Mendelssohn, March 17, 1844

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Letters

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To Jean Joseph Bott, January 16, 1863

14 Friday Jun 2013

To Bott, Jan 1868?

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Posted by Joachim | Filed under Ephemera, Pages

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Concert: Leipzig, Gewandhaus: November 16, 1843, AMZ

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Concert Reviews & Criticism, Pages

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Debut, Gewandhaus, Leipzig

Concert: Leipzig, Gewandhaus: November 16, 1843

AMZ, Leipzig, Vol. 45, No. 49 (December 6, 1843) p. 890

Herr J. Joachim aus Wien, Schüler des Violinvirtuosen Herrn Böhm dasselbst, und erst 13 bis 14 Jahr alt, ist eine höchst interessante Erscheinung, nicht nur in Rücksicht auf das ausgezeichnete Talent, das sich in seinen Leistungen vielfach und ganz entschieden ausspricht, sondern auch der trefflichen Schule und Bildung wegen, von denen sein Spiel unverkennbar Zeugniss gibt. Es muss eine Freude sein, einen so talentvollen Schüler zu unterrichten, es gereicht aber auch dem Lehrer zu grosser Ehre, ein schönes Talent so geleitet und frühzeitig schon so weit gebracht zu haben, dass baldige Erreichung hoher Meisterschaft kaum bezweifelt werden darf. Wie wir hören, wird sich Herr Joachim längere Zeit hier aufhalten, um unter Leitung der Herren Hauptmann, David u. s. w. sich musikalisch ferner auszubilden; bleibt seine Gesinnung so natürlich und anspruchslos wie sie jetzt ist, sein Fleiss so emsig und sorgsam wie er bisher gewesen sein muss, so hat man von ihm wohl mehr noch als einen grossen Virtuosen, man hat gewiss einen bedeutenden Künstler zu erwarten. Möge unsere Hoffnung nicht unerfüllt bleiben. Dass übrigens die Leistung des Herrn Joachim von Seiten des Publicums mit dem lebhaftesten Beifall aufgenommen wurde, bedarf nach alledem nicht weiterer Versicherung.

http://books.google.com/books?id=Z-EqAAAAYAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=editions:OCLC9249860&lr=#v=onepage&q=Joachim&f=false

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Concert: London Philharmonic Debut, 1844 Illustrated London News

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Concert Reviews & Criticism, Pages

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Debut, Illustrated London News, London

The Illustrated London News, vol. 4, No. 109 (June 1, 1844), p. 354.

…now we come to the dictu mirabile monstrum, in the shape of a little boy of thirteen, who perhaps is the first violin player, not only of his age, but of his siècle. Of late years we have heard some prodigies, in the form of grown persons, as performers on that splendid instrument; but without severally enumerating them, or their merits, we can safely say that little Joachim is equal to any, or all of them, put together. His tone is of the purest cantabile character — his execution is most marvellous, and at the same time unembarrassed — his style is chaste, but deeply impassioned at moments; and his deportment is that of a conscious, but modest genius! He performed Beethoven’s solitary concerto, which we have heard all the great performers of the last twenty years attempt, and invariably fail in. On Monday last its performance was an eloquent vindication of the master-spirit who imagined it, and we might fearlessly add, that in the cadences, composed by the youth himself, there was as much genius exhibited as in the subject which gave birth to them. Joachim plays from memory, which is more agreeable to the eye of the auditor than to see anything read from a music-stand; it seems more like extemporaneous performance, and admits a greater degree of enthusiasm on the part of the instrumentalist. We never heard or witnessed such unequivocal delight as was expressed by both band and auditory.

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Concert: London Philharmonic Debut, 1844 The Musical World

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Concert Reviews & Criticism, Pages

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The Musical World, vol. XIX, No. 22 (May 30, 1844), pp. 180-181.

            Joachim’s rendering of Beethoven’s concerto was astonishing. Not only was it astonishing as coming from a comparative child, but astonishing as a violin performance, no matter from whom proceeding. The greatest violinists hold this concerto in awe. It is, we must own, not adapted to display advantageously the powers of the instrument — though a composition of great distinction, the first movement being in Beethoven’s highest manner. Young Joachim, however, attacked it with the vigour and determination of the most accomplished artist, and made every point tell. So well did he play, that we forgot how entirely unadapted for display was the violin part. No master could have read it better, no finished artist could have better rendered it. Tone, execution, and reading, were alike admirable — and the two cadences introduced by the young player were not only tremendous executive feats, but ingeniously composed — consisting wholly of excellent and musician-like workings of phrases and passages from the concerto. The reception of Joachim was enthusiastic, and his success the most complete and triumphant that his warmest friends could have desired. What Charles Filtsch[1] is upon the piano, Joseph Joachim is upon the violin, and he is, in common with that prodigious little genius, remarkable for the most attractive manners, the most amiable disposition, and the most intelligent and charming modesty. We wonder not that he should be such a favourite with Mendelssohn, who is ever the first to acknowledge and to nurture rising genius.

