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About The 24 Caprices

Introduction

Celebrated as "a masterpiece", "the Paganini of our century" and more by the world's most renown violinists (Jennifer Koh, Rachel Barton Pine, Mark O'Connor, Dr. Rubén Salazar, Ikuko Kanda Whitehouse, Tracy Silverman and others) this multigenre collection is one all violinists and fiddlers are getting their hands on!

Are They Études?

While often used to improve technique, these are not exercises. The word "caprice" and its etymology have made this a common question.

 

Gaviniès, Rode, Dont, and Paganini each wrote 24 caprices for violin too. Gaviniès', Rode's, and Dont's are études (studies) for technique.  Only Paganini's and mine constitute performance repertoire.

 

This is obvious after a listen, so stay tuned for my solo album

The New 24 Caprices, aiming to release this summer!

More Details

The choice to specifically write "24" does continue the legacy of: 

• Pierre Gaviniès (1728-1800),

• Pierre Rode (1774-1830),

• Niccolò Paganini (1782-1840), and

• Jakob Dont (1815-1888).

 

This new 24 caprice project sought to do so with something relevant for today’s violinists. 2010 began ten unbroken years writing these, often using them as encores, taking feedback, reediting, and finally publishing them in 2020! 

What Makes Them "Relevant"?

This music features many genres and styles. (Nearly all are sampled throughout my instagram @TheViolinDoctor.)

18th and 19th century artists rarely crossed oceans. Without airplanes or the internet, diverse musical arts were hard to access. That era was also a peak of classicism, elitism, and racism, which perpetuated this problem.

 

The farthest travels documented among the composers mentioned above had been Paganini's visit to Nice, France. Ergo, while they pushed the violin’s technical horizons, it was still limited to one style and one genre.

 

For that reason, these 24 Caprices include a substantial diversity of musical styles and genres. The collection includes:

  • ✔3 Fugues

  • ✔3 Showpieces

  • ✔3 Études

  • ✔2 Fiddle works

  • ✔2 Impressionist works

  • ✔2 Waltzes

  • ✔1 Tango

  • ✔1 Blues

  • ✔1 Jazz Passacaglia

  • ✔1 Rhapsody

  • ✔1 Script Improvisation

  • ✔ and 4 MORE!

How Difficult Are They?

Opinion-polls from over 110 players say they land precisely between the Bach Sonatas & Partitas and Paganini Caprices.

For what my personal opinion is worth, if the non-ornamented U.S. National Anthem is 1, and the "Six Polyphonic Études" of H.W. Ernst were 10, I would place these works at 6.5.

 

Technical Overview:

✔ The highest pitch is a B6.

✔ Two caprices have brief double-stop harmonics.

✔ Four caprices include one or more double-trills.

✔ Six caprices include mixed meters.

• ✔ Seven caprices include left-hand pizzicato.

• ✔ Five caprices include slurred upbow staccato.

What Professional Artists Say

The Sarufutsu Education Board of Japan's Composition Professor, Dr. Ruben Salazar, calls them "...the new 24 caprices" in reference to Paganini. His full review is in the preface of the 2nd edition.

 

Another, from the University of Arizona, calls it "...a book of advanced violin repertoire reflecting the musical globalism and diversity of the 21st century."

It is frequently called "a masterpiece" by artists in feedback messages received by this website and its distributors.

Philosophical Importance

Diverse repertorial collections are important for today's violinists. Many professionally-trained violinists never realize anything beyond western classical music. This work encourages artists to realize other culture's music as worth learning and celebrating.

 

These 24 Caprices purposefully expand artist's diversity of technique, awareness of foreign arts, and musical appetite.​ Brilliant performances have spread rapidly all over the world. Thousands of prints have already shipped all over the world because there is something truly here for everyone.

Caprice No. 18

Caprice No. 18 in D Major will be replaced in 2025.  Observing feedback from hundreds of performers, it simply never reached the acclaim of the other twenty-three.

A New Caprice No. 18, also in D Major, will take its place in all future editions beginning January of 2025.  It will also replace the 18th caprice on the upcoming solo album, "The New 24 Caprices".

 

The new Caprice No. 18 will be a free download upon request to any previous purchasers with proof of purchase.

Images of the original Caprice No. 18 will be provided here for identification purposes.

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Caprice No. 24

"Fugue No. 3" (ending)

"Such a fascinating set of works!  I can't wait to hear more of them!"
—Violinist, Jennifer Koh

"The composer knows the instrument very well and writes very well for it. I love it!"

—Violinist, Lauren Farrell

Caprice No. 10

"The Last Leaf of Autumn" (ending)

Caprice No. 19

"The Neapolitan Caprice"

Caprice No. 1

"Alone"

Caprice No. 3

"The Prayer"

Caprice No. 10

"This Girl Laughs"

Caprice No. 23

"Fugue No. 2"

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