Ysaÿe, Eugène

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{{Infobox Musical artist <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject Musicians —>
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{{epname|Ysaÿe, Eugène}}
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{{Infobox Musical artist  
 
| Name                = Eugène Ysaÿe
 
| Name                = Eugène Ysaÿe
| Img                = EugèneYsaÿe.jpg
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| Img                = Eugène Ysaÿe.jpg
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| Img_size           =200
 
| Background          = classical_ensemble
 
| Background          = classical_ensemble
 
| Born                = {{birth date|1858|7|16|mf=y}}<br/>{{flagicon|BEL}} <small>[[Liège (city)|Liège]], [[Belgium]]
 
| Born                = {{birth date|1858|7|16|mf=y}}<br/>{{flagicon|BEL}} <small>[[Liège (city)|Liège]], [[Belgium]]
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| Notable_instruments = '''Viola'''<br/>[[Carlo Antonio Testore|Antonio Testore 1740]]<br/>'''Violin'''<br/>[[Guarneri|Andrea Guarneri, ''filius Andrea'' 1720]]<br/>[[Stradivarius|''Herkules Stradivarius'' 1734]] <br/>[[Giuseppe Guarneri|Giuseppe Guarneri, ''del Gesù'' 1740]]<br/>[[Giovanni Battista Guadagnini|''Ysaÿe Guadagnini'' 1754]]  
 
| Notable_instruments = '''Viola'''<br/>[[Carlo Antonio Testore|Antonio Testore 1740]]<br/>'''Violin'''<br/>[[Guarneri|Andrea Guarneri, ''filius Andrea'' 1720]]<br/>[[Stradivarius|''Herkules Stradivarius'' 1734]] <br/>[[Giuseppe Guarneri|Giuseppe Guarneri, ''del Gesù'' 1740]]<br/>[[Giovanni Battista Guadagnini|''Ysaÿe Guadagnini'' 1754]]  
 
}}
 
}}
'''Eugène Ysaÿe''' ({{IPA-fr|øʒɛn iza.i}}; July 16 1858 &ndash; May 12 1931) was a [[Belgium|Belgian]] [[violinist]], [[composer]] and [[conducting|conductor]]. His brother was [[pianist]] and composer [[Théo Ysaÿe]] (1865–1918). He was regarded as "The King of the Violin," or, as [[Nathan Milstein]] mentioned, "tzar."
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'''Eugène Ysaÿe''' ({{IPA-fr|øʒɛn iza.i}}) (July 16, 1858 - May 12, 1931) was a [[Belgium|Belgian]] [[violinist]], [[composer]] and [[conducting|conductor]]. He was regarded in his day as "The King of the Violin."
  
== Biography ==
+
Many important violinists of the twentieth century were greatly influenced by Ysaÿe's style, especially in playing the music of the [[Romantic]] era. A [[child prodigy]], he became the master of the Franco-Belgian school of violin playing and played with Europe's leading [[orchestra]]s. However, his playing career was shortened due to the effects of [[diabetes]], particularly on his hands.
Eugène-Auguste Ysaÿe came from a background of peasants, though a large part of his family played instruments. As violinist [[Arnold Steinhardt]] describes, a legend was passed down through the Ysaÿe family about the first violin brought to the lineage:
 
  
<blockquote>
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He served as music director of the [[Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra]] from 1918 to 1922 and had earlier been offered the position of music director by the [[New York Philharmonic]]. In addition to having a major international career as a soloist, Ysaÿe also was a distinguished teacher, [[conductor]] and [[composer]].
''It was told of a boy whom some woodcutters found in the forest and brought to the village. The boy grew up to be a blacksmith. Once, at a village festival, he astonished everyone by playing the [[viol]] [the closest ancestor of the violin] beautifully. From then on the villagers took pleasure in dancing and singing to the strains of his viol. One day an illustrious stranger stopped in front of the smithy to have his horse shod. The count's servant saw the viol inside and told the young smith that he had heard a new Italian instrument played by some minstrels at the count's court. That instrument, called the violin, was much better than the viol – its tone was like the human voice and could express every feeling and passion. From that moment the young man no longer took pleasure in his viol. Day and night he was thinking of that wonderful new instrument that could express joy and sorrow and whose tones went straight to the human heart.
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{{toc}}
Then he had a dream: he saw before him a young woman of indescribable beauty, not unlike his own love, Bienthline. She came to him and kissed his brow. The young man awoke and looked at the wall his broken and neglected viol used to hang on and could barely believe his eyes: there, instead of the viol, was a new instrument of beautiful proportions. He put it against his shoulder and drew the bow over the strings, producing sounds that were truly divine. The violin sang in a heartwarming tone: it rejoiced and wept for happiness – and so did the musician. Thus, goes the legend, came the first violin to the Ardennes and to the Ysaÿe family.''
+
He died at 72 of the effects of diabetes, shortly after the premier of his only opera. His brother was [[pianist]] and composer [[Théo Ysaÿe]] (1865–1918).
</blockquote>
 
