COPIED
12 mins

A JOURNEY THROUGH TIME

Recording Beethoven’s ‘Triple’ Concerto last June allowed French cellist Jean-Guihen Queyras to step back into near normality, among colleagues and friends. He tells Pauline Harding about recording at a social distance, the importance of musical ‘family’, and why working with living composers has helped him to find contemporary relevance in music from every era

H

earing the programme notes for a concert at London’s Wigmore Hall come from a speaker, ringing out over an empty stage, is somehow an other-worldly experience. The date is 24 September 2020 and this is one of the first live concerts to take place at Wigmore after months of national lockdown. For those of us unable to make the physical journey to the hall, its online live stream has at least enabled us to be present in some respect. Even watching the setting remotely, on screen, brings with it a ghostly sense of a familiar past played out within a surreal present. Audience eyes glint above bluish surgical masks spaced out in small groups across the 552-seat hall, and even the bouquets of pink flowers that frame the stage seem like a nostalgic gateway back into a far and distant time. Between them, the performance space bathes in golden light, beneath a robotic claw of microphones.

Jean-Guihen Queyras looks small and isolated when he enters the stage, ready to begin his lonely musical journey through some powerful 20th-century solo repertoire. The scene brings our recent conversation back to my mind. ‘Music is interaction par excellence,’ the French cellist told me a few weeks earlier. ‘It has been such a huge shock to be apart.’ And yet when he coaxes the opening drone of Saygun’s Partita for solo cello (1955) from his C string, the stage blossoms with new life. He is suddenly in company, as he weaves Turkish folk scenes, characters and voices with his bow, in full command both of sound and of silence. His eyes are closed and he seems to have flown far into an alternate reality, away from his masked listeners. In Britten’s Third Cello Suite (1971) and Kodály’s Sonata for solo cello op.8 (1915), he is by turns neurotic, defiant, determined, mournful and accepting, pulling the world around him into the one that he creates. His bow travels from the bridge to well up over the fingerboard; his pizzicato takes his right hand all the way down the fingerboard to the bridge. His posture is often skewed, with his left foot tucked slightly under his seat, his right stretched out before him. Convention falls secondary to the response of his cello, which he plays with absolute understanding and unthinking naturality.

In concert with violinist Daniel Sepec and violist Tabea Zimmermann in August 2020 at the Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg
PHILIPP SELIGER/ELBPHILHARMONIE

‘YOU HEAR A SOUND, YOU LISTEN TO IT IN THE ROOM, AND THEN YOU MAKE IT LIVE WITH THE TIME AND THE PLACE WHERE YOU ARE PLAYING IT’

Queyras’s performance approach, he tells me, is firmly rooted in his early musical education. His childhood teacher in Provence, Claire Rabier, insisted that music was for sharing and connecting, and as a teenager he was taught by Reine Flachot, who gave him a grounding in French technique coupled with the flexibility of a strong technical imagination. It was then Timothy Eddy in New York, he says, who ‘taught me how to speak through the tools that we have, to express all the subtleties of language and psychology – of what you feel in a moment. You hear a sound, you listen to it in the room, and then you make it live with the time and the place where you are playing it. That, to me, is why we make music.’

Boulez’s Ensemble Intercontemporain perhaps gave him the greatest insights into how to bring a score alive. He joined the Paris-based group when he was 23 – in part to satiate the desire for a musical ‘family’ instilled in him during his childhood lessons in Provence – and over the next decade discovered a whole new universe, even recording Ligeti’s Cello Concerto and Boulez’s own Messagesquisse (with the Ensemble de Violoncelles de Paris) under the baton of the then-living legend. ‘I had this extraordinary experience of working on a day-to-day basis with composers from all over the world,’ says Queyras. ‘Ligeti, Berio, Helmut Lachenmann, but also young composers who were not known at all. I had always been excited about contemporary music – about getting these crazy signs on a piece of paper where you have no idea how it will sound, and then you try to play it and see what comes out of your cello. Asking the composers, “What do you want exactly?” has had an enormous influence on the way I look at a score and try to bring it to life.’