[Probably by J. W. Davison]


[1] Charles Filtsch (1830-1845) was Chopin’s most gifted pupil, about whom Franz Liszt is reported to have said “When that boy begins to travel, I will close shop.” He died, tragically young, in Venice.

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Protected: Charles Dickens to Joseph Joachim, July 7, 1862

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Letters, Pages

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Protected: Leipzig Performances, 1843-1845

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Concert Reviews & Criticism, Pages

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Concert: Leipzig. AMZ, January 1845

13 Thursday Jun 2013

Posted by Joachim in Concert Reviews & Criticism, Pages

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Translation © Robert W. Eshbach 2013

__________

AMZ Vol. 47, No. 4 (January, 1845) p. 61:

Of great interest was the playing of the young, 15 year-old Joseph Joachim. The local public knows already from earlier appearances the beautiful, full tone, which he knows how to elicit from the violin, as well as his great dexterity and security, and has always applauded and encouraged these virtues, the more remarkable in one so young. What Mr. Joachim offered us this time, however, was doubly surprising, for he not only gave evidence of the significant advance he has made in technical skill, but he also showed that he is already mature enough to grasp the intellectual and spiritual meaning of a work of the highest artistic importance. The manner in which he performed the difficult and brilliant concerto of Beethoven leaves no doubt as to his true vocation for the musical profession, and now sets him above the mere virtuosi in the ranks of artists. In this connection, we take notice of the two free cadenzas, which he introduced into the first and last movements of the concerto, ingeniously and interestingly made up of the principal themes of the work. Mr. Joachim’s playing is so true and secure, his tone so large and resonant, and always so pure in intonation, even in the highest and most difficult passages, the execution so natural and yet so independent, that only by looking at his juvenile form can one convince oneself of his youthful age. May the young man who last year celebrated triumphs in England long preserve his childlike, modest nature, and neither through the great praise which his accomplishments have always found, this time not excepted, nor through the opinion that he may have already arrived at the peak of perfection, lead him astray and keep him from untiringly striving forward. He has a great and honored future before him, and will certainly be numbered amongst the great artists.

_________

Von grossem Interesse war das Spiel des jungen 15järigen Joseph Joachim. Das hiesige Publicum kennt bereits aus früheren öffentlichen Productionen den schönen, vollen Ton, den derselbe der Violine zu entlocken weiss, so wie seine grosse Fertigkeit und Sicherheit, und hat diese in so frühem Alter um so bemerkenswertheren Vorzüge stets beifällig und aufmunternd anerkannt. Was jedoch Herr Joachim dieses Mal bot, war doppelt überraschend, da er dadurch nicht nur sehr bedeutende Fortschritte in seiner technischen Ausbildung documentirte, sondern auch zeigte, dass er der geistige Erfassung eines künstlerisch höchst bedeutenden Werkes bereits gewachsen ist. Die Art und Weise, wie er das schwierige und geniale Concert Beethoven’s vortrug, bannt jeden Zweifel an seinem wirklichen Berufe zum Musiker, und stellt ihn schon jetzt über die blosen Virtuosen in die Reihen der Künstler. In dieser Beziehung ist noch der beiden freien Cadenzen zu gedenken, welche er im ersten und letzten Satze des Concertes einschaltete und die geistvoll und interressant den Hauptmotiven des Werkes sich anschlossen. Herrn Joachim’s Spiel ist so rund und sicher, sein Ton so gross und klangvoll und selbst in den höchsten und schwierigsten Lagen stets so rein, der Vortrag so natürlich und doch so selbständig, dass man nur durch den Anblick seiner jugendlichen Gestalt von seinem frühen Alter sich überzeugen lässt. Möge dem jungen Manne, der berreits im vorigen Jahre in England Triumphe feierte, sein kindlicher bescheidener Sinn noch lange erhalten werden und er weder durch den grossen Beifall, den seine Leistungen stets, und auch dieses Mal gefunden haben, noch durch die Meinung, dass er schon jetzt auf dem Gipfel der Vollendung angelangt sei, sich irre machen lassen in unermüdlichem Vorwärtsstreben; er hat eine grosse ehrenvolle Zukunft vor sich und wird dann sicherlich unter den Künstlern voll zählen.

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