Tag: Royal Academy of Music

  • György Pauk Violinist Dies at 88

    György Pauk Violinist Dies at 88

    The violinist György Pauk has died.

    Pauk, who lost both his parents in the Holocaust, was haunted by memories of lean times, marked by hunger, cold, and fear, living with his grandmother in the Budapest ghetto. For many years after, he always traveled with emergency food.

    Early promise on the violin earned him admission to the Franz Liszt Academy at the age of 9. There, Zoltán Kodály was among his teachers. In 1956, at the age of 22, he defected from his Soviet-controlled homeland. It was Yehudi Menuhin who encouraged him to settle in the U.K, which he did three years later. Pauk became a British citizen in 1967.

    An important interpreter of contemporary music, he gave first performances of works by Witold Lutoslawski, Peter Maxwell Davies, Krzysztof Penderecki, Alfred Schnittke, and Michael Tippett. He was also a master interpreter of the music of Béla Bartók.

    With pianist Peter Frankl, he recorded the complete violin sonatas of Mozart. Pauk and Frankl had played together since they were children, studying chamber music in Hungary with Leo Weiner. In maturity, they frequently performed trios with cellist Ralph Kirschbaum.

    Pauk returned to Budapest for the first time, at the invitation of Annie Fischer, to perform in 1973.

    In 1987, he was appointed professor at the Royal Academy of Music. He was a renowned teacher, regarded as the foremost living exemplar of the Hungarian violin school, with a direct connection to Joseph Joachim, one of the most significant violinists of the 19th century. Joachim, also born in Hungary, collaborated with Johannes Brahms and his circle. (He gave the first performance of Brahms’ Violin Concerto in 1879, with the composer conducting.)

    Pauk was still teaching as recently as two weeks ago. Reportedly, he took a fall within the past ten days. He died yesterday, in Budapest, at the age of 88.

    His instrument was a 1714 Stradivarius, previously owned by the Belgian violinist Lambert Massart. His autobiography, “A Life in Music,” was published in 2021.

    R.I.P.


    A literal masterclass in how to play Bartók

    From a recording of Bartok’s Violin Concerto No. 2

    Brahms’ Violin Concerto from 1959

    Pauk talks about his life, with musical interludes

  • Clarke & Coates: A Musical Birthday

    Clarke & Coates: A Musical Birthday

    On this date in 1886, two noteworthy figures in English music were born.

    Rebecca Clarke entered London’s Royal College of Music at a time when female students were still considered an oddity. Her teacher, Sir Charles Villiers Stanford, persuaded her to switch from violin to viola, since from that vantage she would be better able to absorb the mechanics of the orchestra. Also, thanks to musicians like Lionel Tertis, the viola was just beginning to be viewed as a viable instrument in itself.

    Clarke played in the Queen’s Hall Orchestra, under Sir Henry Wood. Then in 1916, she packed up and moved to America. Critics tended to praise her works which were listed in concert programs under male pseudonyms, while those identified as her own were often dismissed.

    The notable exception of her career was her Viola Sonata, which tied for first place in a competition sponsored by Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge with a work of Ernest Bloch. Even so, there were some who grumbled that the work couldn’t possibly have been composed by a woman, and that perhaps Bloch himself had even written it.

    Clarke married James Friskin, a founding member of the Juilliard School faculty, in 1944, and although he was supportive of her endeavors, lack of recognition and struggles with depression resulted in her ultimately giving up on composing. She died in 1979, at the age of 93. Today, her sonata is considered one of the great works written for the viola.

    Here’s Rebecca Clarke’s “Morpheus”:

    By contrast, Eric Coates enjoyed enormous popularity as a master of British Light Music. Ironically, Coates had taken viola lessons with Tertis at the Royal Academy of Music.

    Among his best-known works are his “London Suite,” and this one, the perfect Coates confection for a late summer day:

    Happy birthday, Rebecca Clarke and Eric Coates!

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