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Menuhin

de Humphrey Burton

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Humphrey Burton's definitive Menuhin is the first full length, cradle-to-grave study of Yehudi Menuhin, one of the best known and best loved of the twentieth century's classical musicians. Menuhin was born in New York of Russian Jewish immigrants. He demanded to play the violin when only four and proved prodigiously gifted; newspapers were soon dubbing him 'Miracle Boy'. He gave his first solo recital aged eight and within five years had acquired international fame, making triumphant appearances successively in Paris, New York, Berlin and London. Outside purely musical matters Menuhin became renowned as an individualist who took a certain delight in shocking the establishment. After the war his determination to build bridges with the defeated German nation brought him into sharp conflict with the Jewish musical intelligentsia in New York and public opinion in Israel. Later he spoke out against apartheid in South Africa and denounced the Soviet Union's oppressive policy towards writers and dissidents. Meetings with presidents and prime ministers became an essential part of his schedule. Menuhin was a passionate devotee of yoga and his enthusiasm for Indian music led him to a fruitful partnership with Ravi Shankar; a delight in improvisation prompted another treasured duo with the jazz violinist St#65533;phane Grappelli. Humphrey Burton knew Menuhin well; they worked together on radio and television projects for forty years. Drawing on contemporary sources, unpublished family correspondence and the interviews he conducted with Menuhin for an award-winning Classic FM radio series, Burton has bypassed the familiar image of the saint-like, philosophising violinist guru to create a compelling, multi-faceted portrait of an indisputably great musician who was also a complex human being.… (mais)
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"A detailed chronicle of Menuhin's life which will be an indispensable source. Mostly Burton allows the material to tell its own extraordinary tale, but he keeps a firm hand and weaves the many paradoxes of Menuhin's charmed and radiant life into a richly satisfying narrative." - Times Literary Supplement.

Like Burton's previous biography of Leonard Bernstein, Yehudi Menuhin: A Life is sympathetic but candid, especially about the role Menuhin's parents played in his early career. Burton, who differs from the vast majority of critics in hearing "very little falling off" in the quality of Menuhin's postwar playing, does not understand the technical problems with which the violinist was beset from the 40's on. But his book contains enough well-informed testimony to indicate why the most celebrated prodigy of his time failed to fulfill his seemingly miraculous promise.

IN A SENSE, every classical musician is a prodigy, for exceptional musical talent always manifests itself early in life, and it is not uncommon for a gifted youngster to begin studying violin or piano around the age of six. Unlike "ordinarily" gifted children, however, prodigies develop nearprofessional techniques within an unusually brief time, perhaps as little as three or four years. What happens next depends on their parents.

"Believe me, when you find a prodigy, you find an ambitious parent in the background," said the violinist Ruggiero Ricci, a prodigy himself and one who knew whereof he spoke. Some parents have scrupulously kept their young charges out of the spotlight of publicity, but such restraint is comparatively rare; the rule is more or less shameless exploitation. Yehudi Menuhin's parents were exceptional only in their lifelong insistence that they had never exploited their son. The facts tell a different story.

Moshe and Marutha Mnuchin were Russian Jews who arrived in the U.S. by way of Palestine, eventually settling in San Francisco and changing the family name when Moshe took American citizenship in 1919. Though they taught Hebrew for a living, the Mnuchins were wholly secularized, loathing the insularity of the ghettoes from which they came. They also had (in Burton's inadvertently revealing phrase) "a progressive outlook on Zionism," meaning that they were opposed to it. At the same time, however, they never tried to shed their Jewish identities, and when a New York landlord, mistaking them for Gentiles, sought to entice them by explaining that no Jews were allowed in his apartment house, Marutha vowed on the spot that she would name her first-born son "Yehudi," the Hebrew word for a Jew.

