Polonaise de concert en Ré majeur
pour violon avec accompagnement de piano op.4 (series A vol. 3)
The Polonaise de concert, Op. 4 is the first of two polonaises composed by Henryk Wieniawski.The original version of the Polonaise de concert was inspired by Karol Lipiński, to whom it is dedicated. It was in the autumn of 1848. When Wieniawski made the first draft of the Polonaise, in 1849, he had not yet learned the principles of counterpoint and harmony. He graduated from Joseph Lambert Massart’s class at the Paris Conservatoire.
The Polonaise was composed in two versions: for violin with piano accompaniment, and for violin and orchestra. Also at this time, Wieniawski composed the Adagio élégiaque, Op. 5, which he recommended performing before the Polonaise, and both pieces were played in March 1853 in one of a series of nine concerts in Vienna.
The design of this Polonaise is a cross between reprise form and rondo form. The main section (A) comprises the segments a, a1, b and a, of which the eight-bar theme (a) clearly fulfils the role of a dynamic, powerful refrain. The middle section displays more lyrical expression in its themes and phrases, but it is varied in character, featuring virtuoso elements: harmonics, double notes, leaps, broken triads in dotted rhythm and ornaments. The refrain theme also appears, confirming the rondo scheme. A new figurational theme divides the last appearance of the main theme-refrain and the virtuosic coda.
Wieniawski played his polonaises quite often. They are still popular today with artists and audiences alike and are among the composer’s most frequently recorded works.
Irena Poniatowska
- Source commentary by: Irena Poniatowska
- Performance consultation: Jarosław Żołnierczyk
- Series: Wieniawski - Works
- ISMN 979-0-2740-0927-4
- Language of edition: eng, pol
- Number of pages: 42 (38+4)
- Cover: softcover
- No. of edition: 1
- Published: 2014
- Type: solo part (instrumental) + accompaniment
- Size: N4 vertical (235x305 mm)