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Leopold Auer

 
Music Encyclopedia: Leopold Auer
 

(b Veszprem, 7 June 1845; d Loschwitz, 15 July 1930). Hungarian violinist. After a career as leader and chamber musician, he settled in St Petersburg where he taught, 1868-1917. There he exercised a profound influence on Russian violin playing; his pupils included Elman and Heifetz. He stressed purity of style and taste rather than virtuosity. Many Russians dedicated works to him, though he declined Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto as technically awkward.



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Biography: Leopold Auer
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The career of Leopold Auer (1845-1930) spanned two centuries. Not only did this gifted musician create memorable performances of his own, he also taught some of the world's most renowned violinists, including Jascha Heifetz.

Auer's life in Russia extended from the rule of the czars until the early days of the 1917 Bolshevik revolution. The last 13 years of his life were spent in the United States, where he continued performing and teaching. The man whose acquaintances included most of the celebrated musicians of 19th century Europe, from Johann Strauss to Clara and Robert Schumann and Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky, ended his life believing that the future of music would be in America.

A Talented Prodigy

Leopold Auer was born in the small Hungarian town of Veszprem on June 7, 1845. His father's skill as a house painter, both of exterior work and interior (when the craft of painting walls was an artist's realm), took him into the most elite social circles of his day. Auer's father was popular among aristocrats and the rich citizens of the town, as well as among the wealthy clergy in the surrounding countryside. In the course of conversations with his aristocratic patrons, he would mention that he had a son with a gift for music. Auer attended school in Veszprem until the age of eight, when he was sent to the Budapest Conservatory to study the violin. From there he went to the conservatory in Vienna, studying with Professor Joseph Helmesberger, a renowned quartet player. Auer also began harmony and orchestra ensemble classes.

In 1858, when he was 13 years old, Auer began his performance career. Without the money available to continue his studies, he began travelling as a child prodigy in order to earn money for his family's support in Hungary. Auer describes those days in his memoir when he notes that, "We had neither money nor any fixed plan, and knew nothing at all about conducting an enterprise such as the one we had in mind… . We found a pianist as needy as ourselves to share our scanty meals, and with this acquisition were ready to play the part of ambulant artists in search of a fortune in Hungary…" Their first stop was the city of Gran, only a few hours from Vienna. With a famous cathedral where the cardinal-primate of Hungary resided, Gran seemed a good choice for someone with limited funds for travel. In order to make contacts among the local elite, they enlisted the assistance of the town pharmacist. Because no music store or orchestra hall existed, he was the likeliest choice to introduce and promote Auer and his music. Publicity came from those in whose drawing rooms he had entertained. The trio traveled by horseback, kept away from the larger cities along the railroad, moving throughout Hungary this way for two years. Auer had only his papers from the Vienna Conservatory and spoke of Paris as his destination in order to win over anyone who might be skeptical of his gift or intent. Their journey took them to Germany and Holland

Auer and his father arrived in Paris in 1861. They dropped their cards of introduction at the home of Jean-Delphin Alard, the most renowned professor of violin at the Paris Conservatory. It was a common practice in educated and polite society of that era for visitors to leave cards, not unlike modern-day business cards, when stopping by to see a friend or stranger. Auer's plans to stay in Paris were interrupted a few months later when friends who were in touch with violin master, Joseph Joachim, encouraged him to come to Hanover, Germany. Auer spent time there among the greatest musicians of his day including, Richard and Johann Strauss, and Johannes Brahms.

A Russian Appointment

1868 was an important year in the life of the young musician. Nicolai Zaremba, director of the St. Petersburg (Russia) Conservatory of Music, interviewed Auer and offered him a three-year contract as a professor at the Conservatory and a place as soloist in the court of the Grand Duchess Helena. Auer accepted both positions, recalling that the court of the Grand Duchess was where Rubinstein himself had begun his career.

Auer remained in Russia, eventually becoming a subject of the Czar, an equivalent to establishing citizenship. He established an illustrious career as a professor at the Conservatory. He sat on the Imperial Russian Musical Society board that awarded Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky a prize of 500 rubles for his opera, Kunets Vakula, in 1876. That same year, during his first visit to Warsaw, he met the remarkable pianist, Jean Paderewski. Auer also established the first string quartet in Russia.

