由 Patrick 發表於 週一 6月 03, 2002 10:52 am
標 題:Sibelius's violin muses-2(轉貼)
發 表 人:blue97(blue97.tw)
發表時間:2001/12/03 18:00:14
The Sibelius Concerto is rather like the Tchaikovsky, in that the strongest movement is the first, the slow movement is a little less interesting and the finale is musically the weakest – in the case of the Sibelius, this weakness is partly due to the composer's pathologically self-critical nature, as in his 1905 revision he suppressed material which would have made the finale more varied. The work's recording history is strange. The doughty American violinist Maud Powell (1868-1920) introduced it to the US in 1906 and played it a good deal, but died just when she might have been expected to make major concerto records. No one even contemplated taking the Sibelius into the studio in the 1920s. Its dedicatee Franz von Vecsey might well have recorded it in the 1930s but died suddenly, early in 1935, when he had only recently started making records again after a long gap. In March 1932 Fred Gaisberg of HMV offered it to Adolf Busch but the violinist's secretary replied that he was 'not a friend of this composer'. As it was, the work was first attempted in the studio in Philadelphia in December 1934, by Jascha Heifetz and Leopold Stokowski, but the discs were suppressed and issued only recently. A publishable performance was finally achieved in London by Heifetz and Sir Thomas Beecham, some ten months after Vecsey's death; the soloist played well – even if his reading supported Adolf Busch's remark that everything Heifetz played came out sounding like Glazunov – but Beecham's direction missed the score's depth, both sonically and interpretatively. Then came a little flurry of four recordings by women and in all, five of the initial eight versions were contributed by the distaff side.