Showing posts with label Emily E. Hogstad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emily E. Hogstad. Show all posts

Friday, July 3, 2026

The Greatest Violinist of Each Decade of the 20th Century

by Emily E. Hogstad  June 29th, 2026


The process is less about choosing stars and more about understanding what greatness meant in different decades, and how each violinist – and each decade – pushed the art of violin-playing forward.

At the start of the century, the greats were famous for their tone and personal expressiveness. Mid-century, thanks to the diamond-hard virtuosity of Jascha Heifetz, priorities shifted toward technical greatness. Later, the pendulum swung back again: the greats began embodying warmth, humanity, and stylistic chameleonism alongside bulletproof technique.

The following list identifies one violinist per decade who best embodied the dominant values of their time.

1900–1909: Eugène Ysaÿe

Eugène Ysaÿe

Eugène Ysaÿe   At the turn of the century, Eugène Ysaÿe stood at the centre of European musical life.

His playing fused technical command with unprecedented expressive freedom, laying the foundations of modern violinism and earning him the nickname the King of the Violin.

His approach to phrasing and tone permanently altered expectations of what the violin could express.

During his career, composers such as Franck, Chausson, and Debussy wrote with his sound in mind, resulting in a number of vital contributions to the violin repertoire.

He also wrote an important set of six solo sonatas, works that remain both technically and philosophically demanding for violinists today.

1910–1919: Fritz Kreisler

Fritz Kreisler

Fritz Kreisler   Kreisler‘s supremacy in the 1910s was cultural as well as musical.

Many music lovers had their first introduction to violin music through his early recordings – especially the ones of his own beautiful and brief recital pieces like Liebesleid, Liebesfreud, and Caprice Viennois.

He was also famous for his Baroque-style miniatures like his Praeludium and Allegro, which he told audiences were rediscovered scores by obscure composers, but had actually been composed by Kreisler himself.

His famously golden tone, impeccable sense of rubato, and unapologetic Viennese charm shaped early twentieth-century musical taste.

1920–1929: Jascha Heifetz

Jascha Heifetz

Jascha Heifetz   No arrival in violin history was more disruptive than Jascha Heifetz. When he first heard a young Heifetz play, Kreisler reportedly quipped that all other violinists might as well break their instruments across their knees.

In the 1920s, Heifetz redefined technical perfection, achieving clarity, speed, control, and precision previously thought unattainable.

From this decade onward, violinists were judged against a new and unforgiving technical standard: Jascha Heifetz’s.

1930–1939: Yehudi Menuhin

Yehudi Menuhin

Yehudi Menuhin   

While Heifetz remained dominant through the 1930s (and there’s a good case to be made that he was also the most influential violinist for a couple more decades to come), Menuhin came to symbolise something different.

A prodigy of dizzying ability whose seriousness and introspection resonated during the Depression years, Menuhin demonstrated how a solo violinist could become known for his spiritual and even moral depth.

His seriousness and moral authority that emerged in the 1930s would later define his wartime performances, when he performed for Allied troops and concentration camp survivors.

Later in his career, he also became known for his cross-cultural exchanges (he was especially well known for his collaborations with Indian sitarist Ravi Shankar and French jazz violinist Stéphane Grappelli) and supporting young musicians’ careers.

1940–1949: David Oistrakh

David Oistrakh

David Oistrakh   

The wartime and postwar years demanded a kind of moral and musical gravity from its greatest classical musicians, and the playing of Oistrakh – with his deeply human tone and earnestness – fit the bill.

Oistrakh’s broad tone, architectural phrasing, and moral authority were hugely influential to both Soviet and Western violinists in a musical world fractured by war and politics at the dawn of the Cold War.

His collaborations with Shostakovich (the composer’s shattering first violin concerto, written between 1947-48, was dedicated to him), and his interpretations of Beethoven and Brahms established a model of postwar musical nobility that remains influential to this day.

1950–1959: Nathan Milstein

Nathan Milstein

Nathan Milstein   

The 1950s marked a turn toward refinement and stylishness.

