Eda Kersey was an English violinist and teacher born
(in Goodmayes, a district of London) on May 15, 1904. She was a very accomplished musician whose
career was mostly spent in England. She
was also one of quite a few female violinists who died young – Maud Powell, Johanna
Martzy, Ginette Neveu, Edith Volkaert, Alma Rose, Alma Moodie, and Arma Senkrah
are among them. Several sources speak
very highly of her and emphasize that she would have left a great legacy if
only she had lived long enough to record the great works of the violin
repertoire. She is also known to have
stated that practicing seven hours a day (which she routinely did) should be
sufficient for any violinist. Her
musical education began on the piano at age four. She took up the violin at age six when she actually
began studying at the Trinity College of Music in London. Two years later, she was awarded a
certificate from the college with very high marks. She was eight years old. After that, she began studying with Edgar
Mouncher (a pupil of Otakar Sevcik.) After
only two years, at age ten, she played Wieniawski’s second concerto (first
movement only) in Southampton, a city which is 65 miles from London. That concert (in 1915) was a great
success. At age 13, she moved to London
to live with an aunt and uncle in London and began studying with Margaret
Holloway, a pupil of Leopold Auer. Her
first London recital took place three years later at the Aeolian Hall when she
was sixteen years old. (New York City
also had its own Aeolian Hall.) Along
the way, she premiered the concertos of Arnold Bax, Erno Dohnanyi, and Stanley
Wilson, as well as works by other contemporary composers. She also gave the first English performance
of the Barber concerto at a Proms concert in 1943. Her first Proms concert had been in 1930
playing the Beethoven concerto with the famous Henry Wood conducting. She was 26 years old. That performance was the first of several
appearances she made at the popular Proms concerts. In 1931, she formed a piano trio which was
simply named The Trio Players. Her last
concert took place in June, 1944, at the Albert Hall in London. Kersey played a Nicolo Amati, a J.B.
Vuillaume, and a Guarnerius del Gesu (which she acquired from Belgian violinist
Alfred De Reyghere in 1942), among other violins. Eda Kersey died on July 13, 1944, at age 40. Negotiations for many recordings of the
standard repertoire had nearly been concluded before her sudden death but she
never got to actually record anything other than some small pieces (with piano
accompaniment) and the Bax concerto (with orchestral accompaniment) several
months earlier.
On September 10, 1940, Kersey was scheduled to play the Mendelssohn concerto in e minor at a Proms concert but the concert was cancelled due to intensive German air raids over London.
ReplyDeleteOn July 25, 1944, Kersey was again scheduled to play the Mendelssohn concerto at a Proms concert but the concert was cancelled due to "flying bombs" - probably V-2 rockets hurled from Germany.
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