
Karl Weigl (1881-1949)Florian Krumpöck, Klavier / piano (1-3)
David Frühwirth, Violine / violin (4-6)
Norddeutsche Philharmonie
Manfred Hermann Lehner, Dirigent / conductor (1-3)
Florian Krumpöck, Dirigent / conductor (4-6)
Since the revival of so-called Entartete Musik in the 1990s,
interest in Karl Ignaz Weigl’s music has grown but he still
remains a largely unknown figure to most listeners. Weigl was
born in Vienna in February 1881 and had private composition
lessons with Alexander Zemlinsky, a family friend. By the
early-1920s, Weigl was an established figure in the musical
landscape of Vienna and it was probably for this reason that he
was approached by the one-armed pianist Paul Wittgenstein to
compose a left-hand piano concerto. Paul’s family fortune
enabled him to commission some of the most eminent composers of
the day to write works especially for him: Korngold, Britten,
Hindemith, Prokofiev, Ravel, Franz Schmidt, Richard Strauss and
Karl Weigl.
Unfortunately, for reasons unknown, Wittgenstein failed to
perform Weigl’s concerto. Thus it was that the concerto
received its belated premiere in 2002 in Vienna by Florian
Krumpöck, the soloist on the present recording. Despite his no
doubt discouraging experience with Wittgenstein, Weigl returned
to the concerto medium four years later with a violin concerto.
It can be hoped that recordings such as the present one will
help to further draw attention to his large and varied output
which may yet contribute to the repertoire it was designed to
enrich.