Composers

Émile Sauret

Violin
Piano
Orchestra
Piece
Étude
Caprice
Character piece
Rhapsodies
Suite
Impromptu
Andante
Cavatina
Aubade
by alphabet
12 Artistic Etudes, Op.38Suite for Violin Solo, Op.68Gradus ad parnassum du violoniste, Op.3624 Etudes Caprices, Op.6420 Grandes Etudes, Op.24Scènes villageoises, Op.50Cavatine et Aubade mauresque, Op.25Scherzo fantastico, Op.9Feuilles d'Album, Op.284 Morceaux de salon, Op.40Rapsodie russe, Op.322 Impromptus, Op.133 Morceaux de salon, Op.62 Morceaux, Op.2Pensées fugitives, Op.296 Morceaux caractéristiques, Op.22Pensées fugitives, Op.41Pensées intimes, Op.393 Morceaux caractéristiques, Op.47Suite francaise, Op.55Andante et caprice de concert, Op.67Rhapsodie suédoise, Op.59Violin Concerto, Op.26
Wikipedia
Émile Sauret (22 May 1852 – 12 February 1920) was a French violinist and composer. Sauret wrote over 100 violin pieces, including a famous cadenza for the first movement of Niccolò Paganini's First Violin Concerto, and the "Gradus ad Parnassum" (1894).
Sauret was born in Dun-le-Roi in 1852. He began studying violin at the Conservatoire de Strasbourg at the age of six, and with a reputation as child prodigy he began performing two years later. He studied under Charles Auguste de Bériot and later became a student of Henri Vieuxtemps and Henryk Wieniawski. Aged 18, he started studying composition as a pupil of Salomon Jadassohn at the Leipzig Conservatory, where he struck up many friendships. Among these were Fritz Steinbach and Richard Sahla, a child prodigy like Sauret himself.
Sauret played in the most famous concert halls of his time. He made his American debut in 1872. Franz Liszt performed sonatas with him. In 1873, Sauret married Teresa Carreño, a Venezuelan pianist and composer, by whom he had a daughter, Emilita. The marriage did not last; in 1879 he remarried.
He held posts at a variety of institutions, including the Neue Akademie der Tonkunst in Berlin - where he wrote the Twelve Études Artistiques for his "beloved students" -, together with Moritz Moszkowski and the Scharwenka brothers, Xaver and Phillipp, and the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he was appointed a professor of violin of 1890, the Musical College in Chicago in 1903, and the Trinity College in London, an appointment he took up in 1908. His pupils included Tor Aulin, Jan Hambourg, William Henry Reed, Marjorie Hayward, Leila Waddell, Otie Chew Becker, Florizel von Reuter, Gerald Walenn and John Waterhouse. See: List of music students by teacher: R to S#Émile Sauret. He died in London in 1920, aged 67.
Because of the excessive difficulties of his violin compositions, Émile Sauret is remembered today for little more than the cadenza for Niccolò Paganini's Violin Concerto No. 1 in D major.
Émile Sauret played on a violin of Guarnerius del Gesù (1744), named "Sauret". In 1986, it was bought by Itzhak Perlman.