In essence

1706 Posts
archive-post-image
Violin Masterworks Inspired by David Oistrakh
By 1937, David Oistrakh was considered the leading Soviet violinist. He had participated in a good number of competitions and was under tremendous pressure from the government during that time. Gennadi Rozhdestvensky wrote, “Young musicians who took part in competitions
Read more
archive-post-image
Show me the Money
Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
Haydn was rich, but he wasn’t born wealthy… He did come from humble origins, but for his gentrified English audience Joseph Haydn was an accomplished composer, businessman, and gentleman. Yet, his early years of poverty and struggles during his years
Read more
archive-post-image
Food for Thought
Mealtime with Frédéric Chopin
Frédéric Chopin had a love affair with food. On a trip to the town of Toruń, the 15-year-old composer goes to great length to describe the local food specialty. Although he visited the famed Copernicus museum and various fortified building,
Read more
archive-post-image
Musical Tributes: Straussiana, Brahmsiana, Tartiniana and Tocatta Bachiana
Johann Strauss II was one of Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s (1897-1957) musical idols. Korngold possessed considerable knowledge of the Waltz King’s works as he had arranged for the Theater an der Wien new performing versions of Nacht in Venedig, Cagliostro in
Read more
archive-post-image
Musical Tributes: Paganiniana, Schubertiana, Gershwiniana and Bachiana Brasileira
Alfredo Casella (1883-1947) entered the Paris Conservatoire at age 12, taking piano lessons from Louis Diémer and instructions in composition from Gabriel Fauré. As you will probably know, Casella came from a highly musical family. His father, Alfredo Piatti was
Read more
archive-post-image
Claude Debussy and His Circle of Friends II
Let’s continue to look at Debussy’s relationships with his fellow artists and musicians. The Scottish operatic soprano Mary Garden wrote, “I honestly don’t know if Debussy ever loved anybody really. He loved his music – and perhaps himself. I think
Read more
archive-post-image
Making Ballet Modern: Viganò and Beethoven
The New Kind of Ballet ‘Coreodramma’ The cello virtuoso Luigi Boccherini came from a family of talented performers: his father, Leopoldo, was a bass player; his brother Giovanni was a ballet dancer and later a librettist for comic operas; his
Read more
archive-post-image
In Love with the Boss’s Daughter
Ferdinand David and Sophie von Liphardt
By a remarkable coincidence, the German violin virtuoso and composer Ferdinand David (1810-1873) was born in the same house in which Felix Mendelssohn had been born a year earlier. Like Mendelssohn, David was Jewish but later converted to Christianity. And
Read more