Background
Tivadar Nachéz was born in Budapest, where he studied under Sabathiel, the leader of the orchestra of the Budapest Opera.
Tivadar Nachéz was born in Budapest, where he studied under Sabathiel, the leader of the orchestra of the Budapest Opera.
Then he studied under Joseph Joachim in Berlin, and afterwards with Léonard in Paris.
Franz Liszt heard him and gave his approval. He performed at the foundation of the Bayreuth Festspielhaus. He made a debut in Hamburg in 1881.
His first appearance in England was at the Crystal Palace on 9 April 1881, and after that he gave continuous concerts and made tours in England and elsewhere.
He performed twice at a private royal smoking concert held at the Queen"s Hall before its official opening in 1893. he performed his own 2nd Violin Concerto with the London Philharmonic Orchestra on 17 April 1907, and repeated it with the New Symphony Orchestra under Landon Ronald on 27 January 1910. George Bernard Shaw, writing as an arts critic under the pseudonym Corno di Bassetto, saw him at Her Majesty"s in September 1889:
In July 1890, Shaw heard him play Max Bruch"s first concerto and remarked, "Nachez is one of the most musically intelligent violinists we have, but his technique fails him in rapid and difficult movements." In June and July 1893, Nachéz was playing Beethoven and smaller works in Street James"s Hall.
His compositions include: Zigeunertänze. Polonaise, Operation 26; Violin concerto in East minor, Op 30.
And Passacaglia on a Theme of Sammartini.
He produced new editions of two Vivaldi violin concerti (in A minor and G minor)
He died in Lausanne, Switzerland.