Violin Concerto (Khachaturian)
's Violin Concerto in D minor is a violin concerto in three movements composed in 1940.
It was composed for David Oistrakh and was premiered on September 16, 1940 by Oistrakh.
Composition
In 1940, Khachaturian was enjoying tremendous professional success and personal joy. He worked on the concerto in the tranquility of a wood composer's retreat west of Moscow; he said of the composition that he "worked without effort... Themes came to me in such abundance that I had a hard time putting them in order." Many sections of the concerto are reminiscent of the folk music of Khachaturian's native Armenia—while he never directly quotes a specific folk melody, "the exotic Oriental flavor of Armenian scales and melodies and the captivating rhythmic diversity of dances" are throughout the work. The work has been charactered by "an exhilarating rhythmic drive and vitality, and a penchant for intoxicating, highly flavored, languorous melody owning much to the inflections of his native Armenian folk music." Having won the Stalin prize in 1941, it has since become one of Khachaturian's famous pieces, in spite of considerable criticism.Structure
Violin concerto in D minor- First movement: Allegro con fermezza
- Second movement: Andante sostenuto
- Third movement: Allegro vivace
The Andante sostenuto has been described as "a rhapsodic slow movement that sweeps one into a brooding wintry landscape." Geoffrey Norris wrote, "The ease and spontaneity, pungency and flexibility of Khachaturian's melodic inventions are most clearly laid out in the Andante sostenuto of the central movement, cast in a free-flowing, quasi-improvisatory manner redolent of the art of Armenian folk music." The second movement is a free-flowing rondo.
The concluding Allegro vivace has been called "a whirlwind of motion and virtuosity." In this movement, "the folks element is specially pronounced in the dance-like vigor of the main melody and in the repetitive, insistent, wild virtuosity of the solo instrument."
Discography
Year | Soloist | Conductor, Orchestra |
1946 | David Oistrakh | Alexander Gauk, State Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Russian Federation |
1947 | Gerhard Taschner | Artur Rother, Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra |
1955 | David Oistrakh | Aram Khachaturian, National Philharmonic Orchestra |
1956 | Ruggiero Ricci | Anatole Fistoulari, London Philharmonic Orchestra |
1964 | Henryk Szeryng | Antal Doráti, London Symphony Orchestra |
1977 | David Oistrakh | Aram Khachaturian, Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra |
1984 | Itzhak Perlman | Zubin Mehta, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra |
1989 | Valery Klimov | Evgeni Svetlanov, USSR Academy Symphony Orchestra |
1990 | Lydia Mordkovitch | Neeme Järvi, Royal Scottish National Orchestra |
2004 | Julia Fischer | Yakov Kreizberg, Russian National Orchestra |
2007 | Aaron Rosand | Kees Bakels, Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra |
2008 | Nicolas Koeckert | José Serebrier, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra |
2010 | Ara Malikian | Jesús Amigo, Extremadura Symphony Orchestra |
2011 | Mikhail Simonyan | Kristjan Järvi, London Symphony Orchestra |
2014 | James Ehnes | Mark Wigglesworth, Melbourne Symphony Orchestra |
2018 | Nemanja Radulovic | Sascha Goetzel Borusan Istanbul Philarmonic Orchestra |
2020 | Antje Weithaas | Daniel Raiskin, Staatsorchester Rheinische Philharmonie |