Nathan Milstein’s elegance, restraint, and stylistic clarity made him a favourite of the era’s connoisseurs.

His Bach playing, in particular, exerted a particularly long-lasting influence. In those Bach performances and recordings, he favoured structure and line over Romantic excess, helping to usher in a stylish but unsentimental approach to the composer, which hinted at the upcoming historically informed performance practice movement.

1960–1969: Isaac Stern

Isaac Stern

Isaac Stern   

By the 1960s, a violinist’s greatness was expected to extend beyond the concert platform. American violinist Isaac Stern followed in Menuhin’s footsteps, emerging not just as a concert violinist but as a cultural statesman.

He championed young artists, made benchmark recordings, and spearheaded the ultimately successful effort to save Carnegie Hall from demolition.

Later, in the 1970s, he even performed international diplomacy, touring China and giving concerts seven years after President Richard Nixon’s first official visit to the country. That tour underlined the country’s growing passion for Western classical music and served as the material for an Oscar-winning documentary, From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China.

1970–1979: Itzhak Perlman

Itzhak Perlman

Itzhak Perlman   

In the 1970s, Itzhak Perlman became one of the most recognisable violinists in the world.

From an early age, he made important appearances on mass media, showing up everywhere from television shows like The Ed Sullivan Show and Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood to soundtracks of major films like Schindler’s List.

His playing combined technical ease with warmth and generosity, contributing his unique charisma and emotional immediacy to concert platforms the world over.

At a time when virtuosity risked emotional coolness after the rise of Heifetz, Perlman helped to popularise a warmth of style and easy accessibility.

1980–1989: Anne-Sophie Mutter

Anne-Sophie Mutter

Anne-Sophie Mutter   

Anne-Sophie Mutter‘s frequent collaborations with Berlin Philharmonic conductor Herbert von Karajan (a major star in classical music in his own right), her technical authority, and her commitment to contemporary composers positioned her at the centre of late twentieth-century violin culture.

She also became famous for performing in shoulderless gowns, creating a modern idea of what a glamorous woman soloist could look like.

At a time when nearly all of the most famous violinists were men, Mutter demonstrated that virtuosity, authority, and visible femininity were not mutually exclusive.

She bridged virtuosity and modernism with rare confidence and individuality.

1990–1999: Gil Shaham

Gil Shaham


By the 1990s, no single ideal of violin-playing dominated in the popular consciousness. Recordings, television channels, and the number of influences on young violin soloists had multiplied.

In this pluralistic landscape, Shaham’s joyful, accomplished, communicative artistry stood out.

His playing built on Stern and Perlman’s approach, rejecting the more austere, aristocratic approach of a Heifetz or Milstein in favour of warmth and accessibility, redefining excellence as something that was technically jaw-dropping but also breathtakingly generous and human.

In a decade whose media was becoming increasingly fragmented, that ethos proved quietly influential. You can see traces of it in the generous and golden-toned violin playing of 21st-century violin stars like James Ehnes, Julia Fischer, and Augustin Hadelich.

Conclusion

Taken together, these violinists trace the evolution of what listeners prioritised from decade to decade: from individual expressivity to technical achievement to cultural authority to emotional connection.

By the end of the century, the art had embraced a number of styles, with no single figure dominating a decade like had happened in past decades.

Still, all of today’s great players – whether consciously or not – stand on the shoulders of the violinists who shaped each decade before them.

Thursday, July 2, 2026

Debunking the Top 5 Myths About Chopin

 

These stories are certainly compelling – but they also blur historical reality and oversimplify a complex human life.

Frédéric Chopin

Frédéric Chopin

By looking at letters, contemporary accounts, and modern scholarship, we can separate the persistent music-history myths from what the historical record actually shows.

Myth 1: Chopin’s only health issue was tuberculosis

Although most historians believe that Frédéric Chopin died of chronic tuberculosis, he also struggled with a number of other illnesses.

When he was a teenager, he suffered from an infection that left his lymph nodes swollen and nearly killed him.

