Posts

Showing posts from June, 2024

Jelly D'Aranyi and the Schumann Violin Concerto

Image
When will the film industry wake up and make a biopic of the life of Jelly D'Aranyi?  She inspired some of the greatest violin music of the first third of the 20th century. Born in Budapest 1893, she died in Florence in 1966, but spent most of her life in Britain. Joseph Joachim was her great-uncle and Jenő Hubay her teacher. Bartók fell in love with her. The elderly Elgar adored her. Ravel’s virtuoso showpiece Tzigane is dedicated to her. Delius wrote his Double Concerto for her and her sister Adila. She worked with Pablo Casals, Dame Myra Hess and Sir Adrian Boult, among other musicians also as legendary as she was. A painting of her by Charles Geoffroy-Dechaume hangs in the National Portrait Gallery.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y0POrTYPT80 In March 1933, Baron Erik Kule Palmstierna – Sweden’s ambassador to London and an avid psychic researcher – was hosting a séance with his intimate circle of friends. Among them were two flamboyant musicians: the succulent...