Born in [[Liège (city)|Liège]], Belgium, Ysaÿe began [[violin]] lessons aged five with his father. He would later recognize his father's teaching being the foundation of everything he knew on his instrument, even though he went on to study with more reputable masters. At age seven he entered the Conservatoire at Liège studying with [[Joseph Massart]], though soon afterwards he was asked to leave the conservatory because of lack of progress. This was due to the fact that young Eugène in order to support his family had to play full time in two local orchestras, one conducted by his father. Eugene went on playing in these ensembles, though he studied by himself and learned the repertoire of the violin. By the time he was twelve, he was playing so well that one day he was practicing in a cellar when the legendary [[Henri Vieuxtemps]] walked by on the street and was so impressed with the sound of his violin and took interest on the boy. He arranged for Ysaÿe to be re-admitted to the conservatory studying with Vieuxtemps's assistant, the noted [[Henryk Wieniawski]]. Ysaÿe would later also study with Vieuxtemps, and both "master and disciple," as Ysaÿe would call the roles of teacher and pupil, were very fond of each other. In his last years, Vieuxtemps asked Ysaÿe to come to the countryside just to play for him.  
 
  
Studying with these teachers meant that he was part of the so-called Franco-Belgian school of violin playing, which dates back to the development of the modern violin bow by [[François Tourte]]. Qualities of this "École" included elegance, a full tone with a sense of drawing a "long" bow with no jerks, precise left hand techniques, and bowing using the whole forearm while keeping both the wrist and upper arm quiet (as opposed to [[Joseph Joachim]]'s German school of wrist bowing and [[Leopold Auer]]'s Russian concept of using the whole arm.)
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==Biography==
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===Early years===
 +
Eugène-Auguste Ysaÿe came from a peasant background, although a large part of his family played [[musical instrument]]s. Born in [[Liège (city)|Liège]], Belgium, Ysaÿe began [[violin]] lessons at the age of five with his father. He would later recognize his father's teaching being the crucial foundation of his knowledge on his instrument, although he went on to study with more reputable masters. At age seven he entered the Conservatoire at Liège, studying with [[Joseph Massart]]. Young Eugène also had to support his family by playing in two local [[orchestra]]s, one conducted by his father. As a result, he was soon asked to leave the conservatory because of a lack of progress. He continued playing in these ensembles and to study by himself to expand his repertoire on the violin.  
  
After his graduation from the conservatoire at Liège, Ysaÿe was the principal violin of the [[Benjamin Bilse]] beer-hall orchestra, which later developed into the [[Berlin Philharmonic]]. Many musicians of note and influence came regularly to hear this orchestra and Ysaÿe in particular, among whom figured [[Joseph Joachim]], [[Franz Liszt]], [[Clara Schumann]], and [[Anton Rubinstein]], who asked that Ysaÿe be released from his contract to accompany him on tour.
+
By the time he was 12, Ysaÿe's playing was highly accomplished. One day when he was practicing in a cellar, the legendary violinist [[Henri Vieuxtemps]] walked by on the street and was so impressed with the sound of his [[violin]] he took immediate interest in the boy. He arranged for Ysaÿe to be re-admitted to the conservatory, studying with Vieuxtemps's assistant, the noted violinist [[Henryk Wieniawski]]. Ysaÿe would later study with Vieuxtemps himself, with whom he developed an affectionate relationship of "master and [[disciple]]." In his last years, Vieuxtemps asked Ysaÿe to come to the countryside just to play for him.  
  
When Ysaÿe was twenty-seven years old, he was recommended as a soloist for one of the [[Concerts Colonne]] in [[Paris]], which was the start of his great success as a concert artist. The next year, Ysaÿe received a professorship at the [[Koninklijk Conservatorium (Brussels)|Brussels Conservatoire]] in his native Belgium. This began his career as a teacher, which was to remain one of his main occupations after leaving the Conservatoire in 1898 and into his last years. Among his more respected pupils are [[Josef Gingold]], former [[concertmaster]] of the [[Cleveland Orchestra]] and Professor at [[Indiana University]], the [[viola]] virtuoso [[William Primrose]], the violin virtuoso [[Nathan Milstein]] (who primarily studied with [[Piotr Stolyarsky]]), [[Louis Persinger]], [[Alberto Bachmann]], [[Mathieu Crickboom]], [[Jascha Brodsky]], and [[Aldo Ferarasi]].
+
Studying with these teachers meant that he was part of the so-called Franco-Belgian school of [[violin]] playing, which dates back to the development of the modern violin bow by [[François Tourte]]. Qualities of this "École" included elegance, a full tone, drawing a "long" bow with no jerks, precise left hand techniques, and using the whole forearm while keeping both the wrist and upper arm quiet—as opposed to the German school of wrist bowing and the Russian concept of using the whole arm.
  
During his tenure as professor at the Conservatoire, Ysaÿe continued to tour an ever-broadening section of the world, including all of Europe, [[Russia]], and the [[United States]]. Despite health concerns, particularly regarding the condition of his hands, Ysaÿe was at his best when performing, and many prominent composers dedicated major works to him, including [[Claude Debussy]], [[Camille Saint-Saëns]], [[César Franck]], and [[Ernest Chausson]].
+
===Prime career years===
  
In 1886 he established the [[Ysaÿe Quartet (1886)|Ysaÿe Quartet]], which premiered Debussy's ''[[String Quartet (Debussy)|String Quartet]]''.
+
After his graduation from the conservatoire, Ysaÿe became the principal violinist of the [[Benjamin Bilse]] beer-hall orchestra, which later developed into the [[Berlin Philharmonic]]. Many musicians of note came regularly to hear this [[orchestra]] and Ysaÿe in particular, including [[Joseph Joachim]], [[Franz Liszt]], [[Clara Schumann]], and [[Anton Rubinstein]], who asked that Ysaÿe be released from his contract to accompany him on tour.
  