His digestive system also rebelled against fatty foods, although he eventually discovered it could be soothed by honey and oat bran.

In 1835, while living in Paris, he had both laryngitis and bronchitis. Rumours even began spreading in Poland that he’d died.

Other scholars and medical experts have suggested alternative suggestions to a tuberculosis diagnosis, suggesting the possibility of cystic fibrosis or valvular heart disease.

In fact, it’s theoretically possible that he didn’t even have tuberculosis at all and suffered from some other lung issue instead.

Myth 2: Chopin never performed publicly

This myth likely arose because Chopin preferred intimate salon settings over the concert hall. However, he did perform in public on multiple occasions.

As a child prodigy in Warsaw, he played charity concerts, and after settling in Paris, he gave a handful of public recitals.

In fact, over his entire career, Chopin gave roughly thirty public or semi-public concerts. These included his successful Paris debut in 1832 and a final concert tour of England and Scotland in 1848.

This may have been modest by the standards of touring virtuosi like Liszt, but his public performances were far from nonexistent.

That said, contemporaries certainly noted how much more frequently Chopin appeared in salon settings.

But the claim “he never performed publicly” is false. His reputation as a performer was just shaped far more by his salon appearances than by his public concerts.

Myth 3: Chopin’s only moods were melancholic and depressed

Chopin’s music and letters reveal a far more complex personality than the mopey, mournful poet of the piano that is often portrayed in pop culture.

Yes, it’s true that he was prone to bouts of depression, especially during illness or when anguished by news from his occupied Polish homeland. But that wasn’t his only mood.

As a child and teenager, Chopin was remembered as witty, playful, and even mischievous.

One early biographer, Frederick Niecks, noted in his book Frederick Chopin, as a Man and Musician, that Chopin’s behaviour in childhood was marked by “sprightliness, a sparkling effervescence that manifested itself by all sorts of fun and mischief. He was never weary of playing pranks.”

He delighted friends with his jokes and impersonations, and his letters often demonstrated his dry sense of humour.

For example, a teenage Chopin created a spoof newspaper called the “Szafarnia Courier” to amuse his family, and later he wryly described inept doctors “sniffing” and “tapping” at him while trying to diagnose him in Majorca.

In short, over the course of his life, Chopin felt the full range of human emotions. Yes, he was soulful and brooding at times, but he could also be tender, sarcastic, and light-hearted.

The cliché of Chopin as perpetually depressed ignores the lively, personable side he often showed to friends, as well as the vivacity evident in many of his compositions.

Myth 4: Chopin’s relationship with George Sand ruined him. 

Chopin’s nine-year relationship with the novelist George Sand has been both romanticised and maligned. But far from “ruining” him, Sand in many ways provided stability and care that sustained Chopin through difficult years.

They became lovers in 1838, and soon Sand took on a nurturing, almost protective role. She called the ailing composer her “third child,” managed his domestic life, and oversaw his medical care.

At Sand’s country estate in Nohant, Chopin enjoyed some of his most productive summers, composing numerous masterpieces in the tranquil environment she created for him.

Rather than draining his creativity, their union coincided with the writing of many Polonaises, Mazurkas, Ballades, and the Twenty-Four Preludes.

George Sand - Portrait by Nadar (1864)

George Sand – Portrait by Nadar (1864)

It is true that the relationship ended painfully. In 1847, Sand broke with Chopin amid family tensions – namely, a feud involving her daughter, Solange. After Chopin stood up for Solange, Sand felt badly betrayed. This breakup devastated Chopin emotionally, and his health, which was already deteriorating, got worse.

Some of Chopin’s friends bitterly blamed Sand for Chopin’s worsening illness. Modern scholarship, however, views this as an exaggeration; he likely would have gotten sicker regardless of what happened in his love life.

In short, George Sand did not ruin Chopin. On the contrary, she cared for him and inspired him during their years together. Yes, their relationship ultimately soured, but attributing Chopin’s tragic end solely to Sand unfairly oversimplifies the complex personal and medical realities. It was a coincidence, not causation.