Auer's students and musician acquaintances he made in St. Petersburg came to read like a list of the world's finest musicians. In 1902, Efrem Zimbalist and Mischa Elman entered the Conservatory. Later in that decade, Jascha Heifetz and Nathan Milstein became beneficiaries of his teaching expertise. During those years in Russia he was able to meet one of his longtime idols, the composer Franz Liszt. Auer was witness to history when the distribution of a gift to peasants at the royal coronation of Czar Nicholas II and Czarina Alexandra incited a riot. Hundreds of peasants were trampled to death.

Life in America

The Russian Revolution of 1917 changed the face of Russia forever and forced Auer's depature the following year. He left for New York on February 7, 1918, arriving ten days later. Auer was 73 years old. He carried with him two trunks and his Stradivarius violin. His many former pupils greeted him with open arms and a warm reception, including Mischa Elman, Efrem Zimbalist, Jascha Heifetz, and Max Rosen. Performances in New York, Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia were enormously acclaimed. Auer went on to teach at the Institute of Musical Art in New York City and at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia.

In 1926, Auer became a U.S. citizen, once again finding a niche to satisfy his talent and passion for his art. When he put his memories into a book, My Long Life in Music, in 1924, Auer said, "All that remains is my recollections, those memories deeply graven in my mind, an invisible cupboard lined with innumerable drawers, from which I have taken out and set down in the following pages whatever seemed worthy of recording for those interested in the musical life of Russia since the middle of the nineteenth century." Auer died on July 15, 1930 in New York City at the age of 85.

Further Reading

Auer, Leopold. My Long Life in Music, Duckworth & Co., 1924.

Auer, Leopold. Violin Playing as I Teach It, Lippincott, 1960.

American Record Guide, March-April 1992.

The New York Times, August 12, 1990.

Auer, Leopold. Available at: http://www.funkandwagnalls.com.

Auer, Leopold. Available at: http://www.cbs.infoplease.com.

The Columbia Encyclopedia, 5th edition, 1993. Available at: http://web6.infotrac.galegroup.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Leopold Auer
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Auer, Leopold (ou'ər) , 1845–1930, Hungarian violinist and teacher, studied at the conservatories of Budapest and Vienna and with Joseph Joachim in Hanover. He taught at the St. Petersburg Conservatory, 1868–1917. Among his pupils were Mischa Elman, Jascha Heifetz, and Nathan Milstein. In 1918 he came to the United States, where he taught at the Institute of Musical Art, New York City, and the Curtis Institute of Music, Philadelphia. He became an American citizen in 1926. He was tremendously successful as a concert violinist and conductor.
 
Wikipedia: Leopold Auer
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Leopold Auer.

Leopold Auer (In Hungarian: Auer Lipót), (June 7, 1845July 15, 1930) was a Hungarian violinist, teacher, conductor and composer.

Contents

Life

Prodigy

Auer was born in Veszprém in a Jewish household. He first studied violin with a local concertmaster. He later continued his studies with Ridley Kohné in Budapest. A debut with the Mendelssohn concerto aroused the interest of some wealthy patrons, who sent him to Vienna for further study under a scholarship. He lived at the home of his teacher, Jakob Dont. In his memoirs, Auer wrote that Dont was the one who taught him the foundation for his violin technique. In Vienna he also attended quartet classes with Joseph Hellmesberger, Sr..

By the time Auer was 13, the scholarship money had run out. His father decided to launch his career. The income from provincial concerts was barely enough to keep father and son out of poverty. An audition with Henri Vieuxtemps in Graz was a failure. A visit to Paris proved equally unsuccessful. Auer decided to seek the advice of Joseph Joachim, then royal concertmaster at Hanover. The two years Auer spent with Joachim (1861-63) proved a turning point in his career. More than through lessons, he learned through observation and association. He was already well prepared as a violinist. What proved revelatory was exposure to the world of German music making—a world that stresses musical values over virtuoso glitter. Auer later wrote,

Joachim was an inspiration for me and opened before my eyes horizons of that greater art of which until then I had lived in ignorance. With him I worked not only with my hands but with my head, studying the scores of the great masters and endeavoring to penetrate the very heart of their works.... I [also] played a great deal of chamber music with my fellow students. [1]

Auer returned to the concert stage in 1864. Success led to his becoming concertmaster in Düsseldorf. In 1866, he assumed the same position in Hamburg; he also held a string quartet there. On a visit to London in 1868, he was invited to perform Beethoven's Archduke Trio with pianist Anton Rubinstein and cellist Alfredo Piatti. Rubinstein was in search for a violin professor for the Saint Petersburg Conservatory and he suggested Auer. Auer agreed to a three year contract; he would actually stay for 49 years.