As his physical ailments grew more prohibitive, Ysaÿe turned more to teaching, conducting and an early love, composition. Among his most famous works are the six ''Sonatas for Solo Violin'' op. 27, the unaccompanied ''Sonata for Cello'', op. 28, one ''Sonata for Two Violins'', eight ''Poèmes'' for various instruments (one or two violins, violin and cello, string quartet) and orchestra (''Poème élégiaque'', ''Poème de l'Extase'', ''Chant d'hiver'', ''Poème nocturne'', among others), pieces for string orchestra without [[Double bass|basses]] (including ''Poème de l'Exil''), two string trios, a quintet, and an [[opera]], ''Peter the Miner'', written near the end of his life in the [[Walloon language|Walloon]] dialect.
+
When Ysaÿe was 27 he was recommended as a soloist for one of the [[Concerts Colonne]] in [[Paris]], which was the start of his great success as a concert artist. The following year, Ysaÿe received a professorship at the [[Koninklijk Conservatorium (Brussels)|Brussels Conservatoire]] in his native [[Belgium]]. This began his career as a teacher, which was to remain one of his main occupations throughout the rest of his life.  
  
Ysaÿe had been offered the post of music director of the [[New York Philharmonic]] in 1898, but declined it due to his busy solo performance schedule. In 1918, he accepted the music director's position with the [[Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra]], where he remained until 1922 and with which he made several recordings.  
+
During his tenure as professor at the Conservatoire, Ysaÿe continued to tour an ever-broadening section of the world, including throughout Europe, as well as [[Russia]] and the [[United States]]. Despite health concerns, particularly regarding the condition of his hands, Ysaÿe was at his best when performing, and many prominent composers dedicated major works to him, including [[Claude Debussy]], [[Camille Saint-Saëns]], [[César Franck]], and [[Ernest Chausson]]. In 1886 he established the [[Ysaÿe Quartet (1886)|Ysaÿe Quartet]], which premiered Debussy's ''[[String Quartet (Debussy)|String Quartet]]''.
  
Finally, in 1931, suffering from the extreme ravages of [[diabetes]] that had necessitated the amputation of his left foot, Eugène Ysaÿe died and was interred in the [[Ixelles Cemetery]] in [[Brussels]].
+
===Compositions and later life===
 +
As his physical ailments grew more prohibitive, Ysaÿe turned more to teaching, conducting, and composition. Among his most famous works are the six ''Sonatas for Solo Violin'' op. 27, the unaccompanied ''Sonata for Cello,'' op. 28, one ''Sonata for Two Violins,'' eight ''Poèmes'' for various instruments (one or two violins, violin and cello, string quartet) and orchestra (''Poème élégiaque,'' ''Poème de l'Extase,'' ''Chant d'hiver,'' ''Poème nocturne,'' among others), pieces for string orchestra without [[Double bass|basses]] (including ''Poème de l'Exil''), two string trios, a quintet, and an [[opera]], ''Peter the Miner'', written near the end of his life in the [[Walloon language|Walloon]] dialect.
  
== Performing career ==
+
Ysaÿe was offered the post of music director of the [[New York Philharmonic]] in 1898, but declined it due to his busy solo performance schedule. In 1918, he accepted the music director's position with the [[Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra]], where he remained until 1922 and with which he made several recordings.  
[[Image:Ysaye.jpg|thumb|200px|left|Ysaÿe with violin]]
 
As a performer, Ysaÿe was compelling and highly original. [[Pablo Casals]] claimed never to have heard a violinist play in tune before Ysaÿe, and [[Carl Flesch]] called him "the most outstanding and individual violinist I have ever heard in my life."
 
  
Ysaÿe was the possessor of a large and flexible tone, influenced by a considerable variety of [[vibrato]]—from no vibrato at all to very intense. He said, "Don't always vibrate, but always be vibrating." His ''[[modus operandi]]'' was, in his own words: "Nothing which wouldn't have for goal emotion, poesy, heart."
+
=== Style ===
  
Possibly the most distinctive feature of Ysaÿe's interpretations was his masterful [[rubato]]. Ysaÿe's rubato is something apart; "Whenever he stole time from one note, he faithfully paid it back within four bars," said the conductor Sir [[Henry Wood (conductor)|Henry Wood]], allowing his accompanist to maintain strict tempo under his free cantilena. This kind of rubato fits the description of [[Frédéric Chopin]]'s rubato.
+
As a performer, Ysaÿe was compelling and highly original. Cellist [[Pablo Casals]] claimed never to have heard a violinist play in tune before Ysaÿe, and [[Carl Flesch]] called him "the most outstanding and individual violinist I have ever heard in my life." Noted violinist [[Nathan Milstein]] referred to him as the "tzar" of the violinists.  
  
