Friday, February 1, 2019

What is the Curse of the Ninth -

– and does it really exist?


Beethoven, Mahler and Dvořák all died after their ninth symphonies
Beethoven, Mahler and Dvořák all died after writing their ninth symphonies.Picture: Getty
By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM London
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It’s a superstition that plagued some of the great composers of the 19th and 20th centuries – but is there any truth in it?
The ‘Curse of the Ninth’ is a superstition that developed during the late Romantic period – some people believed that composers were fated to die during or after writing their ninth symphony.
On the surface, the theory seems like it might have some basis in fact: BeethovenSchubertDvořák and Vaughan Williamsall died after completing their Ninths, Anton Bruckner died with his Ninth unfinished – and Mahler contracted pneumonia while writing his tenth.
But like all good conspiracy theories, the Curse of the Ninth has been debunked and dismissed. Here’s the real story.
Gustav Mahler
Gustav Mahler hatched a plan to beat the Curse of the Ninth. Picture: Getty

It all started with Mahler… kind of

Gustav Mahler, who wrote some of the most glorious symphonies of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, was one of the first composers to believe in a superstition surrounding ninth symphonies. 
But Mahler was a little *too* obsessed with the idea. Seeing how fate had struck down Beethoven and Bruckner before him, he came up with a cunning plan to beat the curse.
After completing his eighth symphony, Mahler wrote a piece of music (Das Lied von der Erde) that was, in essence, a symphony – but he refused to call it one.
He then finished his ninth symphony and set to work on his tenth – but then he contracted pneumonia while writing it and died in 1911, aged 51, apparently proving the superstition correct. 
But Mahler didn’t know about Schubert, Dvořák... or any of the others
Arnold Schoenberg, whose music was heavily influenced by Mahler, described the Curse of the Ninth in an essay on the composer: “He who wants to go beyond it must pass away. It seems as if something might be imparted to us in the Tenth which we ought not yet to know, for which we are not ready. Those who have written a Ninth stood too close to the hereafter.”
There are a few issues with this theory. Because of the time he was writing, the only victims of the ‘curse’ that Mahler would have been aware of were Beethoven and Bruckner.
He wouldn’t have known about Schubert’s nine symphonies – because what is now called his Symphony No. 9 (the ‘Great’) was known as his Seventh in Mahler’s time.
Plus, Dvořák’s Ninth ‘New World’ Symphony wasn’t even considered a ‘ninth’ in Mahler’s time. It was published as his Symphony No. 5, before four extra symphonies appeared after Dvořák’s death. And Spohr – who is often included on the ‘curse’ list – wrote and completed a tenth symphony, but withdrew it.
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony Manuscript is sold for £1.9 Million GBP
Beethoven died before he could release his tenth symphony. Picture: Getty
Even Bruckner doesn’t fully qualify; he died before completing his (unfinished) Ninth Symphony – which brings his total symphonies to just eight.

But lots of composers have written more than nine symphonies...

Yes. The main snag with the Curse of the Ninth is that it only really makes sense if you concentrate on a relatively small number of 19th and 20th-century composers, omitting composers like Shostakovich, who wrote 15 symphonies, and Heitor Villa-Lobos, who wrote 12.
There’s also the most famous Classical composers: Mozart, for instance, wrote 41 symphonies, while Haydn wrote a whopping 104 – 106 if you count the unnumbered ones (there was no stopping that man).
And then there’s Leif Segerstam’s casual 327 symphonies…
The Curse of the Nine is a great story, and it probably fuelled a lot of the angst behind Mahler’s heart-wrenching symphonies. But perhaps it’s best to treat it as a superstition.

Meet the awesome composer ...

... whose music was published under HER BROTHER’S name


Fanny and Felix Mendelssohn
Fanny and Felix Mendelssohn. Picture: Getty
By Elizabeth Davis, ClassicFM London
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Fanny Mendelssohn was a truly great composer, but she faced an almost overwhelming set of obstacles to getting her work published.
Fanny was born in Hamburg on 14 November 1805 and learned to play the piano when she was a child.
She was such an impressive young musician that the composer Carl Friedrich Zelter said of her: “This child really is something special”.
But Fanny wasn’t just a brilliant performer, she was also a composer – like her younger brother Felix.
You may have noticed that the history of classical music is dominated by male composers – and Fanny’s father was a firm believer that composition wasn’t a career for women. He said to his daughter: “Music will perhaps become [Felix’s] profession, while for you it can and must be only an ornament.”
But Fanny was brimming with musical ideas and carried on composing regardless. While her brother was supportive, he also didn’t think Fanny should publish her music. He once said: “From my knowledge of Fanny I should say that she has neither inclination nor vocation for authorship. She is too much all that a woman ought to be for this.”
So instead he published some of her works under his name. One of the songs he published was called ‘Italien’.
A short time later, Felix was invited to perform some of his music for Queen Victoria in Buckingham Palace. She made a special request – could the composer play one of her favourite of his songs? Of course he could. Which one, asked Mendelssohn?
‘Italien’, replied the Queen.
Felix (presumably slightly awkwardly) replied that this beautiful song was actually the work of his sister Fanny.
Overall, Fanny wrote 460 pieces of music including many ‘Songs without Words’, a type of piano piece for which her brother later became famous. Musicologists now believe Fanny pioneered this musical form.
But despite that impressive body of work, Fanny only published her first work in her own name in 1846, when she was 41.
Even today works that were thought to have been written by Felix are being re-attributed to their real composer: the great Fanny Mendelssohn.

