Violin Concerto (Tchaikovsky)

The Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35 was the only concerto composed by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky in 1878 and is one of the best-known violin concertos.

Instrumentation

The concerto is scored for solo violin, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets in A and B-flat, two bassoons, four horns in F, two trumpets in D, timpani and strings.

Form

The piece is in three movements:

  1. Allegro moderato (D major)
  2. Canzonetta: Andante (G minor)
  3. Finale: Allegro vivacissimo (D major)

The second and third movements are played attacca, with no break between them.

A typical performance runs approximately 35 minutes.

Composition

The piece was written in Clarens, a Swiss resort on the shores of Lake Geneva, where Tchaikovsky had gone to recover from the depression brought on by his disastrous marriage to Antonina Miliukova. He was working on his Piano Sonata in G major but finding it heavy going. Presently he was joined there by his composition pupil, the violinist Iosif Kotek, who had been in Berlin for violin studies with Joseph Joachim. The two played works for violin and piano together, including a violin-and-piano arrangement of Édouard Lalo's Symphonie espagnole, which they may have played through the day after Kotek's arrival. This work may have been the catalyst for the composition of the concerto.[1] Tchaikovsky wrote to his patroness Nadezhda von Meck, "It [the Symphonie espagnole] has a lot of freshness, lightness, of piquant rhythms, of beautiful and excellently harmonized melodies.... He [Lalo], in the same way as Léo Delibes and Bizet, does not strive after profundity, but he carefully avoids routine, seeks out new forms, and thinks more about musical beauty than about observing established traditions, as do the Germans."[2] Tchaikovsky authority Dr. David Brown writes that Tchaikovsky "might almost have been writing the prescription for the violin concerto he himself was about to compose."[3]

Tchaikovsky (right) with violinist Iosif Kotek

Tchaikovsky made swift, steady progress on the concerto, as by this point in his rest cure he had regained his inspiration, and the work was completed within a month despite the middle movement getting a complete rewrite (a version of the original movement was preserved as the first of the three pieces for violin and piano, Souvenir d'un lieu cher).[4] Since Tchaikovsky was not a violinist, he sought the advice of Kotek on the completion of the solo part.[5] "How lovingly he's busying himself with my concerto!" Tchaikovsky wrote to his brother Anatoly on the day he completed the new slow movement. "It goes without saying that I would have been able to do nothing without him. He plays it marvelously."[6]

Tchaikovsky wanted to dedicate the concerto to Iosif Kotek, but felt constrained by the gossip this would undoubtedly cause about the true nature of his relationship with the younger man. (They were almost certainly lovers at one point, and Tchaikovsky was always at pains to disguise his homosexuality from the general public.)[7] In 1881, he broke with Kotek after the latter refused to play the Violin Concerto, believing it was poorly received and would do damage to his budding career. However, he did dedicate to Kotek the Valse-Scherzo in C for violin and orchestra, written in 1877, on its publication in 1878.

Tchaikovsky intended the first performance to be given by Leopold Auer, for whom he had written his Sérénade mélancolique for violin and orchestra, and accordingly dedicated the work to him. Auer refused, however, meaning that the planned premiere for March 1879 had to be cancelled and a new soloist found.[8] In 1912, Auer told his version of the story to the New York magazine Musical Courier:

When Tchaikovsky came to me one evening, about thirty years ago [actually thirty-four], and presented me with a roll of music, great was my astonishment on finding this proved to be the Violin Concerto, dedicated to me, completed and already in print. [This was the reduction for violin and piano, printed in 1878; the publication of the full score did not take place until 1888.] My first feeling was one of gratitude for this proof of his sympathy toward me, which honored me as an artist. On closer acquaintance with the composition, I regretted that the great composer had not shown it to me before committing it to print. Much unpleasantness might then have been spared us both....

Warmly as I had championed the symphonic works of the young composer (who was at that time not universally recognized), I could not feel the same enthusiasm for the Violin Concerto, with the exception of the first movement; still less could I place it on the same level as his purely orchestral compositions. I am still of the same opinion. My delay in bringing the concerto before the public was partly due to this doubt in my mind as to its intrinsic worth, and partly that I would have found it necessary, for purely technical reasons, to make some slight alterations in the passages of the solo part. This delicate and difficult task I subsequently undertook, and re-edited the violin solo part, and it is this edition which has been played by me, and also by my pupils, up to the present day. It is incorrect to state that I had declared the concerto in its original form unplayable. What I did say was that some of the passages were not suited to the character of the instrument, and that, however perfectly rendered, they would not sound as well as the composer had imagined. From this purely aesthetic point of view only I found some of it impracticable, and for this reason I re-edited the solo part.

