Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Thursday, December 5, 2019

Elton John: ‘It’s tragic that music is being taken out of schools


By Maddy Shaw Roberts
We met Sir Elton at his old alma mater to talk music education, his ‘mystical’ song-writing process and how the Royal Academy of Music has changed since 1958...
“It was so intimidating then,” Sir Elton tells Classic FM’s Tim Lihoreau, as they meet in a room behind reception at London’s Royal Academy of Music. “It smelt of fear.”
The great pianist and singer has just hosted a Q&A with students of the Academy, which he attended as a Junior Exhibitioner from the tender age of 11.
But by 16, the young Reggie Dwight had decided to quit his classical roots to pursue a career in rock ‘n roll. And, rather hearteningly, he still puts his enormous success down to those early years spent playing scales in a practice room.
“In those days, the Academy meant classical music and nothing else – certainly no rock ‘n roll. That was the devil’s music. But without my training, I never would’ve been able to write the songs I’ve written.
“I’m so grateful for my classical training. I played Chopin and Mozart and Debussy, and to be part of the choir was incredibly fulfilling. Singing in a choir is such a moving, life-affirming experience.”
Sir Elton John speaks to Classic FM’s Tim Lihoreau at the Royal Academy of Music
Sir Elton John speaks to Classic FM’s Tim Lihoreau at the Royal Academy of Music. Picture: Classic FM
Today, eight Royal Academy students a year are on the Elton John Scholarship – a fund reserved for exceptional young musicians who would otherwise be unable to afford the fees.
There was a rather lovely moment during the Q&A when four of those students stood up and spoke about what they had achieved thanks to their star sponsor. This of course begged the question: what does Elton make of the dwindling presence of music in today’s schools?
“Music was one of the few O Levels I managed to get,” Sir Elton tells Tim.
“A lot of schools [now] have taken music out of the curriculum and I find that really appalling, because music is so inspiring and for kids that have the ability or want to play music, there’s no outlet for this in schools anymore. It’s tragic.”
Watch Taron Egerton and Elton John’s magical duet at 'Rocketman' Cannes premiere
Credit: Getty Images
Sir Elton has famously enjoyed a long-lasting relationship with the keyboard. The story goes that as a teenager at the Royal Academy of Music, he played a note-perfect rendition of a four-page Handel composition, completely by ear (for any Rocketman fans out there, the moment is replicated in the movie but replaced with Mozart’s better-known Rondo alla turca).
But that isn’t the only great musical relationship Elton has enjoyed throughout his professional life. His arrangement with songwriter Bernie Taupin is, Tim suggests, a somewhat mystical one.
“It’s very mystical. There’s no rhyme or reason. It exists, I don’t question it,” Elton replies. “It sounds very cliché but it’s like a gift from God.
“I look at his lyrics, as I’m looking at them a film appears, I finish the lyrics, I puts my hands on the keys and then I go from there. Usually, the first four or five chords I play determine what the song’s going to do. And I have no idea where it comes from.”
Sir Elton John singing 'Candle In The Wind' at the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales
Sir Elton John singing 'Candle In The Wind' at the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales. Picture: Getty
After around 60 years of playing for other people, it would be easy to assume that Sir Elton got over any feelings of stage fright decades ago.
But there was one instance of it that he still remembers very clearly – and it was when he famously played ‘Candle in the Wind’ at the funeral of Diana, the Princess of Wales, in 1997.
“It was the only time I really got stage fright,” he tells Tim.
“It was an enormous responsibility, and I’d been singing that song for so many years as ‘Goodbye Norma Jean’, and I had to call on all my professionalism of all my years of playing in clubs and being Elton John to pull that off.
“And I was doing it for all the people outside, all around the world, so I had a teleprompter. I just didn’t want to sing ‘Goodbye Norma Jean’ – I would’ve been garrotted on the spot. And I pulled it off because I had to. You have to man up in situations like that.”

Friday, November 15, 2019

Music teaching is vital to a child’s education

Nicola Benedetti: ‘Music teaching is vital to a child’s education’



