Saturday, 25 June 2011
BBC sees the Light
Tuesday, 21 June 2011
dos and don'ts for young soloists
I've been fortunate enough to do many concertos with student soloists, always an interesting experience. Here is the sum total of my wisdom in DO and DON'T form.
DO try and know your speeds beforehand. Most inexperienced soloists have spent much more time playing on their own or with a pianist than with an orchestra, and don’t realise that, even with the Classical repertoire, there is a great deal of subconscious tempo variation. In other words, you will play some passages quicker or slower than others without being aware of it. It helps enormously if you can tell the conductor which ones these are beforehand. This doesn’t just save time in rehearsal, it also gives the conductor time to work out how, for example, to get back into the main tempo when your more relaxed second subject has finished. It’s worth practising with a metronome, not because you are expected to play metronomically but because it enables you to judge where you want to push the speed on and where you want to relax.
DON’T watch the conductor too much. He will generally be beating slightly ahead of the orchestra, so if you try and keep up with him the music will get faster. As a rule the orchestra and conductor’s job is to keep up with you, not vice versa. It is sometimes the case that your passage-work is so fast that you have to follow the orchestra instead: one example is in the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto first movement just after the cadenza, where the soloist plays arpeggio semi-quavers over the recapitulated first subject: listen and play with them. There are many other examples in the standard repertoire.
DON’T be afraid to ask for things to be done differently. The orchestra is there to serve you. There are ways of doing this however. Don’t say to the orchestra directly, “Can you do it this way instead?” The conductor has probably spent some time with the orchestra, in good faith, getting the orchestra to do it the way you don’t like. Ask the conductor. “Would it be possible for the woodwind to ....." Nine times out of ten the conductor will be pleased to oblige. There may also be good reasons why the conductor has done it his way, reasons you aren’t aware of, and you don’t want to end up in a situation where the conductor is saying to the orchestra, “No, don’t do that. Do it the way I originally asked you”.
DON’T be nervous. You are probably the best player in the room, and the orchestra will think you are wonderful.
DON’T be arrogant either. The orchestra might not be as good at their instruments as you are at yours (although sometimes some of them will be), but the likelihood is that they will be vastly more experienced musicians who have seen young prodigies come and go. Send the conductor a card afterwards. Do you want another gig or don’t you?
DON’T play without the music unless you are 100% sure you can do it. You don’t want to ruin your opportunity for want of a music stand.
DON’T do things differently in the concert from the way you did them in rehearsal. As Beecham said, an orchestra is not a piece of elastic. It cannot instantly accommodate your interpretative whims.
Friday, 17 June 2011
Ed Balls goes Greek
Monday, 13 June 2011
slut-walking comes to Britain
Friday, 27 May 2011
Coming soon - Serbia
Thursday, 19 May 2011
First Strass-Kahn, now Ken Clarke
Monday, 16 May 2011
Lady Gaga and the slut walkers
Let's assume that I've made a pie, and I stick it on the window sill to cool. Some nefarious so-and-so comes along and pinches it. Now, it's wrong to steal, and the thief shouldn't have done it, but I also am an idiot for leaving it outside.
The organiser of a "slut-walk" in Boston, Mass., 20 year old Siobhan Connors explained to the Associated Press, "The event is in protest of a culture that we think is too permissive when it comes to rape and sexual assault. It's to bring awareness to the shame and degradation women still face for expressing their sexuality... essentially for behaving in a healthy and sexual way".
Ms Connors doesn't get it, and aged 20 could perhaps could hardly be expected to. Sex is mens' achilles heel - it flicks a switch that bypasses our brains and diverts our energies, well, elsewhere. We see the signs that nature or nurture have implanted in us, and from then on we really are thinking about only one thing. Thinking may not actually be the right word. For millenia this weakness has acted as a cruel double-edged sword. While women have youth and beauty, the world is theirs to command. Women who exploit it draw men towards them, and some of that attention will be unwelcome. When those attractions have gone, society pushes women to the margins. Most women, the unlucky majority, do not make it beyond the margins in the first place.
That is the cruel law of sexual attraction, and most women who have lived a little longer than Ms Connors understand it only too well. Rather than criticising the policeman, Ms Connors should be saying, "Fine, let's be aware that showing a bit of leg could get us into trouble, but now let's make sure that our streets are properly policed and that sexual assaults - which happen to people modestly dressed too - are properly investigated and prosecuted."
Last night I watched with my daughters bits of Radio 1's big weekend (in Carlisle - someone at the BBC has a sense of humour). The headline act was Lady Gaga. The New York chanteuse did three or four anonymous Euro-disco numbers in rubber leggings; an incongruous trumpet solo followed while she changed costume, emerging in a rubber mini-dress and fishnets to sing an incongruous jazzy torch song (surprisingly well); she went to the piano (an instrument with which she showed prior acquaintance, even while standing on it in her spike heels) and sang something slow and passionate; she went off stage and emerged in a rubber crop top and hot pants with a crucifix on the front. More disco. We yawned, switched off and went to bed.
There was less sexual content to the material than I'd thought there would be. The fetish stylings were an add on. Ms Gaga came across as a Madonna for the new century, only more talented and more vulnerable (she threw herself into it with an uncontrolled passion which is unfakeable). But Gaga knows that sex sells, and of course I wondered what my daughters made of it and whether they should be watching at all. But the reality is that this stuff is out there on the internet, and short of shutting them in the house without computers and TV, there is nothing you can do to stop them watching it, or stop them coming to the conclusion that this is how women should be.
I think of myself as a feminist (my wife laughs a bitter laugh when I say it), but I sometimes think that all sexual liberation has done for women is to free them to be more like the way men would like them to be.
The slut-walkers of America, parading along in their bra and knickers, are marching to a man's tune that apparently they can't hear.