Thursday, January 17, 2019

Who is Rachel Zegler?

 Meet the teenager playing Maria in the ‘West Side Story’ remake


By: Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM London
The high school student has been selected from a pool of 30,000 applicants to play Maria in Steven Spielberg’s remake of ‘West Side Story’. Here's everything you need to know about the rising star, from her resume and Twitter account to her ethnicity.
Rachel Zegler is a 17-year-old Colombian-American actress and singer-songwriter from New Jersey, who will star in the upcoming remake of West Side Story.
She will make her film debut as Maria, opposite Baby Driver actor Ansel Elgort as Tony.
One of 30,000 applicants, Zegler applied for the role after seeing a casting call on Twitter asking for Latino and Latina actors.
Rachel Zegler to star as Maria in West Side Story remake
Rachel Zegler to star as Maria in West Side Story remake. Picture: Courtesy of subject

What is Rachel Zegler’s resume?

Although she is a newcomer to the film industry, Zegler is no stranger to the role of Maria – having first played the character in a Performing Arts School presentation of West Side Story at the Bergen Performing Arts Centre.
Throughout her teens, Zegler has starred in local, regional and school productions of Thoroughly Modern Millie42nd Street and RENT, as well as doing occasional work as a wedding singer.
She has also taken on the role of Belle in Beauty and the Beast, Serena in Legally Blonde, Cosette in Les Misérables and Ariel in The Little Mermaid.
In 2016, the young actress was nominated for a Metropolitan High School Theater Award for her role in Beauty And The Beast, according to NJ.com.

What is Rachel Zegler’s ethnicity?

Zegler was born in New Jersey to a Polish father and a Colombian mother.
When news broke of her role, she posted on Instagram: “When I played Maria on stage a few summers ago, I never could have imagined that I’d be taking on the role again in Steven Spielberg’s West Side Story.
“As a Colombian-American woman growing up in this day and age, strong roles like Maria are so important. To be able to bring that role to life— a role that means so much to the Hispanic community— is so humbling.”
In West Side Story, Maria is of Puerto Rican descent. In the 1961 film adaptation she was played by American actress Natalie Wood.
Spielberg told Variety: “When we began this process a year ago, we announced that we would cast the roles of Maria, Anita, Bernardo, Chino and the Sharks with Latina and Latino actors.”
His casting, which includes Ariana DeBose as Anita and David Alvarez as Bernardo, has been widely praised on social media.

Follow Rachel Zegler on Twitter, Instagram and YouTube

Zegler already has an impressive social media following, with 85,000 followers on YouTube, 60,000 on Instagram and 50,000 on Twitter.
Last year, Zegler found viral fame when she posted a video of herself singing ‘Shallow’ from A Star is Born. The video garnered over seven million views on Twitter.
Her YouTube channel is equally popular, with the ‘Shallow’ video boasting a huge eight million views. Her first upload to YouTube was in 2015, when she shared a performance of ‘The Wizard and I’ at a youth event group in Clifton, New Jersey. She was 15.
“Welcome to the life of a theatrical mess named Rachel Zegler,” she writes on her intro to her channel.
“I’m Rachel, and I am incredibly infatuated with theatre, musicals, and the people who help them to happen!! Follow me around as I show you how much I love what I do, and how I manage to do it all while juggling my entire life.”

The incredible 14-year-old self-taught violinist who fled Syria ...