According to the later testimony of Yaltah Menuhin, the younger of Yehudi's two sisters, Marutha "believed her destiny was to give birth to a genius." His parents began taking him to concerts when he was two years old; by 1921, aged five, he was studying the violin in earnest, first with Sigmund Anker, one of San Francisco's leading teachers, then with Louis Persinger, a pupil of the great Belgian violinist Eugene Ysaye.(*) He made his formal debut in 1924 at eight; two years later, he performed Lalo's Symphonie espaghole with the San Francisco Symphony, of which Persinger was the concertmaster.

For all his popularity in the concert hall, it was Menuhin's records that made him an international superstar. Between 1928 and 1939, he recorded works for violin and orchestra by Bach, Bruch, Chausson, Dvorak, Elgar, Lalo, Mozart, Mendelssohn, Paganini, and Schumann, as well as a large number of sonatas and shorter pieces, including the very first complete set of Bach's unaccompanied sonatas and partitas. Most of the piano-accompanied sonatas also featured Hephzibah Menuhin, who had made her own debut at the age of eight and with whom Yehudi performed frequently in the 30's.

What is most immediately striking about these recordings is that outside of certain deliberate (and brilliant) evocations of Heifetz and Kreisler--like Bazzini's La Ronde des &tins and Kreisler's own Caprice viennois and Tambourin chinois--Menuhin does not resemble any other violinist, not even Busch or Enesco. The big, sweet tone, the wide but beautifully controlled vibrato, the forceful attack and frank emotionalism: all add up to a style that is both instantly recognizable and irresistibly personal. Except for Heifetz, no other child prodigy has had so individual a manner of playing.

Moreover, none of Menuhin's early recordings sounds like the work of a child, though some are plainly the work of an unformed young man. Thus, his 1936 performance of the Bach A-Minor Sonata, attractive enough in its own uncomplicated terms, cannot stand up to comparison with the lean, incisive tone and boldly asymmetrical phrasing of the masterly version recorded three years earlier by Joseph Szigeti. Next to such deeply considered playing, Menuhin sounds almost naive.

But if the austere rigor of unaccompanied Bach was just beyond the young Menuhin's intellectual grasp, he was altogether at home in romantic music, and it is in a quartet of romantic works recorded between 1931 and 1933 that he comes completely into his own. Bruch's GMinor Concerto, Sir Edward Elgar's B-Minor Concerto (conducted by the seventy-five-year-old composer, who called his sixteen-year-old soloist "the most wonderful artist I have ever heard"), Ravel's Tzigane (accompanied by the peerless ensemble pianist Artur Balsam), and the Symphonie espagnole (conducted by Enesco) are direct, open-hearted, and unaffectedly expressive. They rank among the greatest performances ever given by any violinist, at any age.
  antimuzak | Jun 23, 2006 |
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Humphrey Burton's definitive Menuhin is the first full length, cradle-to-grave study of Yehudi Menuhin, one of the best known and best loved of the twentieth century's classical musicians. Menuhin was born in New York of Russian Jewish immigrants. He demanded to play the violin when only four and proved prodigiously gifted; newspapers were soon dubbing him 'Miracle Boy'. He gave his first solo recital aged eight and within five years had acquired international fame, making triumphant appearances successively in Paris, New York, Berlin and London. Outside purely musical matters Menuhin became renowned as an individualist who took a certain delight in shocking the establishment. After the war his determination to build bridges with the defeated German nation brought him into sharp conflict with the Jewish musical intelligentsia in New York and public opinion in Israel. Later he spoke out against apartheid in South Africa and denounced the Soviet Union's oppressive policy towards writers and dissidents. Meetings with presidents and prime ministers became an essential part of his schedule. Menuhin was a passionate devotee of yoga and his enthusiasm for Indian music led him to a fruitful partnership with Ravi Shankar; a delight in improvisation prompted another treasured duo with the jazz violinist St#65533;phane Grappelli. Humphrey Burton knew Menuhin well; they worked together on radio and television projects for forty years. Drawing on contemporary sources, unpublished family correspondence and the interviews he conducted with Menuhin for an award-winning Classic FM radio series, Burton has bypassed the familiar image of the saint-like, philosophising violinist guru to create a compelling, multi-faceted portrait of an indisputably great musician who was also a complex human being.

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