Henri Duparc, 2021

Henri Duparc, 2021

This Week in Classical Music: January 18, 2021.  Duparc and Elman.  Last year this week we celebrated Johann Hermann Schein and Farinelli.  Some years ago it was the Russian composer Henri Duparcof French descent César Cui and two real Frenchmen, Ernest Chausson and Emmanuel Chabrier (here).  And we’ve written about Henri Dutilleux several times (for example, here, here and here).  All these composers (and the famous castrato) had their birthdays this week.  But, as always, there are several musicians which we, for one reason or another, had left out.  One is the composer Henri Duparc.  Duparc was born in Paris on January 21st of 1848.  He studied with César Franck, to whom he dedicated several compositions, for example this symphonic poem, Lénore.  Duparc’s best known pieces are his “art songs,” most of which he wrote around 1870.  Here’s Phidylé, sung by Renée Fleming, and here Natalie Dessay sings Supir.  At the age of 37 Duparc developed certain mental problems that at the time were diagnosed as "neurasthenia” and stopped composing.  He was not mad in the usual sense, it is very likely that his problems were of a physical nature: some suggest hyperaesthesia, an extreme sensitivity of the skin.  He moved to the south of France and led a quiet life, and eventually moved to Switzerland.  He took up painting as a hobby and spent time with his family.  But there were more problems to come: around the turn of the century, he started losing his eyesight and soon went completely blind.  Later in his life he destroyed much of his music, leaving only about 40 compositions.  Whatever is left is of a remarkably high quality: listen, for example, to this wonderful song, Chanson triste, performed by Elly Ameling.  Duparc died on February 12th of 1933 in Mont-de-Marsan, completely blind and partially paralyzed.  He was 85.Mischa Elman

One of the most interesting violinists of the 20th century, Mischa Elman was also born this week, on January 20th of 1891, in a small town of Talnoye not far from Kyiv.  From 1897 to 1902 he studied the violin in Odessa with the virtuoso violinist and teacher Alexander Fiedemann.  In 1903 he so impressed the visiting Leopold Auer that the famed pedagogue took Mischa to St. Petersburg to study in his class at the capital’s conservatory.  One year later he gave a highly successful concert in Berlin, then premiered in London and in December of 1908, in New York.  By then he had already established himself as one of the greatest violinists of the era.  Elman settled in New York in 1911. 

Elman’s career reached its zenith during the years when recordings were still not widespread and few of them were reissued on CDs.  His playing was “romantic” but he had great taste; his sound was of incomparable beauty.  You can hear it for yourself in this recording from 1959 of Massenet’s Meditation from Thais.  Mischa Elman died in New York on April 5th of 1967.