Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Speaking of women conductors...
...a lot of us did just that on Saturday, in a discussion that formed part of the Women of the World Festival at Southbank Centre. A sizeable and spirited group was convened from all corners of the classical music business, including a number of women conductors, composers, performers, writers, directors, educators and more. It was especially wonderful to have Marin Alsop with us. Helen Wallace has written up the event on the BBC Music Magazine website: http://www.classical-music.com/blog/why-arent-there-more-women-conductors-jude-kelly-leads-discussion-southbank-centre
Karita Mattila: Power from Start to Finnish...
Meet my latest interviewee: the astonishing Karita Mattila. "The Finnish Venus" needs no introduction except for this:
(A short version of this interview appeared in The Independent on 26 October. Karita Mattila sings Marie in Berg's Wozzeck at the Royal Opera House, opening 31 October.)
Karita Mattila is not eight feet tall, but such is the force of her presence and her voice that she almost seems it. At 53, the soprano nicknamed "the Finnish Venus" is among today's most powerful operatic stars, not only vocally, but also as a visceral actress. When she performed the final scene from Strauss's Salome at the Royal Festival Hall recently, a mesmerised audience lived the princess's horror-laden sensuality almost as voraciously as she did.
It is no wonder that opera directors often play to her
strengths. “Because I’m such a physical person, they find a physical way for me
to serve the character,” she says.
“I understand singing, too, as a physical process, so it becomes
fascinating to put those things together.”
A farmer’s daughter from rural Finland, whose career
launched when she won the 1983 Cardiff Singer of the World Competition, she has grown as an artist and kept on growing. The increasing range of her pure-yet-soul-shattering voice has brought thrilling new roles within her grasp. She began as a classic Mozartian. Now she is singing Marie in Berg’s Wozzeck for the first
time, at the Royal Opera House: next year she is doing her first Ariadne
auf Naxos and Schoenberg’s Erwartung, while Sieglinde in Wagner’s Die Walküre
and the Kostelnicka in Jenufa by Janacek are in view.
She prepares her roles rigorously: “I try to do my
homework,” she declares. “I think it would be an impossibility for me to go on
stage and try to do a part without knowing who the character is. In a nutshell,
I feel I can’t use my instrument in full if I don’t understand the dramatic
background. It’s not just learning your part and knowing the story; you read
and you listen to all the material you can get these days. I think it’s
wonderful we have everything in the Internet – you can read all kinds of
analysis. Then you go to the rehearsals and hope that the director and the
conductor are well prepared too – which,” she adds darkly, “is not always the
case.”
You wouldn’t want to get on the wrong side of this lady. “I
work hard before I come to rehearsals, so I’m quite demanding towards the
others,” she says. “I demand so much of myself because I know my level and it’s
very hard for me to reach it, so I’m expecting everyone else to do their
homework too. I’m sure there are directors or conductors who think I’m a
piece of work. But you know, I am the most willing tool – if I am convinced
that the person who is about to direct me or conduct knows what they are
doing.”
Despite that, she insists she has only ever walked out once for anything but health reasons: “It was a concert, a performance of Strauss’s Four Last Songs. The conductor not only mocked me in front of the whole orchestra, but tried to blackmail me into doing something that it had been agreed I wouldn’t do, a recording on the morning of the performance. At first I thought, ‘Oh, he sounds like my father’ and didn’t walk out – but I realised I could not be at the mercy of a conductor whose goal is not the music, but a personal putting-down.” It was a traumatic moment. “Luckily I was old enough and experienced enough to come to terms with the idea that those kind of fossils, those kind of dinosaurs, still exist. And they will soon be dead.”
Despite that, she insists she has only ever walked out once for anything but health reasons: “It was a concert, a performance of Strauss’s Four Last Songs. The conductor not only mocked me in front of the whole orchestra, but tried to blackmail me into doing something that it had been agreed I wouldn’t do, a recording on the morning of the performance. At first I thought, ‘Oh, he sounds like my father’ and didn’t walk out – but I realised I could not be at the mercy of a conductor whose goal is not the music, but a personal putting-down.” It was a traumatic moment. “Luckily I was old enough and experienced enough to come to terms with the idea that those kind of fossils, those kind of dinosaurs, still exist. And they will soon be dead.”
