Isolde Menges
Isolde Marie Menges (16 May 1893 – 13 January 1976) was an accomplished English violinist who was most active in the first part of the 20th century.
A native of Sussex, England, she became a student of Leopold Auer and Carl Flesch. She concertised widely, as soloist and with the Menges Quartet (founded by her in 1931) and Quintet, in locations such as Darmstadt (at 14 years of age), Liège, Wiesbaden, Amsterdam, The Hague, Rotterdam, and throughout England, Scotland, Canada and the United States.
Her Quartet gave a complete cycle of Beethoven quartets in Wigmore Hall in London in 1938, and another in Oxford.
She gave concerti with noted orchestras and conductors such as the New Queen's Hall Orchestra conducted by Henry J. Wood), and London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Bruno Walter, and the Royal Philharmonic Society. In 1916 she played the Brahms Violin Concerto and Édouard Lalo's Symphonie espagnole with Ernest Bloch.
While living with friends in Kelowna, Canada, during the winter and spring of 1918, Isolde Menges gave daily private lessons to child prodigy Isobel Murray, who later became one of British Columbia's leading violinists.
A major prize commemorates her at the Royal College of Music, where she taught.
Her younger brother was the composer and conductor (Siegfried Frederick) Herbert Menges.
Press notices
She generated considerable acclaim. For instance, the New York Times in 1917 called her "first rate".[1]
More specifically, notices included the following:
February 1913: Queen's Hall, Tchaikovsky V concerto: "...remarkable command of the bow and ... almost childish delight in displaying her mastery. Sometimes the conductor had to restrain her when she was on the point of making off with a passage at breakneck speed, and her phrasing was of the impulse kind which makes such frankly bravura music as this entertaining... [H]er tone was extraordinarily pure and her style clean and crisp... [In a Chopin nocturne] great beauty of cantabile quality, but she missed some of the daintiness of Kreisler's "Schoen Rosmarin" by taking it too fast"[2] And in this piece in April 1913: "... clean double-stopping, and ... brilliant manipulation of exacting passages... She.. succeeded in making the listener take a good deal of interest in it".[3]
May 24, 1913: Queen's Hall, Brahms V concerto: "[Although in the Tchaikovsky in February she showed] impulsiveness which bordered upon rashness... [now in the Brahms] her playing... was exceedingly careful of detail, and there was a very great beauty in her whole performance. She had evidently studied the work musically as well as technically, as the distinction of her phrasing showed... [but] she did not quite succeed in making clear.. the intricate development of the slow movement".[4]
1915: Aeolian Hall, London, Brahms sonata in D minor, acc. Hamilton Harty: ".. performance was an exceedingly well thought out one, in which the only disadvantage seemed to be a too meticulous care for the emphasis of certain rhythmic accents... [She] was at her best alike in the .. pieces of Kreisler and the .. chaconne by Vitali... In the former her great variety of bowing and her feeling for the effect of sharply contrasted rhythms... gave remarkable life to her playing. In the latter it was chiefly her splendid tone and the display of an accurate technique in high octave passages... which gave the feeling of complete assurance..."[5]
January 23, 1918: Kelowna Theatre, British Columbia: "..she gave a free performance to 350 school children, and had bidden them shut their eyes and hear the bees humming and dream dreams of an imagination known only to childhood... in her evening's programme were: "Devil's Trill," Tartini; "Nocturne in D," Chopin; "Gavotte," Ph. E. Bach; "Prophet Bird," Schumann-Auer; "Hornpipe," Handel-Harty; Andante and Rondo from "Symphonie Espagnole," Lalo; Pradulium and Allegra, Pugnani; "Le Plus que Lente," Debussy; "Pensee Capricieuse," Albert Sammons; "Liebesfreud," Kreisler; "Schön Rosmarin," Kreisler".[6]
1920: Wigmore Hall, Wieniawski concerto, Handel sonata: "The double stops and other ornaments are a model of neatness, and these are helped by a sensitive bow-hand".[7] On February 21, same venue: "... she seems to be absolutely happy when giving out the charming melody; she enjoys it and has the gift of conveying her enjoyment to her hearers".[8]
1923: Queen's Hall, Dvorak v concerto: "Miss Menges fully realized the warmth and passion of the Czech and the power of the fiddle to convey it"[9]
1926, Queen's Hall, Beethoven v concerto: "..capably played.. [but she] improved as the work proceeded. In the first movement her playing was rather cold and uninspired [with an] unimaginative performance by the orchestra.. However she warmed up to the lyrical dialogue in the second movement, and entered upon the third with a gusto..."[10]
Notable recordings
Handel
1923 Sonata in D. "...the best thing on the violin [in the 2nd quarter of 1923]... This is a glorious piece of playing...." [11]
Bach
1924 Chaconne, HMV D 875-6 [12]
Beethoven
1925 Kreuzer sonata; with Arthur De Greef
Concerto; with Royal Albert Hall Orchestra under Landon Ronald
Brahms
1929 2nd and 3rd sonatas; with Harold Samuel
Schubert
1928 Sonata (Sonatina) for Violin and Piano in G minor, D408; with Arthur de Greef
References
- accessed on 19.5.2008
- accessed on 19.5.2008
- accessed on 20.5.2008
- accessed on 20.5.2008
- accessed on 20.5.2008
- ↑ New York Times, May 6, 1917
- ↑ The Times, Wednesday, Feb 05, 1913; pg. 8
- ↑ The Times, Thursday, Apr 24, 1913; pg. 8
- ↑ The Times, Saturday, May 24, 1913; pg. 42
- ↑ The Times, Wednesday, Apr 21, 1915; pg. 11
- ↑ Kelowna Courier and Okanagan Orchardist, Thursday, Jan 24, 1918; pg. 4
- ↑ The Times, Monday, Feb 09, 1920; pg. 12
- ↑ The Times, Saturday, Feb 21, 1920; pg. 12
- ↑ The Times, Monday, Sep 24, 1923; pg. 10
- ↑ The Times, Saturday, Sep 25, 1926; pg. 12
- ↑ Gramophone, August 1923, p51
- ↑ http://satyr78lp.blogspot.com.au/2010/09/isolde-menges-bach-chaconne-1924.html
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