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Fritz Kreisler
Born: 1875   Died: 1962   Country: Austria   Period: 20th Century
Violinist Fritz Kreisler was one of the most beloved and best known of early recording era musicians. His burnished tone and patrician phrasing were quintessentially Viennese, and the warmth of his playing won him devoted followers wherever he appeared. So great was his fame and the affection in which he was held that he survived a blaze of controversy when he revealed in 1935 that many of the short pieces he had performed as transcriptions of ...
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There are 425 recordings available. Select a specific Work or Most Popular Work below.
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Featured Fritz Kreisler CDs & DVDs:
A Tribute To Fritz Kreisler
Release Date: 01/17/2012   Label: Deutsche Grammophon   Catalog: 001637702   Number of Discs: 2
CD  $16.99
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Most Popular Works
Liebesfreud (121)
Liebesleid (188)
Caprice viennois, Op. 2 (82)
Tambourin chinois, Op. 3 (65)
Schön Rosmarin (104)
Works
Allegretto in the style of Boccherini (14)
Andante cantabile for Violin and Piano [after Tchaikovsky's String Quartet no 1, Op. 11] (1)
Andantino in the style of Martini (7)
Apple Blossoms: Miniature Viennese March (30)
Apple Blossoms: Syncopation (23)
Apple Blossoms: Who can tell? (1)
Aubade provençale in the style of Couperin (6)
Aucassin et Nicolette (7)
Austrian Imperial Hymn (1)
Berceuse romantique, Op. 9 (8)
Cadenza for Tartini's "Devil's Trill" Sonata (2)
Caprice for Violin and Piano in A minor [after Wieniawski] (2)
Caprice viennois, Op. 2 (87)
Cavatina (2)
Chanson arabe for Violin and Piano [after Rimsky-Korsakov's Scheherazade] (1)
Chanson Louis XIII and Pavane in the style of Dittersdorf (2)
Chanson Louis XIII in the style of Couperin (13)
Chant hindou (1)
Concerto in the style of Vivaldi (3)
Danse espagnole for Violin and Piano [after Falla's "La vida breve"] (1)
Danse espagnole for Violin and Piano [after Granados, Op. 37 no 5] (1)
Dragonfly (1)
Fugue in the style of Tartini (3)
Grave in the style of WF Bach (6)
Gypsy Caprice (15)
Humoresque for Violin and Piano [after Dvorák, Op. 101 no 7] (1)
Hungarian Dance after Brahms (2)
Hymn to the Sun (1)
Indian Lament (2)
La chasse in the style of Cartier (11)
La Gitana (47)
La Précieuse in the style of Couperin (20)
Liebesfreud (129)
Liebesleid (201)
Londonderry Air (7)
Lotus Land (1)
Malaguena in the style of Granados (1)
March of the Toy Soldiers (13)
May Breezes [after Mendelssohn] (2)
Melody for Violin and Piano [after Paderewski, Op. 16 no 2] (1)
Melody in the Style of Gluck (3)
Menuet in the style of Porpora (11)
Midnight Bells [after Heuberger] (13)
Molly on the Shore [after Grainger] (1)
Old folks at home (1)
Old Viennese Dances (3) (3)
Petite valse (1)
Polchinelle (18)
Poupée Valsante (6)
Praeludium and Allegro in the style of Pugnani (51)
Praeludium and Allegro in the style of Pugnani: Praeludium (1)
Preghiera in the style of Martini (3)
Quartet for Strings in A minor (3)
Quartet for Strings in A minor: Fantasia (1)
Quartet for Strings in A minor: Finale (1)
Quartet for Strings in A minor: Scherzo (2)
Recitativo and Scherzo-Caprice for Violin solo, Op. 6 (31)
Romanze, Op. 4 (4)
Rondino on a theme by Beethoven (34)
Rondo for Violin and Piano (transcription from Mozart's Haffner Serenade, K. 248b [K. 250]) (2)
Sarabande and Allegretto after Corelli (2)
Scherzo in the style of Dittersdorf (8)
Schön Rosmarin (110)
Sérénade espagnole for Violin and Piano [after Chaminade] (1)
Sérénade espagnole for Violin and Piano [after Glazunov, Op. 20 no 2] (2)
Serenade for violin & piano (transcription from Lehár's Frasquita) (3)
Shepherd's Madrigal (2)
Sicilienne and Rigaudon in the style of Francoeur (18)
Sissy: Ich glaube, das Glück hält mich heuteim Arm (1)
Sissy: Ich mache oft die Augen zu...Ich wär' so gern' einmal verliebt (1)
Sissy: Nimm von der Welt, was dir nur gefällt (1)
Slavonic Dances (3) for Violin and Piano: no 1 in G minor (3)
Slavonic Dances (3) for Violin and Piano: no 2 in E minor (2)
Slavonic Dances (3) for Violin and Piano: no 3 in G major (3)
Slavonic Fantasie (2)
Spanischer Tanz (7)
Tambourin by Leclair (1)
Tambourin chinois, Op. 3 (70)
Tambourin chinois, Op. 3: Excerpt(s) (1)
Tambourin for violin & piano (transcription from Rameau's Les Fêtes d'Hébé) (1)
Tango (3)
Tempo di Menuetto in the style of Pugnani (18)
The Devil's Trill, for violin & piano (transcription of Tartini's Sonata) (1)
The King steps out: Stars in my eyes (6)
The Old Refrain (24)
The Rosary, for violin & piano (after Etherbert Nevin) (1)
Variations on a theme of Corelli (12)
Variations on a Theme of Corelli, for violin & piano (1)
Viennese Rapsodic Fantasietta (10)
Work(s) (1)
More Featured Fritz Kreisler CDs & DVDs:
Kreisler, Zimbalist, Ysaye / Fine Arts Quartet
Release Date: 01/31/2012   Label: Naxos   Catalog: 8572559   Number of Discs: 1
CD  $8.99
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Arturo Delmoni - Ysaye, Kreisler, Bach: Solo Violin Works
Release Date: 08/01/1996   Label: John Marks Records   Catalog: 14   Number of Discs: 1
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$12.99
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Szeryng Plays Kreisler And Other Treasures / Charles Reiner
Release Date: 04/25/1995   Label: Mercury Living Presence   Catalog: 434351   Number of Discs: 1
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Fritz Kreisler - Original Compositions & Arrangements
Release Date: 09/13/2005   Label: Emi Great Recordings Of The Century   Catalog: 76841   Number of Discs: 1
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Biography by Erik Eriksson
Violinist Fritz Kreisler was one of the most beloved and best known of early recording era musicians. His burnished tone and patrician phrasing were quintessentially Viennese, and the warmth of his playing won him devoted followers wherever he appeared. So great was his fame and the affection in which he was held that he survived a blaze of controversy when he revealed in 1935 that many of the short pieces he had performed as transcriptions of such composers as Couperin, Vivaldi, and Pugnani were, in fact, his own work. While the critics fumed, the public expressed little concern and continued to pack his concert appearances.

