Arma Senkrah (Anna
Loretta Harkness) was an American violinist born (in Williamson, New York) on
June 6, 1864. She had an extraordinary
but very short career (1882-1888) and, as did Patricia Travers much later,
stopped playing and dropped out of sight altogether quite suddenly. Nevertheless, a 1750 G.B. Guadagnini violin (which
Isaac Stern owned and played for more than fifty years) is named after her and
that alone will ensure she is forever remembered. If not for that, then there are also very
famous photos of her and Franz Liszt playing together. In fact, she participated in duo recitals
with several of Liszt’s pupils on several occasions. Her career was spent entirely in Europe. According to almost all sources, her life
ended tragically in Weimar, Germany. Her
mother was her first violin (and piano) teacher. At age 9, she went to Europe with her in
order to pursue more advanced instruction.
(At that time, the U.S. had not yet established a solid framework of
advanced music schools which Americans could rely on to further their
education. The very few American
orchestras then in existence were made up almost entirely of European
musicians.) Between 1873 and 1875,
Senkrah studied in Leipzig with Arno Hilf and, in Brussels, with Henryk
Wieniawski. It is not clear whether
Senkrah was actually enrolled as a student at the Leipzig Conservatory (where
Hilf was a teacher) or the Brussels Conservatory where Wieniawski taught. It is far more likely that, due to her young
age, she studied privately with both teachers.
She is also said to have studied with Henri Vieuxtemps – Vieuxtemps was
teaching at the Brussels Conservatory at the time. From 1875 to 1881, she studied at the Paris
Conservatory with Joseph Lambert Massart and received a first prize in
1881. She was 17 years old. She began almost immediately to concertize
all over Europe, still using her birth name - Harkness. On November 25, 1882, she made her London
debut at the Crystal Palace, playing Vieuxtemps’ fourth concerto, the one in d
minor. The reviewers praised her
highly. It was written that the concerto
was “wonderfully interpreted,” that her tone “was clear and soulful,” and that
“her mastery of the technical possibilities of her instrument left nothing to
be desired.” Wherever she played, the
reviews were just as enthusiastic, if not more.
In Germany, she achieved even greater success. It may have been in the autumn of 1883 that,
at the urging of her German agent, she changed her name to Senkrah. On December 28, 1883, she played the
Mendelssohn concerto at a new theatre in Leipzig. On January 3, 1884 she played at the
Gewandhaus (Leipzig.) And so it went. She was compared to Italian violinist Teresina
Tua who was touring England and Germany at about the same time. Some reviewers made it a point to mention
that Senkrah was Tua’s equal in technique but not in good looks. Ironically, Tua and Senkrah both stopped
playing publicly at about the same time.
On September 30, 1884, she made her debut with the Berlin Philharmonic
with the Vieuxtemps d minor concerto. On
November 13, 1884, she again played with the same orchestra, this time playing
the Wieniawski concerto in d minor. A
critic in 1885 mentioned that she overcame any difficulty “with the greatest of
ease.” In the summer of that year, she
met Franz Liszt. She was welcomed into
his circle of friends and professional colleagues. She was 21 years old. Senkrah and Liszt played Beethoven’s Kreutzer
Sonata (and some of Liszt’s music transcribed for violin and piano) on July 20,
1885. I do not know whether it was a
private or public recital. Several
sources say that Liszt was very fond of her and that they gave many public
concerts together. Her handling of the
violin was then described as “incomparable.”
She also undertook several tours of Austria and Hungary with pupils of
Franz Liszt. In 1886, she was in Russia
and met Tchaikovsky. In 1888, she was
appointed chamber virtuoso to the court of the Grand Duke (Charles Alexander
Augustus John) of Saxony. Karl Halir was the concertmaster of the Grand Ducal Court Orchestra (in Weimar) at the time. On September
5, 1900, the New York Times reported that Arma Senkrah had committed suicide
the previous day. Another source gives
the date of her suicide as September 3.
She was 36 years old. Be that as
it may, it was accepted as fact that she had indeed committed suicide with a
pistol, although it was never confirmed.
