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Thursday, October 17, 2019

Boy who blurted out ‘Wow!’ in concert...

... invited back as a special guest

By Rosie Pentreath, ClassicFM
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Nine-year-old Ronan Mattin, who went viral earlier in the year for exclaiming ‘wow’ after some magnificent Mozart at Boston’s Symphony Hall, has been invited back by the orchestra.
Back in May, the story of a nine-year-old boy who couldn’t hide his enthusiasm for Mozart went viral.
Now dubbed the “wow child”, young Ronan Mattin exclaimed “wow” loudly in the silence before the applause at the end of The Handel and Haydn Society’s performance of Mozart’s Masonic Funeral Music, and delighted audiences around the world.
Mattin, who is on the autism spectrum and is “obsessed with musical instruments”, was invited by the orchestra to return to Boston’s Symphony Hall and attend a dress rehearsal as a special guest.
He left school early for the visit and was accompanied by his grandparents, according to The Boston Globe.
“Wow child” Ronan Mattin attends The Handel and Haydn Society’s dress rehearsal for ‘A Mozart Celebration’
“Wow child” Ronan Mattin attends The Handel and Haydn Society’s dress rehearsal for ‘A Mozart Celebration’. Picture: Jessica Rinaldi / Boston Globe
A witness to the first dress rehearsal in the season of The Handel and Haydn Society’s ‘A Mozart Celebration’ season, Mattin was apparently said few words during his visit, but was “thrilled”.
“He was tapping the window and jumping up and down,” his grandmother, Claire Mattin, told The Boston Globe.
“Yeah, music,” were two of the boy’s well-chosen words. Inside the hall he got the chance to meet instruments and their players up close, and hear the sounds they make in isolation.
Principal Trombonist, Toby Oft, welcomed Mattin to experience the vibrations of the music he was making, explaining “sound is vibrations.”
Orchestra seeks boy who exclaimed 'Wow' after performance of Mozart
Credit: WCRB/Handel and Haydn Society
Ronan’s enthusiasm for music came to global attention when, during a brief moment of silence after The Handel & Haydn Society finished their Mozart, he called out an uninhibited ‘Wow!’ (watch video above).
The awe in his voice made the whole audience and ensemble erupt into laughter and applause, with the orchestra’s CEO David Snead describing it as “one of the most wonderful moments I’ve experienced in the concert hall”.
After the concert, the orchestra began looking for the child – and his grandparents eventually got in touch, after initial hesitation due to concerns of reproach.
The moment went viral as a sheer demonstration of the power of music, and the importance of any appreciation of it being allowed to ring loud and clear in the concert hall.
“Music is vibrations” – Toby Oft introduces Ronan to the trombone
“Music is vibrations” – Toby Oft introduces Ronan to the trombone. Picture: Jessica Rinaldi / Boston Globe
“These sort of moments, like Ronan’s wonderful ‘wow’ moment, are just electrifying for us, and actually just make us realise exactly what we’re here doing,” the orchestra’s Artistic Director, Harry Christophers, tells The Globe.
“We’re here to give people a release from their daily existence,” Christophers continues. “With Ronan, it’s spontaneous, it’s an innocence, it’s just lovely.”
Hear, hear!

Brahms: String Sextet No. 1, Op. 18 - Concertgebouw Chamber Orchestra - ...

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Violinist Joshua Bell marries opera singer Larisa Martínez...

... in New York home ceremony

Joshua Bell and Larisa Martínez
Joshua Bell and Larisa Martínez. Picture: IG: Larisa Martinez
By Helena Asprou, ClassicFM
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Classical music power couple, Joshua Bell and Larisa Martínez, have just tied the knot – here’s everything you need to know.
It has just been announced that violinist and conductorJoshua Bell, and opera singer, Larisa Martínez, were married in their New York home last Saturday.
officiated by New York Times columnist David Brooks, the ceremony is a happy milestone for the classical music power couple – who over the years, have won multiple awards between them.
Born and raised in Bloomington, Indiana, Bell fell in love with music at an early age after hearing his mother play the piano and he soon developed an interest in the violin.
When he turned five, they began teaching him how to play the strings and by age 14, he appeared as a soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra.
Bell studied under Indiana University professor Josef Gingold and in 1985, made his Carnegie Hall debut aged 17 with the St. Louis Symphony. Since then, he has performed with some of the greatest classical orchestras and conductors in the world.
In 1993, the gifted virtuoso won a Grammy Award for his beautiful recording of Nicholas Maw’s violin concerto, and in 2000, he was honoured as an Indiana Living Legend for his contribution to the state.
Joshua Bell
Joshua Bell. Picture: Getty
His wife, talented soprano Larisa Martínez, is an opera singer and often praised for her warm voice and unique timbre.
In 2010, Martínez made her operatic debut as Luisa Fernanda in the zarzuela – a Spanish traditional form of musical comedy, at the Centro de Bellas Artes de Puerto Rico.
In the years that followed, she quickly rose to fame after singing as Corinna in Rossini’Il Viaggio a Reims, Musetta in Loft Opera’s 2014 production of Puccini’s La Bohème, and Isaura in the 2016 world premiere of Mercadante’s Francesca da Rimini.

Martínez, who has a masters degree in music from Mannes the New School for Music in New York City, is a winner of the Angel Ramos Foundation Award and the Metropolitan Opera National Council Audition PR district 2016.
She also collaborated with Joshua Bell on Medici TV’s Christmas Special, Joshua Bell and Friends.
Congratulations, Joshua and Larisa!

