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Published: Thursday, 21 November 2024 at 09:00 AM


Here’s why you should get to know the Elgar Violin Concerto….

Yes, Elgar’s Cello Concerto is wonderful, but…

Think of Elgar and it’s a fair bet you’ll think of his brooding, mournful and ultimately wonderful Cello Concerto. And how could you not? When the soloist’s bow bites into those stark E minor chords, it’s like a summons – and not to cocktails and a gossip. Rather Elgar began writing it towards the end of the First World War, as his Edwardian world was falling apart. And with such magnificent advocates as legendary cellist Jacqueline du Pré, who met her own very tragic end, the work cannot help but be highly romantic and passionate.

Here’s why you should get to know the Elgar Violin Concerto

But despite the Cello Concerto’s greater popularity today, Elgar considered his Violin Concerto to be among his best works. ‘It’s good! Awfully emotional! Too emotional, but I love it,’ he once declared. 

It was Fritz Kreisler who, in 1905, persuaded Elgar to compose his Violin Concerto. Over the next five years, Kreisler and London Symphony Orchestra concertmaster William Henry Reed made recommendations as the sprawling, 50-minute work took shape. 

Kreisler declared the finished article the ‘greatest violin concerto produced since Beethoven’s’ and premiered the work in London, with Elgar conducting, in November 1910. It was an immediate success, and although there were plans for the two to record it, these eventually fell through, and Elgar instead recorded the Concerto with a young Yehudi Menuhin in 1932. So popular was Menuhin’s recording that it has remained in the catalogues since it first went on sale.