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Published: Wednesday, 11 September 2024 at 08:28 AM


‘I never knew that music contained such sounds!’ reported the great German poet Heinrich Rellstab, following the 1829 Berlin concert debut of the young violinist Niccolò Paganini. ‘He spoke, he wept, he sang! Paganini is the incarnation of desire, scorn, madness and burning pain.’ Berlioz likened the Italian’s impact to that of a blazing comet, while Goethe fell back exhausted following a performance that ‘hit me like a meteor, yet I was quite unable to unfathom its mysteries.’

Paganini turned the world of music inside out. Nothing could be taken for granted anymore as he unleashed torrential violinistic outbursts of electrifying virtuosity, designed to bring an audience to a fever pitch of excitement.