She pinpoints a few
key moments that inspired her and opened up new vistas: “When I did my first
Fidelio with Jürgen Flimm directing, at the Met in New York, I went out of the
first rehearsal determined that I was going to cut my hair and dye it brown!”
Leonore in Fidelio is desperately misunderstood too often, she insists: “Flimm
made her this wonderful woman, so moving, so bright, so brave. But there are so
many chauvinist directors - maybe it’s
this patriarchal society, that the directors are in their own prison with their
ideas! I remember reading such crap analyses written by such men, who didn’t
have a clue about Fidelio. There were
even women who thought ‘Leonore is so ruthless’!” Now Mattila is on fire: “As if you wouldn’t be ruthless when your
husband is in jail and it’s up to you to save him! Any woman in love with her
husband would do anything for that!”
Many might modestly put enduring success down to good
fortune, but Mattila insists that it’s plain hard work. “My big film idol,
Jeremy Irons, once said in an interview that the people who succeed are the
ones who work a little harder. They put a little more of themselves into
things, they make more sacrifices and they don’t even think about it. That’s
exactly how I feel. Yes, you have to be lucky, and I’ve been lucky to be in the
right place at the right time and to have the type of voice that I have – but
luck alone wouldn’t have got me to the place I’m in now. I’m proud of this
wonderful life.”
Friday, October 25, 2013
WQXR takes up fanfare for the uncommon woman conductor
I've just taken part in a discussion for WQXR's programme Conducting Business on the topic of women conductors, together with Emmanuelle Haim, artists manager Charlotte Lee and the station's presenter Naomi Lewin. It feels a bit weird to speak on New York radio from the comfort of my study (cat confined to kitchen to avoid him inadvertently making his NY debut) - anyway, it was an interesting talk with some fascinating perspectives emerging. Here is the article on the website, and the resulting podcast is embedded below.
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Solti statue for Budapest
The Ferenc Liszt Academy in Budapest, which is currently enjoying celebrations of its reopening after a major refurbishment, has put up a symbolic statue of Sir Georg Solti, an alumnus of the place. In the picture, Lady Valerie Solti is on the podium at the unveiling. More info here, in Hungarian. Solti studied at the Liszt Academy with Bartok, Dohnanyi and Kodaly, among others.
Google Translate says, rather touchingly: "...fulfillment of an old dream that the name of Sir Georg Solti takes up a small restaurant in the academy." I'm not sure that's quite what it means, but the great man might have enjoyed that.
Meanwhile, back to Brum for the second of my Mendelssohn talks. Today's topic: Mendelssohn, Queen Victoria and more... Kick-off at 1pm in the Birmingham Town Hall. At 2.15pm the CBSO plays the symphonies nos 1 and 3 and the Piano Concerto No.2 with Martin Helmchen. Ed Gardner conducts.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Felix is back...
I'm preoccupied with Felix Mendelssohn at the moment. Right now, am between the first two of three pre-concert talks that I'm giving for the CBSO's Mendelssohn symphonies series, which is being conducted by Ed Gardner, and the glories of the music seem endless - galvanising, thrilling, visceral, quicksilver. There's nobody like Felix. Yet I'm still gnashing teeth with frustration over the way that those old slanders keep getting repeated and repeated and repeated, often by people who ought to know better.
The view of Felix as glib and shallow needs to be scotched once and for all. It comes from Wagner, who was finding reasons to damn the Jewish-born composer with rootless-Cosmopolitan syndrome. Poor old Felix was excoriated on the one hand by certain Jewish lobbies for having abandoned his faith - like he had much choice, as his parents converted and had him baptised when he was about six years old; and condemned on the other hand by anti-Semitic musicologists for the sake of it.