Myth 5: Chopin only wrote “salon music.”  

This myth stems from the fact that Chopin composed almost exclusively for solo piano and often in forms suitable for salons (waltzes, mazurkas, nocturnes, and the like).

During the 19th century, some critics dismissed these elegant miniatures as lightweight salon music.

But equating Chopin’s output with trivial parlour fare is a major mischaracterisation.

His contemporaries knew that beneath the graceful surfaces of these pieces lay profound artistry and innovation.

Robert Schumann, for one, famously remarked that “the works of Chopin are cannons concealed amongst flowers” – meaning that even in his delicate mazurkas and waltzes, Chopin smuggled in bold, explosive emotion and subversive expressions of patriotism.

Frédéric Chopin

Frédéric Chopin

Meanwhile, his four Ballades are structurally daring, thematically unified tone poems for piano; his Polonaises (like the “Heroic” Polonaise in A flat, Op. 53) thunder with nationalistic fervour; and his Piano Sonata No. 2 in B flat minor (which includes the famous Funeral March) shows he could handle large-scale forms when he chose.

Even his briefest preludes – slender little wisps of things, lasting only a minute or two – are imbued with sophisticated harmonies, novel textures, and deep feeling.

In short, Chopin should be celebrated as a composer of intimate but profound music rather than dismissed as a writer of lightweight salon pieces.

Conclusion

Taken together, these myths reveal less about Chopin himself than about the stories later generations wanted to tell about him.

Yes, he was physically fragile, but not perpetually incapacitated. Yes, he favoured salons, but he did perform publicly. Yes, he experienced deep melancholy – but he also demonstrated humour, warmth, and playfulness. His relationship with George Sand was complicated, not sheerly destructive, and his piano works, however intimate their scale, are anything but trivial.

Stripped of exaggeration and stereotype, Chopin is revealed to be the sophisticated artist he actually was. Understanding the truth behind these myths allows us to hear his music with fresh ears and a clear mind.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

10 Classical Pieces That Hook You in the First 60 Seconds

  


Some composers prefer to gradually ease their listeners into their piece’s sound world. Others strike like lightning.

Today, we’re looking at the latter type of openings. Within the first 60 seconds, listeners are hooked, whether because of rhythm, volume, atmosphere, or some combination of all of the above.

We’re ranking them in reverse order, saving the most immediately arresting for last.

Music That Brings up Sad Memories

© Psychology Today

10. Johann Sebastian Bach – Brandenburg Concerto No. 3   

We’re starting with the brilliant whirlwind of Baroque perpetual motion that is Bach‘s third Brandenburg concerto.

The first movement instantly launches into interlocking string patterns that feel almost modern in their rhythmic propulsion.

Instead of writing for a typical string ensemble, Bach divides the players into three groups of three, creating nine independent string lines (plus continuo).

That textured propulsion is so effective that you’re hooked and tapping your foot before you’ve had time to analyse what’s happening.

It’s not loud, but it’s striking, and the whirling rhythms immediately get stuck in your head.

9. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Overture to The Marriage of Figaro  

Mozart doesn’t announce himself here; instead, he sets up a murmured string motif and then starts sprinting.

From that opening string motif, the overture bursts into breathless motion, setting the stage for a world of mischief and comic chaos.

Within seconds, the energy feels theatrical. Even listening at home, you can envision the curtain of the opera house rising.

It hooks listeners through its cheeky velocity rather than its profundity – and that virtuosic speed is intoxicating.

8. Maurice Ravel – Daphnis et Chloé, Suite No. 2  

This hook works differently from the others on this list. Instead of grabbing attention with a fast attack, Ravel immerses his listeners in a radiant atmosphere. It feels like sinking into a hot bath.

Ravel composed this music as a ballet, later extracting two orchestral suites from it.

The opening movement of his second orchestral suite – titled “Lever du jour” (“Daybreak”) – begins in a shimmer of sound that gradually blooms into radiant colour.

