COPIED
6 mins

A night filled with stars

Laurence Vittes found himself impressed by the talent at the Netherlands Violin Competition in Utrecht, as well as swept away by the diverse array of non-classical styles at its sister Night of the Violin festival

The Netherlands Violin Competition for Dutch nationals concluded its three-week 29th edition on 27 January by awarding Salomé Bonnema the top prize in the Oskar Back Prize category for competitors at the highest level (aged 18–26). The 22-year-old from Leiderdorp gave a performance of the Mendelssohn Concerto in E minor that was serene, elegant and perfectly in sync with the magnificently responsive Residentie Orchestra from The Hague under Jonathan Bloxham. Bonnema lent the music a youthful, soaring ease, paid full attention to the notes and met all the iconic technical challenges of speed and bowing in fresh unhurried ways that were a joy to hear. The audience also played its role, hanging on her every note and cheering warmly at the end.

Central Utrecht
OLENA Z/ GETTY

Known for laureates like Janine Jansen, Jaap van Zweden and Liza Ferschtman, the competition has welcomed 122 participants in five age categories, every one of them a Dutch national, and an army of 45 jurors, most of them Dutch as well (the American Tessa Lark being one of the notable exceptions). The fact that the Netherlands Violin Competition is a national contest means that every participant, whether they win or lose, is a home-town hero. As was the case on my last visit in 2020, the atmosphere in the hall was electric.

The youngest of the three Oskar Back Prize finalists,18-year-old Kira van der Woerd, flirted with Lalo’s Symphonie espagnole brilliantly while battling a heavy cold and took home second prize (having also won the prize for best performance of Mayke Nas’s commissioned work, Unlock Your Full Potential, in the preliminary rounds). Charismatic 21-year-old Enzo Kok took wonderful chances with his impulsive Mendelssohn, reaching moments of pure genius, and took both the highly coveted audience prize and third prize overall.

The competition’s director Aart-Jan van de Pol told me: ‘Our national violin competition is very much owned by Dutch violin culture: Dutch violin people, teachers, audiences, players. That helps a lot and gives tremendous energy to the event.’

Wouter Vossen, concertmaster of the Residentie Orchestra and a member of the Storioni Trio, described the competition as ‘more a part of the educational system than a career builder like the Sibelius, Indianapolis or Paganini competitions’. He takes pride in ‘the courage of the young finalists playing difficult repertoire in front of a big orchestra and a large crowd in a big hall and on the radio, all for the first time’. Distantly related to Adolf Busch, Vossen is himself a part of Dutch violin culture, having been mentored by Herman Krebbers, concertmaster of the Residentie Orchestra in the 1950s and later of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. ‘We always kept in good touch,’ Vossen said. ‘Krebbers gave me all his trio parts with his notes, bowings and fingerings. A tremendous personal gift.’

While the jurors were making their decisions, the stage gave way for a change-of-pace set that turned out to be a sign of a major evolution of the competition in 2024. It was performed by a band called Moon Garden (violinist Noah Hassler-Forest, cellist Joshua Herwig and electric guitarist Ella Zirina), winner of the Young Creatives Prize (Jonge Makers Prijs) for non-classical violinist-led ensembles aged 18–26. The band’s appearance reflected the competition’s commitment to the new and the young which had been evident throughout the main event, notably in the requirement that Oskar Back Prize semi-finalists create a multidisciplinary performance including guest musicians and artists.

The competition’s commitment to the future had been showcased the night before when, for almost six hours, a festival for violinists called Night of the Violin had occupied the upper halls and floating performance spaces of the TivoliVredenburg in the centre of Utrecht. During this, nothing much was classical but everything was very violin. Curated by jazz violinist and improvisation guru Tim Kliphuis, the line-up featured Tessa Lark (who at the last minute also subbed for Pekka Kuusisto), Baroque master Shunske Sato, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra deputy concertmaster Tjeerd Top, violinist, singer and composer Diamanda La Berge Dramm, Syrian violinist Anan Al-Kadamani, the Nordic Fiddlers Bloc – and others, mostly on the violin. There was Irish and Romanian folk music, jazz, rock and improv, and a Gypsy trio of violin, piano and cimbalom.