Glib, nothing. He was a perfectionist; he took years to polish up some of his smoothest-sounding works, among them the 'Italian Symphony' and the Violin Concerto. Even the Octet, that utterly perfect masterpiece, didn't emerge that was first go when Felix was 16, as is often thought. Yes, he was lucky, privileged, well-educated, deeply cultured; yes, he was a favourite of Queen Victoria; no, he was not spoiled, nor was he immune to suffering, as the Jenny Lind story has proved.
In my talk the other day, on Saturday afternoon, I suggested that Mendelssohn is, as Peter Maxwell Davies has called him, "the Prophet of Light": the ultimate enlightened musician, grandson of Moses Mendelssohn - philosopher father of the Jewish Enlightenment - in every way, a man and musician who reconciled apparently conflicting ideas as if they barely existed. Thus he's the shining beacon that proves to us that such a thing is possible.
Come along to Birmingham Town Hall on Thursday at 1pm for the next episode, in which I'll be looking at Mendelssohn and Victorian Britain - from the very stage on which he conducted the world premiere of Elijah. Ed and the orchestra will perform a wonderful programme including the 'Scottish' Symphony and the Piano Concerto No.2, with Martin Helmchen - another work written specially for premiere in Birmingham.
Meanwhile, have a listen to the Ebene Quartet's marvellous recording of the Mendelssohn siblings, Felix and Fanny. Anyone who needs reminding that Mendelssohn was as prone to crises of the soul as anybody who ever lived simply needs to hear the F minor Quartet. End of story.
The view of Felix as glib and shallow needs to be scotched once and for all. It comes from Wagner, who was finding reasons to damn the Jewish-born composer with rootless-Cosmopolitan syndrome. Poor old Felix was excoriated on the one hand by certain Jewish lobbies for having abandoned his faith - like he had much choice, as his parents converted and had him baptised when he was about six years old; and condemned on the other hand by anti-Semitic musicologists for the sake of it.
Glib, nothing. He was a perfectionist; he took years to polish up some of his smoothest-sounding works, among them the 'Italian Symphony' and the Violin Concerto. Even the Octet, that utterly perfect masterpiece, didn't emerge that was first go when Felix was 16, as is often thought. Yes, he was lucky, privileged, well-educated, deeply cultured; yes, he was a favourite of Queen Victoria; no, he was not spoiled, nor was he immune to suffering, as the Jenny Lind story has proved.
In my talk the other day, on Saturday afternoon, I suggested that Mendelssohn is, as Peter Maxwell Davies has called him, "the Prophet of Light": the ultimate enlightened musician, grandson of Moses Mendelssohn - philosopher father of the Jewish Enlightenment - in every way, a man and musician who reconciled apparently conflicting ideas as if they barely existed. Thus he's the shining beacon that proves to us that such a thing is possible.
Come along to Birmingham Town Hall on Thursday at 1pm for the next episode, in which I'll be looking at Mendelssohn and Victorian Britain - from the very stage on which he conducted the world premiere of Elijah. Ed and the orchestra will perform a wonderful programme including the 'Scottish' Symphony and the Piano Concerto No.2, with Martin Helmchen - another work written specially for premiere in Birmingham.
Meanwhile, have a listen to the Ebene Quartet's marvellous recording of the Mendelssohn siblings, Felix and Fanny. Anyone who needs reminding that Mendelssohn was as prone to crises of the soul as anybody who ever lived simply needs to hear the F minor Quartet. End of story.
Friday, October 18, 2013
A trailer for the ALICIA'S GIFT concert
Here is my Alicia's Gift Concert partner, Viv McLean, playing Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, which will feature in our programme in a big way. This was at the gorgeous 12th-century church of St Mary's, Perivale, where the tireless Hugh Mather runs an exceptional concert series - Viv is a regular there. Enjoy.