In the autumn of 1888, she had met and soon after married a Weimar
attorney surnamed Hofmann (or Hoffman) – nobody seems to know his first name. She had henceforth not played in public. Some sources say her brief marriage was happy
but that she suffered from a disorder of the brain which supposedly rendered
her emotionally unstable. Other sources
say her marriage was unhappy because she suspected her husband of infidelity
and was chronically and hysterically jealous, which eventually resulted in her
ending her life in despair. One source
states that she shot herself through the heart.
Whether it might be true that her husband at one time was infatuated
with an actress is anyone’s guess. One
source claims that to be the case. Senkrah
owned a 1685 Stradivarius violin which bears her name. I do not know who owns it now. She also played the previously-mentioned
Guadagnini. Her mother was forced to
sell both instruments (and perhaps others) when she later became
destitute.
Showing posts with label Arma Senkrah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arma Senkrah. Show all posts
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Teresina Tua
Teresina Tua (Maria Felicita Tua, aka Maddalena Maria Teresa Tua) was an Italian violinist born (in Turin) on May 22, 1867. Her date of birth is somewhat vague – she may also have been born on April 23, 1866. For a time, she was called the “violin fairy” for her angelic face and good looks. However, her fame did not last into the twentieth century. She studied at the Paris Conservatory with Joseph Lambert Massart, taking a first prize in violin at the age of thirteen. In 1882, she toured Germany. She played in London, England for the first time on May 5, 1883. It has been said that in Europe, everywhere she played, she created a sensation. She very successfully toured all of Europe and Russia. One source states that in Russia, in the fall of 1885, her accompanist was none other than Sergei Rachmaninoff. He was not impressed with her playing but shared the stage with her for three months. Stating that she did not play particularly well, he went on to say that "as an artist, she is not serious, but she has talent." Soon after touring the U.S. – in 1887 – she gave up her public stage life altogether. A review of one of her performances in New York (New York Times, October 18, 1887) was fairly typical of the reception she received in this country. After her debut performance in New York on October 17, 1887, the reviewer pointed out (among other shortcomings) that “Her enunciation of rapid passages is often unfinished and at times absolutely unintelligible, and her double stopping is frequently distressing to the acute ear.” The reviewer also noted that Tua seemed to want to beguile her listeners with her looks rather than with her playing. After she returned to Europe, Tua seemed to gradually lose interest in concertizing further but devoted some of her time to teaching. It also didn’t help that in 1889, she married a wealthy member of the nobility – Giuseppe Franchi Verney. When he died, she married another aristocrat – Emilio Quadrigo. Her economic incentive to keep playing– if there had ever been one – was thus destroyed. A similar thing happened to Johanna Martzy. Another now-obscure violinist (and Tua's contemporary), Arma Senkrah, also gave up playing in public after marrying an attorney in Weimar. Senkrah's ultimate fate, however, was very dissimilar. According to a usually reliable source, from 1885 until about 1935, Tua played a Stradivarius constructed in 1708. From 1909 forward, she owned and played a 1709 Stradivarius – now in a museum in Turin – given to her by a British friend and patron (Ludwig Mond) via his will. In 1940, she entered a convent and was obliged to give this violin up. She was 74 years old. Tua died on October 29, 1956, at age 90, largely forgotten.