Although Ysaÿe was a great interpreter of late Romantics and early modern composers &mdash; [[Max Bruch]], [[Camille Saint-Saëns]], and [[Cesar Franck]], who said he was their greatest interpreter{{fact|date=August 2007}} &mdash; he was admired for his [[Johann Sebastian Bach|Bach]] and [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]] interpretations. His technique was brilliant and finely honed, and in this respect he is the first modern violinist, whose technique was without the shortcomings of some earlier artists.
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Ysaÿe urged his students to develop a large and flexible tone, influenced by a considerable variety of [[vibrato]]—from no vibrato at all to very intense. He said, "Don't always vibrate, but always be vibrating." His ''[[modus operandi]]'' was, in his own words: "Nothing which wouldn't have for goal emotion, poesy, heart."
  
An international violin competition in Brussels was created in his memory: in 1951, this became the violin section of the [[Queen Elisabeth Music Competition]].
+
Possibly the most distinctive feature of Ysaÿe's interpretations was his masterful [[rubato]], the art of varying a piece's [[tempo]]. "Whenever he stole time from one note, he faithfully paid it back within four bars," said the conductor Sir [[Henry Wood (conductor)|Henry Wood]]. This allowed his accompanist to maintain strict tempo while Ysaÿe freely improvised dynamic variations in mood.
 +
 
 +
Ysaÿe was a great interpreter of late Romantics and early modern composers. [[Max Bruch]], [[Camille Saint-Saëns]], and [[Cesar Franck]] all stated that he was their greatest interpreter. At the same time, Ysaÿe was admired for his [[Johann Sebastian Bach|Bach]] and [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]] interpretations. His technique was brilliant and finely honed, and is considered by many to be the first modern violinist.
 +
 
 +
===Final days===
 +
[[Image:ElisabethofBelgium.jpg|thumb|150px|Elisabeth of Belgium]]
 +
The première of ''Piére Li Houyeû'' (the composer's only opera) took place at the Opéra de Liège on March 4, 1931, during a long evening dedicated to the composer's works, in the presence of Queen Elisabeth of Belgium, who had become his pupil. The opera's story is based on a real incident which occurred in 1877 during a miners' strike in the Liège region. During clashes with the police, some shots were fired. The wife of a foreman rushed forward to seize a grenade which had been placed in the offices by a striker. But the grenade exploded and she was killed.
 +
 
 +
Ysaÿe, who was very ill with [[diabetes]], listened to the performance in his hospital room. The Queen, having been informed of the seriousness of Ysaÿe's condition, had organized the radio broadcast of the work and Ysaÿe was even able to address the audience thanks to a microphone placed in his room. After this unique performance, the work was performed in Brussels, on April 25. Ysaÿe was finally able to follow the performance live, having been taken to his box on a stretcher. Finally, suffering from the extreme ravages of the disease that had necessitated the amputation of his left foot, Eugène Ysaÿe died and was interred in the [[Ixelles Cemetery]] in [[Brussels]].
 +
 
 +
Although the critics were appreciative, the opera did not find a place in the standard repertoire. It was performed again in Liège Opéra Royal de Wallonie on November 25, 2006.
  
 
== Personal life ==
 
== Personal life ==
Ysaÿe was married twice: he was first wed to Louise Ysaÿe, and after her death in 1924 he became married to a pupil of his, Jeanette Dincin, 44 years his Junior. She was a violinist who in her teens had studied with prominent teachers such as [[Franz Kneisel]], [[Leopold Auer]], and [[Otakar Ševčík]]. Ysaÿe met her in 1922 while conductor of the Cincinnati Orchestra. She cared for him in his ailing years. Eugene's only request of her after he died was that she carry on her performances under his name.
+
Ysaÿe was married twice: He was first wed to Louise Ysaÿe, and after her death in 1924 he was married to a pupil of his, Jeanette Dincin, 44 years his junior. She was a violinist who in her teens had studied with prominent teachers such as [[Franz Kneisel]], [[Leopold Auer]], and [[Otakar Ševčík]]. Ysaÿe met her in 1922, while conductor of the Cincinnati Orchestra. She cared for him in his ailing years. Ysaÿe only request of her after he died was that she carry on her performances under his name. His widow took over the teaching of Belgium's queen after his death, and the queen began the competition in Ysaÿe's honor.
 
 
Eugène Ysaÿe was also close friends with Queen Elisabeth of Belgium, whom he taught violin despite her lack of talent. His widow took over the royal teaching herself after his death, and the queen began the competition in his honor.
 
  
== List of works ==
+
==Legacy==
{{Listdev}}
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Eugène Ysaÿe's legacy has as much to do with the great violinists who were his students as it does with his excellence as a performer. Many great violinists of the twentieth century were greatly influenced by his style. Among his more respected pupils are [[Josef Gingold]], former [[concertmaster]] of the [[Cleveland Orchestra]] and Professor at [[Indiana University]]; the [[viola]] virtuoso [[William Primrose]]; and the violin virtuoso [[Nathan Milstein]] (who primarily studied with [[Piotr Stolyarsky]]). Other well-known students of Ysaÿe include [[Louis Persinger]], [[Alberto Bachmann]], [[Mathieu Crickboom]], [[Jascha Brodsky]], and [[Aldo Ferarasi]].
  