Alicia's Gift will be at St Mary's on 8 December, but don't forget we kick off on 9 November at the Musical Museum, Brentford, with Kensington & Chelsea Music Society to follow on 13 November, Vernon Ellis's Queen's Gate Terrace salon on 27th, and finally before Xmas a performance for our North London fans at Burgh House, Hampstead, on 15 December.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Benjamin Grosvenor at the Wigmore Hall - review
My review of Benjamin Grosvenor's astonishing recital on Monday night, for International Piano Magazine. Contains names I do not throw around without seriously good reason.
http://www.rhinegold.co.uk/magazines/international_piano/news/int_piano_news_story.asp?id=1873
The concert went out live on BBC Radio 3 and is available to listen to on the iPlayer for the rest of the week: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03cnd6y
Enjoy!
http://www.rhinegold.co.uk/magazines/international_piano/news/int_piano_news_story.asp?id=1873
The concert went out live on BBC Radio 3 and is available to listen to on the iPlayer for the rest of the week: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03cnd6y
Enjoy!
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
More precious than rubies
Who can find a virtuous woman? And what does "virtue" mean? I had a fascinating talk with Fiona Shaw, who is directing Britten's The Rape of Lucretia for Glyndebourne Touring Opera. The first night is on Saturday and the cast includes Kate Valentine and Allan Clayton/Andrew Dickinson as the Choruses, Claudia Huckle as Lucretia and Duncan Rock as Tarquinius, among others. Part of the interview appeared in The Independent the other day, and here is the director's cut...
Fiona Shaw is worried about our view of “virtuous” women of stage, page and history. Earlier this year, the renowned Irish actress and director took the role of the Virgin Mary on Broadway; but the production, Colm Tóibín’s play The Testament of Mary, sparked protests outside the theatre by members of the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property.
Fiona Shaw is worried about our view of “virtuous” women of stage, page and history. Earlier this year, the renowned Irish actress and director took the role of the Virgin Mary on Broadway; but the production, Colm Tóibín’s play The Testament of Mary, sparked protests outside the theatre by members of the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property.
“Who is the Virgin Mary? We
discovered her to be a mother very angry about her son being crucified,” Shaw
says. “But apparently it is sacrilege to suggest that a ‘virtuous’ woman is more
interesting than the bland version that’s been handed down to us.”
This is a concept more than pertinent to Shaw’s latest
project: she is staging Britten’s chamber opera The Rape of Lucretia for Glyndebourne Touring Opera. Its storyline
is outwardly simple, but the emotions behind it are anything but; and its final
attempt to extrapolate meaning from tragedy heightens its ambiguities.
The story is based on a Roman legend that has been
reinterpreted in many forms over the centuries. The army officers have tested
their wives’ fidelity in their absence; only Lucretia, wife of the general
Collatinus, has emerged untainted. This provokes jealousy among the soldiers
whose spouses have strayed. To test her virtue, or indeed to prove it, the
prince Tarquinius visits Lucretia’s house by night and eventually rapes her.
When Collatinus returns he places no blame on his devastated wife; but rather
than live under such a shadow, she takes her own life.
“What is virtue?” Shaw demands. “It’s interesting that we
meet Lucretia when she is at her most frustrated and fed up, with her husband
away. ‘Virtue’ is nothing to do with not being frustrated, or with not having
another glass of wine because you want to stay up; after all, it’s also
virtuous to want to be awake because you can’t bear to go to bed without your
husband. That doesn’t come in any guise of prudery. Lucretia’s an immediate
person, not a saint.” The central role is sung by the mezzo-soprano Claudia
Huckle, who will, Shaw says, give a “feisty” interpretation.
The opera, which was premiered at Glyndebourne itself in
1946, must have been shocking in its day, when rape was very much a taboo subject.
“I find it quite shocking still,” Shaw remarks. “It’s painful, what is being
exposed, and the music is so brilliantly constructed that you feel pierced by
it. It leaves Mozart standing, some of it.”
Nevertheless, the composer – famously homosexual in an era
when this was still illegal – was not always at his best when creating female
characters. His finest are often motherly figures, like the Governess in The Turn of the Screw; but his Queen
Elizabeth I in Gloriana never becomes
as real as the eponymous heroes of Peter
Grimes and Billy Budd, outsiders
amid hostile societies that reject their troubled or non-conforming visions of
life. Lucretia is often regarded as his one truly convincing heroine; and
Britten and his librettist, the poet Ronald Duncan, provide her with a wealth
of concealed or unconscious depths, desires and conflicts.
