AMERICAN VIOLINIST EDDY BROWN (1895-1974) VOL. 1 CDR

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EDDY BROWN (CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, USA, JULY 15, 1895 – ABANO TERME, ITALY, JUNE 14, 1974)         His father, with whom he had his first lessons, was Austrian and his mother, Russian.  He later studied with Hugh McGibney in Indianapolis while still a child.  He is known for having launched and hugely influenced…

Description

EDDY BROWN (CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, USA, JULY 15, 1895 – ABANO TERME, ITALY, JUNE 14, 1974)

 

 

 

 

His father, with whom he had his first lessons, was Austrian and his mother, Russian.  He later studied with Hugh McGibney in Indianapolis while still a child.  He is known for having launched and hugely influenced classical music radio programming in the U.S.  In fact, he gave the first radio performance of all ten Beethoven sonatas.  In 1936, he pioneered radio station WQXR in New York City (devoted exclusively to classical music) which survives to this day.  His first public appearance as a violinist was at age six.  At age nine (1904), he enrolled at the Royal Conservatory in Budapest where he studied with Jeno Hubay, Bela Bartok and others.  Two years later, he took first prize in the Budapest Concerto Competition.  Eugene Ormandy took second.  Brown graduated in 1909 and soon after made his formal debut in Budapest playing the Beethoven concerto.  That same year he made his London debut with the London Philharmonic playing Tchaikovsky’s violin concerto – he was fourteen years old.  His Berlin debut came in 1910 with the Brahms concerto.  He then studied further (until 1916) with Leopold Auer at the St Petersburg Conservatory and concertized world wide for some time after that.  His U.S. debut was at Indianapolis in 1916 with the Beethoven concerto.  He made his New York debut that same week.  He began to record (if one can call it that) in 1916.  He also formed a string quartet (name unknown) and established the Chamber Music Society of America. After becoming involved in radio in 1930, he essentially stopped touring, though he played for many of the different radio programs which he created and in various venues close to New York.  Ironically, almost none of the hundreds of performances he gave on radio survive.  Brown started to teach at the University of Cincinnati in 1956.  He was named Artist-in-Residence of Butler University (Indianapolis) in 1971.  Brown died unexpectedly (in Italy) on June 14, 1974, at age 78.

 

TRACKLIST

 

 

  1. Variations on a theme of Corelli (Tartini-Kreisler) Block cylinder C200
  2. La Chasse in the style of Cartier (Kreisler) Block cylinder C211
  3. Andantino in the style of Martini (Kreisler) Block cylinder C207
  4. Liebesleid (Kreisler) Block cylinder C202
  5. Minuet in F, from Symphony No. 96 (Haydn-Burmester) Block cylinder C209
  6. Minuet No. 2 in G, 167, WoO 10 (Beethoven-Burmester) Block cylinder C212
  7. Vogel als Prophet, from Waldscenen, op. 82 (Schumann-Auer) Block cylinder C205
  8. Berceuse, op. 28, no. 3 (Juon) Block cylinder C210
  9. Capricietto (Mendelssohn) Josef Bonime (piano) Columbia A3766
  10. Cavatina (Raff) Maurice C. Rumsey (piano) Columbia A5904 48884
  11. Concerto in D minor (Wieniawski) Finale A la zingara L. T. Greenberg (piano) Columbia A6012 49271
  12. Elegie (Massenet) Maurice C. Rumsey (piano) Columbia A5904 48881
  13. Entr’acte gavotte (Thomas) Columbia A3766 80226
  14. Happy days (Strelezki) Hulda Lashanska (soprano) Columbia 79213 79213
  15. Humming (Breau-Henderson) Josef Bonine (piano) Columbia A 3399 79786
  16. Hymn to the sun (Rimsky-Korsakov) Columbia A3545 79174

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