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Longevity
I have been curious lately about the longevity - life span - of concert violinists. It seems most of them age rather well and die in old age. Some have died young, of course, but, among the ones I surveyed here, half reached 80 years of age or more and the other half at least reached age 72. I did a random check of twenty violinists born in the Twentieth Century (on this blog) and found the average age at death was 81. The one lasting the longest died at age 99. Curiously, among female concert violinists, a great number of them (comparatively) died young. The ratio is, of course, skewed because, over time, there have been fewer women violinists than men. Katya Tsukanova died at 17, Ginette Neveu died at 30; Arma Senkrah died at 36; Alma Rose' at 37; Eda Kersey at 40; Jitka Suranska at 40; Edith Volkaert at 42; Alma Moodie at 44; Maud Powell at 52; Ida Levin at 53; Johanna Martzy at 54; and Camilla Urso at age 59. With time, that disproportion will correct itself since there appear to now be more female concert violinists than male. Among the men who have died young are: Josef Hassid (26), Gregory Cardi (28), Eitan Silkoff (29), Nico Richter (29), Julian Sitkovetsky (32), Francois Prume (33), Ottokar Novacek (33), Ossy Renardy (33), Dmitri Kogan (38), Noel Pointer (39), Michael Rabin (40), Lucien Martin (42), Ferenc Vecsey (42), Andrei Korsakov (44), Henryk Wieniawski (44), Benjamin Godard (45), Tor Aulin (47), Joseph Ghys (47), Paul Kochanski (47), Carl Rosa (47), Christian Ferras (49), Karl Halir (50), Philippe Hirschhorn (50), Alfred Dubois (50), Chevalier De Saint George (53), Nicolai Berezowsky (53), Lucien Capet (55), Joseph Achron (56), Eddie South (57), Stuff Smith (58), Desmond Bradley (58), Leonid Kogan (58), Nicolo Paganini (58), Julian Olevsky (59), Grigoras Dinicu (59), and Vasa Prihoda (59). On the other hand, Olga Rudge lived to age 100 and Roman Totenberg to age 101.
Friday, December 9, 2011
Patricia Travers
Patricia Travers was an American violinist and actress born (in Clifton, New Jersey) on December 5, 1927. She is known for having given up her professional career entirely and dropping from sight in 1951, still in her early twenties. She is also known for having owned the Tom Taylor Stradivarius (1732), the violin Joshua Bell used to play. That violin was sold to a collector in 1954, three years after she retired. It is now being played by Mark Steinberg, first violinist of the Brentano Quartet. She also played a 1733 Guarneri violin. Travers died only recently. She began studying the violin before the age of 4. Her teachers were Jacques Gordon (concertmaster of the Chicago Symphony for almost a decade and teacher at the Eastman School of Music) and Hans Letz (pupil of Joseph Joachim and concertmaster of the Theodore Thomas Orchestra for a time. Letz believed, as did Bronislaw Huberman and Frans Bruggen, that Rhythm was the most important element in music. He also taught at Juilliard.) A single source says that Travers also attended the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia. Her first public performance was at age 6. She gave her first Carnegie Hall recital in 1938, at age 9. She appeared with the New York Philharmonic on July 6, 1939, playing Lalo’s Symphonie Espagnol. She was 11 years old. Two years later, she appeared in the movie There’s Magic In Music (1941.) Here is a YouTube video showing her playing in the movie. Finnish violinist Heimo Haitto also took part in that movie - he was 18 years old at the time. Travers had a very promising and active career going and played with most major American and European orchestras from age 10 onward, including the orchestras of Chicago, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Boston, London and Berlin. She also recorded several discs, one of them being the first recording of Charles Ives’ second violin sonata. Joan Field had been the first to record the first Ives violin sonata. People have taken wild guesses as to why Travers suddenly stopped playing. She did not suffer a nervous breakdown as did Josef Hassid. It is not an easy thing to stop doing something one truly enjoys. If she had felt fulfilled, successful, or happy as a performer, she would not have stopped playing. Approval from her audiences and critics would have been enough to keep her going. An early article (1939) in a music journal stated the following: “We feel sure that the prophecy that Patricia Travers is to become known as one of the great women violinists will be fully realized.” Toward the end, after a performance in Boston (1951), a critic wrote “…she is not yet either a brilliant technician or a compelling interpreter.” What may have contributed to her decision to stop was that the economic motive to keep working was not there – she came from a well-to-do family. It’s the old push-pull theory at work - in order for a person to move forward, there must be a push from within and a pull from without. Some sources say she devoted the last six decades of her life to helping run her family’s business interests – similar to what Iso Briselli did, except he stopped playing much later in life. As far as I know, she never had any students. Patricia Travers died on February 9, 2010, at age 82.
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