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What Did They Play? PART II: Fritz Kreisler (b. 1875 – d. 1962) and his Violins

January 5, 2019 by Sherry

What Did They Play? By Isabel Dammann

PART II: Fritz Kreisler (b. 1875 – d. 1962) and his Violins

Kreisler’s acquisition of fine violins was far from over. In 1911, Kreisler purchased another violin from Alfred Hill: a c.1715 violin by Daniel Parker, who was one of the first makers to copy Stradivarius. It was such a close replica that Kreisler liked to pass it off as a Strad, and by the 1940’s he was referring to it as the ‘Parker Stradivari’. When he performed the Elgar and Brahms concertos on this violin, apparently no one could tell the difference between this violin and his ‘Hart’ Guarneri that he was particularly associated with[1]. In 1948, he sold the Parker to Wurlitzer.

In 1925, Kreisler purchased an unusually fine c.1850 Jean Baptiste Vuillaume copy of Paganini’s ‘Cannon’ Guarnerius from Hill & Sons. Kreisler showed the Vuillaume side by side with his ‘Hart’ Guarneri to his colleague, Mischa Elman. Kreisler asked, “Do you see any difference in quality?” Mischa replied that he did not[2].

Soon, in 1926, another violin gained Kreisler’s affection: the c.1730 (labeled 1733) Guarneri ‘del Gesu’ which is now named for Kreisler and is most associated with him. Alfred Hill considered this violin to be the finest Guarneri he had ever seen, and “one of the few of the first rank”[3]. By the 1930’s, this violin had surpassed the 1733 ‘Huberman’ Strad as Kreisler’s favorite, and it was this instrument that Kreisler likely used to re-record the Mendelssohn Concerto in 1935 with Sir Landon Ronald, the 1936 re-recordings of the Brahms and Beethoven concertos with Barbirolli, and the 1939 re-make of Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 4 with Sir Malcom Sargent. By 1952 Kreisler was no longer performing, so gave this ‘Kreisler’ Guarneri to the Washington Library of Congress.

In 1926 Kreisler bought the ‘Lord Amherst of Hackney’ c. 1734 Stradivarius, which he sold in 1946 to Rudolph Wurlitzer, and in 1928 he acquired the c. 1711 ‘Earl of Plymouth’ Stradivarius from Alfred Hill. He sold it in 1946 on advice from his wife Harriet: “I didn’t want six fiddles hanging around when so many violinists need them.”[4]

Kreisler’s Bows

Kreisler was equally versatile in his use of bows and strings. When asked about bows, he said, “I have a beautiful Tourte, a gift from Mr. Tubbs, which I use frequently”[5]. He also had half a dozen Hill bows that he often used, a Pfretzschner, and a Franz Albert Nürnberger Jr. He preferred the bow hair very taut, and some accounts suggest that he did not often loosen the hair of his bows between concerts[6].

Kreisler’s Strings

When asked what strings he used, Kreisler responded, “I find very good ones wherever I happen to be. I am not a faddist”[7]. Up until 1912, he used gut D, A and E, at which point he switched to a wound gut D, and then to a steel E in 1916-18. By the late 1920’s, he was using wound gut G, D and A strings, and a steel E. In his later years, Kreisler consistently bought strings from a friend in Chicago at Armour & Co, a meatpacking firm that also made both steel and gut strings.

…But for all that, a violin is not simply wood and catgut. It is a personality, and goes through the world looking for its rightful master. It has moods, and must be wooed. It selects, gives itself to one and withholds itself from another. At times its humors and whims must be combatted with everything at command… For sweetness of tone, Stradivarius is still king… If they seem timeless, it is because of their destiny. To crush a “Strad” would be to kill an immortal. -Fritz Kreisler[8]

 

OTHER KREISLER QUOTES ABOUT HIS VIOLINS:

“Can a man say that he prefers a blond beauty to a brunette beauty, and vice versa? One does not make a choice when face to face with beauty. My choice is a polygamous one as regards to violins.” [9]

“The Strad is excellent for a small concert hall. At the time when Strads were built, only small halls were available for concerts. The Guarnerius has much more power. Recently a younger violinist bought a Strad. He wondered why, although it is such a marvelous instrument, he was not doing well with the audiences as he used to do. Th answer is simple: our concert halls today for the most part are too big for a Strad.” [10]

“One might imagine that Kreisler would watch his priceless instruments most carefully while on tour. The contrary is true. He is serenely confident that so costly an instrument will turn up again, even if someone should steal it, as every instrument dealer in the world knows who the owners of the most famous fiddles are… Occasionally Fritz forgot one of his precious violins at a hotel or in a taxicab… Kreisler usually left his expensive instrument in the recording studio when he went out, say for lunch, while other artists did not.” [11]

 

Stay tuned for my next blog on Hot Club jazz legend Stephane Grappelli!

 

[1] Tully Potter, “Kreisler’s Violins,” Tarisio, February 1st 2017, https://tarisio.com/cozio-archive/cozio-carteggio/kreislers-violins/.
[2] Lochner, Kreisler (Neptune City, NJ: Paganiniana Publications, Inc), 353.
[3] Potter.
[4] Lochner, Kreisler, 353.
[5] Lochner, Kreisler, 357.
[6] Potter.
[7] Lochner, Kreisler, 357.
[8] Lochner, Kreisler, 346.
[9] Lochner, Kreisler, 351.
[10]Ibid
[11]Lochner, Kreisler, 354-55.

