Album: Favourite Requests for Violin (Walter Mony, Violin; Anna Bender, Piano

Walter Mony (1929-2009)

Walter Mony was a violinist, violist, conductor, and music lecturer. He was born in Canada, had his first music lessons there, and then studied in the United States and London, England. He studied under several top violinists including, Albert Sammons, Max Rostal, and Henryk Szeryng. When he was in his 20s, Walter was the Assistant Principal (assistant concertmaster) of the London Symphony, and also a member of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under Sir Thomas Beecham. Walter was a member of the internationally famous Nederburg Harp Trio with which he made many recordings on major record labels. Walter also made many chamber music recordings and recordings as violin soloist with orchestras, including recordings of contemporary music written especially for him. He moved to South Africa and became Head of Music at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. Apart from his regular teaching, for many years Walter taught music to poor African children in South African Townships for free, even lending them his expensive violin bows and violins to play on (not knowing if he would ever get them back). In 2005, Walter Mony moved to Victoria BC, Canada and became the Head of Strings at the Victoria Conservatory of Music where he taught students of all levels, including students in the post-secondary Music Diploma Program. I was privileged to be one of his students from September 2006 to December 2008 for the first two years of my Bachelor of Music majoring in violin performance and teaching. Walter Mony passed away in January 2009.

Anna Bender (1919-2004)

Anna Bender had a remarkable career of over 60 years as a pianist in South Africa during the late 20th Century. She performed and made recordings with some of the world’s most famous musicians between the years 1950 and 1970. Anna travelled all over South Africa and former Rhodesia working as an accompanist. She also did a solo piano recital in Prague in 1992. Anna received a Fellowship from Trinity College of Music in London for solo piano. She got a degree in Cultural History from the University of Pretoria and published five volumes of Afrikaans Art Songs. Anna Bender passed away in 2004.

Here are two pieces from an album that Walter Mony and Anna Bender recorded together called, Favourite Requests for Violin. The album was released in 1960. The links provided are from a streaming service called Boomplay. The album was available for a short time on YouTube, but seems to have been taken down. I am providing a link to two pieces, Souvenir by Frantisêk Drdla and the Waltz in A Major by Johannes Brahms (arranged by David Hochstein), plus a link to the whole album if you wish to listen to more of it. Enjoy.

https://www.boomplay.com/songs/193348524 (Souvenir)

https://www.boomplay.com/songs/193348522?from=artists (Waltz in A Major)

https://www.boomplay.com/albums/103410955?from=artists (Whole Album: 11 tracks, 39 minutes)

Franz Schubert: Seligkeit, D. 433

Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

Franz Schubert was an Austrian composer who lived during the late classical and early romantic eras. He wrote chamber music, piano music, symphonies, operas, but it is for his around 600 lieder (art songs) that he is best known. For those songs Schubert used poems written by the top poets of his time. He not only composed beautiful melodies, but also wrote piano accompaniments that were very ingenious in the way they helped to tell the story behind the poems.

Here is one of Schubert’s most beloved art songs called Seligkeit (which means bliss). This is a lively charming little waltz tune. In this recording it is sung by Soprano Kathleen Battle and accompanied on the piano by James Levine. On the homepage of my website I have put a link where you can purchase my arrangement of this song for piano solo. Enjoy.

Django Reinhart and Stephane Grappelli – If I Had You

Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli are known today for their collaboration together as part of the Quintet of the Hot Club of France. Django Reinhardt was the top jazz guitarist of his time, and one of the greatest jazz guitarists in history. Stephane Grappelli was a famous jazz violinist who and also a very high-powered jazz pianist. Before becoming famous as one of the top jazz violinists of all time, Grappelli busked on the violin as a kid. He played jazz piano early in his career, playing with a big band. One night, The band leader Grégor learned that Stephane used to play the violin. He borrowed a violin and asked Grappelli to play a tune. Grégor then encouraged Grappelli to take up the violin again. In 1931, Stephane Grappelli met Django Reinhardt while playing a gig with Grégor’s big band. The rest is history as they say.

Here is a rare recording with Django Reinhardt playing the guitar, and Stephane Grappelli playing the piano (instead of the violin). The duo plays the tune “If I Had You” by James Campbell and Reginald Connelly. This recording is from 1938. I hope that you enjoy it.

Brahms Intermezzo Op. 118 No. 2

Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)

Johannes Brahms was a German Romantic composer, pianist, and conductor. He wrote solo piano music, chamber music, symphonnies, piano concertos, a requiem, and organ works. Some of his first compositions were written for the pipe organ. Brahms had a dream of becoming an organ virtuoso, but abandoned that idea because he struggled to play the organ well. Instead, Brahms became a piano virtuoso. He gave the premiere performances of his piano concertos. Brahms music is full of various rhythms, meters, and counterpoint. His introduction to Hungarian and gypsy folk music at a young age influenced his compositional style, and explains his fascination with irregular rhythms and use of rubato (robbed time) in his music. Brahms’ music was traditional in the sense that he used traditional classical forms when writing his music. His music was a complete contrast to the bombastic, showy “modern” music of the time such as that of Franz Liszt. Liszt apparently thought that Brahms’ music was too “hygienic”, and Brahms disapproved of Liszt’s music, apparently falling asleep during one of Liszt’s piano recitals during a performance Liszt gave of his b minor piano sonata. 

Julius Katchen (1926-1969)

Julius Katchen was an American pianist who is especially well known for his recordings of Johannes Brahms’ piano music. He made his debut performance when he was 10 years old, playing Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 20 in d minor. Conductor Eugene Ormandy heard about young Julius and invited him to play in New York with the Philadelphia Orchestra. Julius Katchen studied music with his grandparents Mandell and Rosalie Svet until he turned 14. His grandparents taught piano at the Moscow and Warsaw Conservatories. In 1947 Katchen toured Europe and moved to Paris, France. He died of cancer at the age of 42 in 1969.

Julius Katchen’s solo piano recordings of the works of Johannes Brahms are very popular among pianists, and those recordings are often described as one of the best recordings of Brahms’ piano works. 

In this recording, Julius Katchen plays Brahms’ Intermezzo Op. 118, No.2 from his Op. 118 six pieces. I hope that you enjoy this beautiful piano piece.