“Britten is so good at dealing with the most complex issue:
what is it to have secret desires and be punished for it?” Shaw says. She has
no doubt that in the opera the rape is precisely that: Lucretia refuses
Tarquinius at every turn, is ultimately forced, and the act drives her to
suicide. Yet there is still a suggestion of an attraction to him, upon which
she refuses to let herself act. “What a hell to be put through: to be forced to
do something that your moral sense would make you not do, but your instinct
would desire you to do. In that way, with that double twist, the opera is
nearer to a Greek tragedy than anything else. At the end she tells us the she
knows the consequences of living now, admitting to desire – not to acting on
desire, but to having desire – would
be a blemish on her marriage. So she’s the most honourable person – and the
opera throws a little light on a very dark part of our psyches.
“Britten is looking under the stone and seeing the muddy
waters that lie beneath us all, maybe beneath morality itself,” she continues.
“The Greeks were very good at this – but the notion of Christianity is that
Jesus looked with compassion at us, but our sin is to be human, is to be
flawed, is to have these contradictory feelings and try to deal with them.
Lucretia is the most upright person. She is at home, passive, she made no
action – but somewhere her secret desire came to her in the night. And she
resisted. And yet it ruined her marriage. That’s the tragedy of it.”
Britten adds a male and female ‘chorus’, who watch and
comment on the action throughout; Shaw says that in the new production they are
a present-day couple whose marriage is suffering and who work through their own
issues by observing Lucretia’s story. The opera’s Christian element is
articulated in their bleak yet compassionate postlude: “Is it all?” they ask.
She has introduced a further twist still: “I want it to be
about the destruction of a family, not only a couple.” Lucretia and Collatinus
therefore have a small daughter, an eight-year-old who witnesses the horror of
her mother’s death: “It’s to do with the continuity of children; the
consequences for the next generation are worth showing.”
Lucretia, in
Shaw’s opinion, is “up there with the classics,” as she declares. “It’s
explores that terribly deep psychic schism that’s in us and it’s a brave and
beautiful opera. Humans in it are not all terrible; Tarquinius is not a baddy
and Lucretia is not a goody. That’s the beauty of opera: it allows you to
meditate on the complexity of our choices. I think it’s fantastic that Britten
writes so much about that. The chilly unease that he brings to most of his work
is to do with the fact that the major chord of society’s vision of itself is
not his experience.”
Is Britten, then, his own outsider, that “different” figure
at the heart of most of his operas? “Yes,” says Shaw. “But we all are.”
The Rape of Lucretia,
Glyndebourne Touring Opera, from 19 October. Tour dates and booking online:
http://glyndebourne.com/production/rape-of-lucretia-tour-2013
Fiona has also written a 'director's diary' which is out in The Guardian today.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Watch Julian Jacobson's Beethoven Marathon live today!
Assuming this works, you should be able to watch Julian Jacobson's extraordinary undertaking today - all 32 Beethoven piano sonatas in one day - in the livestream below, starting at 9.15am London time. (If for any reason it doesn't work, here is a link to one that should.) To donate to Julian's chosen charities, WaterAid and The Connection at St Martin's, please click here. And if you missed the original post, read it here.
Break a leg, Julian!
Break a leg, Julian!
Watch live streaming video from marathonman at livestream.com
Monday, October 14, 2013
My autumn & winter schedule
Here are some dates for your diaries, fresh from my writing desk: a brand-new words&music concert, a brand-new play, more HUNGARIAN DANCES. Please come along! (The info is also in the sidebar, but certain people are telling me to put it somewhere more prominent...)
ALICIA'S GIFT: THE CONCERT OF THE NOVEL - new!
Starring Viv McLean (piano) (left) & Jessica Duchen (narrator).
A concert adaptation of my novel, lifting the lid on the world of a child prodigy pianist trying to grow up. Music includes Chopin, Debussy, Ravel, Viv's famous performance of Rhapsody in Blue, and a little surprise to end (clue: I have to practise...). News story in International Piano, here.
