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Joseph Joachim

Monthly Archives: May 2015

Agathe von Siebold: Göttingen, Summer of 1857

31 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Joachim in Reminiscences & Encomia

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Hans Küntzel, Brahms in Göttingen, Göttingen: Edition Herodot, 1985, pp. 96-98.


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Agathe von Siebold: Göttingen, Summer of 1857

(from Allerlei aus meinem Leben)

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Agathe von Siebold

(*1835 — †1909)

 Screen Shot 2015-05-31 at 10.20.40 PMin wunderschönes Jahr war dann für mich das Jahr 1857, wo im Sommersemester Joseph Joachim sich Studierens halber in Göttingen aufhielt. Gekannt hatte ich den großen Künstler schon früher, aber näher bekannt und befreundet wurden wir erst durch meinen Freund und Lehrer Julius Otto Grimm, den mit Joachim eine enge Freundschaft verband. Es war ein ganz herrlicher Sommer, den ich da verlebte. Täglich die herrlichste Musik oder schöne Ausflüge in die Wälder. Joachim hatte auch verschiedene Schüler für die Zeit seines Göttinger Aufenthaltes nach sich gezogen, die des Meisters Unterricht hier genießen wollten: Adolf Bargheer, nachmals Musikdirektor in Basel, Friedemann Bach, ein Nachkomme des großen Sebastian, Herner, der erst Orchestermitglied in Hannover, dann Musikdirektor und Kapellmeister dort wurde. Dieser Herner war ein äußerst begabter Mensch, ein musikalisches Genie. Fast auf allen Instrumenten vermochte er zu spielen, wenn auch die Geige sein Hauptinstrument war. Auf dem Cello war er sehr tüchtig, und dieses Instrument spielte er auch in den häufig stattfindenden Kammermusik-Zusammenkünften, wo Joachim selbstverständlich an der ersten Geige saß, Bach an der zweiten, während Adolf Bargheer Bratsche spielte. Es gesellte sich dann später noch Carl Bargheer, der ältere Bruder von Adolf hinzu, Geiger und Kapellmeister in Detmold. Gott, war das schön! Ich lebte wie in einem Meer von Glück und Entzücken. Immer, alle Tage, die wunderbare Musik und das fröhliche Zusammensein im Grimmschen, in unserem, im Dirichletschen Hause. Auch ich fand Beachtung mit meinem Gesang und Joachims damalige Lieblingsstücke, den Liederkreis an die ferne Geliebte von Beethoven, und die wunderbar schönen schottischen Lieder mit Cello und Geige und Klavierbegleitung von Beethoven sangen wir wochenlang alle und alle Tage. Als mein Lehrer J. O. Grimm einmal ein paar Wochen verreisen mußte, da bat er Joachim, mit mir indessen Musik zu treiben, und da kam der große Künstler fast alle Tage und ließ mich seine und meine Lieblingslieder singen. Auch tat er mir einmal die Ehre an und spielte die G-dur Geigensonate von Mozart mit mir und war dabei so schön geduldig, wenn ich in meiner Weise stümperte oder Taktfehler in der letzten Variation machte. Dann hielt er nachher wohl seine Hand geöffnet hin und sagte: “Ich bitte mir von Ihnen so und so viel Achtel (oder Viertel oder Sechzehntel) aus, um die Sie mich betrogen haben.” Meine Stimme hatte er gern und verglich den klaren, hohen Sopran wohl mit einer Amati-Geige. Ich erinnere mich noch ganz genau des Abends, wo ich ihm zuerst, und was ich ihm vorsang. Das war bei Dirichlets, der Schwester von Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy. Frau Rebekka hatte mir aus Berlin von Frau Fanny Mendelssohn eine Arie von dem alten italienischen Meister Porpora mitgebracht, die Joachim nicht kannte. Dieselbe hatte ich bei Grimm einstudiert und trug sie nun vor, und außerdem eine Arie von Händel aus dem Josua: “O, hätt’ ich Jubals Harf etc.” Ich glaube, ich zog mich damals ganz anständig aus der Affäre, denn Joachim war sehr freundlich, und von der Zeit an durfte ich immer mit musizieren. Dann erinnere ich mich auch noch meines Geburtstages, des 5. Juli, wo ich 22 Jahr alt wurde. Grimm gab an dem Tage, ein Sonntag war’s, eine seiner Matinéen im Ritmüllerschen Saal. Joachim spielte, und ich sang die Haydn’sche Schöpfungsarie “Nun beut die Flur.” Dies Mal machte ich es wirklich gut, denn sowohl Joachim wie auch Julius Hey, der nachherige Gesangsprofessor, sagten mir viel Erfreuliches.

