Henry Vieuxtemps was born in 1820 in
Verviers, not far from Ličge, a district of Belgium that was fertile ground for
violinists. He had his first lessons from his father, a weaver and amateur
violin-maker and player, followed by study with Lecloux-Dejonc, a teacher who won praise
from Eugčne Ysa˙e, whose own younger brother, the pianist Thčophile Gautier, was born
in Verviers. Vieuxtemps made his first public appearance as a violinist at the age
of six, playing a concerto by Rode and the following year embarking on a concert tour of
neighbouring cities with his teacher. In 1828 he was heard in Brussels by Charles de
Bčriot, who accepted him as a pupil. In the following years, now in absence of de
Bčriot, he continued to perfect his technique and broaden his musical tastes, assisted in
the latter task by his teachers sister-in-law, Pauline Garcia, later Pauline
Viardot, then a pupil of Liszt. Concerts throughout Germany and Vienna won him an
increasing reputation, leading Schumann, in Leipzig, to compare him to Paganini, whom
Vieuxtemps met and heard in London in 1834.
It was in 1836 that Vieuxtemps wrote his first violin concerto, the Concerto No. 2 in F sharp minor, published as Opus
19. He had some technical instruction in Vienna from Simon Sechter, the teacher
with whom Schubert was planning to study at the time of his death in 1828, and further
lessons in Paris with Anton Reicha. At the same time he had taken care to observe
possible techniques of instrumentation by attending orchestral rehearsals with score in
hand. |
![[Henry Vieuxtemps]](viuxtmps.jpg) |
| Vieuxtemps made his first visit to Russia in
1837, returning in the following years. It was in Russia that he wrote the Concerto
No. 1 in E major, published as Opus 10, a work he introduced to Paris audiences
in 1841, to the admiration of musicians and critics, including Wagner and Berlioz.
In 1843 and 1844 he toured America and in the summer of the latter year, during a
holiday in Cannstadt, near Stuttgart, he wrote his Concerto No. 3 in A major, Opus 25,
a work later described by Ysa˙e as a great poem rather than a concerto, influenced, he
went on to suggest, by Beethovens Violin Concerto, a work that Vieuxtemps had
revived in Vienna in 1834, seven years after its composers death, and was to play
again there eight years later, in 1842. 1844 also brought for Vieuxtemps marriage to Vienna-born
pianist Josephine Eder. From 1846 to 1852 he was in St Petersburg as court
violinist, soloist in the Imperial Theatres and teacher, writing there his Concerto No.
4 in D minor, Opus 31, a work described by Berlioz, as a symphony with a violin solo,
and a number of other compositions. After leaving Russia, he spent two years in
Brussels, before settling for a time in Dreieichenhain, neat Frankfurt.
Vieuxtempss Concerto No. 5 in A minor, Opus 37, was written in the
years 1858 and 1859 at the request of his fellow countryman and colleague Hubert Lčonard,
a professor of the Brussels Conservatory, for a competition there. To this day the
Fifth concerto, expressive and poetic in its melodies, colorful in its virtuosity and
orchestration, and original in form, continues to attract violinists seeking music
for concerts.
In 1866 Vieuxtemps moved with his family to Paris,
continuing all the time his international career. In 1871 he returned again to
Brussels, now as professor of the violin the Conservatory. Here he devoted
considerable time and energy to teaching, his work interrupted by a stroke that affected
his bowing arm, making further virtuoso playing impossible. He was replaced by
Wieniawski, but in 1877 resumed teaching and conducting once more. Illness led
finally to his resignation in 1879, when he joined his daughter and son-in-law at Mustapha
in Algeria. Here he continued to compose, completing his Concerto No. 6 in G
Major, Opus 47, and soon thereafter Concerto No. 7 in A minor, Opus 49.
He died in 1881 and was buried in his hometown of Verviers, Belgium. |