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Any composer who sets out to write a violin concerto knows their new work will be measured against the famous concertos of the past. But in the fall of 1936, when Hungarian composer Béla Bartók decided to write a violin concerto, he asked his publisher to send him some recent work of his contemporaries. After seeing what Karol Szymanowski, Kurt Weill and Alban Berg had accomplished in the form, Bartok set to work, with much input from his violinist friend, Zoltan Szekely, for whom the new concerto was being written.
Bartók was in America when Szekely premiered his Concerto with the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra, conducted by Willem Mengelberg.
It was only in America in 1943, that Bartok first heard his Concerto at a New York Philharmonic concert. He wrote, “I was most happy that there is nothing wrong with the scoring. Nothing needs to be changed, even though orchestral accompaniment of the violin is a very delicate business.”
If Bartók was happy with the scoring, he wasn’t very pleased with one New York music critic, who wrote that he didn’t think the new work would ever displace the great violin concertos of Beethoven, Mendelssohn, or Brahms.
“How is it possible to write such an idiotic thing? What fool fit for a madhouse would want to displace these works with his own?” he commented.
Béla Bartók (1881-1945): Violin Concerto No. 1; Kyung-Wha Chung, violin; Chicago Symphony; Sir Georg Solti, conductor; London 411 804
By American Public Media4.7
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Any composer who sets out to write a violin concerto knows their new work will be measured against the famous concertos of the past. But in the fall of 1936, when Hungarian composer Béla Bartók decided to write a violin concerto, he asked his publisher to send him some recent work of his contemporaries. After seeing what Karol Szymanowski, Kurt Weill and Alban Berg had accomplished in the form, Bartok set to work, with much input from his violinist friend, Zoltan Szekely, for whom the new concerto was being written.
Bartók was in America when Szekely premiered his Concerto with the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra, conducted by Willem Mengelberg.
It was only in America in 1943, that Bartok first heard his Concerto at a New York Philharmonic concert. He wrote, “I was most happy that there is nothing wrong with the scoring. Nothing needs to be changed, even though orchestral accompaniment of the violin is a very delicate business.”
If Bartók was happy with the scoring, he wasn’t very pleased with one New York music critic, who wrote that he didn’t think the new work would ever displace the great violin concertos of Beethoven, Mendelssohn, or Brahms.
“How is it possible to write such an idiotic thing? What fool fit for a madhouse would want to displace these works with his own?” he commented.
Béla Bartók (1881-1945): Violin Concerto No. 1; Kyung-Wha Chung, violin; Chicago Symphony; Sir Georg Solti, conductor; London 411 804

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