In 1935, the sixteen
year old Ginette Neveu won the Wieniawski competition, beating
all comers including David Oistrakh, who finished second. She was a
wonderful violinist with an inner fire and a stupendous technique.
Her career took off; then came the period 1939-45 when, for most of
the time, she was confined to cycling round Paris during the German
occupation. During the second half of 1945 her career re-started
until she died in an air crash 28th October 1949. What a
loss!
A friend and I were
somewhat surprised when Gidon Kremer, after a personal
analysis of a whole pile of recordings of the Beethoven violin
concerto (the analysis lasted 44 pages) declared that, for him, the
greatest of all the recordings was by … Ginette Neveu, recorded
off-air in September 1949 with Hans Rosbaud conducting a somewhat
second class German south-west radio orchestra. My friend and I rushed to
unearth our copies of the recording; mine had been untouched for
several decades and, with 86 different recordings of this concerto on
my shelf, it might well have remained unheard for a few more decades.
The orchestral playing
is a bit rustic at times, not too surprising in the Germany of 1949.
However, in a perverse way this serves to emphasise the serenity of
Ginette Neveu's playing, especially in the first two movements. Neveu
was renowned as an often fiery player (witness her famous Ravel
Tzigane, and her predilection for the Brahms violin concerto). The
Beethoven concerto is not easy to bring off in performance, since the violin rarely
challenges the orchestra or indulges in pyrotechnics. To my mind,
Neveu's serenity (with character) and flowing tempi achieve a really
great performance of this fragile concerto. In the cadenzas we
glimpse the fiery Neveu from time to time (but, surely, that is what
cadenzas are for). Rosbaud's part is strong and firm, pace the
orchestra. This performance is admitted to my pantheon of great
recordings of Beethoven's violin concerto. Fortunately, Ginette Neveu was
recorded quite often during the period 1945-49, with a batch of
recordings of shorter pieces during 1938-39.
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