قراءة كتاب Violin Mastery: Talks with Master Violinists and Teachers
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
align="right">XVII.
ILLUSTRATIONS
Eugène Ysaye | Frontispiece |
FACING PAGE | |
Leopold Auer | 14 |
Mischa Elman | 38 |
Arthur Hartmann | 66 |
Jascha Heifetz | 78 |
Fritz Kreisler | 100 |
Franz Kneisel | 110 |
Adolfo Betti | 128 |
David Mannes | 146 |
Tivadar Nachéz | 160 |
Maud Powell | 184 |
Toscha Seidel | 220 |
Albert Spalding | 240 |
Theodore Spiering | 248 |
Jacques Thibaud | 260 |
Gustav Saenger | 278 |
VIOLIN MASTERY
EUGÈNE YSAYE
THE TOOLS OF VIOLIN MASTERY
Who is there among contemporary masters of the violin whose name stands for more at the present time than that of the great Belgian artist, his "extraordinary temperamental power as an interpreter" enhanced by a hundred and one special gifts of tone and technic, gifts often alluded to by his admiring colleagues? For Ysaye is the greatest exponent of that wonderful Belgian school of violin playing which is rooted in his teachers Vieuxtemps and Wieniawski, and which as Ysaye himself says, "during a period covering seventy years reigned supreme at the Conservatoire in Paris in the persons of Massart, Remi, Marsick, and others of its great interpreters."
What most impresses one who meets Ysaye and talks with him for the first time is the mental breadth and vision of the man; his kindness and amiability; his utter lack of small vanity. When the writer first called on him in New York with a note of introduction from his friend and admirer Adolfo Betti, and later at Scarsdale where, in company with his friend Thibaud, he was dividing