Russia

During that time he held the position of first violinist to the orchestra of the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres. This included the principal venue of the Imperial Ballet and Opera, the Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre (until 1886), and later the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre, as well as the Imperial Theatres of Peterhof and the Hermitage. For nearly 50 years, Auer performed almost all of the violin solos in the ballets performed by the Imperial Ballet, the majority of which were the work of the choreographer Marius Petipa. Many of the noted ballet composers of the day, such as Cesare Pugni, Ludwig Minkus, Riccardo Drigo, Pyotr Tchaikovsky, and Alexander Glazunov, wrote the violin solos of their scores especially for his talents.

Until 1906 he was also leader of the string quartet for the Russian Musical Society (RMS). This quartet's concerts were as integral a part of the Saint Petersburg musical scene as their counterparts led by Joachim in Berlin. Criticism arose in later years of less-than-perfect ensemble and insufficient attention to contemporary Russian music. Nevertheless, Auer's group performed quartets by Tchaikovsky, Alexander Borodin, Glazunov and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. The group also played music by Johannes Brahms and Robert Schumann, along with Louis Spohr, Joachim Raff and other secondary German composers.

Auer also continued performing sonatas with many great pianists. His favorite recital partner was Anna Yesipova, with whom he appeared until her death in 1914. Other partners included Anton Rubinstein, Theodor Leschetitzky, Raoul Pugno, Sergei Taneyev and Eugen d'Albert. In the 1890's, he performed cycles of all 10 Beethoven violin sonatas. He also introduced the violin and piano sonatas of Brahms.

America

In 1918 he moved to the United States. He played at Carnegie Hall on March 23, 1918 and also performed in Boston, Chicago and Philadelphia. He taught some private students at his home on Manhattan's Upper West Side. In 1926 he joined the Institute of Musical Art (later to become the Juilliard School). In 1928 he joined the faculty of the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. He died in Loschwitz, a suburb of Dresden, Germany and was interred in the Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York.

Playing

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was especially taken with Auer's playing. Reviewing a 1874 appearance in Moscow, Tchaikovsky praised Auer's "great expressivity, the thoughtful finesse and poetry of the interpretation." [2] This finesse and poetry came at a tremendous price. Auer suffered as a performer from poorly built hands. He had to work incessantly, with an iron determination, just to keep his technique in shape. He wrote, "My hands are so weak and their conformation is so poor that when I have not played the violin for several successive days, and then take up the instrument, I feel as if I had altogether lost the facility of playing." [3]

Despite this handicap, Auer achieved much through constant work. His tone was small but ingratiating, his technique polished and elegant. His playing lacked fire, but he made up for it with a classic nobility. After he arrived in the United States, he made some recordings which bear this out. They show the violinist in excellent shape technically, with impeccable intonation, incisive rhythm and tasteful playing aside from some now unfashionable use of portamenti.

His musical tastes were conservative and refined. He liked virtuoso works by Henri Vieuxtemps and Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst and used those works in his teaching. Once a student objected to playing Ernst's Othello Fantasy because it was bad music. Auer did not back down. "You'll play it until it sounds like good music," he thundered at the student, "and you'll play nothing else." [4] He played little Bach. Neither did he ever assign any of Bach's solo concertos to a student. The Double Concerto, however, was one of his favorites.[citation needed]

Conducting

Auer was also active as a conductor. He was in charge of the Russian Musical Society orchestral concerts intermittently in the 1880s and 90s. He was always willing to mount the podium to accompany a famous foreign soloist—as he did when Joachim visited Russia—and did the same for his students concertizing abroad.

Teaching

Auer is remembered as one of the most important pedagogues of the violin, and was one of the most sought-after teachers for gifted pupils. Many famous virtuoso violinists were among his pupils, including Mischa Elman, Jascha Heifetz, Nathan Milstein, Efrem Zimbalist, Georges Boulanger, Benno Rabinof, Kathleen Parlow, Oscar Shumsky, and Shinichi Suzuki. Auer also taught the young Clara Rockmore, who later became one of the world's foremost exponents of the theremin.