Although he has long since left the French ensemble, Queyras’s sense of musical family continues to shape his career today. In 2002, he united with violinists Antje Weithaas and Daniel Sepec and violist Tabea Zimmermann to found the Arcanto Quartet; and since his early thirties he has been a devoted cello professor – currently at his alma mater the Freiburg University of Music. Other ‘family members’ include pianists Alexandre Tharaud and Alexander Melnikov, and violinist Isabelle Faust. ‘Everything that has happened in my life as a musician is because I meet people,’ says Queyras. ‘Meeting Isabelle was significant; meeting Pierre Boulez, and also Tabea, changed my life.’

Over the past few years, he and Faust have recorded Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht (released 2020), Beethoven duos and piano trios with Melnikov (re-released as a box set in 2020), and the Schumann Piano Trios (2015–16), also with Melnikov, all for Harmonia Mundi. The third Schumann disc includes Queyras playing the Cello Concerto with the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra and conductor Pablo Heras-Casado. Queyras’s relationship with this orchestra goes back to his student days: ‘It was actually founded by students at the Freiburg University of Music when I was studying there, so I met a lot of them when I was 17, 18 years old, and we go back a really long way!’

 Performing solo cello works by Bach, Saygun and Kodály at the opening of Atelier Lyrique de Tourcoing in France in September 2020
HOLGER TALINSKI/ATELIER LYRIQUE

 ‘GUT STRINGS GIVE YOU A CRISPER ATTACK. THEY ALMOST ALWAYS REACT IN AN UNEXPECTED WAY – IT’S MORE LIKE PLAYING A LIVING THING!’

Queyras, Faust, Melnikov and the Freiburg orchestra release their latest recording, of Beethoven’s ‘Triple’ Concerto, in February. Work took place during two intense days at the Teldex Studio Berlin in June 2020, once quarantine rules enabled Heras-Casado and Melnikov to reach Germany, and plans had been made to keep everyone 1.5m apart. ‘Simply being in the same room with other musicians, combining sounds again, creating harmony, experiencing rhythm, was very emotional and intense,’ says Queyras. ‘Whether you’re 1m or 1.5m from each other, in the end it doesn’t make such a big difference. It felt almost normal.’ Of course, he points out, it might have been a different story had any one of the concerto’s protagonists ‘not felt so much like family – especially because two days is not much time for such a masterwork. It’s a very dense, demanding piece, particularly for us cellists. But with Isabelle, there is something about the way we both start a phrase, the way we put the bow on the string, the way we breathe, the way we use vibrato and choose our intonation. Our choices go very naturally in the same direction.’

Key within their interpretation of the Beethoven is the use of a fortepiano and gut strings, which have an enormous impact on the overall sound colour. ‘The fortepiano is a strong game changer in this combination,’ says Queyras. ‘It’s much more percussive, lighter and more transparent than a modern instrument. And the gut strings give you a crisper attack, but at the same time they are lighter and more supple. They almost always react in an unexpected way, so it puts you on edge. It’s more like playing a living thing than a metal string! Then the strings of the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra can be so biting and rough’ – he accents his ‘r’ and pushes out the rest of the word with a rush of air – ‘in moments when you want it.’

He is keen to dispel the idea that just because the piece is neither solo concerto nor piano trio concerto, but a concerto for three separate instruments, it is somehow inferior to Beethoven’s other works. ‘There has been a lot of talk about the idea that there is “deeper” Beethoven and “lighter” Beethoven, and that the “Triple” Concerto is somehow less existential,’ he says. ‘I disagree strongly. I have a passionate love for this work. If you compare it with late Beethoven, of course, it is a more positive, civil type of music. But the conversation between the soloists and the orchestra means that it doesn’t get superficial at all, and the beauty and depth of it is overwhelming. There are moments which are just absolutely breathtaking.’

In September this year Queyras is due to release a second album, recorded before the pandemic, with Zimmermann, Cologne’s Gürzenich Orchestra and conductor François-Xavier Roth in Strauss’s musical reimagining of Don Quixote, the tale of the mad knight errant and his trusty squire, Sancho Panza. ‘I imagine the young Strauss read Cervantes’ novel and fell in love with this crazy, intriguing guy,’ says Queyras. ‘I really identify myself with this piece and this character.’ 