I followed the crowds from one overflowing hall to the next. I heard Tjeerd Top and members of Kamerata Zuid play cowboy tunes and modern jazz takes on Brahms, and La Berge Dramm channelling Tartini into a 21st-century spiral whirl. The most purely magnetic violinist was Al-Kadamani, alongside his lute and percussion ensemble, especially when he was making strangely beautiful sounds using a violin strung and tuned to sound like a cello. Sato joined Kliphuis and an all-star line-up for an extended take on Bach that made no sense at all but was relentlessly, inventively entertaining. I learnt later that the two duelling fiddlers had only met for the first time 15 minutes before going on stage. The Night of the Violin ended well after midnight with all the remaining musicians on stage sent out into the night accompanied by cimbalom riffs from The Third Man.

Kliphuis sees the Utrecht event addressing ‘one of the major threats to the musical world and to our competition: that there are not enough young artists starting to play the violin’. He told me: ‘We are going to invest a lot in turning this around. Last weekend we had 45 kids who had no professional aspirations at all perform at a non-competitive showcase and open podium, not for any prizes – just for feedback and having a good time. And we are investing a lot in helping music teachers around the country.’ Kliphuis dreams that ‘in ten years’ time, all the young kids who performed at the Night of the Violin will have participated in one of these competitions.’

As it turns out, there are even more ambitious plans afoot: in a later announcement made in March, Van de Pol said, ‘We found that there are many violinists who would like to participate in both the Oskar Back and the Young Creatives prize. This is good news, for it means that young musicians are embarking on a musical career and investigating different styles at the same time. To offer them the opportunity to compete for both prizes, we have decided to hold the Netherlands Violin Competition plus the Open Podium, the Showcase and the Violin Orchestra, in even years. We will hold the NVC Young Creatives Prize, for ages 18–26, in odd years beginning in 2025. The Night of the Violin Festival will be held every year. And in advance of the 30th awarding of the Oskar Back Prize in 2026, we will start the celebrations in 2025 by inviting ensembles led by violinists, violists, cellists and double bass players to the Young Creatives party.’

I can’t think of many, or indeed any, similar competitions to the now independent Young Creatives, or examples of classical competitions that are growing this way. What a fantastic way to diversify.

Above Salomé Bonnema’s winning performance with the Residentie Orchestra.
Right Tessa Lark and Tim Kliphuis jam at the Night of the Violin festival
COMPETITION PHOTO FOPPE SCHUT. NIGHT OF THE VIOLIN PHOTO ERIC VAN NIEUWLAND
This article appears in June 2024 and Accessories 2024 guide