Like pianist Franz Liszt in his teaching, Auer did not focus on technical matters with his students. Instead, he guided their interpretations and concepts of music. If a student ran into a technical problem, Auer did not offer any solutions. Neither was he inclined to pick up a bow to demonstrate a passage. Nevertheless, he was a stickler for technical accuracy. Fearing to ask Auer themselves, many students turned to each other for help. (Paradoxically, in the years before 1900 when Auer focused more closely on technical details, he did not turn out any significant students.)

While Auer valued talent, he considered it no excuse for lack of discipline, sloppiness or absenteeism. He demanded punctual attendance. He expected intelligent work habits and attention to detail. Lessons were as grueling as recital performances—in fact, the two were practically identical.

In lieu of weekly lessons, students were required to bring a complete movement of a major work. This usually demanded more than a week to prepare. Once a student felt ready to play this work, he had to inscribe his name 10 days prior to the class meeting. The student was expected to have his instrument concert ready and to be dressed accordingly. An accompanist was provided. An audience watched—comprised not only of students and parents, but also often of distinguished guests and prominent musicians. Auer arrived for the lesson punctually; everything was supposed to be in place by the time he arrived. During the lesson, Auer would walk around the room, observing, correcting, exhorting, scolding, shaping the interpretation. "We did not dare cross the threshold of the classroom with a half-ready performance," one student remembered.

Admission to Auer's class was a privilege won by talent. Remaining there was a test of endurance and hard work. Auer could be stern, severe, harsh. One unfortunate student was ejected regularly, with the music thrown after him. Auer valued musical vitality and enthusiasm. He hated lifeless, anemic playing and was not above poking a bow into a student's ribs, demanding more "krov." (The word literally means "blood" but can also be used to mean fire or vivacity.)

While Auer pushed his students to their limits, he also remained devoted to them. He remained solicitous of their material needs. He helped them obtain scholarships, patrons and better instruments. He used his influence in high government offices to obtain residence permits for his Jewish students. He shaped his students' personalities. He gave them style, taste, musical breeding. He also broadened their horizons. He made them read books, guided their behavior and career choices and polish their social graces. He also insisted that his students learn a foreign language if an international career was expected.

Even after a student started a career, Auer would watch with a paternal eye. He wrote countless letters of recommendation to conductors and concert agents. When Mischa Elman was preparing for his London debut, Auer traveled there to coach him. He also continued work with Efrem Zimbalist and Kathleen Parlow after their debuts.

Dedications

A number of composers dedicated pieces to Auer. One such case was Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto, which, however, he initially refused to play, because he regarded the work as unplayable. He did play the work later in his career, however, with alterations in certain passages. Performances of the Tchaikovsky concerto by his students (with the exception of Nathan Milstein's) were also based on Auer's edition.

Compositions and writings

Auer wrote a small number of works for his instrument, including the Rhapsodie hongroise for violin and piano. He also wrote a number of cadenzas for other composers' violin concertos including those by Beethoven, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Brahms (see Beethoven Violin Concerto and Brahms Violin Concerto). He also wrote three books: Violin Playing as I Teach It (1920), My Long Life in Music (1923) and Violin Master Works and Their Interpretation (1925). He also wrote an arrangement for Paganini's 24th Caprice.

Relations

The jazz vibraphonist Vera Auer is a niece of Leopold Auer. The actor Mischa Auer (born Mischa Ounskowsky) was his grandson. The composer György Ligeti (the name Ligeti is a Hungarian equivalent of the German name Auer) was his great-nephew.

Notes

  1. ^ Auer, leopold, My Long Life in Music, 63-64. As quoted in Schwarz, Boris, Great Masters of the Violin (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1983), 414.
  2. ^ As quoted in Scharz, 415.
  3. ^ Auer, Leopold, Violin Playing, 46. As quoted in Scharz, 417.
  4. ^ Schwarz, 419.

References

  • Schwarz, Boris, Great Masters of the Violin (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1983)
  • Violin Virtuosos (from Paganini to 21st century) - Henry Roth 1997 ISBN 1-8879395-15-0

External links


 
 
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Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
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