A lot of composers began as freakish children, but by any standards
Saint-Saëns was an extreme case.
As a two-year-old he could read and write, and was picking out melodies
on the piano.
Shortly after his third birthday he began conmposing, and by the age of five
had given his first piano recital.
At seven he was reading Latin, studying botany and developing what was to
become an eighty-year interest in lepidoptery, (the study of butterflies
and moths).
As an encore after his formal debut as a concert pianist, the 10-year-old
Camille offered to play any of Beethoven's 32 sonoatas from memory.
In short, his childhood suggested Mozartian potential that was never
realized.
Saint-Saëns once remarked that he lived "in music like a fish in water
"
and that composing was as natural as "an apple tree producing apples
."
And there lay the problem.
As with Mendelssohn, the technique came so easily to him that it virtually
extinguished the spark of originality.
That said, for many years he was considered by many to be France's greatest musical
revolutionary, though his reputation grew more from his outspoken support for other
composers' music -especially Wagner's- than from any work of his own.
As well as promoting comtemporary music, Saint-Saëns threw his
energies into researching the work of his forerunners.
Along with Mendelssohn, he was one of the first to reestablish the music of Bach
(converting the skeptical Berlioz in the process)
and he did much to restore Mozart to his rightful place,
being the first to play a complete cycle of the piano concerti.
Handel was another unfashionable composer to engage Saint-Saëns'
attention, and (as with Berlioz) Gluck held a fascination that lasted
most of his life.
By the time Saint-Saëns reached his mid-fifties, the past had won the
upper hand over the present.
Embittered, ill-tempered and restless, he became the arch-traditionalist,
opposing the progressive music of Debussy and Ravel,
bellowing outrage at the first performance of
The Rite of Spring,
and yet, for all his reactionary pomposity, he was one of the first
neo-classicists, embodying many of the finest traditional qualities of
French music - neatness, clarity, elegance and dignity.
His best epitaph is the rueful one he wrote for himself:
"I ran after the chimera of purity of style and perfection of form."
Of Saint-Saëns' three violin concerti, the Concerto No.3 in B Minor
for Violin and Orchestra, op. 61, is by far the most popular.
The work was introduced at Châtelet concert in Paris on January 2, 1881,
with Pablo de Sarasate as soloist.
The Concerto was published the following year with a dedication to
Sarasate, and went on to inspire highly imaginative writing among Saint-Saëns'
students.
The concerto opens with on of Saint-Saëns' most provocative melodies
- a gypsy-ish theme in the lowest register of the violin.
The Adagio is playful and jaunty, and all stops are pulled for the
finale, which oscillates between virtuosic passages and a vague religiosity.
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