I'm reading a biography of Pau Casals and I decided to share some small facts with the forum:
1. Julius Röntgen (cousin of the X ray Röntgen) tells Casals: "today I've received the telegram I was waiting for": The text says "Beethoven" and the signature "Grieg".
Casals asks: "What does it mean?"
Röntgen answers: "Means that I invited the Griegs to introduce them to you, and they accepted, because when we say "Beethoven" it means "splendid", "perfect".
2. November 1910, Casals' debut at the Gross Musik Verein Saal in Wien, he decided to play a concert by Emmanuel Moor because they were friends, and he feels overwhelmed by the history of the hall, the audience... so when he attacks the first note on the 4th string, the arch flies, tries to catch it in the air and falls in row number 6... and he is stunned because nobody says a word, the orchestra stops, and the people passes the arch row to row until the gentleman in the first row hands it to Casals.
At the end of the concert the audience ovationed Casals
Mendischewski, friend of Brahms tells to another man, a critic: "In the first Eroica, at Palace Lobkowitz, Beethoven had to stop the orchestra to restart and nobody made any comment.
1. Julius Röntgen (cousin of the X ray Röntgen) tells Casals: "today I've received the telegram I was waiting for": The text says "Beethoven" and the signature "Grieg".
Casals asks: "What does it mean?"
Röntgen answers: "Means that I invited the Griegs to introduce them to you, and they accepted, because when we say "Beethoven" it means "splendid", "perfect".
2. November 1910, Casals' debut at the Gross Musik Verein Saal in Wien, he decided to play a concert by Emmanuel Moor because they were friends, and he feels overwhelmed by the history of the hall, the audience... so when he attacks the first note on the 4th string, the arch flies, tries to catch it in the air and falls in row number 6... and he is stunned because nobody says a word, the orchestra stops, and the people passes the arch row to row until the gentleman in the first row hands it to Casals.
At the end of the concert the audience ovationed Casals
Mendischewski, friend of Brahms tells to another man, a critic: "In the first Eroica, at Palace Lobkowitz, Beethoven had to stop the orchestra to restart and nobody made any comment.
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