COPIED
13 mins

Life lessons

TERRY LINKE

‘Thanks to the internet, performances sound more and more similar’

My first teacher taught me and my classmates to associate every sound we made with an image or a feeling – to imagine a world with the notes we were playing. Even now, I remember how it helped us to understand how to speak to the audience with music as if we were speaking with words. Nely Jeleva, who taught me between the ages of five and ifteen, was a very gifted young woman who had studied with Elizabeth Gilels in the Soviet Union before returning to Bulgaria. I think she taught small children like me because, although she was a very fine musician, she was also very shy. Not many people have heard her name, but I think she was one of the most gifted teachers in the world. Even though our hands were too small to play properly, she showed us how to paint with notes like we’d paint with brushes.

Thanks to the internet, performances today are sounding more and more similar. It isn’t the only reason, but now that it’s so easy to listen to so many different recordings, people no longer feel they have to come up with an interpretation of their own. I’m not against listening to decent recordings, but I think we should switch the internet of. he technical abilities of many young players are absolutely amazing, and the standard is only getting better – but where is the art? People are losing the ability to imagine their own sound, instead producing something that sounds a little like one person and a little like someone else. Because they’ve been stitched together from components imagined by other people, interpretations have less and less character of their own. If you spend all your time thinking about the ‘rights’ and ‘wrongs’ of others’ playing it’s impossible to know who you are yourself. People follow the rules because they don’t want to make a mistake – but why not? They’re just notes!

I heard a fantastic saxophonist on a street corner in Manhattan when I visited the US on a high-school exchange programme. he memory has stayed with me ever since. I remember thinking even then that it was like a scene from a kitschy film, which might be why I can recall it so clearly even now. he sunset was reflected of the glass of the skyscrapers and this man was improvising with all his heart. I just couldn’t believe how spontaneous it sounded, or how well the music matched its setting. So many of us work so hard to bring just a little of that freedom to our playing, and so few ever achieve it. I’ve heard many other street musicians since, but none has ever had the same effect on me as that anonymous man in New York.

INTERVIEW BY TOM STEWART

This article appears in April 2019

Go to Page View
This article appears in...
April 2019
Go to Page View
Editor’s letter
Maintaining creative interest can sometimes be a challenge
Contributors
INGA BRANDINI (Alfred Staar, page 44) is a violin teacher
SOUNDPOST
Letters, emails, online comments
On the beat
News and events from around the world this month
NEW PRODUCTS
Turning everyday pracicality to musicians’ acousic
Life lessons
One of three Vienna Philharmonic concertmasters, the Bulgarian violinist talks about New York street jazz and the musical impact of the internet
Bass ambition
Young South African double bass players took part in a new dedicated course for their instrument at the end of last year – with promising results, writes faculty member Leon Bosch
BRILLIANT CONCEPTS
Since winning the Indianapolis Competition in 2006, violinist Augustin Hadelich has built a reputation for musically astute interpretations in wide-ranging repertoire, much of it written in the 20th and 21st centuries. He speaks to Chloe Cutts about his latest recording – an unusual pairing of Brahms and Ligeti
REVIEWING THE SITUATION
It has long been assumed that Jacob Stainer received some training in Cremona – but the theory rests on slim evidence. Rudolf Hopfner explores a middle-period violin using micro-CT technology to cast doubt on what we think we know
Sound MASTER
As a leading proponent of the Viennese sound, Alfred Staar’s influence continues to be felt today – no fewer than 22 of his former students currently hold posts in the Vienna Philharmonic. Inga Brandini shares a conversation with the great professor from 15 March 2000, shortly before his death a month later
VOICE FOR ISRAEL
Violinist Itamar Zorman’s new recording highlights the transition from European to Middle Eastern influences in the works of Paul Ben-Haim, as he tells Gavin Dixon
The gain in SPAIN
In the 16th century, many European cities saw an influx of makers from Germany – and the cultural milieu and civic policies of Spanish-held Naples proved particularly attractive. Luigi Sisto explains how the expatriate community laid the groundwork for the city’s lutherie tradition
THE FOLK CONNECTION
Chinese composer Tan Dun’s new concerto for Norwegian violinist Eldbjørg Hemsing draws on traditions common to the homelands of both artists. Andrew Mellor speaks to them about this latest in a series of collaborations
THE ILLUSION SOLUTION
One of the most mysterious French bow makers, Persoit had a number of idiosyncrasies that give his works a uniquely light appearance. Through a detailed study of a single bow, Paolo Sarri shows his creative answer to the problem of bulky heads
PAUL DÖRFEL
A close look at the work of great and unusual makers
Making and itting purling
solution to the awkward problem of how to insert strips around the neck heel area
CHRISTIAN ADAM
Ahrensburg is a small town about 20 miles north-east
Fruits of our labours
It’s well worth the effort to try out alternative wood types in double bass making, says Stefan Krattenmacher, who shares the results of his own experiments – mainly using fruitwoods
SCHUMANN FANTASIESTÜCKE OP.73
Cellist Jan Vogler discusses how to colour these fantasy pieces using a mixture of technique and imaginaion
Achieving balance between the chin and left thumb
Learn to reduce physical stress by distribuing instrument weight more efecively across your body
Reviews
Your monthly critical round-up of performances, recordings and publications
THE ESSENTIAL RESOURCE
Take out a subscripion today and ensure you never miss an issue
RECORDINGS
BEACH Violin Sonata in A minor op.34; Romance op.23;
Missed an issue?
Download digital versions of every recent edition now
BOOKS
Katharina Uhde claims that this weighty tome, emanating
From the ARCHIVE
E.C. hatcher, an infrequent contributor, observes how so many string players have diiculty keeping their mannerisms and ‘facial oscillations’ in check
IN THE NEXT ISSUE
The pioneering chamber group mark their 35th anniversary
ANTJE WEITHAAS
The Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto presents a mixture of Eastern and Western inluences to the German violinist – and only revealed its true secrets ater a whole decade of resing
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

Previous Article Next Article
April 2019
CONTENTS
Page 22
PAGE VIEW