Kreisler, Fritz

views updated May 18 2018

Fritz Kreisler

Austrian-born violinist Fritz Kreisler (1875–1962) was one of the most famous classical musicians in the world during the first decade of the twentieth century. His rhythmic vigor and his heavy use of vibrato have influenced violinists down to the present day, and his original compositions—some of them originally passed off as works by composers of the distant past—remain staples of the violin repertoire.

Kreisler led a long and colorful life, the substance of which he embellished still further through a consistent habit of exaggeration and storytelling. He served two stints in the Austrian army and was drafted for a third. A natural talent, he rarely studied or practiced the violin after the age of twelve. Kreisler was also something of a link between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in music. He knew the Austrian composer Johannes Brahms personally, and his music was suffused with the mood of old Vienna. Yet he was touched by the modern era of music in many ways; he made numerous records, played concerts on radio, and tailored his violin compositions to the attention spans of popular audiences; his three-minute works were the hits of their day, instrumental counterparts to the best-selling vocal recordings of Italian tenor Enrico Caruso. For many lovers of classical music, Fritz Kreisler seemed to sum up the whole tradition of the violin.

First Instrument Made from Cigar Box

Kreisler was born in Vienna, Austria on February 2, 1875. Kreisler's father Salomon was of Jewish background, a fact that Kreisler tried to downplay later in life, but that may have undergirded his staunch resistance to German fascism. Kreisler's father and other relatives often indulged in a leisure-time activity that was very common among Viennese middle-class families: they enjoyed performing music in small groups at home. One occasional visitor to their evenings of music was a young violinist and student of human nature named Sigmund Freud, who later became the founder of psychiatry. Young Fritz looked on as a string quartet was played, following along on a violin made from a cigar box. One time, when he was four, he was handed a child-sized violin and proceeded to amaze the group by playing the Austrian national anthem straight through in perfect time and pitch.

Admitted to the Vienna Conservatory at seven, he became the school's youngest student ever. His mother had lied about his age in order to help him win admission, but soon it was clear that his talents did not need help from any deception. The boy studied harmony and composition with Anton Bruckner, one of Austria's greatest composers of the day, and he taught himself to play the piano. Kreisler made his concert debut in 1884 and was then sent off to the Paris Conservatory in France for a still-higher level of musical finishing. His mother was too ill to accompany him, so he went alone. In 1887, at 12, he was awarded the Conservatory's Premier Premier Prix (First First Prize) over four adult students. The Conservatory had no more to teach him, and at that time his musical education was over.

Such a feat was all the more astonishing in view of Kreisler's lifelong aversion to practicing. He often claimed that playing the violin was something that happened more in the brain than in the hands, and indeed he seemed to have an uncanny ability to absorb musical lessons when he heard a performance by one of the few violinists who was above his own level. He soaked up concerts by the world-famous musicians who came to perform in Vienna, and in an interview quoted by Amy Biancolli in Fritz Kreisler: Love's Sorrow, Love's Joy he said, "I really believe that hearing [German violinist Joseph] Joachim and [Russian pianist Anton] Rubinstein play was a greater event in my life and did more for me than five years of study!" Kreisler realized, however, that he was a special case, and later in life he emphasized the importance of practice.

It is possible that Kreisler's casual attitude toward music actually delayed the flowering of his career by several years. He was signed to tour the United States with pianist Moriz Rosenthal in 1888–1889 and was thrilled with his first view of the New York City skyline. Reviewers, however, were mixed in their evaluations—they were impressed by his technical skills but he plainly did not yet have the interpretive magic he would later acquire, and the tour, while generally successful, did not bring Kreisler the renown he had imagined. When he returned to Vienna, he dropped out of music for several years, finishing his high school education at the Piaristen Gymnasium, a Catholic institution, and then enrolling in medical school at the University of Vienna. His parents, not wanting to rush him into a musical career, supported his decision. "In those youthful days," Kreisler was quoted as saying by Biancolli, "I had some very weird thoughts about my future career. I envisaged myself operating on a patient in the morning, playing chess in the afternoon, giving a concert in the evening, and (in anticipation of a glorious military career) winning a battle at midnight." Indeed, still short of his medical degree, Kreisler enlisted in the Austrian army in 1894. He edged back into music as he and his commanding officer sometimes played music recitals for other officers.

Rebuilt Technique Above Tavern

After he finished his term of service in 1896, Kreisler recommitted himself to the violin. He rented a room in a tavern-inn and began to rebuild his technique systematically, more or less hiding out for eight weeks but emerging at times to play for the tavern's patrons. Kreisler began writing music during this period and produced, among other small compositions, two new cadenzas—a quasi-improvised passage played by the violinist at the end of a movement of work for violin and orchestra—for Beethoven's violin concerto. When Kreisler returned to the concert stage, he did not have the novelty of being a child star any longer, but his playing had gained depth. His 1898 debut with the Vienna Philharmonic was hailed by Eduard Hanslick, the city's top music critic, and he created a real sensation with his Berlin Philharmonic debut the following year.

