Violin Mastery

Chapter 18

A UNIQUE COLLECTION OF VIOLIN STUDIES

"What special editorial work of mine has given me the greatest personal satisfaction in the doing? That is a hard question to answer. Off-hand I might say that, perhaps, the collection of progressive orchestral studies for advanced violinists which I have compiled and annotated for the benefit of the symphony orchestra player is something that has meant much to me personally. Years ago, when I played professionally--long before the days of "miniature" orchestra scores--it was almost impossible for an ambitious young violinist to acquaint himself with the first and second violin parts of the great symphonic works. Prices of scores were prohibitive--and though in such works as the Brahms symphonies, for instance, the "concertmaster"s" part should be studied from score, in its relation to the rest of the _part.i.tura_--often, merely to obtain a first violin part, I had to acquire the entire set of strings. So when I became an editor I determined, in view of my own unhappy experiences and that of many others, to give the aspiring fiddler who really wanted to "get at" the violin parts of the best symphonic music, from Bach to Brahms and Richard Strauss, a chance to do so. And I believe I solved the problem in the five books of the "Modern Concert-Master," which includes all those really difficult and important pa.s.sages in the great repertory works of the symphony orchestra that offer violinistic problems. My only regret is that the grasping att.i.tude of European publishers prevented the representation of certain important symphonic numbers. Yet, as it stands, I think I may say that the five encyclopedic books of the collection give the symphony concertmaster every practical opportunity to gain orchestral routine, and orchestral mastery.

A NEW CLa.s.sIFICATION OF VIOLIN LITERATURE

"What I am inclined to consider, however, as even more important, in a sense, than my editorial labors is a new educational cla.s.sification of violin literature, one which practically covers the entire field of violin music, and upon which I have been engaged for several years.

Insomuch as an editor"s work helps in the acquisition of "Violin Mastery," I am tempted to think this catalogue will be a contribution of real value.



"As far as I know there does not at present exist any guide or hand-book of violin literature in which the fundamental question of grading has been presented _au fond_. This is not strange, since the task of compiling a really valid and logically graded guide-book of violin literature is one that offers great difficulties from almost every point of view.

"Yet I have found the work engrossing, because the need of a book of the kind which makes it easy for the teacher to bring his pupils ahead more rapidly and intelligently by giving him an oversight of the entire teaching-material of the violin and under clear, practical heads in detail order of progression is making itself more urgently felt every day. In cla.s.sification (there are seven grades and a preparatory grade), I have not chosen an easier and conventional plan of _general_ consideration of difficulties; but have followed a more systematic scheme, one more closely related to the study of the instrument itself.

Thus, my "Preparatory Grade" contains only material which could be advantageously used with children and beginners, those still struggling with the simplest elementary problems--correct drawing of the bow across the open strings, in a certain rhythmic order, and the first use of the fingers. And throughout the grades are special sub-sections for special difficulties, special technical and other problems. In short, I cannot help but feel that I have compiled a real guide, one with a definite educational value, and not a catalogue, masquerading as a violinistic Baedeker.

VIOLIN EDITIONS "MADE IN AMERICA"

"One of the most significant features of the violin guide I have mentioned is, perhaps, the fact that its contents largely cover the whole range of violin literature in American editions. There was a time, years ago, when "made in Germany" was accepted as a certificate of editorial excellence and mechanical perfection. Those days have long since pa.s.sed, and the American edition has come into its own. It has reached a point of development where it is of far more practical and musically stimulating value than any European edition. For American editions of violin music do not take so much for granted! They reflect in the highest degree the needs of students and players in smaller places throughout the country, and where teachers are rare or non-existent they do much to supply instruction by meticulous regard for all detail of fingering, bowing, phrasing, expression, by insisting in explanatory annotation on the correct presentation of authoritative teaching ideas and principles. In a broader sense "Violin Mastery" knows no nationality; but yet we a.s.sociate the famous artists of the day with individual and distinctively national trends of development and "schools." In this connection I am convinced that one result of this great war of world liberation we have waged, one by-product of the triumph of the democratic truth, will be a notably "American" ideal of "Violin Mastery," in the musical as well as the technical sense. And in the development of this ideal I do not think it is too much to claim that American editions of violin music, and those who are responsible for them, will have done their part."

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