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?
JJ: Well,
I really won't do it again! I mean, it's basically bananas. I've had
fantastic support from friends and family. A few people have said
they'll come for the whole day to follow Beethoven's progress throughout
the 32 sonatas and that's a nice thought. And, when it comes down to
it, the fundamental
thing is that the music is immeasurably great and wonderful: Beethoven
had such creativity and he never repeated himself (as he was well
aware). Whatever I feel about the marathon aspect, I love the music, and
every sonata, every movement, has given me intense pleasure to
re-study.
Here is Julian's donations page again.