World premiere: 9 November, Musical Museum, Kew Bridge.To book tickets, call Houben's Bookshop, Richmond-upon-Thames, 020 8940 1055 or Yvonne Evans, 07889 399862. Ticket price includes a tour of the museum's amazing collection plus a glass of bubbly.
13 November, Kensington & Chelsea Music Society
27 November, Vernon Ellis Foundation, 49 Queen's Gate Terrace, SW7. Info from Yvonne: 07889 399862.
8 December, St Mary's, Perivale
15 December, Burgh House, Hampstead, NW3. Tickets from Yvonne: 07889 399862.
18 January, Soirees at Breinton, Woking
SINS OF THE FATHERS - new!
World premiere of my first full-length play, exploring the relationships of Wagner, Liszt and Cosima: rehearsed reading starring John Sessions (right) and Sarah Gabriel. 24 November, Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond-upon-Thames. Part of the International Wimbledon Music Festival. NB - the performance is sold out, but please watch for returns/standing room!
HUNGARIAN DANCES: THE CONCERT OF THE NOVEL
A dazzling journey in words and music through the 20th century, following the story of Mimi, a Hungarian Gypsy violinist who becomes a famous classical soloist, but at a terrible personal price... Works by Bartok, Dohnanyi, Brahms, Ravel, etc.
27 October, 7.45pm, Teesside Music Society.
Bradley Creswick (violin), Margaret Fingerhut (piano), Jessica Duchen (narrator). (Team pictured left)
27 January 2014, Hungarian Cultural Centre, Covent Garden
David Le Page (violin), Viv McLean (piano), Jessica Duchen (narrator). Special performance for International Holocaust Memorial Day.
2 March 2014, St Mary's, Perivale: again, Dave, Viv & muggins.
ALICIA'S GIFT: THE CONCERT OF THE NOVEL - new!
Starring Viv McLean (piano) (left) & Jessica Duchen (narrator).
A concert adaptation of my novel, lifting the lid on the world of a child prodigy pianist trying to grow up. Music includes Chopin, Debussy, Ravel, Viv's famous performance of Rhapsody in Blue, and a little surprise to end (clue: I have to practise...). News story in International Piano, here.
World premiere: 9 November, Musical Museum, Kew Bridge.To book tickets, call Houben's Bookshop, Richmond-upon-Thames, 020 8940 1055 or Yvonne Evans, 07889 399862. Ticket price includes a tour of the museum's amazing collection plus a glass of bubbly.
13 November, Kensington & Chelsea Music Society
27 November, Vernon Ellis Foundation, 49 Queen's Gate Terrace, SW7. Info from Yvonne: 07889 399862.
8 December, St Mary's, Perivale
15 December, Burgh House, Hampstead, NW3. Tickets from Yvonne: 07889 399862.
18 January, Soirees at Breinton, Woking
SINS OF THE FATHERS - new!
HUNGARIAN DANCES: THE CONCERT OF THE NOVEL
A dazzling journey in words and music through the 20th century, following the story of Mimi, a Hungarian Gypsy violinist who becomes a famous classical soloist, but at a terrible personal price... Works by Bartok, Dohnanyi, Brahms, Ravel, etc.
27 October, 7.45pm, Teesside Music Society.
Bradley Creswick (violin), Margaret Fingerhut (piano), Jessica Duchen (narrator). (Team pictured left)
27 January 2014, Hungarian Cultural Centre, Covent Garden
David Le Page (violin), Viv McLean (piano), Jessica Duchen (narrator). Special performance for International Holocaust Memorial Day.
2 March 2014, St Mary's, Perivale: again, Dave, Viv & muggins.
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Marathon man and the Beethoven challenge
He says himself, "It's basically bananas". Nevertheless, the pianist Julian Jacobson is about to play all 32 Beethoven sonatas in one day. From memory. For charity. On Tuesday 15 October 2013, 9.15am – 10pm at St Martin-in-the-Fields, Trafalgar Square, London. The aim is to raise money for WaterAid and St Martin-in-the-Fields’ ‘The Connection at St Martin’s’ that gives crisis grants to people in need across the UK. You can make a donation here.
