Many well-known violinists
such as the dedicatee Pablo de Sarasate, together later with Eugène
Ysaye and Jacques Thibaud, included in their repertoires Camille
Saint-Saëns’ concert piece composed in 1863. Even today, concert life is
hard to imagine without the Introduction et Rondo capriccioso.
The highly virtuosic work already inspired critics and audiences during
the composer’s lifetime; reported about the premiere in 1867 was: “The Introduction and the Rondo capriccioso for the same instrument are both original and charming, and Maestro Sarasate,
who was in his element here, admirably made the most of it.” And a few
years later, a music critic described the work as “a kind of fantasy
waltz in the Spanish style and with a most bewitching effect.” After the
first performances in 1867, despite success, the work’s score and
orchestral parts had little chance of publication due to concert
companies’ reluctance. In 1869 the Paris publishing house G. Hartmann
merely published an arrangement for violin and piano produced by the
composer’s friend Georges Bizet. The orchestral score and parts were
first published after the Paris publishing house Durand had acquired
publication rights in 1875.
The present edition published in collaboration with the G. Henle Verlag is the first critical edition of the work.