Images of Queyras atop an emaciated horse, with missing teeth, a sword, and a barber’s golden basin on his head, with Zimmermann trotting behind on a scruffy ass, flash into my mind. I probe further. ‘I see what you mean,’ he grins. ‘I should take my bow and attack! First of all, I’d like to make a confession: I have a bit of difficulty with Strauss’s tone poems. But Don Quixote is a masterwork in so many ways. The way Strauss works with all the different protagonists, and the way they interact with all the musical elements and themes, is absolutely beyond words. There is so much humanity in this music. The fifth variation, where Don Quixote is awake at night dreaming of Dulcinea, is like an improvised recitative. You feel you are with Don Quixote in his deepest feelings – in his soul.’

Queyras with his c.1696 Gioffredo Cappa cello 
JULIEN MIGNOT

Even outside these projects, Queyras’s life is filled with music and creativity. With social distancing measures in place, in July 2020 he ran a downsized version of his French festival Rencontres Musicales de Haute-Provence in Forcalquier. During the pandemic he has also been filming what will be a total of 36 live videos about the Bach Cello Suites, each time finding creative inspiration from a guest instrumentalist, conductor, writer, choreographer, actor and more (see bit.ly/3kaSJey). Apart from this, he has been working with Slovenian composer Vito Žuraj, whose cello concerto he hopes to premiere later this year, and performing with family members including his artist son, who paints as he plays.

QUEYRAS’S CELLOS AND BOWS

‘Last year I was given a Montagnana cello to try,’ says Queyras. ‘My whole life I had dreamed of a Montagnana. When I got the call, I was jumping to the roof!’ After some months, though, he wasn’t convinced. He played it to his cello class at the Freiburg University of Music, and compared it with his c.1696 Gioffredo Cappa cello. ‘With the Montagnana, they listened and could say, “The cello is there.” With the Cappa, the sound was smoother and more caressing, and somehow it was everywhere in the hall.’ Just a year later, the Cappa – on loan from the Mécénat Musical Société Générale since 2005 – won him back. He describes it as a tenor instrument, slim both in shape and sound: not ‘fatty’, but slender and projecting, with a warm bass.

He uses two bows: a heavier one by Thomas Gerbeth in Vienna, for 20th-and 21st-century repertoire, and a lighter Tourte. ‘The Tourte is an amazing bow that I acquired only a year and a half ago and I am very much in love with,’ he says. The ferrule of the Tourte is curved, meaning that the hair is not as tight towards the bow’s outer edges – a small detail which he finds has a significant impact on his sound. ‘The hair is slightly looser, so it’s more supple and progressive when it reaches the string.’

‘THE LIFE OF A MUSICIAN IS A PROCESS. EACH ONE OF US HAS TO FIND WHAT IS GOING TO KEEP US ALERT, ALIVE, INVENTING’

At present, Queyras does not wish to take on anything quite as ambitious as his 2017 Bach Cello Suites project, for which he worked with choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker in dozens of concerts with five dancers (see bit.ly/3jdYsPm) – even though he says, ‘It was better than anything I had dreamed!’ Instead, after exploring world music improvisation with the Chemirani brothers and Sokratis Sinopoulos over the years (see bit.ly/3o4euz7), he now plans to immerse himself in jazz. Twenty years of sporadic work with saxophonist and composer Raphaël Imbert led the two to experiment in 2019 with melding classical and jazz in Invisible Stream (see bit.ly/3m6OWzH), and this year they want to make a CD. ‘It’s a big step for me,’ says Queyras. ‘I never thought I would dare to go more in the direction of jazz. The combination of harmony and improvisation is so complicated! But the life of a musician is a process. Each one of us has to find what is going to keep us alert, alive, inventing. That means taking risks, even if some things that we do are not as good as others.’

Recording Beethoven’s ‘Triple’ Concerto in Berlin
MAIN PHOTO ROMANS DRITS. RECORDING PHOTO MARTIN BELL, FREIBURG BAROQUE ORCHESTRA. TRIO PHOTO MOLINA VISUALS

Queyras’s collaborations and adventurous nature continually push his personal and musical boundaries. And yet, at the same time, it is these experiences together that form his core as a musician. In many ways, his work with composers and creative musicians today is not so far removed from his performances even of classical works, because it has helped him to interpret their language, and to meld that with his own in the present. ‘When you take a piece of Beethoven that has been played millions of times, I think the way to propose an interpretation that is relevant, alive and that really makes sense in this moment is by going deep into the score, as you would for Ligeti or Boulez, and letting it impregnate you,’ he says. ‘That way, when we play Haydn, or Bach, or Beethoven, we can make these works sound as contemporary as they were when they were created.’

