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Thursday, October 26, 2017

This is how Beethoven can change your life - maybe...

We meet the legendary conductor Herbert Blomstedt

20 October 2017 by ClassicFM London
Herbert Blomstedt
By Lizzie Davis
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Herbert Blomsted is a true icon of classical music. He celebrated his 90th birthday in July this year but he’s just recorded all nine of Beethoven’s symphonies, will be performing at the Barbican this month and isn’t thinking of retiring any time soon…

How did you decide to become a conductor?

Unlike some of my colleagues, I did not dream of becoming a conductor. I loved orchestra music – when I was at school I listened to two symphony concerts a week in Gothenburg. But I played the violin and I was more fascinated by playing the string quartets of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven. My brother played the cello and tougher we dreamed of find a couple of lovely girls who played the viola and violin, and we’d find two houses by a lake and play string quartets every day.
Of course that didn’t happen. The real change in direction came when I studied at the conservatory in Stockholm and I was chosen to conduct Brahms’ Requiem one semester. That was the beginning of it.

What’s your advice for young musicians just starting out on their careers now?

Get a good musical training, whatever musical instrument you play. I was a violinist and then an organist also. But it doesn’t matter so much what instrument you play, but that you have to get a very good musical training and knowledge of theoretical subjects – harmony, counterpoint and so on. Only if a conductor starts out as a good musician does he stand any chance. To start too early to wave your hands in front of a professional orchestra doesn’t bring much. You might get some flashy emotional things if you conduct a Mahler piece, but conduct a minuet from Haydn and see if you can get some music out of that.
Herbert Blomstedt shows his… musical side in this video from the Berlin Philharmonic:

What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?

My piano teacher at the conservatory gave me some great advice He was a pupil of Artur Schnabel. He said: you have to hear the tone in your head before you strike the key. Don’t just push down the key and then discover how it sounds, but have in your head already how you want it to sound, then try to transport it to your fingertips.
That’s very good advice for conductors too. You must never give the downbeat and then say to your self “now, how does that sound?”. You must know how you want it to sound before you even pick up the baton.

You’ve made a huge amount of recordings in your career. Is there one which stands out for you?

First, I must make a confession – I don’t listen very much to my own recordings. But I do especially remember when we recorded Bruckner’s Seventh Symphony in Dresdenwith the Staatskapelle. We had been on tour in Japan for three weeks and had played the symphony several times on tour. And when we came back to Dresden to record this piece, of course we didn’t need to rehearse at all. We just had three days to adjust to the time different and then we went into the studio and recorded this. And it’s a fantastic sound. When I listen to the end of the first movement, when you start the final crescendo, how the orchestra plays fills me with awe.

Is there a recording you’d like to go back and do it again?

Yes and no. I cannot mention a particular piece but we’ve just finished recording the Beethoven symphonies for the second time. I recorded them in Dresden 30 years ago and many things have changed since then – I have changed, the editions have changed, the orchestral seating has changed. At the time of the Dresden recordings we had the second violins sitting inside the first, but that’s not correct. In Beethoven’s time you have the second violins on the right, otherwise you cannot have the dialogue between the first and second violins.
So when I returned to these symphonies I wanted that sort of sound geography and now we also have the big advantage of using the new editions. We use the Bärenreiter editions edited by Jonathan del Mar which I think is the best edition you can have nowadays. That brings a lot of information you we didn’t have 30 years ago, particularly the metronome markings.

Why do you think audiences and musicians still love Beethoven’s music?

I think the most striking character of Beethoven’s symphonies is the will power – the resolute plan for every work. He takes us by the hand so to speak and leads us his way. It’s music that has a message, but you have to work to find that message. If you just play the notes, that does not mean that you’ve got the meaning of the music.

What role do you think music has in a politically divided world?