Kreisler was the son of a famous surgeon, a good amateur musician who gave young Fritz his first violin lessons. Kreisler made his public debut at seven in a collection of short works. Shortly thereafter, he was permitted to enter the Vienna Conservatory despite a policy that no one younger than 14 be accepted. After three years of study with Joseph Hellmesberger, he was awarded a gold medal.

Kreisler was sent to Paris for further studies with Delibes and Massart. At the age of 12, he won the Premier Grand Prix de Rome gold medal competing against 40 other players, all of whom were at least 20 years of age.

In 1888, Kreisler sailed to the United States for a concert tour with pianist Moriz Rosenthal, earning many complimentary reviews. When he returned to Vienna, he applied to the Vienna Philharmonic for a position but was turned down. Feeling discouraged, he resolved to abandon music and chose to pursue a career in medicine. After several years, he rejected that course and began the study of painting. First in Paris, then in Rome, he worked toward mastering his technique, but soon this, too, became tiresome. He returned to Vienna and enlisted in the army.

A full year as a soldier was sufficient to cause yet more rethinking and Kreisler resigned his commission and returned to the study of violin. He spent eight weeks in country solitude readying himself for his return to the concert stage. His "second debut" in Berlin was successful, but widespread acclaim came during several American tours between 1901 and 1903. In the United States, he was hailed as one of the foremost violinists of his time and, soon after, Europe followed suit in recognizing his extraordinary artistry.

In 1910 in London, Kreisler gave the premiere performance of Elgar's Violin Concerto, a work dedicated to him.

While vacationing in Switzerland in 1914, Kreisler received the news that Austria was at war. Returning to his native country, he rejoined his former division, now stationed in Galicia. An attack by the Russians resulted in an injury and his discharge with high honors. Wishing to help his country, Kreisler embarked on a lengthy concert tour of America. The United States' entry into the war, however, put him in the awkward position of being an ex-Austrian officer aiding what was now an enemy nation. Negative reaction obliged him to withdraw from concertizing and retire to Maine to pass the remaining period of hostilities.

At his return to the New York concert stage in 1919, however, he was given a tumultuous reception. He took up residence in Berlin for ten years beginning in 1924. With the Anschluss in 1938, he moved to France, but returned to the United States before the Nazi invasion and lived his remaining years in America, where he gave his final public concert in 1947. He continued to perform on broadcasts until 1950.
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