==== Violin and Piano ====
+
==Partial list of works==
 +
====Violin and Piano====
 
* 2 Celebres Arias
 
* 2 Celebres Arias
 
* 2 Mazurkas de Salon
 
* 2 Mazurkas de Salon
* Caprice After the Study in the Form of a Waltz (Composed by Camille Saint-Saëns, arranged by Ysaÿe.)
+
* Caprice After the Study in the Form of a Waltz (Composed by Camille Saint-Saëns, arranged by Ysaÿe)
  
 
==== Violin solo ====
 
==== Violin solo ====
Line 71: Line 80:
 
* Sonata for Two Violins
 
* Sonata for Two Violins
  
==== Poems for Violin and Orchestra ====
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==== Compositions for ciolin and orchestra ====
 
* Poème Élégiaque, Op. 12
 
* Poème Élégiaque, Op. 12
 
* Au rouet, Op. 13
 
* Au rouet, Op. 13
Line 77: Line 86:
 
* Extase, Op. 21
 
* Extase, Op. 21
 
* Amitie, Op. 26 Poem for 2 Violins and Orchestra
 
* Amitie, Op. 26 Poem for 2 Violins and Orchestra
 
+
* Several Concertos for Violin and Orchestra
Several Concertos for Violin and Orchestra
 
  
 
==== Cello solo ====
 
==== Cello solo ====
Line 84: Line 92:
 
* Sonata for Cello Solo, Op. 28
 
* Sonata for Cello Solo, Op. 28
  
==Opera==
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===Opera===
* "Pier li Houyeû" 1931 (Original in [[Walloon language]] indeed perhaps the only performed opera in that language)
+
* "Pier li Houyeû" 1931 (Original in [[Walloon language]] indeed perhaps the only performed opera in that language.)
 
+
* "L’avièrge di pièr" (La vierge de pierre)—not completed or performed
The première of Piére Li Houyeû (the composer's only opera) took place at the Opéra de
 
Liège on 4 March 1931, during a long evening dedicated to the
 
composer's works, in the presence of Queen Elisabeth (of Belgium) who had become
 
his pupil. Ysaÿe, who was very ill with diabetes, listened to the
 
performance in his hospital room. The Queen, having been informed of
 
the seriousness of Ysaÿe's condition, had organised the radio
 
broadcasting of the work and Ysaÿe was even able to address the
 
audience thanks to a microphone placed in his room. After this
 
unique performance, the work was performed in Brussels, on 25 April.
 
Ysaÿe, having been taken to box on a stretcher, was finally able to
 
follow the performance live. On 12 May, he died.
 
The critics were appreciative but the opera did not find a place in the standard repertoire. It was performed again in Liège
 
Opéra Royal de Wallonie on 25 November 2006.
 
The story is based on a real incident which occurred in 1877 during a miners' strike in the
 
Liège region. During clashes with the police, some shots were fired.
 
The wife of a foreman rushed forward to seize a grenade which had
 
been placed in the offices by a striker. But the grenade exploded
 
and she was killed.
 
 
 
* "L’avièrge di pièr" (La vierge de pierre) - not completed, not performed
 
  
 
== Complete Discography ==
 
== Complete Discography ==
 
[Released on CD, Sony Classical MHK 62337, 1996]
 
[Released on CD, Sony Classical MHK 62337, 1996]
==== Camille de Creus, piano accompaniment: ====
+
====Camille de Creus, piano accompaniment====
* 'Prize Song' From Die Meistersinger Von Nürnberg by Wagner, recorded 2/1/1912
+
* 'Prize Song' From Die Meistersinger Von Nürnberg by Wagner
* Piece Pittoresque No.10 : Scherzo-Valse by Chabrier, recorded 12/20/1912
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* Piece Pittoresque No.10 : Scherzo-Valse by Chabrier
* Abendlied, Op. 85, No. 12 by Schumann, recorded 12/24/1912
+
* Abendlied, Op. 85, No. 12 by Schumann
* Mazurka No. 1 In G Major, Obertass by Wienawski, recorded 12/26/1912
+
* Mazurka No. 1 In G Major, Obertass by Wienawski
* Mazurka No. 2 In D Major, Dudziarz by Wienawski, recorded 12/26/1912
+
* Mazurka No. 2 In D Major, Dudziarz by Wienawski  
* Berceuse, Op.16 by Faure, recorded 12/27/1912
+
* Berceuse, Op.16 by Faure
* Concerto For Violin And Orchestra In E Minor, Op. 64 (Lll: Allegro Molto Vivace) by Mendelsohn, recorded 12/27/1912
+
* Concerto For Violin And Orchestra In E Minor, Op. 64 (Lll: Allegro Molto Vivace) by Mendelsohn
* Rondino, Op. 32, No. 2 by Vieuxtemps, recorded 12/30/1912
+
* Rondino, Op. 32, No. 2 by Vieuxtemps
* Hungarian Dance No. 5 In F-Sharp Minor by Johannes Brahms, recorded 12/30/1912
+
* Hungarian Dance No. 5 In F-Sharp Minor by Johannes Brahms
* Caprice Viennois, Op. 2 by Kreisler, recorded 12/30/1912
+
* Caprice Viennois, Op. 2 by Kreisler
* Albmblatt In C Major by Richard Wagner, recorded 12/30/1912
+
* Albmblatt In C Major by Richard Wagner
* Mazurka in B minor, Op. 11 No. 3, 'Lointaine Passe' by Eugene Ysaye, recorded 2/1/1913
+
* Mazurka in B minor, Op. 11 No. 3, 'Lointaine Passe' by Eugene Ysaye
* 'Reve D'Enfant', Op. 14 by Eugene Ysaye, recorded 2/1/1913
+
* 'Reve D'Enfant', Op. 14 by Eugene Ysaye
* Humoressque In G-Flat Major, Op.101, No. 7 by Dvorak, recorded 3/9/1914
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* Humoressque In G-Flat Major, Op.101, No. 7 by Dvorak
* Ave Maria, D.839 by Schubert, recorded 1914, recorded 3/9/1914
+
* Ave Maria, D.839 by Schubert, recorded 1914
* Marche Joyeuse by Chabrier, recorded 11/30/1919
+
* Marche Joyeuse by Chabrier
  