Over the first minute, the orchestra sound becomes enormous and almost painfully beautiful: luminous, layered, alive.

7. Sergei Rachmaninoff – Piano Concerto No. 2   

Few openings in the repertoire feel as inevitable as the tolling piano chords here.

They begin in the solo piano part, dark and ominous and resonant, each one weightier than the last.

Within 60 seconds, the orchestral strings sweep in with a heartbreaking theme, and the emotional temperature rises dramatically.

Once that theme arrives, the emotional tenor is set, and it becomes impossible to turn away.

6. Edvard Grieg – Piano Concerto   

This is considered one of the great concerto entrances in the repertoire. It features a massive timpani roll, then a cascade of piano chords.

The piano part tumbles down the keyboard in a gesture that feels both virtuosic and defiant.

After that attention-grabbing opening, Grieg immediately launches into a march that is somehow both jaunty and deeply dramatic, setting the stage for the rest of the movement.

5. Sergei Prokofiev – “Montagues and Capulets” from Romeo and Juliet    

This excerpt begins with horror-soundtrack dissonance. After some unforgiving shrieking chords, the low brass and strings start stomping and swinging forward.

The rhythm is famously heavy, ceremonial, and almost brutal.

Within seconds, thanks to that tonal contrast and that forbidding rhythm, Prokofiev establishes the violent world of the ballet: proud and tense and dangerous.

4. Richard Wagner – Overture to The Flying Dutchman   

Wagner‘s opera The Flying Dutchman tells the story of a cursed 17th-century ghost ship.

Writing this overture, Wagner was determined to portray the mood of a storm at sea – and he succeeded.

Stormy strings and brassy surges create immediate turbulence, imitating roaring winds and lashing waves with scrubbing tremolo bow strokes and trumpet fanfares.

3. Igor Stravinsky – The Rite of Spring   

Stravinsky‘s ballet The Rite of Spring made a major splash at its riotous premiere in the spring of 1913.

It opens with a bassoon playing at the tippy-top of its register. The sound is strange, reminiscent of some kind of ancient woodwind instrument. Within seconds, you know you’re somewhere new.

By the time other instruments enter, the tension and sheer strangeness are palpable.

It’s a quieter kind of shock than some of the other pieces on this list, but historically, it’s certainly among the most disruptive 60 seconds in music history.

2. Carl Orff – Carmina Burana   

There’s absolutely no warm-up here. Straight out of the gate, the chorus explodes with full force, with percussion hammering underneath.

It’s overwhelming – almost operatic in scale – and it seizes attention through sheer sonic weight and repetition.

It’s one of the most dizzying openings ever written for orchestra and chorus.

However, the opening movement that we think has the best hook in classical music history…

1. Ludwig van Beethoven – Symphony No. 5   

Four notes. That’s all it takes. Short-short-short-long. Everyone is familiar with it, even those who have never listened to a symphony in their life.

It has since become a cultural shorthand for the idea of “fate knocking at the door.”

More than two centuries after their composition, those first seconds still feel inevitable.

Those first four notes, and the carefully crafted phrases that follow, are among the most memorable first 60 seconds ever written in classical music history.

Conclusion

Across centuries and styles, composers have found countless ways to seize our attention, whether through rhythm, colour, drama, or sheer volume.

But in these ten opening movements, one thing is clear.

Sometimes you don’t need an hour of classical music to be convinced. Sometimes 60 seconds – and the lightning flash of inspiration behind them – are enough.

Friday, June 26, 2026

10 Classical Music Facts That Sound Fake But Are True

  

But scratch the surface, and the past turns out to be far stranger.

Behind some of the most revered composers in Western music are stories that sound like modern internet myths: fan hysteria bordering on mass delusion, obscene jokes set to immaculate counterpoint, creative breakdowns cured by hypnosis, murder plots abandoned at the last minute, and lifelong obsessions with things like trains and numerology.

Remarkably, these stories aren’t apocryphal. In many cases, they’re documented in letters, memoirs, contemporary reports, and firsthand accounts.

