COPIED
15 mins

Life lessons Laura van der Heijden

Performing with pianist Huw Watkins

Because I’ve just finished studying, I’m spending a lot of time thinking about how I want my musical life to pan out. The really exciting thing about that is that there are so many avenues to choose from. My life so far has already been filled with lots of different kinds of music making and that’s the way I want to keep it.

I recently tried continuo playing for the first time, performing on a Baroque cello and with a Baroque bow. The experience drummed into me the importance of pulse and harmonic rhythm and changed the way I approached a performance of a Haydn concerto a couple of weeks later. Playing the bass-line means you don’t have much melodic material to overcomplicate things with – it reminded me to keep my playing simple and to always have a visceral sense of direction.

New experiences like this one really help me grow as a musician. Sightreading through a Haydn quartet at two or three in the morning with some friends at the East Neuk Festival in Scotland was another. We were only doing it because we were having such a good time discovering the music with each other. There was no stress or pressure and we were getting so much joy from finding all the quirks and details in the music. Things like this fire me up and keep my motivation going.

I love singing and I learn a lot from it.

Whether it’s with my cello or with my voice, my aim is always to sing. In my first year at Cambridge University I sang in a performance of Bach’s St John Passion that had no conductor but was led by Baroque violinist Maggie Faultless. I was so inspired by the whole thing that I organised a conductorless performance of the St Matthew Passion. I’d never balanced so many aspects of a performance before: playing in it myself as well as fundraising, booking musicians, creating schedules and printing the posters.

Cambridge is full of amazing singers but most of them are used to relying on a conductor or director. I think I was quite naive before I started the project – I thought everyone would immediately come up with lots of their own ideas. After getting to know each other and the music better, and with the inspirational help of Maggie and tenor Nicholas Mulroy, people’s contributions came into their own. The result was one of the most rewarding experiences I’ve ever had!

With my cello or with my voice, my aim is always to sing

My first cello teacher, Marina Logie, had her own system for teaching beginners. She used books she had drawn herself and which were full of really lovely exercises and help with things like holding the bow properly. I remember a drawing that showed it was just like a spider climbing up a tree. Getting to know the instrument was always the focus but without any pressure. Her teaching was inspired by what she had learnt from the Russian school, so hidden behind the colour and fun was a fantastic technical ability that we weren’t even aware she was transmitting.

This article appears in December 2019

Go to Page View
This article appears in...
December 2019
Go to Page View
Editor’s letter
Each great instrument has a story to tell. Waiting
Contributors
CELIA COBB
SOUNDPOST
Letters, emails, online comments
Brain training
Can learning a musical instrument have a positi ve eff ect on a child’s mental health? Players and teachers give their thoughts on the psychological benefits for young people
Lighting up the sky
An aerial journey for double bass and strings
TAILPIECE Sting in the tail
Titanium continues its rise as a material for instrument fittings
Life lessons Laura van der Heijden
Seven years after winning the BBC Young Musician competition, the British cellist discusses how different forms of music making inspire her
History in sound
This year’s Krzy?owa-Music event marked several anniversaries, among them the festival’s own fifth birthday. Tully Potter attended a wealth of chamber concerts featuring young musicians and established artists, each staged in venues of historical significance
A MASSIVE ACHIEVEMENT
Made in 1677, the ‘Romanov’ Nicolffati viola is one of the maker’s late masterpieces. Alberto Giordano and Rudolf Hopfner investigate its turbulent history and examine how it fits into the Amati family’s oeuvre
A TREASURY OF SOUND
The Royal Danish Orchestra has been adding to its collection of fine stringed instruments for centuries – but there is revolution as well as evolution behind its distinctive string sound, which is unmistakable whatever the repertoire and whoever the conductor, finds Andrew Mellor
LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION
As the founder of Music in Vision, Kathleen Ross has built a business from supplying professional musicians for on-camera roles. Introducing instrumentalists to the world of film and TV can be challenging, but, she writes, ensuring that musicians in background parts are convincingly portrayed is well worth the effort
Into the light
Rebecca Clarke’s 1923 Rhapsody for cello and piano was never publicly performed during the composer’s lifetime, and has only recently received proper attention in the hands of champions of British music Raphael Wallfisch and John York – who makes the case for the forgotten masterpiece as its score is finally published
Like fathers, like sons
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the death of Emile Auguste Ouchard, as well as the 40th of his son Bernard – both regarded as among the 20th century’s finest bow makers. Thomas Martin, Andrew McGill, Martin Lawrence and George Martin examine the legacy of the Ouchard dynasty, particularly focusing on their double bass bows
A CONDUCTOR’S TALE
Music director Manfred Honeck has brought a distinctly European flavour to the Pittsburgh Symphony. Gavin Dixon spoke to him at his summer festival in Wolfegg, Germany, as he prepared to embark on a tour of Europe with his Pittsburgh forces – and discovered how his time as a violist in the Vienna Philharmonic helped him to become the conductor he is today
DAVID STIRRAT
A close look at the work of great and unusual makers
Flattening planes
A sadly necessary task for all luthiers, which should have been taken care of by the manufacturer in the first place
HONORATA STALMIERSKA
A peek into lutherie workshops around the world
A phoenix from the ashes
Points of interest to violin and bow makers
BERG VIOLIN CONCERTO
ln the first of two articles, Leila Josefowicz explores ideas of feverishness, hallucinati on, death and resurrecti on in the second movement of a great 20th-century concerto
Teaching rhythm and bowing to beginners
How to inspire very young musicians to learn new cello playing skills
Reviews
Your monthly critical round-up of performances, recordings and publications
From the Archive
The pseudonymous ‘L.H.W.’ gives his thoughts on teaching, in an article he might himself call ‘profuse and extravagant in expression’
IN THE NEXT ISSUE
The violinist has taken over as artistic director of
LINUS ROTH
Weinberg’s Violin Concerto is a work of passionate intensity, as the German violinist found – even though he hadn’t encountered the composer unti l eight years ago
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

Previous Article Next Article
December 2019
CONTENTS
Page 22
PAGE VIEW