In 1902 Kreisler married Harriet Lies Woerz, a divorced American tobacco heiress; he had met her the previous year on the Prince Bismarck ocean liner while returning from an American tour and proposed before the ship had even docked. Her wealthy family opposed the match, but the strong-willed Harriet went through with the wedding anyhow. It was possibly to please her that Kreisler avoided talking about his Jewish background, which was well known to other musicians. Kreisler's career steadily gained momentum, and in the years before World War I broke out he often performed more than 250 concerts a year. Russian pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff, who sometimes performed with Kreisler, said that it was because he played so many concerts that he did not need to practice.

One of the top concert draws in the world, Kreisler nevertheless enlisted once again in the Austrian army when the war began. He spent most of 1914 in the military and was sent to the Russian front for four weeks. He claimed that thanks to his musical ear he could distinguish the sounds of the different armies' shells as they whizzed past. Discharged in November of 1914 after a wound whose severity is a matter of historical dispute, Kreisler wrote a small book, Four Weeks in the Trenches, about his experiences. The book gained attention in the United States, and Kreisler continued to give successful concerts there for most of the war. When the U.S. entered the war on the side of England and France in 1917, however, Americans with backgrounds in German-speaking countries faced discrimination, and Kreisler was forced to cancel a major concert tour. He was soon welcomed back to the U.S. after the war, but did not perform in France for six years. In the 1920s, Kreisler and his wife lived mostly in Berlin.

In the midst of his growing career before the war, Kreisler found himself short of the kind of convincing but little-known material that would keep his concerts fresh. He composed music of his own but was not convinced that he had the stature to introduce a great deal of original music in his concerts. So he began to write music that was vaguely in the style of almost-forgotten composers from the distant past—France's François Couperin, Germany's Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf, and others—and to claim that he had unearthed the music in libraries and monasteries. Older music was little known at the time, and the reverse-plagiarized music became a favorite component of Kreisler's concerts. Kreisler finally revealed the hoax in 1935 when he was jokingly asked by New York Times music critic Olin Downs whether he had actually written the older pieces and answered the question truthfully.

Fakes Caused Controversy

Kreisler's admission touched off an uproar, with some critics attacking his deception while others praised the artfulness of his counterfeits (there were 17 of them) and contended that the audience's enjoyment of the music was the most important thing. Kreisler explained his original reasons for writing the pieces and argued that, unlike in the case of a counterfeit painting, no one had been harmed by his forgeries. Kreisler weathered the controversy; his popularity in the late 1930s was undiminished. Heard today, the counterfeits sound very little like Couperin or Dittersdorf and a great deal like Kreisler's other music. For his entire life, Kreisler was a teller of tall tales that were sometimes accepted as fact; he once claimed, for example, to have been held at gunpoint by a cowboy in Butte, Montana, who wanted to hear a specific violin work by Johann Sebastian Bach.

By the 1930s, the music Kreisler composed under his own name was familiar to most concertgoers, and several pieces remain staples of classical concert life today. Kreisler composed some large, virtuosic pieces (and several littleknown operettas), and various shorter works that were flavored by ethnic or national traditions. His best-known compositions, however, were short, sentimental pieces that showcased his awe-inspiring vibrato and were ideally suited to the length of the 78 rpm records Kreisler made in abundance after being signed to an exclusive contract by the Victor label in 1910. Such Kreisler works as the Caprice viennois (Viennese Caprice), Schön Rosmarin (Beautiful Rosemary), and most of all the pair of works called Liebesfreud and Liebesleid (Love's Joy and Love's Sorrow) could be played either by violin and orchestra or violin and piano, and they closed out many a concert in which a violinist was featured.

Kreisler refused to perform in Germany after the Nazi party took control of the government in 1933, and he left the country for good after being threatened, despite his advanced age, with being drafted into the military when the Anschluss of 1938 put Austria under Germany's control. He briefly took French citizenship but by the following year he was back in the United States. In 1941, Kreisler was hit by a delivery truck on a New York street and spent several weeks in a coma. But he recovered and resumed giving concerts in 1942. He became a U.S. citizen in 1943 and continued to perform through the war years, appearing on the Bell Telephone Hour radio show from 1944 through 1950. His last concert appearance was at Carnegie Hall in 1947. Kreisler and his wife spent much of their energy during his last years on charitable enterprises, including several aimed at indigent musicians. He died in New York on January 29, 1962, at the age of 86.

Books

American Decades, Gale, 1998.

Biancolli, Amy, Fritz Kreisler: Love's Sorrow, Love's Joy, Amadeus, 1998.

Periodicals

Economist, December 7, 1991.

Online

"Fritz Kreisler," Legendary Violinists, http://www.thirteen.org/publicarts/violin/kreisler.html (January 29, 2006).

"Fritz Kreisler," Museum of Hoaxes, http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/kreisler.html (January 29, 2006).

Kreisler, Fritz, Four Weeks in the Trenches, http://www.lib.byu./edu/∼rdh/wwi/memoir/Kreisler/Kreisler/htm (January 29, 2006).