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Wunderherrlich, voll Schönheit und Poesie, waren auch die gemeinsame Ausflüge. Oft lagen wir im Wald oder am Waldrand im Schatten und lasen uns schöne Sachen vor: z.B. Brentanosche Novellen “Die mehreren Wehmüller,” Indische Sagen, übersetzt von Holzmann u.s.w., und die Romantik dieser Werke paßte so ganz und gar, so harmonisch zu der ganze Poesie unseres Daseins. Es war eine so herrliche und reiche Zeit, wie ich sie vorher nie gekostet hatte, und tief ist sie in mein Gedächtnis eingegeraben. Auch sie mußte ein Ende nehmen. Ich mußte mit der Mutter auf Reisen gehen. So schön die Aussicht gewesen wäre, ins Fichtelgebirge, dann nach München und nach Berchtesgaden zu gehen, jetzt freute ich mich kein bißchen darauf, reiste sogar sehr ungern ab, denn Joachim und die anderen lieben Musikanten blieben noch in Göttingen, und ich mußte scheiden.

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George du Maurier: Trilby, 1894

25 Monday May 2015

Posted by Joachim in Literature

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George du Maurier, Trilby. A Novel, New York: Harper & Brothers, 1894, pp. 248-251.


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Excerpt from Trilby, 1894, by George du Maurier

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George du Maurier

            It was on one of the most brilliant of these Saturday nights that Taffy and the Laird, chaperoned by Little Billee, made their début at Mechelen Lodge, and were received at the door of the immense music-room by a tall, powerful man with splendid eyes and a gray beard, and a small velvet cap on his head — and by a Greek matron so beautiful and stately and magnificently attired that they felt inclined to sink them on their bended knees as in the presence of some overwhelming Eastern royalty — and were only prevented from doing so, perhaps, by the simple, sweet, and cordial graciousness of her welcome.

            And whom should they be shaking hands with next but Antony, Lorrimer, and the Greek — with each a beard and mustache of nearly five years’ growth!

            But they had not time for much exuberant greeting, for there was a sudden piano crash — and then an immediate silence, as though for pins to drop — and Signor Giuglini and the wondrous maiden Adelina Patti sang the Miserere out of Signor Verdi’s most famous opera — to the delight of all but a few very superior ones who had just read Mendelssohn’s letters (or misread them) and despised Italian music; and thought cheaply of “mere virtuosity,” either vocal or instrumental.

            When this was over, Little Billee pointed out all the lions to his friends — from the Prime Minister down to the present scribe — who was right glad to meet them again and talk of auld lang syne, and present them to the daughters of the house and other charming ladies.

            Then Roucouly, the great French barytone, sang Durien’s favorite song,

“Plaisir d’amour ne dure qu’un moment;
Chagrin d’amour dure toute la vie. …”

 with quite a little drawing-room voice — but quite as divinely as he had sung “Noël, noël,” at the Madeleine in full blast one certain Christmas eve our three friends remembered well.

            Then there was a violin solo by young Joachim, then as now the greatest violinist of his time; and a solo on the piano-forte by Madame Schumann, his only peeress! and these came as a wholesome check to the levity of those for whom all music is but an agreeable pastime, a mere emotional delight, in which the intellect has no part; and also as a well-deserved humiliation to all virtuosi who play so charmingly that they make their listeners forget the master who invented the music in the lesser master who interprets it!

            For these two — man and woman — the highest of their kind, never let you forget it was Sebastian Bach they were playing — playing in absolute perfection in absolute forgetfulness of themselves — so that if you weren’t up to Bach, you didn’t have a very good time!

            But if you were (or wished it to be understood or thought you were), you seized your opportunity and you scored; and by the earnestness of your rapt and tranced immobility, and the stony, gorgon-like intensity of your gaze, you rebuked the frivolous — as you had rebuked them before by the listlessness and carelessness of your bored resignation to the Signorina Patti’s trills and fioritures, or M. Roucouly’s pretty little French mannerisms.

