MAX BRUCH - “Scottish Fantasy“, Orchestra and Violin, Op. 46 - Heifetz/Sargent/New London Symphony

Max Bruch was born in Cologne into a musical family. His mother, a famous singer, taught him in his early years. He studied in Bonn and composed over 70 pieces of music between his nineth and fourteenth years, and he climaxed this achievement by winning a four-year scholarship to the Mozart Foundation in Frankfurt. He taught and played music as concertmaster in an orchestra for some years and then settled down to a life of composing, conducting, and occasional teaching. He spent ten years working on his G-minor violin concerto, and even after its première he made further revisions to it with much help from the famous violinist Joseph Joachim. When it was played in Liverpool, England, its success was overwhelming. Bruch was invited to conduct the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra for three years (1880 -- 1883). However, the orchestra members disliked the foreigner with the heavy German accent and the little oval spectacles; Bruch turned out to be a martinet, and they were relieved to see him leave. While i
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