Kreisler, Fritz

views updated May 23 2018

KREISLER, FRITZ

Composer and violin virtuoso; b. Vienna, Feb. 2, 1875; d. New York City, Jan. 29, 1962. He was a musical wonder child whose talent was fostered by his parents,

Anna and Samuel Severin Kreisler, and his teachers, including Anton Bruckner and Leo Delibes. He won the Vienna Conservatory's gold medal for violin as a boy of ten, and the Paris Conservatory's grand prize at 12; at 13 he made his New York debut. Later, while working toward recognition as an adult artist, he became acquainted with Johannes brahms and Joseph Joachim, whose influence on him was lasting. Kreisler's Berlin debut took place in 1899, and for the next 60 years he brought violin virtuosity to audiences the world over. In 1939 he settled in America, and in 1943 he became a U.S. citizen. He retired from the concert stage in 1950 but continued to play for charitable causes, as had been his lifelong custom. His funeral took place at St. John the Evangelist Church, New York City.

Loved by audiences and revered by critics and colleagues, Kreisler also enriched the violin repertory as composer and arranger. Early in his career he published as transcriptions of 17th-and 18th-century masters, such as Vivaldi and Couperin, works that were later revealed to be his own. He composed concertos, chamber music, violin and piano solos, operettas, and cadenzas for Mozart, Beethoven, and Brahms concertos. His best-known works are Caprice viennois, Liebesfreud, Tambourin chinois, the operetta Apple Blossoms, and the Quartet in A-minor.

Bibliography: l. p. lochner, Fritz Kreisler (New York 1951). m. pincherle, The World of the Virtuoso, tr. l. h. brock-way (New York 1963). New York Times (Jan. 30, 1962) 1:4. h. jancick, Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, ed. f. blume (Kassel-Basel 1949) 7:174243. Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, ed. n. slonimsky (5th, rev. ed. New York 1958) 869. amy biancolli, Fritz Kreisler: Love's Sorrow, Love's Joy (Portland 1998). d. m. randel, ed., The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music (Cambridge 1996) 467. b. schwarz, "Fritz Kreisler" in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, vol. 10, ed. s. sadie, (New York 1980) 249250. n. slonimsky, ed. Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, Eighth Edition (New York 1992) 963.

[m. fitzgibbon]

Kreisler, Fritz

views updated Jun 08 2018

KREISLER, FRITZ

KREISLER, FRITZ (1875–1962), violinist and composer. Born in Vienna and a child prodigy, Kreisler gained admission to the Musikverein Konservatorium at the age of seven. His principal teachers were Hellmesberger (violin) and Bruckner (theory). He first performed when he was nine and was awarded the Konservatorium's gold medal at ten. Later he studied at the Paris Conservatoire with Massart and Delibes. Kreisler's rise to fame was interrupted by medical and art studies and a period of military service. His debut with the Berlin Philharmonic (1899) launched his international career. He was presented with the Philharmonic Society's gold medal (1904) and gave the premiere of Elgar's Violin Concerto, a work dedicated to him (1910). At the outbreak of World War i he joined his former regiment, but upon being quickly wounded he was discharged and went to the U.S. He returned to Europe in 1924, living first in Berlin, then in France. In 1939 he settled permanently in the U.S., becoming a citizen in 1943. Kreisler was one of the greatest masters of the violin. His remarkable sweet and expressive tone, graceful phrasing, and vitality of rhythm match his brilliant technique. He developed personal methods of bowing, fingering, and vibrato. Among the works he wrote as a gifted composer are a string quartet, operettas, short compositions (such as Caprice viennois, Liebeslied, and Liebes freud), and a series of pieces he attributed to lesser known 18th-century composers but which were in fact his own. He also prepared cadenzas for the Beethoven and Brahms violin concertos and published music arrangements.

bibliography:

Grove Music Online; mgg2; Baker's Biographical Dictionary (1997); Amy Biancolli, Fritz Kreisler: Love's Sorrow, Love's Joy (1998); C.R. Scheidemantle, "The Violin of Fritz Kreisler: An Analysis and Performance Guide" (doctoral diss., 1999);

[Naama Ramot (2nd ed.)]

Kreisler, Fritz (Friedrich)

views updated May 14 2018

Kreisler, Fritz (Friedrich) (b Vienna, 1875; d NY, 1962). Austrian-born violinist and composer (Amer. cit. 1943). Entered Vienna Cons. at age 7. Amer. début 1888 in Boston, followed by tour with pianist Moriz Rosenthal. Returned to Europe and abandoned mus. career, studying medicine in Vienna and art in Rome and Paris. Resumed career as violinist Jan. 1898 in Vienna. Returned to USA 1900–1. London début, Philharmonic Soc., May 1902. His brilliant technique and unmistakably personal tone put him in the forefront of int. violinists. In 1910 gave the f.p. of Elgar's conc., which is ded. to him. Lived in NY 1915–24 but later returned to Eur. and in 1938 became Fr. citizen. Made many recordings. Returned to NY 1940, thereafter living chiefly in USA. Comp. str. qt. and many pieces for vn., of which the best-known are Caprice Viennois, Liebesfreud, Liebesleid, Schön Rosmarin and Tambourin Chinois. Also transcr. works by Dvořák, Paganini, and Tartini. Wrote cadenzas for Beethoven and Brahms concs.