WIN JEAN-GUIHEN QUEYRAS’S NEW BEETHOVEN RECORDING

Queyras’s recording of the Beethoven ‘Triple’ with Faust, Melnikov and the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra/Pablo Heras-Casado, will be released by Harmonia Mundi in February. To win one of ten copies, submit your details at bit.ly/3np3MlN Closing date 28 February 2021

This article appears in January 2021 and String Courses Supplement

Go to Page View
This article appears in...
January 2021 and String Courses Supplement
Go to Page View
Editor’s letter
ANGELA LYONS W hen French cellist Jean-Guihen Queyras
Contributors
TOMÁS COTIK (Technique, page 80) studied with Ana
SOUNDPOST
Letters, emails, online comments
Lost at sea?
More musicians than ever are speaking out about struggles with their mental health, but what support services are available in this time of crisis?
OBITUARIES
ALEXANDER BUZLOV The Russian i nternational solo c
YCat musicians to give classes in musicianship
COMFORT AND JOY: For the first time, the
Top lots from the London sales
Despite the problems of Covid-19, the October sales went ahead as planned in the capital. Kevin MacDonald reviews some of the highlights
The big reveal
A celebration of a celebrated violin
Lifelessons
Rohan de Saram
A JOURNEY THROUGH TIME
Recording Beethoven’s ‘Triple’ Concerto last June allowed French cellist Jean-Guihen Queyras to step back into near normality, among colleagues and friends. He tells Pauline Harding about recording at a social distance, the importance of musical ‘family’, and why working with living composers has helped him to find contemporary relevance in music from every era
SECRETS OF THE ‘MESSIAH’
In 2016 the ‘Messiah’ Stradivari was the subject of an extensive CT scanning project. Francesco Piasentini and Gregg Alf examine the resulting data, discovering repair work in the neck, and attempt to determine how it had originally been set
GEORGE NEIKRUG MEMORIES OF A LEGEND
Cellist George Neikrug, who died in 2019 at the age of 100, was a celebrated performer and orchestral principal. However, his skills as a pedagogue were second to none, writes University of Wisconsin-Whitewater professor Benjamin Whitcomb, who has gathered personal recollections from fellow former students
RIGHT PLACE, RIGHT TIME
For Renaud Capuçon, recording Elgar’s Violin Concerto with the London Symphony Orchestra and Simon Rattle was a dream come true – and one that he couldn’t allow to be derailed by Covid-19’s lockdown restrictions, as he tells Charlotte Gardner
AVOIDING INSTRUMENT CARNAGE
Luthiers often see the same basic problems when repairing instruments – and most of them could be solved by some simple care and attention from the players themselves. Korinthia Klein presents a simple guide to violin maintenance, without encroaching on the experts’ territory
BEATING THE ODDS
Despite losing the function of the third and fourth fingers of his left hand through focal dystonia and a shoulder injury, violinist Clayton Haslop was determined to continue playing. Here he shares his story
JENS NIELSEN FROST
ALL PHOTOS JONAS BUTHLER LINDBJERG Jens Nielsen Frost
Making a partial plaster cast
A useful restoration method that can be used when a full cast is unnecessary
MY SPACE
A peek into lutherie workshops around the world
Making fingerboards green
MAKING MATTERS
SAINT-SAËNS CELLO CONCERTO NO.1
MASTERCLASS
Ricochet
TECHNIQUE
Reviews
RECORDINGS
Live streaming
CONCERTS
Reviews
BOOKS
From the ARCHIVE
The weights of a Stradivari violin’s plates are revealed for the first time, although modern readers will likely be left none the wiser
NAREK HAKHNAZARYAN
For the Armenian cellist, Tchaikovsky’s Rococo Variations allows for incredible freedom of expression – and even has the ability to heal
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

Previous Article Next Article
January 2021 and String Courses Supplement
CONTENTS
Page 17
PAGE VIEW