The whole day is being live-streamed on the Internet, and (drumroll) I hope that you will be able to watch it right here on JDCMB. (This assumes that I can get the technology to work.)
What's without doubt is that Julian's a brave man. I asked him some questions...
JD: Julian, you're playing all the 32 Beethoven sonatas in one day, from memory?!? How and why did you cook up this extraordinary idea?
JJ: Thanks
Jessica. Well, it's actually my third marathon - and it will almost
certainly be my last! By around 2001 I had done five complete cycles
over the normal seven or eight concerts (once over ten, as they were
lunchtimes), from memory except that I sometimes used the score for the
"Hammerklavier". One day the idea suddenly came to me: "I wonder if
it's actually possible to do them all in a day..." I counted up the timings
and found that, by
omitting most of the exposition repeats, it was just about manageable.
And from then on the idea wouldn't let me go.
I thought I'd do it just once, and that was in St James's Piccadilly in October 2003, for WaterAid as this time. A Beethoven lover, Mr Tom Glaser, was at that performance and booked me for a repeat performance in 2004 at the Harrow Arts Centre. And I thought that would be that, and I remember driving back down to London yelling to my companion "Hooray, never again!". But a couple of years ago I began to wonder if I had it in me to do it one more time, as a tenth anniversary and because I'm 65 this year! So here we are.
In 2003 I used the
score just for the "Hammerklavier"; in 2004 I did the lot from memory as I
intend to this time. It's not even that I particularly adhere to
the custom of
playing from memory, either for myself or
certainly for anyone else (except that one's students still have to do
it, poor things), but it doesn't seem quite like a real marathon
performance if I just put the books up there and read through them all.
And there IS something of the "stunt" about it, I'm very aware of that,
some musicians think it's not really a serious venture at all, and I
insist that it's for charity. Though of course I will play it all to my
best ability!
JD: What do you think is the single most difficult thing about it?
JJ: Keeping
going! Not losing concentration, avoiding thinking what I have already
played or am going to play, Monitoring hands and back to ensure they
hold out.
JD: Any special favourites among the sonatas?
JJ: Op 101. Then some overlooked gems like Op.79. The "Appassionata" remains permanently sublime.
JD: How long has it taken you to learn them all and how have you been preparing for the big day?
JJ: I
claim to be the only Beethoven pianist - if I may call myself that -
who learnt the "Moonlight" and "Pathétique" at the age of 45! I would
never learn the popular pieces in the first part of my life. I hatched
the idea around 1989, by which time I'd played perhaps 12 of them.
Firstly I learnt the "Hammerklavier" and played it at Dartington, as I
felt there was no point in even considering a Beethoven cycle until I
had that under my belt, or at least vaguely
attached to the buckles. (I had already done op 101, 109, 110 and 111).
Then I put the idea on ice till I got my job as Head of Keyboard
Studies at the Welsh College in 1992. At that point, with the security
of a salary, I planned an initial couple of cycles and spent the whole
summer vacation of 1994 learning all the rest.
Preparing
for the big day: impossible to know how to do it really! Mainly I've
been going through them all in decreasing time spans, so I started
around six months ago to re-study every one, then worked through them
all again in a few weeks, then over about ten days, and now just in four
days. A short while ago I stopped listening to any other pianists, and
indeed to most other music, in order to concentrate entirely on my own
performances "right or wrong".
JD: Tell us a little about the charities you've chosen to support.
JJ: I'm
a long-term supporter of WaterAid: firstly I love the work they do, as
water is such a fundamental need and it is something we can actually do
something about, and then it is a very well run charity that I feel
happy about giving extra support to. The Connection does vital work
among the homeless and I've been impressed by the care and thought that
goes into their activities and projects, also by the dignity with which
they treat the people they are helping. It's a homegrown charity,
whereas WaterAid is largely active in the third world, so they
complement each other nicely.
JD: And there's a live stream on the Internet? How do you feel about that?
