i read a random article on the internet that said something about that they figured out for certain who was beethoven's 'eternal beloved.' apparently you had to register in some kind of a book if you went out of the city of ? can't remember now - and this lady was registered with beethoven's name when they wanted to re-enter the city.
oh, the things people come up with. will ahve to look for the article. i think she was married.
stravinsky, not a violinist, was asked to compose a violin concerto for samuel dushkin. he hesitated because he felt he lacked ' a sufficient profound understanding of the instrument,' but hindemith urged him to do it anyway because he would not fall into the use of 'violin cliches.' so stravinsky did it- and composed his concerto of 1931 with samuel dushkins advice on violin matters. he asked about one widely spaced chord (if it was possible for a violin to play it. it spanned over three octaves - with a note in each octave range (d, e2, a3) something like that - and it became a chord called his 'passport' to the concerto. it begins every movement.