Tchaikovsky, hurt at my delay in playing the concerto in public and quite rightly too (I have often deeply regretted it, and before his death received absolution from him), now proceeded to have a second edition published, and dedicated the concerto this time to Adolf Brodsky, who brought it out in Vienna, where it met with much adverse criticism, especially from Hanslick. The only explanation I can give of the orchestral score still bearing my name is that when the original publisher, P. Jurgenson, of Moscow, to suit the composer, republished the concerto, he brought out the piano score in the new edition, but waited to republish the orchestral score until the first edition of it should be exhausted. This is the only way I can solve the problem of the double dedication.

... The concerto has made its way in the world, and after all, that is the most important thing. It is impossible to please everybody.[9]

The first performance was eventually given by Adolph Brodsky on December 4, 1881 in Vienna, under the baton of Hans Richter. Tchaikovsky changed the dedication to Brodsky. Critical reaction was mixed. The influential critic Eduard Hanslick called it "long and pretentious" and said that it "brought us face to face with the revolting thought that music can exist which stinks to the ear", labeling the last movement "odorously Russian". Hanslick also wrote that "the violin was not played but beaten black and blue."

The violinist who did much early work to make the work popular with the public and win a place for it in the repertoire was Karel Halíř (who in 1905 was to premiere the revised version of the Sibelius Violin Concerto). When Tchaikovsky attended a Leipzig performance of the work in 1888, with Haliř as soloist, he called the event "a memorable day".[10]

The Polish premiere of the concerto was given in Warsaw on 14 January 1892, with Stanisław Barcewicz on violin and the composer conducting. They also played the Sérénade mélancolique for the first time in Poland on that occasion.[11][12]

  • The most recognizable theme from the first movement of the concerto is used in a heavily reworked, playful fashion in the Fratelli theme from the soundtrack to the 1985 adventure film The Goonies, composed by Dave Grusin.
  • The violin concerto has a central role in the 2009 French comedy film Le Concert and is played during the final scene.
  • A reworked version of the first movement tutti or march was used in Philip Kaufman's film The Right Stuff.
  • The concerto is also heard briefly during the 2014 film The Equalizer.
  • In the pilot episode of the Amazon Prime Instant Video series Mozart in the Jungle parts of the last movement are played by Joshua Bell.
  • The concerto was used in Chinese movie Together in the last scenes.
  • The concerto was prominently used in a critical scene in the 1984 version of the movie Unfaithfully Yours.
  • In the 1947 movie Carnegie Hall the first movement is performed by Jascha Heifetz with Fritz Reiner conducting the New York Philharmonic.
  • The concerto is used in the soundtrack to the documentary film Jiro Dreams of Sushi.
  • The violin concerto was also present in the final episodes of the Korean drama entitled Naeil's Cantabile played by the Rising Star Orchestra.
  • The second movement of the violin concerto is repeatedly played in Oliver Stone's 2012 documentary The Untold History of the United States.
  • In Nodame Cantabile, Shinichi Chiaki conducts this concerto in the final round of the Platini International Conductor's Competition.
  • Monty Python satirized the concerto in their "Royal Festival Hall Concert" sketch on Another Monty Python Record, in which violinist Emile Gilbert wrecked violins while overplaying solo passages, eventually provoking violent conflicts in the orchestra.[13]
  • The first movement (Allegro moderato) is played in the final episode of the Korean cartoon Larva season 2 called "Wild Wild Wild World".
  • In the 2012 family comedy film Parental Guidance, characters cause chaos while attending a performance of the concerto, featuring in particular the opening of the third movement (Allegro vivacissimo).
  • A reworked version of the first march was used in the bridge of the Billy Joel song "Leningrad."
  • On February 8th 2020, the duo TwoSet Violin played the violin concerto live on Youtube.[14]
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gollark: Isn't it stated somewhere that it has to be representable as finitely many `char`s?
gollark: Oh dear, I will have to reëvaluate my entire code guessing entry.
gollark: Time to partition and ext4ize.
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References

  • Brown, David, Tchaikovsky: The Crisis Years, 1874–1878, (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1983). ISBN 0-393-01707-9.
  • Steinberg, Michael, The Concerto (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998).
  • Warrack, John, Tchaikovsky (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1973). SBN 684-13558-2.

Notes

  1. Brown, Crisis Years, 260.
  2. As quoted in Brown, Crisis Years, 260.
  3. Brown, Crisis Years, 260—261.
  4. Brown, Crisis Years, 261.
  5. Steinberg, 484.
  6. As quoted in Brown, Crisis Years, 261.
  7. Alexander Poznansky, Tchaikovsky: The Quest for the Inner Man, p. 297
  8. Brown, Crisis Years, 261–262.
  9. Musical Courier, January 12, 1912. As quoted in Steinberg, 485–486.
  10. John Warrack, Tchaikovsky, p. 211
  11. Tchaikovsky Research: Sérénade mélancolique
  12. Tchaikovsky Research: Violin Concerto
  13. Monty Python - Gilbert, from the "Another Monty Python Record/CD" classical music skit, YouTube
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