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Editorís letter

Johannes Moser isn’t afraid to challenge both himself and conventional musical thinking. As well as being a world-class cellist and collaborative musician playing the core repertoire, the German–Canadian soloist is known for playing the electric cello, an instrument that offers both unexpected freedoms of expression as well as challenges to overcome. As he reveals on page 26, his latest project involves recording in spatial audio –a system that relays sound to the listener in a three-dimensional way that’s usually found in gaming headsets or at the cinema – on both acoustic and electric instruments.

On page 34 we examine the fascinating story of Jacob Stainer, the leading luthier of the Austro–German school in the 17th century, and the attempts to solve the mystery that surrounds his real birthdate. This intriguing detective work has involved the analysis of Stainer’s handwriting as well as historical documents from an investigation into heresy by the Episcopal Inquisition.

More than four hundred years after Stainer’s birth the German lutherie tradition has spread its influence around the world. On page 42 we discover the story of pioneering luthier families from Markneukirchen – the Schrötters and the Roths – who sent sons across the Atlantic in the mid-20th century to set up workshops in the US. Andrew Schroetter and Heinrich Roth both grew very successful businesses, particularly supplying the burgeoning post-Second World War demand for high-quality but affordable instruments, and their legacies endure to this day.

Away from the German theme for this issue, in 2019 the American bluegrass fiddler Casey Driessen undertook a nine-month journey through seven countries to discover local musical traditions, and on page 48 he shares with us his travelogue. At a time when few of us have been able to travel freely, and with terrible events unfolding in Ukraine as I write, Casey’s snapshot of cultures and peoples sharing musical ideas in mutual peace and harmony is very welcome indeed.

Email me at thestrad@thestrad.comor tweet @TheStradMag

This article appears in April 2022

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April 2022
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Editorís letter
Johannes Moser isn’t afraid to challenge both himself
Contributors
CATHY ELLIOTT (Books, page 89 ) juggles playing
SOUNDPOST
Letters, emails, online comments
Seeing the wood for the trees
News and events from around the world this month
NEWS IN BRIEF
Foundation launched to renovate Antonio Stradivari’s house bit.ly/3hrBLJ5
OBITUARIES
JAAKKO KUUSISTO Violinist, conductor and composer Jaakko Kuusisto
Lost for words
PREMIERE of the MONTH
COMPETITIONS
1 Bryan Cheng 1 Canadian cellist Bryan Cheng,
Straight to the point
The vertical endpin that promises better balance and motion
Life lessons
The US violinist recalls childhood travels and discusses the challenges of a young soloist’s life
In the footsteps of masters
As well as a rich selection of concerts and masterclasses, the Philharmonie de Paris’ tenth String Quartet Biennale included its first ever lutherie competition, as Mélissa Lesnie reports
SURROUNDED BY SOUND
The German–Canadian cellist Johannes Moser embraces experimentation. He talks to Peter Quantrill about channelling his inner Jimi Hendrix and exploring the sound of the electric cello which, alongside the conventional cello, features in his latest recordings for Platoon
A question of dates
For centuries, historians have tried to settle on a definitive birthdate for Tyrolean luthier Jacob Stainer. Heinz Noflatscher explains how we now have an upper limit for his birth year – and why researchers were foxed by the elegant handwriting of the master
A MEETING AT THE CROSSROADS
For violinist Rachel Podger and pianist Christopher Glynn, recording Beethoven’s violin sonatas, which occupy the stormy transitional period between Classicism and Romanticism, brought together their disparate musical specialisms, as they tell Harry White
TWO OF A KIND
With the demand for massproduced German instruments skyrocketing in the 1920s, enterprising makers sent family members to America to represent them. Clifford Hall explores the careers and legacies of Andrew Schroetter and Heinrich Roth
MUSIC IN OTHER LANDS
In 2019, American five-string fiddler Casey Driessen and his family took off around the world for nine months for his music-sharing project Otherlands: A Global Music Exploration. In a tantalising snapshot of his journey, often into the musical unknown, he recalls meeting and playing with some of the great regional music masters in seven diverse countries
ENRICO CATENAR
A close look at the work of great and unusual makers
Using Baker-style mechanics on a double bass
How to fit these brass pegs, gears and tuners, as used by English bass makers in times gone by
LUTHIER RAINER W. LEONHARDT
A peek into lutherie workshops around the world
In tune with the types
Luthiers often examine a musician’s way of playing before setting to work on their instrument. David Leonard Wiedmer explains why it can be helpful to categorise players into two different ‘types’
GRIEG VIOLIN SONATA NO.2 IN G MAJOR
To bring out all the joy, innocence and darkness in this first movement, it is essential to understand its combined roots in classical composition and Norwegian folk music, explains Eldbjørg Hemsing
Speaking with the bow
How to use language, vowels, consonants and inflection to colour and shape every phrase
CONCERTS
Your monthly critical round-up of performances, recordings and publications
RECORDINGS
COURTESY JENNIFER KLOETZEL BACH Solo Partitas: no.1 in
BOOKS
Jascha Heifetz in South Africa: Insights from 1932
From the ARCHIVE
FROM THE STRAD 1902 APRIL VOL.12 NO.144
IN THE NEXT ISSUE
Viktoria Mullova The Russian violinist discusses her
CHRISTINE HOOCK
Mišek’s Double Bass Sonata no.2 has been by the German bassist’s side throughout her career – and helped to create a lot of friendships along the way
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