This is a list of works associated with the left-handed Austrian pianist Paul Wittgenstein.
These works were either:
- arranged for left hand by him (A)
- commissioned by him (C)
- dedicated to him or written with him in mind (D), or
- premiered by him (P).
Composer | Work | Legend | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Johann Sebastian Bach |
|
A | Wittgenstein arranged only the piano part of the Violin Sonata movement |
Bach-Gounod | A | ||
Ludwig van Beethoven |
|
A | |
Sergei Bortkiewicz |
|
DP | Premiered 11 January 1929.[1] It draws on material from Bortkiewicz's first attempt at a piano concerto.[2] |
Johannes Brahms |
|
A | Wittgenstein arranged only the piano part of the song |
Rudolf Braun |
|
DP | Premiered 31 October 1927.[1] |
|
D | Composed 1922, pub 1928.[3] | |
Benjamin Britten | DP | Originally called Concert Variations; premiered 17 January 1942.[1] | |
Frédéric Chopin |
|
A | |
Norman Demuth |
|
D | |
Hans Gál |
|
DP | Premiered 1928.[2] |
Leopold Godowsky |
|
D | Written for Wittgenstein, but he never played it so Godowsky rededicated it to Simon Barere.[2] |
Edvard Grieg |
|
A | |
Ernst Haberbier |
|
A | |
Joseph Haydn |
|
A | |
Adolf von Henselt |
|
A | |
Josef Herz |
|
D | |
Paul Hindemith |
|
CD | Wittgenstein did not understand the work and refused to play it. He kept the score, but never spoke of it, and it was believed lost. It was discovered in his papers after his widow's death in 2002.[2] It had its world premiere in Berlin in 2004, with Leon Fleisher and the Berlin Philharmonic; the U.S. premiere was on 2 October 2005, with Fleisher and the San Francisco Symphony, under Herbert Blomstedt.[4] |
Alexis Holländer (1840–1924) |
|
D | |
Leonard Kastle |
|
D | |
Erich Wolfgang Korngold |
|
CDP | Wittgenstein was given lifelong exclusive rights to play the concerto; first performed 22 September 1924,[2] the composer conducting.[1] The UK premiere was in 1985, with Gary Graffman.[2] |
|
CDP | First performance in Vienna on 21 October 1930 by Wittgenstein with members of the Rosé Quartet. | |
Josef Labor |
|
DP | Written when Wittgenstein was a prisoner of war in Omsk, Siberia, Russia. This was the work with which he made his return to the concert platform in Vienna, as a one-armed pianist.[2] |
|
D | ||
|
DP | Premiered 9 January 1917.[2] | |
|
DP | Premiered 26 October 1936.[2] | |
|
D | ||
|
D | ||
|
DP | Premiered 25 January 1932.[2] | |
|
D | ||
|
D | ||
|
D | Unfinished.[2] | |
|
DP | Premiered 18 March 1932.[2] | |
Felix Mendelssohn |
|
A | |
Giacomo Meyerbeer |
|
A | |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | A | ||
Sergei Prokofiev |
|
CD | He did not understand the work, and would not play it until such time as he did - but that never eventuated. The premiere was on 5 September 1956, played by Siegfried Rapp, a German pianist who had lost his right arm during World War II.[2] |
Giacomo Puccini |
|
A | |
Maurice Ravel |
|
CDP | He gave the premiere on 5 January 1932, with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra under Robert Heger. The dedication was reassigned after Wittgenstein's sole performing rights expired in 1943.[1] |
Felix Rosenthal (1867–1936) |
|
D | Found in his papers after his death. |
Moriz Rosenthal |
|
D | |
D | The score is signed and inscribed: Paul Wittgenstein in Bewunderung zugeeignet von Moritz Rosenthal (Dedicated to Paul Wittgenstein in admiration by Moritz Rosenthal). | ||
|
D | Autograph manuscript of an untitled work. Extensively annotated by Wittgenstein. | |
Anton Rubinstein |
|
A | |
Franz Schmidt |
|
DP | Premiered Vienna 2 February 1924.[1] |
|
DP | Premiered 1927. | |
|
DP | Premiered 1933. | |
|
DP | Premiered Vienna 10 February 1935.[1] | |
|
D | Premiered 1939 by Friedrich Wührer. The finale is a set of variations on a theme by Josef Labor, and Wittgenstein often performed this lengthy movement as an independent piece.[2] | |
|
D | ||
Franz Schubert trans. Franz Liszt |
|
A | |
Robert Schumann |
|
A | |
Eduard Schütt |
|
P | Premiered February 1925, Musikvereinsaal, Vienna[5] |
|
DP | Premiered 27 June 1929.[1][2] | |
Johann Strauss II |
|
A | |
Richard Strauss |
|
D | |
|
DP | It was written with him in mind and he gave the first performance, but it was not formally dedicated to him.[1] | |
|
D | ||
Alexandre Tansman | D | ||
Richard Wagner |
|
A | |
Wagner trans. Liszt |
|
A | |
Ernest Walker |
|
D | |
|
D | ||
|
D | ||
Karl Weigl |
|
D | |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Donald L. Patterson, One-handed
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Hans Brofeldt: Piano Music for the Left Hand Alone
- ↑ IMSLP: Braun (Three Piano Pieces for the Left Hand)
- ↑ Rowe, Georgia (8 October 2005). "Paul Hindemith's Piano Concerto for the Left Hand, Rejected by Its Dedicatee, Gets Its Belated US Premiere". Contra Costa Times. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
- ↑ Alexander Waugh, The House of Wittgenstein: A Family at War, 2008, ch.47 'Russia and Ravel'
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.