Felix Adrian Norman Salmond (
19 November,
1888 –
20 February,
1952) was an
English cellist and
cello teacher who achieved success in both England and the
United States of America.
Early life and career
Salmond was born to a family of professional musicians. His father was a
baritone, and his mother was a
pianist who had studied with
Clara Schumann. At age twelve, Salmond started studying with the man who became his primary cello teacher,
William Whitehouse. He won a scholarship to continue studies with Whitehouse four years later at the
Royal Academy of Music in
London. He continued on to the
Brussels Conservatoire at age nineteen, where he studied for two years with
Edouard Jacobs. His concert debut was in 1908, playing
Frank Bridge's Fantasy Trio in C minor and
Johannes Brahms's Piano Quartet No. 1 in G minor. Salmond's mother was the pianist, with Bridge on
viola and
Maurice Sons playing the
violin. The recital, which took place at the
Bechstein Hall, was very successful, leading to many future engagements for Salmond. He gave recitals across Britain and appeared with the
Queen's Hall Orchestra, the
London Symphony Orchestra and the
Hallé Orchestra, amongst others. He also toured America in a piano quartet with
Harold Bauer,
Bronisław Huberman and
Lionel Tertis.
Salmond and Elgar
World War I prevented Salmond from developing his international career further at that time, but he resumed building a reputation in
chamber music after the war. His performances in this period included the premieres, on
21 May 1919, of
Edward Elgar's
String Quartet in E minor and
Piano Quintet in A minor at the Wigmore Hall (as the Bechstein Hall had now become).
After Salmond's performance of his quartet, Elgar entrusted Salmond with the solo part for the debut of his most personal and heartfelt work, his Cello Concerto in E Minor with the London Symphony Orchestra at the Queen's Hall. The premiere, on 27 October 1919, proved to be a disaster. The performance was scheduled such that Albert Coates, the conductor of the London Symphony, would conduct the rest of the program whilst Elgar himself would conduct the concerto. Coates, a self-important man, was well known for using up to forty-five minutes of his hour of rehearsal time lecturing his players. After consuming an hour of Elgar's rehearsal time, Elgar—who was until that time waiting offstage for his chance to rehearse—uncharacteristically exploded with anger. The severely under-rehearsed performance which followed received scathing reviews, with Ernest Newman stating that "the orchestra made a public exhibition of its miserable self." Elgar later said that if it weren't for Salmond's diligent work in preparing the piece, he would have pulled it from the concert entirely.
Career in America
On
29 March 1922, he made his American solo debut in
New York City at the
Aeolian Hall. He settled in America, although he returned to England and Europe for tours. He was appointed to
The Juilliard School's faculty in 1924, and became head of the cello faculty at the
Curtis Institute of Music a year later—a position which he kept until 1942. However, still bruised by the experience of the first performance of the Elgar concerto, he did not teach it or play it outside England. He was highly regarded in America as a teacher, with pupils including
Orlando Cole,
Bernard Greenhouse,
Leonard Rose and
Daniel Saidenberg. He also received great appreciation as a performer. In 1942, he appeared at
Carnegie Hall in a well-reviewed
piano trio with pianist
Ignace Jan Paderewski and violinist
Efrem Zimbalist. He had a broad taste in music for the cello, including works by contemporary composers such as
Samuel Barber,
Ernest Bloch and
George Enescu (premiering two of his pieces). He last returned to England in 1947; he died in New York.
References
External links