Concerto in D major for Violin and Orchestra, Opus 35
COMPOSER: born May 29, 1897, Vienna; died November 29, 1957, Hollywood
WORK COMPOSED: 1937-1945. Commissioned by violinist Bronislaw Huberman. Dedicated to Alma Mahler-Werfel (Gustav Mahler’s widow).
WORLD PREMIERE: February 15, 1947. Vladimir Golschmann led the St. Louis Symphony with Jascha Heifetz as soloist.
INSTRUMENTATION: solo violin, 2 flutes (one doubling piccolo), 2 oboes (one doubling English horn), 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons (one doubling contrabassoon), 4 horns, 2 trumpets, trombone, timpani, bass drum, cymbals, glockenspiel, vibraphone, xylophone, celesta, harp and strings.
ESTIMATED DURATION: 24 minutes
Erich Korngold was a man out of time. Had he been born a century earlier, his musical sensibilities would have aligned perfectly with the musical and artistic aesthetics of the Romantic period. Instead, Korngold grew up in the tumult of the early 20th century, when the Romanticism of the 19th century had been eclipsed by the horrors of World War I and the stark modernist trends of fellow Viennese composers Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg and Anton Webern.
Korngold’s prodigious compositional talent emerged early. At age 10, he performed his cantata Gold for Gustav Mahler, whereupon the older composer called him a genius. When Korngold was 13, just after his bar mitzvah, the Austrian Imperial Ballet staged his pantomime The Snowman. Rumors about the music’s true author swirled around Vienna’s musical circles, as some, refusing to believe a 13-year-old could create such polished work, claimed Korngold’s father Julius was the actual composer. Julius, a renowned music critic, pointed out the ridiculousness of him critiquing others’ music if he were in fact capable of writing music as good as his son’s.
In his teens, Korngold received commissions from the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, pianist Artur Schnabel performed his Opus 2 Piano Sonata on tour, and Korngold began writing operas, completing two full-scale works by age 18. When he was 23, Korngold’s opera Die tote Stadt (The Dead City) brought him international renown; it was performed in 83 different opera houses.
By the end of 1919, in response to the unspeakable carnage and chaos wrought by the war, composers everywhere had found a new medium to express themselves: modernism. Music bristled with dissonance, unexpected rhythms, and often little that resembled a clear melody. Korngold’s music, by contrast, reflected the style of an earlier, bygone era, and his unabashed Romanticism was dismissed as hopelessly out of date. Fortunately for Korngold, another forum for his lush, lyrical style simultaneously emerged: film scores. In 1933, director Max Reinhardt invited Korngold to write a score for his film adaptation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Korngold subsequently moved to Hollywood, where he spent the next dozen years composing scores for 18 films, including his Oscar-winning music for Anthony Adverse (1936) and The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938).
While some composers and critics, then as now, regard film music as less significant than works written for the concert hall, Korngold did not. “I have never drawn a distinction between music for films and for operas or concerts,” he stated, and his violin concerto bears this out. The concerto is a compilation of themes from several Korngold scores, including Another Dawn (1937), Juárez (1939), Anthony Adverse and The Prince and the Pauper (1937). Korngold composed it for an old family friend, Polish violinist BronisÅ‚aw Huberman. It was a running joke in the Korngold family that every time Huberman saw Korngold, he would demand, “Erich! Where’s my concerto?” At dinner one evening in Korngold’s house in Los Angeles, Korngold responded to Huberman’s mock-serious question by going to his piano and playing the theme from Another Dawn. Huberman exclaimed, “That’s it! That will be my concerto. Promise me you’ll write it.” Korngold complied, but it was Jascha Heifetz, another child prodigy, who gave the first performance. In his own program notes for the premiere, Korngold wrote, “In spite of its demand for virtuosity in the finale, the work with its many melodic and lyric episodes was contemplated rather for a Caruso of the violin than for a Paganini. It is needless to say how delighted I am to have my concerto performed by Caruso and Paganini in one person: Jascha Heifetz.”
St. Louis audiences loved the concerto, but Korngold knew the gauntlet of New York critics were less likely to embrace it. Just as he expected, New York savaged it. One critic from the New York Sun made an offhand quip that has become indelibly attached to the concerto’s narrative, whether you agree with it or not: he termed the work “more corn than gold.” Such unanimous condemnation doomed the concerto to obscurity for some decades, but over time, violinists and conductors have come to see Korngold’s Concerto as both technically and artistically worthwhile. Since Korngold’s time, the status of film composers has also risen, thanks to the Academy Award-winning work of Bernard Hermann (Psycho), John Williams (the Star Wars, Superman, Raiders of the Lost Ark and Harry Potter franchises; Schindler’s List; Memoirs of A Geisha; amongst many others), Miklós Rózsa (The Thief of Bagdad, countless film noir classics including Double Indemnity, A Double Life and more), Ennio Morricone (many Italian spaghetti westerns, including the iconic score for The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly, The Mission and Cinema Paradiso, among many others, and, more recently, Icelandic composer Hildur Guðnadóttir, whose From the Other Place was featured on our March concert (she also wrote the Oscar-winning score to 2019’s The Joker). Today, performers, audiences and critics tend to make fewer arbitrary distinctions among genres. Instead, more people are embracing Duke Ellington’s eloquent assessment of what makes any music worthy of our attention: “If it sounds good, it IS good.”