Go to Page View
This article appears in...
June 2024 and Accessories 2024 guide
Go to Page View
Editor's letter
L ong before the phrase ‘portfolio career’ was
Contributors
NICOLAS DUPONT (Technique, page 76) is a Belgian
SOUNDPOST
LETTER of the MONTH
Alternative measures
News and events from around the world this month
NEWS IN BRIEF
Violinist Alexandra Tirsu loaned 1717 ‘Reifenberg’ Stradivari bit.ly/3U8qTTC
OBITUARIES
EDMOND BEART The Belgian cellist and pedagogue Edmond
Feeling dandy
The Black dandyism fashion movement spawns a new cello concerto
COMPETITIONS
Javus Quartet 1 The Vienna-based Javus Quartet has
Not just a carbon copy
The world’s first 3D-printed carbon fibre cello
MATERIAL GAINS
ArcRest has released alternative species models for
HOLD ON
Arcofrog has released a German bass bow hold
Life lessons
The US violinist on the importance of our decisions and promoting inclusivity
Like father, like son
An Omobono Stradivari and two Vuillaumes were the standout lots during a varied spring auction season in London, as Kevin MacDonald reports
A night filled with stars
POSTCARD from... UTRECHT
NEW WAYS OF THINKING
Although British cellist Laura van der Heijden is well versed in live performance and studio recording, she is still discovering new facets of her musical personality, as Toby Deller finds out
RETAIL THERAPY
As a general rule, luthiers tend to be better at making instruments than making friends. Violin maker Korinthia A. Klein gives some hints and tips on good customer relations – both for the people entering the workshop and for those running it
‘MUSIC WILL NEVER LET YOU DOWN’
The Henschel Quartet celebrates its 30th anniversary this season. Co-founder and violist Monika Henschel-Schwind speaks to Andrew Stewart about the group’s longevity, and looks forward to the premiere of Freda Swain’s neglected ‘Norfolk’ String Quartet at Aldeburgh this summer
A HOMECOMING
Their latest recording gathers new music and 20th-century works by US composers, but the Miró Quartet musicians are always mindful of melodic accessibility. Harry White hears from cellist Joshua Gindele about the group’s commissioning process and recording the album
THREE’S COMPANY
Are piano trios having a sudden renaissance? Charlotte Gardner hears from industry professionals and from musicians who relish the repertoire offered by this flexible but underrated chamber grouping
THREE TO WATCH: MITHRAS TRIO
Violinist Ionel Manciu, cellist Leo Popplewell and pianist
THREE TO WATCH: TRIO ORELON
HÉLIOS PHOTO LYODOH KANEKO. ORELON PHOTO SERGIO BERTANI
THREE TO WATCH: TRIO CHAGALL
FEDERICO CARDAMONE YCat artist Trio Chagall was formed
LISTEN TO THE INNER VOICE
Normally, acoustic measurements are taken from outside the instrument – but the internal vibrations can reveal even more. Colin Gough presents a method for listening inside the soundbox and demonstrates what it can tell us about the sound
BRIDGING THE DECADES
The design of an instrument’s bridge is nowadays
EVASIO EMILIO GUERRA
A close look at the work of great and unusual makers
A workshop facility to measure violin family acoustics
Makers reveal their special techniques
MY SPACE
A peek into lutherie workshops around the world
A bridge too far?
Points of interest to violin and bow makers 
FRANCK VIOLIN SONATA, FIRST MOVEMENT
Taking inspiration from Jacqueline du Pré and singers, double bassist Michael Rieber shares tips on cultivating Franck’s delicate sound world, despite playing stratospherically high on the instrument
May the 5ths be with you
Using simplification to achieve better technique
CONCERTS
New York
RECORDINGS
HIDDEN FLAME BEACH Romance op.23 BOULANGER Three Pieces
BOOKS
Doreen Carwithen Dorothy Howell Ethel Smyth Rebecca Clarke
FROM THE STRAD
Violinist Archie Easton presents some ‘reminiscences of John Frederick Lott’ (1804–70), including his brief spell as an elephant trainer for a circus
IN THE NEXT ISSUE
1733 ‘Salabue, Martzy’ Carlo Bergonzi violin One of
ANDRÉS CÁRDENES
The Cuban-born violinist feels a rapport with the opulence of Chausson’s Poème – particularly with the revisions by its dedicatee, Eugène Ysaÿe
FUTURE PROOF
Natural hardwoods, including ebony and rosewood, are becoming
OUR FRIENDS ELECTRIC
Casey Driessen in his music studio MAIN PHOTO
STRING ACCESSORIES 2024
CASES ROSINS STRINGS TECH LUTHERIE SHOULDER RESTS The
CASES
A colourful collection to protect your instrument
STRINGS
New violin and viola sets
CELLO
Stabilising accessories for cellists
MUTES
Varying materials to help you keep quiet
LUTHERIE
Products for every violin maker's toolkit
SHOULDER RESTS
Rests for every shoulder shape COLOUR POP Initially
TECH
Lights, tuners and microphones
ROSINS
Recipes for every type of bow
BASS
Double bass-specific products
PHOTOSHOP: A STARTER GUIDE FOR LUTHIERS
The Strad’s art editor gives a guide to creating, isolating and removing images from a background, as well as understanding colour corrections and saving the files
Spoilt for choice
A variety of string, bow, shoulder rest and rosin manufacturers present specific ranges that are designed to be the best product you can buy within your price point
JARGAR STRINGS
Affordable Young Talent violin and cello sets The
SMOOTH OPERATOR
Before applying the first layer of varnish, ground coat or even primer to an instrument, the wood surface must first be prepared. Narelle Freeman examines some of the options for luthiers, and argues that equisetum hyemale provides the best results
Looking for back issues?
Browse the Archive >

Previous Article Next Article
June 2024 and Accessories 2024 guide
CONTENTS
Page 24
PAGE VIEW