Filed Under: Players

What Did They Play?

November 24, 2018 by Sherry

What Did They Play? by Isabel Dammann

PART I: Fritz Kreisler (b. 1875 – d. 1962) and his Violins

“The violinist should not be accused of inconstancy; he must follow the call of a siren voice – the voice of the magic piece of wood that dominates his destiny. It is the voice of an enchantress which he must obey.” -Fritz Kreisler, 1908[1]

Many musicians have a primary instrument they play that becomes synonymous with their musical voice – Fritz Kreisler was not one of these musicians. Throughout his life as a performer, Kreisler bought, played and sold dozens of instruments, including numerous Stradivari and Guarneri violins. Some became favorites, while others were merely visitors in his collection.

As a young child, Fritz Kreisler listened to his father play violin in an amateur string quartet. Wanting to participate, he made himself a toy violin, and he’d pretend to play during their rehearsals: “Soon I made myself a would-be violin out of a cigar box over which I stretched shoe strings; and I’d pretend I was playing right…”[2] Noticing his keen interest in the instrument, Kreisler’s father got him a small violin and bow and began to give him lessons. By age eight, Kreisler was given a half-sized Thir violin from the Vienna Conservatory, and at age ten he won a ¾-sized Amati as first prize in the Austrian State competition. As a 13-year-old, Kreisler won 1st prize at the Paris Conservatorie, and was gifted a full-size Gand-Bernadel as well leant the c. 1708 “Davidov” Stradivarius. Upon returning home, Kreisler’s father gave him a beautiful Giovanni Grancino violin that he played for eight years.

One morning, Kreisler visited an old architect friend in Vienna, who said, “Fritz, here is an old, battered violin that you can have, perhaps make some use of, by giving it away to someone who needs it.” Upon returning home, Kreisler realized it was a genuine Nicol Gagliano, “of entrancing tone and quality”. As Kreisler recalls, “It became the best beloved of my violins until within three years ago. It traveled with me on my concert tours in almost every large city in Europe and America.”[3]

Around the turn of the century, Kreisler bought the c. 1735 ‘Mary Portman’ Guarneri del Gesu from the dealer George Hart for only $10,000. It was not long, however, before another instrument stole Kreisler’s affections: the c. 1734 ‘Hart’ Guarneri del Gesu (now referred to as the ‘Hart, Kreisler c. 1734’), then owned by the collector John Adams. Kreisler recalls:

Then one day as I entered the rooms of Mr. Hart I heard a Voice, liquid, pure, penetrating, whose divine sweetness pierced my soul as a knife with the anguish of longing…That this divine Voice should be doomed to silence under the glass case of a collector was to me a tragedy that rent my heart… Finally he took it from his case, saying, ‘Play’ … When I had finished, he said: ‘I have no right to it; keep it; it belongs to you. Go out into the world and let it be heard’… This time I shall be faithful until the end, for I do not delude myself that I shall ever hear a voice more beautiful than that of my last beloved, my ‘Hart’ Guarnerius.[4]

It is likely that Fritz Kreisler played this violin for his first five recordings in Berlin in 1904, as well as using it for recordings he made in New York and London between 1910-1916. He premiered the Elgar Concerto on this instrument in 1910 and sold it in 1917[5].

In 1908, Kreisler bought the c. 1726 ‘Greville’ Stradivarius from Kempton Adams, who prepared a detailed brochure especially for Kreisler about the instrument. However, he only had it for a year or two before selling it to Lyon & Healy of Chicago. Around this time, Kreisler also purchased the c. 1732 Guarneri del Gesu, as well as the c. 1733 Stradivari known as the ‘Huberman, Kreisler’ from Alfred Hill, which quickly became his new favorite. Kreisler played the ‘Huberman, Kreisler’ Strad on his 1926-1927 concerto recordings (Brahms, Mendelssohn, and Beethoven) with the Berlin State Opera Orchestra conducted by Leo Blech, and his 1928 sonatas with Sergei Rachmaninoff on piano. Hill bought the violin back in 1936 and shortly after sold it to Bronislaw Huberman[6].

“Hill offered me some fine instrument from time to time and suggested that I take it home and even use it for concert purposes. As I like to give my violins a rest, I gladly accepted the offer. No sooner had I used such an instrument in a public performance, however, than Hill was able to sell it for a much higher price because somehow the impression got around that I liked it so much that I even preferred it to my own violin.” -Fritz Kreisler[7]

(To be continued…)

[1] Louis P. Lochner, Kreisler (Neptune City, NJ: Paganiniana Publications, Inc), 349.

[2] Tully Potter, “Kreisler’s Violins,” Tarisio, February 1st 2017, https://tarisio.com/cozio-archive/cozio-carteggio/kreislers-violins/

[3] Lochner, Kreisler, 349.

[4] Lochner, Kreisler, 350.

[5] Potter.

[6] Ibid.

[7] Lochner, Kreisler, 351

Filed Under: Players

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