Ysaÿe VC in E minor etc.

Started by Alan Howe, Tuesday 26 December 2023, 23:06

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Alan Howe


semloh

Well, this is fascinating, Alan. A "recently discovered" concerto to add to Ysaye's ouevre.
.. I find it all all rather confusing!

terry martyn

I think that the now fully discovered mid-1880's D minor concerto will follow this recording. My inference is from YouTube

Mark Thomas


Alan Howe

My copy's now arrived and, naturally, I'm confused about the current state of play with regard to Ysaÿe's concertante works. So: can anyone enlighten me?

Oh, by the way: the Violin Concerto in E minor here sometimes sounds like a fiendishly virtuosic and updated version of Mendelssohn's famous concerto in the same key. I'm just not sure precisely what I'm listening to. Is it some kind of 'Frankenstein's Monster' assembled from disparate sources - or is it really a genuine reconstruction?

Alan Howe

To answer my own question, I've found this:

<<The world-premiere recording of the complete Violin Concerto in E Minor by Belgian virtuoso violinist and composer Eugène Ysaÿe has arrived! Following the recent discovery of a first movement, further manuscripts which complete the work have come to light – one a full orchestration, others for violin and piano – which were found on opposite sides of the Atlantic. Philippe Graffin's close collaboration with Ysaÿe aficionado Xavier Falques led to a page-by-page analysis and painstaking reconstruction of the musical puzzle pieces, resulting in this recording of the full, three-movement concerto which displays Ysaÿe's trademark ardour, intensity, and originality.

For reasons unknown, Ysaÿe abandoned his Violin Concerto in E minor in 1885...>>
https://www.chandos.net/products/catalogue/AV%202650

It's nice music, but an entirely unnecessary purchase. There's no great discovery here.

Mark Thomas

QuoteIt's nice music, but an entirely unnecessary purchase. There's no great discovery here.
I wish I'd read that before I bought it, Alan!

Alan Howe

And I wish I hadn't had to write it.  :'(

terry martyn

Well,I have now played through the Ysaye. Some sixty or seventy years ago, I played the part of "Everyman" in the mediaeval morality play, and my school performance was described by a well-intentioned critic as "audible".  So is the Ysaye....................

Ok,it is not offensive to the ear, but it sounds like three separate compositions cobbled together,and without a trace of originality.



Alan Howe

Just think: while stuff like this gets recorded, mountains of far superior music survives in computer realisations by dedicated members of this forum. They're the true heroes in my book.