Hilary Hahn explores her heritage with violin works by Belgian composer Eugene Ysaye

Published: July 12, 2023, 7 a.m.

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Hilary Hahn - Eug\\xe8ne Ysa\\xffe:\\xa0Six Sonatas for Violin (Deutsche Grammophon)






New Classical Tracks - Hilary Hahn


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\\u201cThis was my grand homage. And I really put so much love and time and energy and respect into the recording,\\u201d violinist Hilary Hahn says. \\u201cI really wanted to focus on that aspect, almost like giving a gift to a relative on their birthday. This is my gift to my musical grandfather on his hundredth birthday.\\u201d


Hahn is talking about her new recording featuring the violin sonatas of Belgian violinist and composer Eug\\xe8ne Ysa\\xffe.\\xa0He composed these masterpieces 100 years ago this month.\\xa0Each one was dedicated to a top violinist of the day.


\\u201cI am one generation removed from him musically. He was born in the 1850s. I was born in 1979, but my teacher was born in 1907 and studied with him. So there was something about listening to him, listening to the early recordings of his I when I hadn\'t heard them for a while, that was very surprising for me.


\\u201cI have spent most of my career trying to get closer to my own way of playing, my own sense of expression and my own sense of freedom within the instrument. And I realized that instead of getting closer to myself as an individual, I\'ve gotten closer to myself as part of a long history. Because when I heard Ysa\\xffe, it was like opening a box in your grandparents attic and looking at a photo of an ancestor. But it is also like looking in the mirror, because they might be wearing different clothing but there\'s something about them that\'s just like you.


\\u201cWhile listening to his recordings, I realized there is musical DNA. Somehow, deep in my soul, I have internalized a set of values in my playing that I must have inherited.


\\u201cYsa\\xffe also wanted to lift up some incredible violinists of his day, and he dedicated these sonatas to several of those. I don\'t know if it\'s obvious to the listener or the performer, but the deeper you get into the pieces, the more you realize it\'s customized for different players. The feeling of playing the instrument is different in each piece, and it\'s a bit of an insight into what it must have felt like to be that person. Also, there are lots of hidden messages in these pieces that were never written down in the music. So it\'s kind of a little game of Clue.


\\u201cA very good example of that is the beginning of the Sonata No. 2, Obsession, which was dedicated to a violinist who played fast but also practiced in a very fragmented way. So he would kind of start with one thing and quickly work on a phrase of something else and go back to the other thing. A sort of free-flowing mentality is in practice that Ysa\\xffe brings that into his writing for that particular violinist.\\u201d


You said listening back to yourself playing these pieces gave you goose bumps. What were you hearing that caused that?


\\u201cI think the most goose bumpy thing for me was just listening to Ysa\\xffe\\u2019s own playing and then getting as close as I wanted to these pieces in a total immersion studio situation. Listening to the playback and drawing these connections back to the past, but also knowing that what I do now is very much geared toward the future. And so that feeling of inheriting this sense of mission, of passing things on from the past to the future generations.\\u201d





To hear the rest of my conversation, click on the extended interview above, or\\xa0download the extended podcast on iTunes\\xa0or wherever you get your podcasts.


Resources


Hilary Hahn - Eug\\xe8ne Ysa\\xffe:\\xa0Six Sonatas for Violin (Deutsche Grammophon)


Hilary Hahn - Eug\\xe8ne Ysa\\xffe:\\xa0Six Sonatas for Violin (Amazon)

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