Classic FM Live 2019 at the Royal Albert Hall in pictures

 – with Gareth Malone and Isata Kanneh-Mason


Classic FM Live 2019
Classic FM Live 2019. Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
It’s that exciting time of the year again – Classic FM Live 2019 took place at the Royal Albert Hall last night!
Featuring standout performances from choirmaster Gareth Malone, and pianists Isata Kanneh-Mason and Benjamin Grosvenor, there’s a whole host of artists for the audience to enjoy.
We’ll be adding to the gallery during the night, but here are all the highlights from Classic FM Live so far...
  1. Rehearsals are in full swing...

    Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and Chorus rehearse ahead of Classic FM Live 2019
    Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and Chorus rehearse ahead of Classic FM Live 2019. Picture: Classic FM
  2. We’re joined by the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and Chorus

    Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
    Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and Chorus. Picture: PA
  3. Margherita Taylor and John Suchet present Classic FM Live 2019!

    Margherita Taylor and John Suchet present Classic FM Live 2019
    Margherita Taylor and John Suchet present Classic FM Live 2019. Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  4. Debbie Wiseman conducts the ‘Decca Anthem’, in celebration of the record label’s 90th anniversary

    Debbie Wiseman conducts the ‘Decca Anthem’, in celebration of the record label’s 90th anniversary
    Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  5. Stephen Barlow conducts the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and Chorus

    Stephen Barlow
    Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  6. Choirmaster Gareth Malone conducts ‘Wherever You Are’, performed beautifully by soloist Sara Brimer Davey

    Choirmaster Gareth Malone conducts ‘Wherever You Are’, sung by Sara Brimer Davey
    Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  7. Tonight’s concert hall, in all its glory

    Royal Albert Hall
    Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  8. Views from the back of the stalls...

    Royal Albert Hall
    Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  9. Star pianist Benjamin Grosvenor performs Gershwin’s ‘Rhapsody in Blue’

    Pianist Benjamin Grosvenor performs at Classic FM Live 2019
    Pianist Benjamin Grosvenor performs at Classic FM Live 2019. Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  10. Surprise guest, Colin Thackery, performs ‘I vow to thee my country’

    Britain's Got Talent winner, Colin Thackery, is a surprise guest on Classic FM Live 2019
    Britain's Got Talent winner, Colin Thackery, is a surprise guest on Classic FM Live 2019. Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  11. Isata Kanneh-Mason performs stunning Chopin

    Pianist Isata-Kanneh Mason performs at Classic FM Live 2019
    Pianist Isata-Kanneh Mason performs at Classic FM Live 2019. Picture: PA / Matt Crossick
  12. Pyrotechnics round off Classic FM Live 2019 with a bang!

    Classic FM Live 2019 fireworks finale at the Royal Albert Hall
    Classic FM Live 2019 fireworks finale at the Royal Albert Hall. Picture: PA / Matt Crossick

Saturday, October 5, 2019

I went into a depression

Julie Andrews on losing her voice after an operation...

Julie Andrews lost her voice after an operation
Julie Andrews lost her voice after an operation. Picture: PA
By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM London
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After having vocal surgery to remove ‘nodules’, Julie Andrews was left with permanent damage that destroyed her four-octave soprano voice.
Julie Andrews, the 84-year-old soprano and musical theatre legend, has opened up about the 1997 operation that caused her to lose her singing voice, saying: ‘I went into a depression’.
“When I woke up from an operation to remove a cyst on my vocal cord, my singing voice was gone,” she told AARP The Magazine for their October/November 2019 issue.
“I went into a depression. It felt like I’d lost my identity.”
Andrews, who won an Academy Award for her starring role in Mary Poppins (1964), first noticed her voice was hoarse during a Broadway show in 1997.
Shortly after, she had surgery to remove what she thought were ‘non-cancerous nodules’ from her throat at New York’s Mount Sinai Hospital. The surgery left her with permanent damage that destroyed her voice.
Julie Andrews had surgery that permanently destroyed her singing voice
Julie Andrews had surgery that permanently destroyed her singing voice. Picture: Getty
In 1999, Andrews filed a malpractice suit against the doctors at Mount Sinai Hospital. The lawsuit was settled in September 2000.
Ten years later, the Sound of Music actress revealed that she did not have cancer or nodules but was suffering from ‘a certain kind of muscular striation’ on her vocal cords, after straining her voice while making Victor/Victoria – the 1982 comedy directed by her late husband, Blake Edwards.
Andrews has since had several unsuccessful operations to repair her voice. Fortunately, around the time of operation, a new path opened up for the singer.
“But by good fortune,” she tells AARP, “That’s when my daughter Emma and I had been asked to write books for kids,” she said. “So along came a brand-new career in my mid-60s. Boy, was that a lovely surprise.”
“But do I miss singing,” she added. “Yes. I really do.
“I would have been quite a sad lady if I hadn’t had the voice to hold on to. The singing was the most important thing of all, and I don’t mean to be Pollyanna about how incredibly lost I’d have been without that.”
Julie Andrews is best known for her role as Maria in The Sound of Music (1965)
Julie Andrews is best known for her role as Maria in The Sound of Music (1965). Picture: 20th Century Fox
On being cast as Mary Poppins – her feature film debut – she said: “I don’t know what P.L. Travers [the author of the Mary Poppins books] thought. She said to me, ‘You’re very pretty, and you’ve got the nose for it.’ I’m sure she laughed all the way to the bank. She was very tough and canny.”
Now, Julie is starring in the TV series Bridgerton and has a new book coming out on 15 October, Home Work: A Memoir of My Hollywood Years.
But it seems those aren’t the only plans on the horizon for the singer.
“I’d love to be able to paint,” she tells AARP. “I’d love to be a good cook, but I’m rotten. I don’t have the patience for it. But I have to say, I’m a very good whistler. A lot of singers are.”