Josef Slavík
Josef Slavík was a Czech violin virtuoso and composer, who was expected by Viennese musical critics to become Paganini's successor after composing a supposedly unplayable Concerto in F-sharp minor and teaching himself to play Paganini's "La Campanella" after a single hearing.
Career
The first son of Barbora and Antonín Slavík, teacher and musician, who started to teach Josef violin in the age of four.Later on, he was a student of violin by Friedrich Wilhelm Pixis and music theory and composition by Friedrich Dionys Weber at the Prague Conservatory. Before leaving Prague, Slavík played his final concert. He went to Vienna in 1825 and became enjoyed critical success. He was then a young man of nineteen, but already technically superior to other violinists that had been heard in the Austrian capital. The celebrated Mayseder called him a "second Lipinski".
Frédéric Chopin who heard Slavík on several occasions described his skills as:
"With the exception of Paganini, I have never heard a player like him. Ninety-six staccatos in one bow! It is almost incredible! He plays like a second Paganini, but a rejuvenated one, who will perhaps in time surpass the first. Slavík fascinates the listener and brings tears into his eyes... he makes humans weep, more he makes tigers weep."
Franz Schubert composed two violin sonata-like pieces for Slavík and pianist Carl Maria von Bocklet: the Rondo in B minor, D 895, and the Fantasy in C major, D 934.
His last performance was in 1833 in Vienna, immediately prior to a scheduled tour to Hungary. He was suffering from influenza and played while ill. Shortly after arriving in Budapest, the fever came back and Slavik died, at the age of 27.
Works
- Variations in E major
- Violin Concerto No.1 in F-sharp minor
- "Caprice" in D major, for violin solo
- "Grand-Potpourri" in E major, for Violin and Orchestra
- "Rondino" for violin and piano
- Violin concerto No.2 in A minor
- Piano Polonese in D major
- Variations "Il Pirata" on the G-String for Violin and Piano