I know
them, but curiously hardly ever hear them. Why? Well, one of the paradoxes of
classical music is that when a piece gets played often enough, it gains
“warhorse” status, and people then tend to shun it. Think I’m wrong? When was
the last time you heard Beethoven’s
Fifth Symphony?
Of the four
concerti, Beethoven’s is the oldest and—some would argue—the best. It’s also
fiendishly difficult: the violin has to go into the stratosphere and still be
utterly lyrical. It’s therefore almost unbelievable that Beethoven gave the
part to the violinist Franz
Clement so late that Clement was sight-reading (that is, playing it for the
first time) at the first performance. That may have been why Clement chose to
play a little ditty for one string with his violin held upside down between the
first and second movements. In fairness, breaking up movements was a fairly
common practice at the time; earlier generations were less fussy in those days.
At any
rate, the debut was not a great success, and the concerto went essentially
un-played for a couple of decades, when it was revived by a twelve-year old
Joachim with Mendelssohn conducting.
It’s a
typical concerto—nothing revolutionary here. OK—it’s a little weird to have
those four somber timpani notes starting the whole thing, but other than that,
it’s fairly traditional. It starts out with the orchestra playing the tutti, which introduces the principal themes, as well
as giving the soloist time to fully feel his dry mouth, sweaty hands, and
churning stomach. Then we get the soloist coming in, and playing a miniature
cadenza—a solo passage which is or should feel improvised and which, generally,
is highly virtuosic. There’s nothing virtuosic here, it’s mainly meant to
tease—when is the violinist gonna get down to business and play us some tunes?
He or she
does for about twenty minutes—Beethoven takes his sweet time wrapping this
thing up. And the first movement ends with a true, fiery cadenza. The second
movement is Beethoven at his most lyric, and the third movement—which is
connected to the second, a typical Beethoven trick—is almost fatally a rondo.
A good
blogger would look it up, and give you the formula for the damn thing—it goes
something like aabbaaccaaddaa and
then—at last—the end. So the first problem is that you’re gonna hear the aa six zillion times. The second problem is
that the tunes chosen by the composer tend to be mildly irritating at the
start, so by the end? You’ll be gagging.
And
Beethoven, with all his skill, comes very close to not pulling it off. He has,
however, to his aid an incredible violinist, Kyung-wha Chung. Chung
has quite a story—her mother was a singer, and two of her siblings are
professional musicians as well. So she grew up playing with her cellist sister
and pianist brother, and was famous in South Korea, their home. From there, it
was off to Julliard, where she had two major challenges—Juilliard was filled
with child prodigies as good as she, and her teacher, the famous and feared Ivan Galamian, didn’t
think much of female violinists. He thought she’d make an orchestra violinist,
not a soloist.
The life of
a conservatory student took its toll on Chung. Although she was fiendishly
disciplined, she grew depressed: other people were dating, having fun, dancing
in clubs. She was practicing every waking moment; despondent, she considered
giving up the violin.
The family
reacted by having an emergency meeting. They decided: Chung would enter the
prestigious Edgar
Leventritt Violin Competition. If she didn’t win, she could give up. If she
won, she’d go on. She told Galamian, who adored her, but feared she would be
lost to marriage.
He was also
teaching a kid named Pinchas
Zuckerman, who had the chromosome that Chung lacked. So, she didn’t get
much support. Oh, except for her mother, who sold the family home to buy a Stradivarius for the
event.
She didn’t
win—she did something better. She tied with Zuckerman, the first time that any
two people had been declared winners; some years, no one wins the thing if the
judges don’t feel there’s anybody up to snuff.
Zuckerman’s
career took off; hers languished. And then, she got a break—Zuckerman’s wife
was giving birth, and Chung was asked to step in. She prepared the Tchaikovsky
concerto, the orchestra played the Mendelssohn, instead. Right, so she could do
that—they prep you for stuff like that in Juilliard. She played it perfectly,
and the London Symphony Orchestra, which thought she was a lightweight, was
impressed.
In the clip
below, she’s at the peak of her career, and playing with a wonderful orchestra,
the Royal Concertgebouw
Orchestra of Amsterdam, with Klauss Tennstedt as
conductor. The orchestra has this wonderful, rich sound; Chung goes from fiery
virtuosity to almost unbearable tenderness. It’s a knockout.