Here are ten classical composer facts that sound fake – but are completely true.

1. Franz Liszt caused celebrity hysteria.

Evgeny Kissin – La Campanella (Liszt)   

During the 1840s, Franz Liszt inspired a phenomenon that writer Heinrich Heine famously dubbed Lisztomania, which can be compared to the Beatlemania of the twentieth century.

Audiences screamed, fainted, and picked up his cigar stumps in the street.

Liszt concert cartoon

Liszt concert cartoon

Lisztomania even had an impact on fashion: women wore cameos with his portrait, made his piano strings into bracelets, and collected his discarded gloves and handkerchiefs.

Thanks to his virtuosity, Liszt became an international celebrity decades before visual mass media, creating a template for the fame of musical superstars of the future.

2. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote a canon whose text is literally “lick me in the arse.”

Mozart: Leck mich im Arsch  

Mozart‘s scatological humour is well documented, and one of his canons bears the unforgettable title Leck mich im Arsch (K. 231) (“Lick me in the Arse”).

Barbara Krafft: W. A. Mozart, 1819 (Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde)

Barbara Krafft: W. A. Mozart, 1819 (Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde)

Historians have surmised that it was a party piece for a group of friends to sing together.

The canon is harmonically correct, neatly constructed – and unapologetically vulgar.

After Mozart’s death, when his remaining work was being catalogued and published, the publisher changed the lyrics to “Let Us Be Glad!” The original text was rediscovered in 1991.

3. A full performance of Erik Satie’s Vexations can last 18 to 24 hours.   

Satie‘s Vexations consists of a short, eerie piano phrase with the instruction that it be repeated 840 times.

When taken at a slow, meditative tempo – as Satie may have intended – a complete performance can last nearly an entire day.

Erik Satie

Erik Satie

The first full performance took place in 1963 and was organised by composer John Cage. It involved multiple pianists rotating in shifts, with audience members coming and going throughout the night.

That performance lasted for eighteen hours. One audience member heard the entire thing.

4. Johann Sebastian Bach once walked 250 miles just to hear an organist.

Bach – Passacaglia in C minor BWV 582 – Smits | Netherlands Bach Society   

In 1705, the 20-year-old Johann Sebastian Bach walked roughly 250 miles from the town of Arnstadt to the town of Lübeck to hear the legendary organist Dieterich Buxtehude.

Depiction of the Danish baroque composer Dieterich Buxtehude in the painting "The Musical Party" 1674 by Johannes Voorhout

Depiction of Dieterich Buxtehude in the painting “The Musical Party” 1674 by Johannes Voorhout

That year, Buxtehude was scheduled to lead weekly performances of his music during the Advent season. At least one performance included a 25-member violin section, a brass section, and multiple choirs, so it’s easy to see why Bach would be so interested in hearing it.

Bach was granted a short leave from his job to experience this event, but he overstayed it by several months, studying Buxtehude’s playing and compositional style.

The journey would have permanently shaped Bach’s approach to music, expanding his idea of what was possible.

5. Hector Berlioz, composer of the Symphonie fantastique, once planned a triple murder.

Berlioz : Symphonie Fantastique   

After composing his famous Symphonie fantastique, based on his fixation with actress Harriet Smithson, Hector Berlioz turned around and fell in love with a virtuoso pianist named Camille Marie Moke, and the two became engaged.

Marie Pleyel

Marie Pleyel

Around the same time, Berlioz won the prestigious Prix de Rome and, as part of his prize, travelled to Rome to live and compose.

One day, he got a letter letting him know that Moke had married a wealthy piano manufacturer instead of him.

Blinded by rage, he devised a detailed plan to murder Moke, her mother, and her husband before killing himself. He even acquired poison and a disguise (a maid’s costume).

Fortunately, the plan collapsed before it could be carried out. He wrote in his memoir that he didn’t follow through because he didn’t want to deprive the world of his music.

It’s one of the more disturbing pieces of trivia in the history of classical music.

