Károly Flesch
- Hungarian form:
- Flesch Károly
- Born:
- Oct. 9, 1873, Moson [now Mosonmagyaróvár], Hung.
- Died:
- Nov. 15, 1944, Lucerne, Switz.
- Also Known As:
- Flesch Károly
Károly Flesch (born Oct. 9, 1873, Moson [now Mosonmagyaróvár], Hung.—died Nov. 15, 1944, Lucerne, Switz.) was a Hungarian violinist and teacher who was largely responsible for raising international awareness of Hungarian music.
From 1886 to 1889 Flesch was the student of Jakob Grün at the conservatory in Vienna, and then from 1890 to 1894 he was taught by Martin Marsick and Eugene Sauzay at the Paris Conservatory. As a student of Marsick, Flesch belonged to the Belgian school of violinists. Flesch’s balanced, refined style was combined with exceptional technique. He was famed for the classical purity of his playing and for his taste and his wide-ranging knowledge of styles.
From 1897 to 1902 Flesch taught at the Conservatory in Bucharest and was the leader of the Romanian queen’s string quartet. From 1903 to 1908 he taught at the Amsterdam Conservatory. In 1905 he held a famous series of concerts in Berlin to illustrate musical history from the 17th through the 20th century. From 1908 to 1923 he lived in Berlin. He performed as a soloist and chamber musician and achieved international recognition as a member of the Schnabel-Flesch-Becker trio. In 1921–22 and again from 1928 to 1934 he was a professor at the Music Academy in Berlin; in the intervening period he taught at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia. With the rise of Nazism in Germany, he was forced to move to London in 1934 because of his Jewish origins. In 1939–40 he lived and taught in Amsterdam, returning to Hungary after the Germans occupied the Netherlands. From 1943 until his death he taught at the Lucerne Conservatory in Switzerland.
Flesch’s analytical capacity made him one of the great violin teachers of his day. His students included Henryk Szeryng and Ida Haendel. The Carl (Károly) Flesch Medal is the first prize in an international violin competition that has been held regularly in London since 1945 (from 1970 it has included the viola as well as the violin).
Among the books Flesch wrote on method are Urstudien (1911; “Ancient Studies”), Die Kunst des Violin-Spiels (1923–28; The Art of Violin-playing”), Das Skalensystem (1926; “The Scale System”), and Das Klangproblem im Geigenspiel (1931; “The Problem of Resonance in Violin-playing”). He adapted Johann Christian Bach’s sonatas for the violin and performed works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Johannes Brahms. His memoir, Erinnerungen eines Geigers (“Remembrances of a Violinist”), was published in 1960.