... and joined Sydney Youth Orchestra


By: Helena Asprou, ClassicFM London
After a turbulent childhood in the midst of a war zone, young musician Aboud turns his life around using his incredible gift
For most 14-year-old Syrians living in Aleppo, life is a series of great challenges – but one young boy has managed to turn his luck around.
Born into a war zone, Aboud Kaplo is a self-taught violinist who originally used his talent to help him cope with his city’s ongoing conflict.
As the Syrian unrest escalated, Aboud and his family fled to Lebanon carrying only their essential belongings – including the boy’s rickety, child-sized violin.
While seeking refuge in Beirut, they met a musician from the University of Oxford who quickly realised Aboud’s skill and loaned him a restored, full-size violin from the university’s archives.
The musician was Susie Attwood, a former student and violinist at Oxford university, who had met Aboud while filming The Wait – a movie about Syriac Christian families waiting in a monastery in Lebanon in hope of receiving a visa for a new country.
Since then, life has become a very different story for the young performer…
Aboud Kaplo plays the violin
Aboud Kaplo plays the violin. Picture: Amr Kokash

New strings – and new horizons

It’s not every day that you’re given a violin after a chance encounter – and the university’s donation to Aboud was extra special.
With more than 2,000 instruments dating from medieval times, Oxford’s Bate Collection is rather exceptional.
The violin they sent to Aboud, which is manufactured by German brand Wolff Brothers, is a 19th-century instrument with a heart-warming history.
Andy Lamb, the Collection’s manager, said: 'The moment I read about this lad’s situation, I realised that the Bate Collection and Faculty of Music could make some kind of positive contribution towards his quality of life.
“I immediately had an instrument in mind. It belonged to a former curator, Dr Hélène Larue, a very generous person, and I knew that if she had been confronted with this situation, she would have donated an instrument instantly.”
After receiving this exquisite gift, the teenage string enthusiast hasn’t been able to put his violin down and has now joined the Sydney Youth Orchestra.
Aboud Kaplo
Aboud Kaplo. Picture: Amr Kokash

From Aleppo to Sydney

Despite his lack of music education while living in Syria, Aboud’s passion and commitment for teaching himself the violin has led him to happier times.
Through sheer determination and a lot of YouTube tutorials, he has landed himself a scholarship with the prestigious Sydney Youth Orchestra and now lives in Australia with his family.
Since his arrival, Aboud has been receiving weekly violin lessons in the traditional Western Classical style to ensure that he can read well and play in orchestras or chamber ensembles.
Speaking to SBS News about the opportunity, Aboud said: "I love playing the violin because I can express myself; when I'm sad I play the violin… when I'm happy. Every time when I feel, I play the violin."
When Susie Attwood heard the news, she said: "I got a message from Aboud's mum with this picture of him in Sydney with a violin on his back – a selfie with his family in the background.
"It's amazing that this violin has travelled from Oxford to Lebanon and now all the way across to the other side of the world to Australia. He takes good care of it and I hope that he'll be able to take lessons soon and fulfil his dream."
Self-taught violinist
Self-taught violinist. Picture: Amr Kokash
His father, Amanouel Kaplo, added: “I’m very proud, he has known his way since childhood, and he has always loved music.”
The orchestra is delighted to welcome Aboud and will be helping him to improve his technique even further by teaching him music theory.
The orchestra’s general manager Mia Patoulios commented: "He has this beautiful understanding of music and I think that's the thing that unites all our young people."

Thursday, January 3, 2019

"Access to music ...

... remains out of reach for the majority of children’ says Julian Lloyd Webber


Julian Lloyd Webber
Julian Lloyd Webber. Picture: Steve Thorne/Getty Images
By Elizabeth Davis, ClassicFM Londoon
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The principal of Royal Birmingham Conservatoire has spoken out against the decline in arts subjects in English schools
In an article in The TimesJulian Lloyd Webber has attacked the decline in arts subjects in England, saying:
“Access to music remains stubbornly out of reach for the vast majority of children from less privileged backgrounds.”
The cellist, who is now Principal of the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire, lays the blame with the EBacc.
“Since the introduction of the EBacc in 2010, the number of GCSEs taken in arts subjects has declined by 34 per cent,” he writes. “Yet judged by any rational criteria, removing arts subjects from the national curriculum makes no sense at all.”
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The EBacc is a set of subjects, chosen by the Government and does not include music, drama or art. Many education professionals say it is driving the decline in arts subjects in schools, although the government has consistently denied this.
Many music teachers blame the EBacc for the decline in students taking the subject
Many music teachers blame the EBacc for the decline in students taking the subject. Picture: Getty
In The Times, Julian Lloyd Webber goes on to point out that the music industry brings in £4.4 billion a year to the economy, but that there are other reasons the arts should be accessible for school children regardless of their background:
“On a practical level, many jobs will soon be lost to automation but jobs in the arts will be among the least affected. On a social level, all our children should have a right to experience music, not just the ones with parents who can afford to pay for expensive instruments and tuition.”
He was writing in response to a recent statement by education secretary Damian Hinds that said universities could face sanctions if they didn’t recruit more white working-class students.
Lloyd Webber said: “Mr Hinds should be overseeing a co-ordinated government policy which allows access to the arts for all our children, from primary school through to higher education.”