The Violin Sonata in A was written in 1886, when
César Franck was 63, as a wedding present for the 28-year-old violinist
Eugène Ysaÿe. played the Sonata to the other wedding guests. The Sonata was given its first public concert performance on 16 December of that year, at the
Musée Moderne de Peinture in
Brussels. Ysaÿe and Bordes-Pène were again the performers. The Sonata was the final item in a long program which started at 3pm. When the time arrived for the Sonata, dusk had fallen and the gallery was bathed in gloom, but the museum authorities permitted no artificial light whatsoever. Initially, it seemed the Sonata would have to be abandoned, but Ysaÿe and Bordes-Pène decided to continue regardless. They had to play the last three movements from memory in virtual darkness. When the violinist
Armand Parent remarked that Ysaÿe had played the first movement faster than the composer intended, Franck replied that Ysaÿe had made the right decision, saying "from now on there will be no other way to play it".
Vincent d'Indy, who was present, recorded these details of the event. Ysaÿe kept the Violin Sonata in his repertoire for the next 40 years of his life, with a variety of pianists, like
Théo Ysaÿe,
Ernest Chausson,
Ferruccio Busoni,
Vincent d'Indy,
Raoul Pugno,
Camille Decreus,
Arthur De Greef,
Leopold Godowsky,
Yves Nat, and many others. His championing of the Sonata contributed to the public recognition of Franck as a major composer. This recognition was quite belated; Franck died within four years of the Sonata's public première, and did not have his first unqualified public success until the last year of his life on 19 April 1890, at the
Salle Pleyel, where his
String Quartet in D was premiered. The Sonata in A regularly appears on concert programs and on recordings, and is in the core repertoire of all major violinists.
Jascha Heifetz played it at his final recital in 1972. The piece is further notable for the difficulty of its piano part, when compared with most of the chamber repertoire. Its technical problems include frequent extreme extended figures—the composer himself having possessed huge hands—and virtuoso runs and leaps, particularly in the second movement, though some passages can be facilitated by employing a spare hand to cover some notes. ==Structure==