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"IT HAS BEEN BUTCHERED and malplayed by so many people, it's time
somebody pleaded the composer's case," declares violinist Vincent
Skowronski. "This is not a soccer match or a hockey game. It's a very
nice piece of music to play."
Skowronski is defending the honor and integrity of Felix Mendelssohn's
Violin Concerto in E minor. It's a popular work that is arguably played
too often, and in Skowronski's opinion, too early and too fast.

REFINED: Felix Mendelssohn
"When you're a student," he says, "after the Vivaldi A major, and after
one of the five Mozart concertos, you are immediately thrust upon the
shoulders of Mr. Mendelssohn. I think young violinists get this piece
way too early in their careers, because they approach it as their first
meaty concerto, the first thing Grandma would actually like to hear, and
they're taught to play it 'impressively,' at breakneck speed.
"Yet Mendelssohn was a very refined, erudite composer; he was not a
crasher and banger."
Skowronski became sensitized to the speed issue as a young man in New
York City. "I went to hear Ruggiero Ricci play the Mendelssohn Violin
Concerto because I had recently worked on it and Ricci was one of the
great virtuosos," he recalls. "It was so fast and so out of control I
thought Ricci had a plane to catch. From that time on, every time I
heard the Mendelssohn I paid attention to the speed the violinist would
take, and across the board, every violinst I've heard plays it way, way
too fast."
"In the 1950s, Ray Still was the principal oboist of the Chicago
Symphony. One day he had to complain to [conductor] Fritz Reiner, 'Can't
you talk to Mr. Heifetz and tell him it's almost impossible to double-
tongue at the speed he takes the last movement?' He couldn't double-
tongue that fast, and Ray Still was one of the fine, fine oboists."
"People just tear through that thing, and I don't think it's necessary at
all, not to mention that it's harmful."
The Concerto Refined
Skowronski asserts that the true character of the concerto reflects
Mendelssohn's own character and milieu.
"Mendelssohn came from a very well-to-do family. He was raised with
people like Goethe and the great thinkers of the time coming to visit,"
he says.
"He was refined. Even his physiognomy was refined. What he wrote was
refined. So why brutalize the concerto?"
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"Among violinists, if you like to
chop wood and want to play Mendelssohn, you have to compromise in
the middle and not beat the hell out of it."
"If you like to chop wood and you want to play Mendelssohn, you have to compromise in the middle and not beat the hell out of it."
Skowronski observes that the portion most subject to brutalization is
the first-movement cadenza. "If you ask your average man on the street,
what is a cadenza," he says, "nine out of ten will say it's a piece of a
concerto in which you can do anything you want. Well, it's not. In the
case of this concerto, the composer notated it himself and had a good
idea what he wanted from people. According to legend he was a hell of a
violinist, and he knew what he was doing.
"He starts off going up by arpeggios and ascending scales, always ending
on E-natural, so you have no mistake what key it's in. Then he gets to the
marvelous trill section, which everyone mistakenly thinks should be done
as fast as the last page of the Saint-Saens Rondo Capriccioso.
Mendelssohn has taken away all the 8th and 16th notes, and now he
writes only half-notes with trills."
"If you take the tempo you have established in the first part of the
cadenza and translate it to the half-note notation, the trill section
will not be as fast as people play it; they play it as if those were
eighth notes."
"After that, with the arpeggios and spiccato, speed is ridiculous,
because when the oboe comes in and states the theme, the theme would have
to be three times as fast as the beginning of the concerto. That simply
is not right."
"Milstein, when he came to the bariolage section leading up to the
recapitulation, took it so fast it was laughable. It was machine-gun
stuff. Any conductor should say it's not that fast, but you don't argue
with the likes of Heifetz and Milstein and those boys."
"So basically the piece gets faster and faster and you get to the point
where you can't play it."
Proper Tempo
Skowronski insists that the proper tempo relationships are specified in
the score for all to see.
"Where the trills begin," he says, "someone has written 'Tempo I.' I can
only assume that comes from the pen of Mendelssohn. It means you have to
go back to the beginning of the concerto, and what you took for a tempo
primo at that time. You must try to replicate that in this section."
"If you start the concerto like a bat out of hell, that's what you do
here. If you use a more sensible tempo at the beginning, you return to it
here."
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"No matter what, the trills will sound terribly slow. So if you write in
'poco a poco accelerando' or 'stringendo' to indicate, 'Look out, folks,
we're gonna have a beginning and middle and end to this section,' it
takes a marvelous shape, through many brief modulations."
"Finally you arrive at that high E-natural harmonic, which you hope you
can hold forever. After that, there are no tempo markings. So if you
have accomplished a dramatic accelerando to the finale of the trill
section, when the bariolage section starts you go back to Tempo I; by the
time you reach the oboe theme you're back to the tempo where you started
the whole thing."
Skowronski hesitates to recommend any recordings that demonstrate what
he's talking about. And although the concerto was once one of his
specialties, he doesn't play it anymore. "I want to remember how I did
it the way I wanted to do it when I did it," he says.
"Don't look to other violinists for good examples," he insists; "take your
inspiration from what Mendelssohn wrote in the score."

SKOWRONSKI says: "It's a victim of speed and
lack of refinement."
"It's a classy concerto, or it should be," he says. "Unfortunately, I
have rarely heard it in the classy vein; it's always at the virtuoso,
let's-beat-it-to-death, crash-crunch level. It's a victim of speed and
lack of refinement."
"To play this concerto the way Mendelssohn wrote it, you have to battle
the majority of violinists who just want to make fast notes, play in
tune, and convince people that this is all music should be."
Re: Mendelssohn's Cadenza to the Concerto in E Minor
When approaching this piece, it helps to remember that it is a work of refinement, not a race to the finish. Choose reasonable tempos and heed the composer's markings.
The first-movement cadenza is the section most often abused by overzealous players, according to Vincent Skowronski, so make sure to pay attention to the wishes of Mendelssohn that are notated in the music. The trill section will seem slow: focus on giving it shape. Skowronski suggests writing "poco a poco accelerando" or "stringendo" in this section to keep focused on giving it a beginning, middle, and end.
If you resist the impulse to speed through this work, you'll find at its heart much more than just a piece built to impress audiences with breakneck speed and spot-on intonation. Instead, you'll find yourself playing, as Skowronski attests, a very "classy" concerto. --Megan Westberg, Managing Editor, Strings Magazine
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