JJ: Apprehensive! And that I will try to put it out of my mind. The point is to increase the amount of money for the charities.
JD: Anything else you'd like to tell us about the task ahead?
Here is Julian's donations page again.
Friday, October 11, 2013
Protecting music education: a vital message from the ISM
The ISM has emailed today with the following message. Please support their call! | ||||
Take action now to protect music education | ||||
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Thursday, October 10, 2013
Women conductors: encore furore
In an excoriating piece for the NPR blog, Anastasia Tsioulcas shreds the latest sexist remarks against women conductors - which include comments by the head of the Paris Conservatoire, for heaven's sake - and says that women in the classical music industry must start speaking up in earnest. Read it here.
You might like to know that my Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman Conductor has had more hits than any other post on JDCMB ever, in nearly a decade, and still rising.
Speaking isn't enough. We have to do something. Here is my idea from about a year ago. I still think it's a good one. http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/classical/features/sexism-with-strings-attached-8197972.html?origin=internalSearch
You might like to know that my Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman Conductor has had more hits than any other post on JDCMB ever, in nearly a decade, and still rising.
Speaking isn't enough. We have to do something. Here is my idea from about a year ago. I still think it's a good one. http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/classical/features/sexism-with-strings-attached-8197972.html?origin=internalSearch
Wednesday, October 09, 2013
Verdi bicentenary: Anja Harteros and Jonas Kaufmann in Don Carlo
It's Verdi's bicentenary today and as everyone is choosing their favourite bits, here is one of mine. I've been lucky enough to hear these two in this opera twice this year - once at Covent Garden, once in Munich. Life in music just doesn't get any better than that.
Thursday, October 03, 2013
Alexei Sultanov plays Tchaikovsky's 'October'
An exquisite performance of 'October' from The Seasons by Tchaikovsky, performed by the late Alexei Sultanov.
This loss of this young Russian pianist was one of the great tragedies of the music world in recent years. He was the winner of the Van Cliburn Competition in 1989, aged only 19, and died in 2005 at only 35. His full story is here.
Wednesday, October 02, 2013
When is a bat not a bat?
When it's a turkey. Here's my review of the new Die Fledermaus at ENO.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/classical/reviews/opera-review-die-fledermaus--english-national-opera-london-coliseum-8852067.html
Odd that Bieito's thought-provoking Fidelio was booed and this one wasn't, though the applause was little more than "well done for trying".
We may need a moratorium on jackboots at the opera. Terry Gilliam got away with it in The Damnation of Faust because of the general brilliance of the whole; and The Passenger, by Mieczyslaw Weinberg, was the real thing and couldn't do without them - though notably failed to sell. But in Die Fledermaus? This is getting silly. Next time someone brings gratuitous Nazis into an opera production, I might just stand up in the auditorium and start singing 'Springtime for Hitler'...
There's a serious point to this. If productions fill up with Nazis the minute anything is German or Austrian, it is lazy thinking and becomes a cliche. And if Nazis are reduced to a cliche on the operatic stage, it devalues the horrors that they (and other fascist/totalitarian regimes) have perpetrated. It devalues their victims. Enough, already.
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/classical/reviews/opera-review-die-fledermaus--english-national-opera-london-coliseum-8852067.html
Odd that Bieito's thought-provoking Fidelio was booed and this one wasn't, though the applause was little more than "well done for trying".
We may need a moratorium on jackboots at the opera. Terry Gilliam got away with it in The Damnation of Faust because of the general brilliance of the whole; and The Passenger, by Mieczyslaw Weinberg, was the real thing and couldn't do without them - though notably failed to sell. But in Die Fledermaus? This is getting silly. Next time someone brings gratuitous Nazis into an opera production, I might just stand up in the auditorium and start singing 'Springtime for Hitler'...
There's a serious point to this. If productions fill up with Nazis the minute anything is German or Austrian, it is lazy thinking and becomes a cliche. And if Nazis are reduced to a cliche on the operatic stage, it devalues the horrors that they (and other fascist/totalitarian regimes) have perpetrated. It devalues their victims. Enough, already.