==== Conducting the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, recorded 11/28/1919: ====
+
====Conducting the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra====
 
* Intermezzo From Naila (Pas Des Fleurs, Grande Valse), by Delibes
 
* Intermezzo From Naila (Pas Des Fleurs, Grande Valse), by Delibes
 
* Overture To Les Dragons De Villars, by Maillart
 
* Overture To Les Dragons De Villars, by Maillart
Line 137: Line 125:
 
* Orpheus in Hades, by Offenbach
 
* Orpheus in Hades, by Offenbach
  
== Bibliography ==
+
==References==
* {{cite book | last=Slonimsky | first=Nicolas | url=http://www.thirteen.org/publicarts/violin/Ysaÿe.html | title=Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians | edition=Centennial Edition | location=New York | publisher=Schirmer Books | year=2001 | isbn=0028655257}}
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* Campbell, Margaret. ''The Great Violinists.'' London: Robson Books, 2004. ISBN 1861056230.
* {{cite book | last=Ginsburg | first=Dr. Lev | title=Ysaÿe | edition=Engish, Edited by Dr. H.R. Axelrod, translated from Russian by X. M. Danko | location=Neptune City, NJ | publisher=Paganiniana Productions, Inc. | year=1980}}
+
* Ginzburg, L. S., and Herbert R. Axelrod. ''Prof. Lev Ginsburg's Ysaÿe''. Neptune City, NJ: Paganiniana, 1980. ISBN 9780876666203.
 +
* Hoatson, Karen D. ''Culmination of the Belgian Violin Tradition: The Innovation Style of Eugene Ysaye.'' 1999. {{OCLC|220402310}}.
 +
* Ysaÿe, Antoine, and Bertram Ratcliffe. ''Ysaÿe, His Life, Work, and Influence.'' St. Clair Shores, Mich: Scholarly Press, 1978. ISBN 9780403017232.
 +
 
  
== External links ==
 
* {{allmusic|41:}}
 
* [http://www.classical-composers.org/cgi-bin/ccd.cgi?comp=Ysaÿe Eugène Ysaÿe biography] at the [[Classical Composers Database]]
 
* {{findagrave|6871}}
 
* {{IMSLP|id=Ysaye, Eugene}}
 
  
{{CinSO music directors}}
 
  
<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] —>
 
{{Persondata
 
|NAME              = Ysaÿe, Eugène
 
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
 
|SHORT DESCRIPTION = Belgian violinist, composer and conductor
 
|DATE OF BIRTH    = 16 July 1858
 
|PLACE OF BIRTH    = Liège, Belgium
 
|DATE OF DEATH    = 12 May 1931
 
|PLACE OF DEATH    = Brussel, Belgium
 
}}
 
  
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ysaye, Eugene}}
 
  
 
[[Category:art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]

Latest revision as of 18:51, 11 September 2023

Eugène Ysaÿe
Eugène Ysaÿe.jpg
Background information
Born July 16 1858(1858-07-16)
Flag of Belgium Liège, Belgium
Died May 12 1931 (aged 72)
Liège, Belgium
Genre(s) Classical
Occupation(s) Composer, conductor, pedagogue, violinist
Instrument(s) Violin
Years active ca. 1862–1931
Associated
acts
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
Notable instrument(s)
Viola
Antonio Testore 1740
Violin
Andrea Guarneri, filius Andrea 1720
Herkules Stradivarius 1734
Giuseppe Guarneri, del Gesù 1740
Ysaÿe Guadagnini 1754

Eugène Ysaÿe (French pronunciation: [øʒɛn iza.i]) (July 16, 1858 - May 12, 1931) was a Belgian violinist, composer and conductor. He was regarded in his day as "The King of the Violin."

Many important violinists of the twentieth century were greatly influenced by Ysaÿe's style, especially in playing the music of the Romantic era. A child prodigy, he became the master of the Franco-Belgian school of violin playing and played with Europe's leading orchestras. However, his playing career was shortened due to the effects of diabetes, particularly on his hands.

He served as music director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra from 1918 to 1922 and had earlier been offered the position of music director by the New York Philharmonic. In addition to having a major international career as a soloist, Ysaÿe also was a distinguished teacher, conductor and composer.

He died at 72 of the effects of diabetes, shortly after the premier of his only opera. His brother was pianist and composer Théo Ysaÿe (1865–1918).

