Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst
50 top tracks
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst
50 top tracks
Albums

ERNST: Music for Violin and Orchestra
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Ernst: Erlkönig - Le Carnaval de Venise
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Ernst: Complete Works, Vol. 6
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Ernst: Romantic Music for Violin and Piano
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Paganini & Schubert - Ernst: Grand Caprice, Op. 26 (After Schubert's "Der Erlkönig", D. 328)
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Solo
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

The Virtuoso Violin
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Bach, Paganini, Ernst, Ysaÿe, Kreisler, Haas: Violino solo
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Ernst: Complete Music for Violin and Piano, Vol. 1
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Ernst: 6 Mehrstimmige Studien / Wieniawski: L'Ecole Moderne
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Ernst: Complete Violin Music, Vol. 3
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst

Violin Recital: Kavakos, Leonidas - Kroll, W. / Bazzini, A. / Kreisler, F. / Tchaikovsky, P. / Schubert, F. / Paganini, N. / Debussy, C.
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst
Biography
Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst (born January 1814 in Brünn (Moravia); died October 8, 1865 in Nice) was a Moravian-Jewish violinist and composer. Ernst was widely seen as the outstanding violinist of his time and Paganini's greatest successor....Read more on Last.fm
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Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst (born January 1814 in Brünn (Moravia); died October 8, 1865 in Nice) was a Moravian-Jewish violinist and composer. Ernst was widely seen as the outstanding violinist of his time and Paganini's greatest successor.
At the age of nine, Ernst began to study the violin. Ernst was a child prodigy, educated at the Conservatorium of Vienna, studying the violin under Joseph Böhm, and composition under Ignaz von Seyfried. In 1828, Ernst heard Paganini and became deeply impressed by his violin playing and adopted Paganini's virtuosic style. Later, Ernst challenged Paganini by playing the latter's Nel cor pìu non mi sento with an accuracy that stunned both the audience and Paganini himself. Like Paganini, Ernst composed his own set of variations on the theme Carnaval de Venise which he often played at the end of his concert. This piece was most popular among Ernst's audience everywhere where he played, and it became his signum. All his professional life, he was on tour around Europe playing concerts and also composed many violin pieces and formed his own style. In the end of Ernst's life, his health broke down owing to long-continued neuralgia of a most severe kind that made him unable to play. The last seven years of his life were spent in retirement, chiefly at Nice, where he spent time composing, e. g. the Polyphonic Studies. Ernst died in Nice on the 8th of October 1865.
Though Ernst was a highly esteemed artist in his days, he is today half-forgotten. Ernst was widely seen as the superior violinist of his time and Paganini's greatest successor. Not only did he develop the polyphonic playing, but he also discovered new idiomatic ways to compose polyphonically conceived violin music to a degree that is unprecedented to this day.
<a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Heinrich+Wilhelm+Ernst">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