            And what added so much to the charm of this delightful concert was that the guests were not packed together sardinewise, as they are at most concerts; they were comparatively few and well chosen, and could get up and walk about and talk to their friends between the pieces, and wander off into other rooms and look at endless beautiful things, and stroll in the lovely grounds, by moon or star or Chinese-lantern light.

            And there the frivolous could sit and chat and laugh and flirt when Bach was being played inside; and the earnest wander up and down together in soul-communication, through darkened walks and groves and alleys where the sound of French or Italian warblings could not reach them, and talk in earnest tones of the great Zola, or Guy de Maupassant and Pierre Loti, and exult in beautiful English over the inferiority of English literature, English art, English music, English everything else.

            For these high-minded ones who can only bear the sight of classical pictures and the sound of classical music do not necessarily read classical books in any language — no Shakespeares or Dantes or Molières or Goethes for them.


George du Maurier’s Trilby, was one of the most popular novels of its time. It was published serially in Harper’s Monthly in 1894, and appeared in book form in 1895. Set in Paris in the 1850s, its most celebrated character is the Jewish musician and hypnotist Svengali, who exercises his powers over a young woman named Trilby O’Ferrall.

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Sir Henry Wood on Joachim’s Diamond Jubilee

20 Wednesday May 2015

Posted by Joachim in Reminiscences & Encomia

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Henry J. Wood, My Life of Music, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd. 1938, pp. 183-185.


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JOACHIM (1904)

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Henry Wood ca. 1906

The outstanding event of the 1904 season was the diamond jubilee of Joseph Joachim. A wonderful reception was given for him in Queen’s Hall on Monday, May 16. The president was Arthur James Balfour whom, for the first time, I had the honour of meeting. On the programme appeared a delightful poem by Robert Bridges and, on the second page, a reproduction of a pencil drawing by Frau Moritz Hauptmann; also a recently-taken photograph.

I opened the concert with Mendelssohn’s Hebrides Overture. I may say that, in those early days of my conducting, Mendelssohn was not a great favourite of mine; I was more devoted to Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, and Wagner. Joachim, on the other hand, had known Mendelssohn personally — indeed, he had played with him. He was naturally devoted to Mendelssohn’s works. I was therefore not a little proud of the result of my conducting of the Hebrides overture, for it brought nothing but words of praise from Joachim.

Later, that amazing personality Sir Hubert Parry read, and Balfour presented an illuminated address to Joachim together with his portrait by Sargent. The second item on the programme was announced as ‘solo violin’, and someone went into the artists’ room and brought Joachim’s fiddle-case which he opened amid tremendous applause and enthusiasm. I began the introduction to Beethoven’s violin concerto and Joachim gave a memorable performance of it with his own cadenza. This was followed by his arrangement of Schumann’s Abendlied for violin and orchestra. The musical part of the programme closed with Joachim conducting his own overture to Shakespeare’s King Henry IV (written in 1885) and also the Brahms Academic Festival Overture.

In his address Balfour referred to Joachim’s association with Mendelssohn and told us how the composer conducted the concerto we had just heard when Joachim played it at the Philharmonic concert of May 27, 1844. He then addressed Joachim thus:

“Learning from Mendelssohn and working with Brahms and in the comradeship of life-long friends, you have devoted your whole energies as executant and composer to continuing the tradition and maintaining the ideal of classical music. We now hold it that the sixtieth anniversary of your first appearance in London should not pass without greeting. Your first thoughts as a performer have ever been for the composer, not for yourself.”

The list of the committee and subscribers numbered six hundred and three and contained all the greatest names in music, literature, painting, and even politics.

Of Joachim I always felt that one was in the presence of a Hungarian gentleman of great intellect, and although his playing lacked the emotional depth of that of dear Ysaÿe, his was a quiet classical serenity free from any trace of exaggeration and always musical and scholarly. Joachim was always conscious of his dignity; one could never have the fun out of him that was possible with Ysaÿe. He was a great friend and always a welcome guest at the house of Edward Speyer in Elstree — generally known as the ‘Elstree Speyer’, and cousin to Sir Edgar. Those two did not quite hit it musically: Edgar was all out for the modern in music, Edward for the strictly classical.

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Joseph Joachim: Lüpke, Berlin

09 Saturday May 2015

Posted by Joachim in Iconography

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Joseph Joachim: Lüpke, Berlin

JJ Berlin

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Photo collage © Mathias Brösicke — Dematon, Weimar

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