Biography

Early years

Eugène-Auguste Ysaÿe came from a peasant background, although a large part of his family played musical instruments. Born in Liège, Belgium, Ysaÿe began violin lessons at the age of five with his father. He would later recognize his father's teaching being the crucial foundation of his knowledge on his instrument, although he went on to study with more reputable masters. At age seven he entered the Conservatoire at Liège, studying with Joseph Massart. Young Eugène also had to support his family by playing in two local orchestras, one conducted by his father. As a result, he was soon asked to leave the conservatory because of a lack of progress. He continued playing in these ensembles and to study by himself to expand his repertoire on the violin.

By the time he was 12, Ysaÿe's playing was highly accomplished. One day when he was practicing in a cellar, the legendary violinist Henri Vieuxtemps walked by on the street and was so impressed with the sound of his violin he took immediate interest in the boy. He arranged for Ysaÿe to be re-admitted to the conservatory, studying with Vieuxtemps's assistant, the noted violinist Henryk Wieniawski. Ysaÿe would later study with Vieuxtemps himself, with whom he developed an affectionate relationship of "master and disciple." In his last years, Vieuxtemps asked Ysaÿe to come to the countryside just to play for him.

Studying with these teachers meant that he was part of the so-called Franco-Belgian school of violin playing, which dates back to the development of the modern violin bow by François Tourte. Qualities of this "École" included elegance, a full tone, drawing a "long" bow with no jerks, precise left hand techniques, and using the whole forearm while keeping both the wrist and upper arm quiet—as opposed to the German school of wrist bowing and the Russian concept of using the whole arm.

Prime career years

After his graduation from the conservatoire, Ysaÿe became the principal violinist of the Benjamin Bilse beer-hall orchestra, which later developed into the Berlin Philharmonic. Many musicians of note came regularly to hear this orchestra and Ysaÿe in particular, including Joseph Joachim, Franz Liszt, Clara Schumann, and Anton Rubinstein, who asked that Ysaÿe be released from his contract to accompany him on tour.

When Ysaÿe was 27 he was recommended as a soloist for one of the Concerts Colonne in Paris, which was the start of his great success as a concert artist. The following year, Ysaÿe received a professorship at the Brussels Conservatoire in his native Belgium. This began his career as a teacher, which was to remain one of his main occupations throughout the rest of his life.

During his tenure as professor at the Conservatoire, Ysaÿe continued to tour an ever-broadening section of the world, including throughout Europe, as well as Russia and the United States. Despite health concerns, particularly regarding the condition of his hands, Ysaÿe was at his best when performing, and many prominent composers dedicated major works to him, including Claude Debussy, Camille Saint-Saëns, César Franck, and Ernest Chausson. In 1886 he established the Ysaÿe Quartet, which premiered Debussy's String Quartet.

Compositions and later life

As his physical ailments grew more prohibitive, Ysaÿe turned more to teaching, conducting, and composition. Among his most famous works are the six Sonatas for Solo Violin op. 27, the unaccompanied Sonata for Cello, op. 28, one Sonata for Two Violins, eight Poèmes for various instruments (one or two violins, violin and cello, string quartet) and orchestra (Poème élégiaque, Poème de l'Extase, Chant d'hiver, Poème nocturne, among others), pieces for string orchestra without basses (including Poème de l'Exil), two string trios, a quintet, and an opera, Peter the Miner, written near the end of his life in the Walloon dialect.

Ysaÿe was offered the post of music director of the New York Philharmonic in 1898, but declined it due to his busy solo performance schedule. In 1918, he accepted the music director's position with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, where he remained until 1922 and with which he made several recordings.

Style

As a performer, Ysaÿe was compelling and highly original. Cellist Pablo Casals claimed never to have heard a violinist play in tune before Ysaÿe, and Carl Flesch called him "the most outstanding and individual violinist I have ever heard in my life." Noted violinist Nathan Milstein referred to him as the "tzar" of the violinists.

Ysaÿe urged his students to develop a large and flexible tone, influenced by a considerable variety of vibrato—from no vibrato at all to very intense. He said, "Don't always vibrate, but always be vibrating." His modus operandi was, in his own words: "Nothing which wouldn't have for goal emotion, poesy, heart."

Possibly the most distinctive feature of Ysaÿe's interpretations was his masterful rubato, the art of varying a piece's tempo. "Whenever he stole time from one note, he faithfully paid it back within four bars," said the conductor Sir Henry Wood. This allowed his accompanist to maintain strict tempo while Ysaÿe freely improvised dynamic variations in mood.

Ysaÿe was a great interpreter of late Romantics and early modern composers. Max Bruch, Camille Saint-Saëns, and Cesar Franck all stated that he was their greatest interpreter. At the same time, Ysaÿe was admired for his Bach and Beethoven interpretations. His technique was brilliant and finely honed, and is considered by many to be the first modern violinist.

Final days

Elisabeth of Belgium

The première of Piére Li Houyeû (the composer's only opera) took place at the Opéra de Liège on March 4, 1931, during a long evening dedicated to the composer's works, in the presence of Queen Elisabeth of Belgium, who had become his pupil. The opera's story is based on a real incident which occurred in 1877 during a miners' strike in the Liège region. During clashes with the police, some shots were fired. The wife of a foreman rushed forward to seize a grenade which had been placed in the offices by a striker. But the grenade exploded and she was killed.