Music can certainly split people but it can certainly also bring people together. Music has a very big impact on the listener.
I know from many reactions I’ve had from the public how it can change people's minds and even change their whole lives by listening to a Beethoven symphony. I’ve been performing in Tokyo every year for about 40 years. Some 15 years ago I got a letter from a banker and he said he’d been thinking of committing suicide because he was so unhappy with what was happening in the world of banking – so much fraud. He was thinking, I’ve devoted my life to a business where so many bad things are happening, I cannot go on like this.
And he came to one of our concerts where we played a Beethoven symphony and it changed his life. He said, “if there’s a world where Beethoven could create this music, some 200 years ago, it must also be possible to give my work in the world a good purpose.” He was sensitive enough to understand the different moods in the music and was carried along with its sense of purpose. The music changed his life. And now every time I come back to Tokyo there’s a big box of fresh fruit waiting for me. 

Finally, if you could go back in time and meet any of the composers from the past for a coffee, who would it be and why? 

This is a difficult question, I would like to meet many of them! Since I was a violinist from the beginning, Bach was my musical god. The incredible talent and incredible mind – of course he was a very religious man. He was convinced that music was of divine origin and he had had divine purpose in his composing of music.  The other one is Schubert. Schubert is a mystery to me – he is an incredible artist, every bar is so wonderful and fresh. Schubert composed as if he had some secret line to God himself. The second movement of his String Quintet always makes me cry. It’s so musically perfect and enigmatic that it brings me awe and wonder.
Herbert Blomstedt conducts the Gewandhausorchester Leipzig this Sunday, 22 October, at London's Barbican, at 7.30pm
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Thursday, October 19, 2017

Meet the muses of the great composers

Musicians are three times more likely to experience depression...

...according to study

By CLASSIC FM, LONDON
Male cellist
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A concerning new piece of research reveals the scale of the mental health crisis facing the UK music industry.
‘Can Music Make You Sick?’ is a new study commissioned by Help Musicians UK, which explores the effects of a career in music on musicians’ mental health.
The study, completed by University of Westminster, investigated 2,211 musicians, 71.1% of whom said they had suffered from panic attacks or anxiety, with 68.5% saying they had struggled with depression.
Researchers Sally-Anne Gross and Dr. George Musgrave cited a few major issues including money worries, because of juggling many different jobs and dealing with precarious and unpredictable pay, and poor working conditions.
They also found musicians were more likely to be subject to sexual abuse, bullying and discrimination – as well as antisocial and unsympathetic working environments.
While relationships with family and the support of close friends and partners are highly valued, they are also “open to abuse and feelings of guilt”. Plus, musicians often lack the financial means to seek professional support.
This news follows a recent study in the scientific journal Eating and Weight Disorders which revealed that a third of musicians suffer from eating disorders due to stress, concerts and perfectionism.
Since publishing the study, Help Musicians UK have promised to establish a music industry mental health taskforce, launch a 24/7 mental health service, Music Minds Matter, and to advocate change across the industry.
Christine Brown, director of external affairs at Help Musicians UK, told M magazine: “Help Musicians UK is uniquely placed to commission and share the results of this important, game-changing study. The charity granted nearly two million pounds last year to those that need it most in the industry, so it is a natural step to examine the key issues and make a call to action to help implement wider, lasting change in the industry. 
“The British music industry is in rude health and has a world class reputation – but to continue the long-term wellbeing of the industry and its workers, we aim to create a constructive forum for discussion, partnership and collaboration.
“Through the new Music Minds Matter service, we are closer to providing the crucial support, advice and education the music community desperately needs. Together we can continue to chip away at the stigma, so that in the long term those working in the community never have to suffer in silence.”
Researchers Gross and Musgrave added: “This research is a crucial step forward in our understanding of the complex relationship between the working conditions of musicians and mental health conditions. 
“The honesty and poignancy of our interviewees has made possible this important work, and informed the service provision being implemented by Help Musicians UK, and for that we are truly thankful. We welcome the new service Music Minds Matter and hope that this research can spark a wider debate both in the music industry about the welfare of those at its heart, and more generally about the challenging nature of precarious work.”

