It began with a piece which I fell in love with: Eugène
Ysaÿe’s Poème élégiaque. You have to tune the bottom violin string a
tone lower. That explains the dark character, which you hear
particularly in the middle, which is a funeral march. Ysaÿe dedicated it
to Gabriël Fauré. And so the idea for this CD was born: violin music by
composers who honoured and inspired one another. I found out, for
example, that Fauré often visited the famous singer Pauline Viardot’s
salon. It was there that he premiered the Romance. At first it sounds
like a rather sweet Fauré, but passions rise high in the middle. Fauré
was briefly engaged to a daughter of Viardot. The Russian writer Ivan
Toergenjev, Viardot’s lover, used the affaire in his short story Le
chant de l’amour triomphant, on which, in turn, Ernest Chausson based his Poème, with its dreamy music and a tragic ring. Chausson dedicated
it to Ysaÿe and drew inspiration from his Poème élégiaque, as one hears
in the high violin trills at the end of both pieces.
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