By Maddy Shaw Roberts
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The leading violinist on the state of music education in schools, the essential role of music in our day-to-day lives, and why we need to do more to celebrate our country’s teachers.
Nicola Benedetti has spoken passionately about the need for better music education in schools, saying “music teaching is vital to a child’s education”. 
In a speech held at Elizabeth Garrett Anderson School in London, the violin virtuoso drew on her time spent campaigning for better music provision in some of England and Scotland’s most underprivileged schools.
“Any one moment can flick a switch and turn a tide. Each moment with someone young can be that moment for them – when they choose hope over apathy or choose to persevere over giving up,” she says, speaking to members of the Royal Philharmonic Society and the wider classical music industry.
“Music fires the imagination in young minds. On many an occasion, I have learned more about the pieces I’m playing from critiques of a four-year-old listening to me playing, than I have from years of studying and learning professionally,” Benedetti says, with a smile.
Nicola Benedetti is campaigning for better music education across the UK
Nicola Benedetti is campaigning for better music education across the UK. Picture: PA
The Scottish-born violinist, who has tirelessly campaigned for better music education across the country, has previously said that while her first love is music, her second is educating people through the art of music.
Since the age of 15, Benedetti has worked with schools and music organisations around the world, engaging with local music-making and spending countless hours working alongside teachers who have dedicated their lives to music.
“I saw a huge number of inspiring teachers engaging their students with no sacrifice on quality,” she recalls.
“I saw great teaching and playing, regardless of level. The more I looked, the more excellence, ingenuity, creativity, dedication, resilience and unbelievable steadfastness in both teacher and student I encountered.”
Benedetti pauses. “But I also saw lacklustre music teachers and students, worn down by years of zero celebration of their work, continuous battles to hold onto the tiny resources they have, and feeling like they are pushing against a culture that only celebrates music sold like addictive candy.”
Nicola Benedetti is a leading violinist and music education ambassador
Nicola Benedetti is a leading violinist and music education ambassador. Picture: Andy Gotts
In January this year, Nicola and her team set up the Benedetti Foundation, a charitable organisation which will support students and teachers in music-making.
The foundation’s main focus will be the ‘Benedetti Sessions’ – a series of orchestra-based weekend workshops, designed to address the needs of young musicians and of teachers, and to enrich the lives of today’s young people through music.
“Music is a gift from the depth of one person’s soul to another. It is the art of all things we cannot see nor touch,” the virtuoso says.
“The teaching of music is important because, put simply, music is important.”

Thursday, October 24, 2019

A rigorous musical analysis of Kylie Jenner’s ‘Rise and Shine

By Kyle Macdonald and Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM

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Kylie Jenner has gone viral for singing a musical wake-up call to her daughter, Stormi. And as always, when a moment of music is resonating around the world, we’re here with the analysis.
Kylie Jenner, 22-year-old billionaire and professional Internet Person, sang a lullaby to her daughter, Stormi – and now, the video has gone viral.
Jenner’s original lullaby, entitled ‘Rise and Shine’, has been breaking the Internet for a grand total of 72 hours. It’s literally only second on the viral scale to Jennifer Aniston’s Friends reunion selfie (here’s our classical version, if you missed it).
But why is ‘Rise and Shine’ proving to be so popular?

Let’s begin with our transcription.


Jenner chooses a loosely swung triple metre for her magnum opus. The click of the light switch is ever so slightly anticipated, coming in just before the line’s anacrusis.
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In a true mezzo register, the melody moves from the tonic to the third degree of the scale (an E), before a swung D as we return to the tonic.
But in a surprise cadenza, Jenner chooses not to settle on the tonic, instead falling down from the C in a subtle portamento and ending on a raspy dominant.
Harmonically, Kylie plays it safe, opting for the key of C major – second inversion. Throughout the line, her vocals demonstrate a tentative, wavering timbre underpinned with a strength that emerges in the second syllable of the lyric.

‘Rise and Shine’ as Gesamtkunstwerk

The German term Gesamtkunstwerk is translated as ‘total work of art’. It’s an idea that began during the enlightenment and later advanced in Richard Wagner’s writings on music, aesthetics and philosophy.
Gesamtkunstwerk is the theatrical act that brings together all or as many art forms as possible: poetry, staging and music in free-flowing drama. Wagner’s Ring Cycle is often used as an example of this aesthetic.
In Jenner’s dramatic vignette, we begin in a darkened room, the flick of the light bringing narrative drama to the Spartan stage and barred cot.
There’s poetry in the ‘rise and shine’ text, and of course now-iconic music. So, is it Gesamtkunstwerk? Ja.

The best covers of ‘Rise and Shine’

Since Kylie premiered her opus, musicians the world over have been keen to put their own spin on ‘Rise on Shine’.
Yesterday, musician Suzy Jones demonstrated how ‘Rise and Shine’ would sound in nine-part harmony, by added a choir to the track.
A pianist and a singer extended the line, morphing Jenner’s simple melody into a fully-fledged musical theatre ballad for soprano voice.
There was also this violinist, who got bored of practising...
Even Ariana Grande sampled Jenner’s line.
Best of all, jazz pianist Charles Cornell (see his excellent work on Cardi B’s videos here) has now treated us to an excellent extended harmony version. We are in awe.