Ysaÿe, who was very ill with diabetes, listened to the performance in his hospital room. The Queen, having been informed of the seriousness of Ysaÿe's condition, had organized the radio broadcast of the work and Ysaÿe was even able to address the audience thanks to a microphone placed in his room. After this unique performance, the work was performed in Brussels, on April 25. Ysaÿe was finally able to follow the performance live, having been taken to his box on a stretcher. Finally, suffering from the extreme ravages of the disease that had necessitated the amputation of his left foot, Eugène Ysaÿe died and was interred in the Ixelles Cemetery in Brussels.

Although the critics were appreciative, the opera did not find a place in the standard repertoire. It was performed again in Liège Opéra Royal de Wallonie on November 25, 2006.

Personal life

Ysaÿe was married twice: He was first wed to Louise Ysaÿe, and after her death in 1924 he was married to a pupil of his, Jeanette Dincin, 44 years his junior. She was a violinist who in her teens had studied with prominent teachers such as Franz Kneisel, Leopold Auer, and Otakar Ševčík. Ysaÿe met her in 1922, while conductor of the Cincinnati Orchestra. She cared for him in his ailing years. Ysaÿe only request of her after he died was that she carry on her performances under his name. His widow took over the teaching of Belgium's queen after his death, and the queen began the competition in Ysaÿe's honor.

Legacy

Eugène Ysaÿe's legacy has as much to do with the great violinists who were his students as it does with his excellence as a performer. Many great violinists of the twentieth century were greatly influenced by his style. Among his more respected pupils are Josef Gingold, former concertmaster of the Cleveland Orchestra and Professor at Indiana University; the viola virtuoso William Primrose; and the violin virtuoso Nathan Milstein (who primarily studied with Piotr Stolyarsky). Other well-known students of Ysaÿe include Louis Persinger, Alberto Bachmann, Mathieu Crickboom, Jascha Brodsky, and Aldo Ferarasi.

Partial list of works

Violin and Piano

  • 2 Celebres Arias
  • 2 Mazurkas de Salon
  • Caprice After the Study in the Form of a Waltz (Composed by Camille Saint-Saëns, arranged by Ysaÿe)

Violin solo

  • Etude Posthume
  • 6 Sonatas for Solo Violin, Op. 27 (1924)
  • 10 Preludes (Exercises for Violin), Op. 35
  • Sonata for Two Violins

Compositions for ciolin and orchestra

  • Poème Élégiaque, Op. 12
  • Au rouet, Op. 13
  • Chant d'hiver, Op. 15
  • Extase, Op. 21
  • Amitie, Op. 26 Poem for 2 Violins and Orchestra
  • Several Concertos for Violin and Orchestra

Cello solo

  • Meditation, Op. 16
  • Sonata for Cello Solo, Op. 28

Opera

  • "Pier li Houyeû" 1931 (Original in Walloon language indeed perhaps the only performed opera in that language.)
  • "L’avièrge di pièr" (La vierge de pierre)—not completed or performed

Complete Discography

[Released on CD, Sony Classical MHK 62337, 1996]

Camille de Creus, piano accompaniment

  • 'Prize Song' From Die Meistersinger Von Nürnberg by Wagner
  • Piece Pittoresque No.10 : Scherzo-Valse by Chabrier
  • Abendlied, Op. 85, No. 12 by Schumann
  • Mazurka No. 1 In G Major, Obertass by Wienawski
  • Mazurka No. 2 In D Major, Dudziarz by Wienawski
  • Berceuse, Op.16 by Faure
  • Concerto For Violin And Orchestra In E Minor, Op. 64 (Lll: Allegro Molto Vivace) by Mendelsohn
  • Rondino, Op. 32, No. 2 by Vieuxtemps
  • Hungarian Dance No. 5 In F-Sharp Minor by Johannes Brahms
  • Caprice Viennois, Op. 2 by Kreisler
  • Albmblatt In C Major by Richard Wagner
  • Mazurka in B minor, Op. 11 No. 3, 'Lointaine Passe' by Eugene Ysaye
  • 'Reve D'Enfant', Op. 14 by Eugene Ysaye
  • Humoressque In G-Flat Major, Op.101, No. 7 by Dvorak
  • Ave Maria, D.839 by Schubert, recorded 1914
  • Marche Joyeuse by Chabrier

Conducting the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra

  • Intermezzo From Naila (Pas Des Fleurs, Grande Valse), by Delibes
  • Overture To Les Dragons De Villars, by Maillart
  • 'Navarraise' From Le Cid, by Massenet
  • Festival Overture, by Lassen
  • Marche Joyeuse, bu Chabrier
  • Scheherazade, by Rimsky-Korsakov
  • Orpheus in Hades, by Offenbach

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Campbell, Margaret. The Great Violinists. London: Robson Books, 2004. ISBN 1861056230.
  • Ginzburg, L. S., and Herbert R. Axelrod. Prof. Lev Ginsburg's Ysaÿe. Neptune City, NJ: Paganiniana, 1980. ISBN 9780876666203.
  • Hoatson, Karen D. Culmination of the Belgian Violin Tradition: The Innovation Style of Eugene Ysaye. 1999. OCLC 220402310.
  • Ysaÿe, Antoine, and Bertram Ratcliffe. Ysaÿe, His Life, Work, and Influence. St. Clair Shores, Mich: Scholarly Press, 1978. ISBN 9780403017232.

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