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Editor’s letter

ANGELA LYONS

Without question, Julian Lloyd Webber has had an enviable career. The British cellist, who celebrated his 70th birthday last month, worked with everyone from Yehudi Menuhin to Yan Pascal Tortelier to Neville Marriner during the first four decades of his professional life, his diary an abundance of recording and performing engagements. Yet Lloyd Webber’s career has also encompassed another important strand – an unfailing commitment to music education. Although it was a terrible blow, the injury that forced him to retire as a performer in 2014 also allowed him to build on the work of his In Harmony programme, bringing music to children in disadvantaged areas, and to become principal of the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire in 2015.Today, Lloyd Webber is reinventing himself again, as a conductor – and as he tells Julian Haylock on page 24, his passion and enthusiasm for music remain as strong as ever.

Of all the instruments that Lloyd Webber owned during his years on the concert platform, the c.1690 ‘Barjansky’ Stradivari was by far the most sophisticated, with its always ‘glorious’ sound, no matter how near to the recording microphone. On page 32 Philip Ihle examines this and 16 other early cellos by the great Cremonese maker to determine the number of patterns used in his workshop before the much-celebrated ‘B form’. It’s a particularly difficult question to answer given the dearth of existing internal moulds – and that most of Stradivari’s cellos have been cut down in the years since his death – but Ihle’s analysis leads to some intriguing conclusions.

It is thought that Stradivari designed his later cellos as smaller instruments in response to the developing string repertoire. Likewise, the 20th century’s prevailing appetite for virtuoso violin encores by the likes of Paganini, Wieniawski et al has undergone a transformation in the last two decades, with players more often opting for solo Bach, and a variety of left-field choices from folk tunes to pop arrangements. On page 52 Charlotte Gardner talks to top musicians about their encore preferences and asks whether this most recent trend has been artist- or audience-led.

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This article appears in May 2021 and Degrees Supplement

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This article appears in...
May 2021 and Degrees Supplement
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Editor’s letter
ANGELA LYONS Without question, Julian Lloyd Webber has
Contributors
ARIADNE DASKALAKIS (Technique, page 76) is the former
SOUNDPOST
Letters, emails, online comments
Seeing the wood for the trees
News and events from around the world this month
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Petition launched for plaque to violinist George Bridgetower
OBITUARIES
MARK LUBOTSKY Russian violinist and tutor Mark Lubotsky
Uncertainty principle
Music for strings and saxophone that reflects a change in mood
COMPETITIONS
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CELLO STRINGS
SAFE AND SECURE
BRIDGE HOLDER 
COLOUR UP
VIOLIN CASE
Life lessons
Henning Kraggerud
A GLITTERING CAREER
In celebration of his 70th birthday last month, British cellist Julian Lloyd Webber shares with Julian Haylock memories of a long and fulfilling professional life – and also looks forward to returning to the stage as a conductor
TRACING THE TRUTH
What cello moulds were used in the Stradivari workshop? The question has long gone unanswered, despite the number of artefacts – and even intact moulds – that survive. Philip Ihle examines 17 of the cellos made before 1700 to find out how many moulds may have been used before the mighty ‘B form’ came into play
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The discovery of part of an autograph manuscript for Ysaÿe’s little-known Second String Trio op.34 hidden in a folder on his computer led violinist Nandor Szederkényi eventually to produce a performing edition. Here he shares details of the painstaking process
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Time to shine
Throughout much of the last century, technically showy encores by Paganini and Kreisler were standard fare for violinists, but in recent years players have moved away from the established virtuoso works to embrace everything from solo Bach to folk tunes and contemporary commissions. Charlotte Gardner talks to top players about their encore choices
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Lutherie  Makers reveal their special techniques
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Find out where you can study with some of the string world’s most in-demand pedagogues
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