6. Sergei Prokofiev died the same day as Stalin.

Prokofiev: Symphony No. 7 / Gergiev · London Symphony Orchestra   

Prokofiev died of a cerebral haemorrhage on March 5, 1953 – the exact same day as Joseph Stalin.

Grave of Sergei Prokofiev

Grave of Sergei Prokofiev

The dictator’s death dominated Soviet media, leaving Prokofiev’s passing largely unnoticed. (In fact, one Soviet music periodical didn’t include a notice of his death until page 116; all preceding pages were devoted to Stalin.)

Prokofiev’s funeral only drew thirty mourners, including his sometimes-rival Dmitri Shostakovich.

Prokofiev’s ex-wife Lina – who was living in a Siberian gulag at the time – only heard about her husband’s death months later, via the radio.

7. Arnold Schoenberg was terrified of the number 13.

Arnold Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht   

Schoenberg suffered from severe triskaidekaphobia (i.e., a fear of the number thirteen).

Throughout his life, he did things like avoiding hotels with 13 floors and altering the title of his opera from Moses und Aaron to Moses und Aron to avoid writing an opera with 13 letters.

His anxiety became worse as he aged. He was especially despondent when he turned 76, because seven plus six equals thirteen.

Arnold Schoenberg

Arnold Schoenberg

That said, maybe his fear was justified. He died on 13 July 1951 – just 13 minutes before midnight – having reportedly spent the entire day in terror. He was 76.

We wrote about Arnold Schoenberg‘s terror of the number here: https://interlude.hk/friday-the-13tharnold-schoenberg-and-triskaidekaphobia/.

8. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart could memorise and recreate entire works after one hearing.

Miserere mei, Deus – Allegri – Tenebrae conducted by Nigel Short  

At age 14, Mozart attended a performance of priest and composer Gregorio Allegri’s Miserere in the Sistine Chapel: a piece whose score was closely guarded and forbidden to copy.

After hearing it once, Mozart wrote the entire work down from memory. He later returned to correct minor details.

The Vatican ultimately praised the feat rather than punishing him.

We wrote about Mozart’s famous feat of transcription here: https://interlude.hk/mozart-diaries-14-april-1770-contredance-b-flat-major-k-123/.

9. After the disastrous premiere of his first symphony, Sergei Rachmaninoff needed hypnosis to write again.

Yuja Wang: Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor Op. 18     

The premiere of Rachmaninoff‘s First Symphony in 1897 was a catastrophe, partly due to a poorly rehearsed and inebriated conductor.

Kubey-Rembrandt Studios: Sergei Rachmaninoff, 1921

Kubey-Rembrandt Studios: Sergei Rachmaninoff, 1921

The failure plunged the composer into a deep depression and creative paralysis that lasted several years.

Rachmaninoff eventually underwent hypnotherapy, which helped restore his confidence, leading directly to the composition of his wildly successful Piano Concerto No. 2. Today, that concerto is one of the most popular ever written.

He even dedicated the score to his therapist in gratitude for the help.

10. Antonín Dvořák had a hyperfixation with trains.

Dvořák: 9. Sinfonie (»Aus der Neuen Welt«) ∙ hr-Sinfonieorchester ∙ Andrés Orozco-Estrada   

Antonín Dvořák was intensely fascinated by trains.

Antonín Dvořák, 1904

Antonín Dvořák, 1904

He memorised timetables, kept a journal of his train travels, spent hours at stations watching engines arrive and depart, and could identify individual trains by sight and sound.

He even once famously remarked that he would have given up all of his symphonies to have invented the locomotive.

Conclusion

Taken together, these stories reveal something essential about classical music history: it is far messier, funnier, darker, and more human than the myths suggest.

The same figures who wrote sacred masses, symphonies, and operatic tragedies were also capable of crude jokes, obsessive fixations, emotional collapses, and spectacular lapses in judgment.

History doesn’t need embellishment to be fascinating. Sometimes, the truth is already stranger than fiction.

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