Thursday, October 12, 2017

49 sentences all musicians will find intensely annoying


By ClassicFM London

musician sentences
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If you're a musician, these will make you curl up on the floor and weep. We've all heard them before, but it doesn't make it any less painful...

If you're a musician, these will make you curl up on the floor and weep. We've all heard them before, but it doesn't make it any less painful...

1. ‘You’re a singer? Sing us something then.’

2. ‘No space in the cabin I’m afraid. This will have to go in the hold.’

3. ‘We’ll be playing all the repeats in Pachelbel’s Canon.’

4. ‘I didn’t think anyone still wrote classical music.’

5. ‘It’s nice to have teaching to fall back on.’

6. ‘I loved Amadeus. It’s great to see an accurate portrayal of historical events.’

7. ‘You’re a musician? So what do you do for your actual job?’

8. ‘We will pay you in exposure and experience.’

9. ‘The bar will be closing as soon as the concert finishes.’

10. ‘So that’s like a big violin, right?’

11. ‘So that’s like a small cello, right?’

12. ‘So that’s like a… actually, what is a viola?’

13. ‘Is there a machine gun in there?’

14. ‘Is there a dead body in there?’

15. ‘Ladies and gentlemen, please be aware that the toilets are unfortunately out of order. And now, the complete Ring Cycle.’

16. ‘OK, we’ll break for tea just as soon as we finish this 18-minute movement.’

17. ‘You’re a singer? Have you thought about trying out for The X Factor?’

18. ‘We’re bringing classical music to a new audience by adding a rap.’

19. ‘We’re bringing classical music to a new audience by adding electronic beats.’

20. ‘We’re bringing classical music to a new audience by creating a fusion of multiple non-traditional influences.’

21. ‘We’re bringing classical music to a new audience by playing the piece exactly as intended by the composer.’

22. ‘Opera is such an expressive art form, any Lloyd Webber show will tell you that.’

23. ‘Aren’t you too young to be a classical musician?’

24. ‘I could’ve been a professional musician too.’

25. ‘Ah, you’re a musician. How do you pay for things?’

26. ‘I adore classical music. All the greats. Mozart… uh… yeah, Mozart.’

27. ‘It must be so romantic to live like an impoverished artist.’

28. ‘You play music for a living? That must be so relaxing.’

29. ‘You understand good music, don’t you? Have you heard Justin Bieber’s mature new album?’

30. ‘I wish I could just do my hobby all day like you.’

31. ‘Would you listen to my band’s demo tape? We’re equally influenced by Schoenberg
and Metallica.’

32. ‘Ticket prices are £30, but we can’t actually afford to give you a fee.’

33. ‘Actually I’ve composed a song of my own. Can I play it to you?’

34. ‘I know a musician, do you know them too?’

35. ‘Have you ever thought about using a microphone?’

36. ‘We’re all meeting up this weekend, can you make it?’

37. ‘Of course you’re invited to our wedding! But could you bring your violin?’

38. ‘If you like music you should come along to my band’s gig, it’s a darkwave-ska sound installation with musical theatre elements.’

39. ‘But you don’t LOOK like a classical musician.’

40. ‘Can you bring your own piano?’

41. ‘I listen to all genres. Rock, pop… err… yeah, all genres.’

42. ‘So we want two sets of two hours, and no repetition please.’

43. ‘I went to a classical concert once.’

44. ‘I’m a musician too. I played the recorder at school.’

45. ‘Are you one of those singing waitresses?’

46. ‘You can’t call practising work, really, can you?’

47. ‘So if you could play for an hour and then clear up all the empty glasses, that’d be great.’

48. ‘Can we negotiate your fee down a little bit?’

49. ‘Who’s your favourite composer?’



Classical cartoons from 'don't shoot the pianist'