RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Classical music and opera’

Playing it cool with Mahler in slo-mo

Haitink’s magical Mahler Prom made up for the BBC’s gruesome coverage of the First Night

A dance of death or a song of life? This question, posed but never answered, haunts Mahler’s Ninth Symphony, written in bleak circumstances: his young daughter had died, he had lost his conducting job in antisemitic Vienna, his wife was giving him trouble and he had heart disease. Today he would be called “stressed out”. But the 49-year-old composer doggedly took to his hut in the Tyrolean mountains and drafted, in the summer of 1909, this sprawling, tender masterpiece, his last completed symphony.

It proved the sombre highlight of the first week of the BBC Proms 2009, in a spellbinding account by Bernard Haitink and the London Symphony Orchestra. Slow, majestic and tightly controlled, the performance ran for nearly 100 minutes – longer than average but worth the amplitude for the intensity achieved. This was the Proms at their best: top musicians giving their all in front of a capacity crowd with barely a cough or a fidget. Even without the aid of a fourth plinth, the stalwart Prommers standing in the hot arena turned themselves into statues.

The Ninth has a quality of distillation, as if the emotional flesh and bones of Mahler’s youth has been reduced to music of transparent purity. At times it was like listening in slow motion. Harmonies shift, not abruptly or jaggedly but gradually, like a drop of dye dissipating through water. Often the piccolo (played by the LSO’s animated Sharon Williams) is the instigator, piercing the existing harmony with a long, sour dissonance and forcing change.

As ever with Haitink, analytical precision won the day. No fudging, no blurry wash of sound, no feverish swell. Each orchestral solo was vivid. The ever-prominent second violins ushered in the opening Andante and the subsequent Ländler with shining resonance. Haitink plays it cool and bare. This can frustrate those who give themselves up to a Mahler symphony as if entering a purple tunnel of love and pain, hoping for empathy and therapy. This would be anathema to Haitink. He demands that you leave your ego at home and use your ears: the wordless elegy is the more memorable for it. At 80, this Dutch maestro begins to look frail. We must treasure him.

Wednesday’s Cambridge University at 800 Prom had bad advance publicity. What was it for? Why not celebrate more of the current wave of excellent Cambridge-trained composers – George Benjamin, Julian Anderson, Thomas Adès, Jonathan Dove? When is Loughborough or Warwick getting its own Prom? Why was it so late starting and ending and what the heck was Saint-Saëns’s swaggering and sentimental “Organ” Symphony doing there? If you gave the answer “because he has an honorary degree” in your Tripos exams, you’d end up with a Third.

Certainly the concert was a rum event, a triumph of lost opportunity but not without its glories. Five combined Cambridge choirs, including King’s and St John’s, performed Vaughan Williams’s Five Mystical Songs with Simon Keenlyside as the ardent soloist. Short, ethereal choral works by Jonathan Harvey (Come, Holy Ghost) and Judith Weir (Ascending into Heaven) were reminders of the importance of this university’s vital, unparalleled tradition of teaching compo sition, now apparently – according to the current professor Robin Holloway – under threat.

The poetic Harvey, fiercely difficult but outstandingly sung, was conducted by Andrew Nethsingha. Weir’s piece, directed by Stephen Cleobury and with organ accompaniment, had delicious buoyancy, as if the heavenly ascent was powered by a celestial waltzing Wurlitzer. A new work by Ryan Wigglesworth – an Oxford graduate; who ever said this event was not eclectic? – made a powerful impression, incisively played by the BBC SO. The Genesis of Secrecy demonstrated this young conductor-composer’s gift for exquisite orchestral colour. Wigglesworth is also, I am duty bound to report, a bit of a dish.

More choral pleasure was offered by Monday’s first lunchtime Chamber Music Prom at Cadogan Hall, when the Cardinall’s Musick excelled in unaccompanied works from the time of Henry VIII. But the season had opened messily, at least for those of us who watched the First Night on BBC2. The experience was gruesome. Neither the adorable Clive Anderson, presenting, nor his “celeb” guest Stephen Fry in the red-plush Albert Hall box, can do wrong. Yet their discussion of Fry’s weight-loss, with the orchestra tuning up in the background, was downright surreal. Why not get Jordan along to discuss her embonpoint? No knowledge of music required.

Ailish Tynan and Alice Coote, attractive and spirited soprano and mezzo, were soloists in Bruckner’s Psalm 150 and Brahms’s Alto Rhapsody. Shooting in close-up from under their chins made them look like sweaty all-in wrestlers. If a camera angle can be classified as actionable, this is surely it. Elsewhere the lens showed exhausting signs of OCD, flicking and darting as if hunting the ball on Centre Court. The harder you try to make music on the small screen “interesting”, the more tedious it gets. I checked with my usual TV-watching, music-loving research team: a teenager and an octogenarian. What did they think? They’d both switched off in squirming embarrassment.

Telly detritus – cameras, furry microphones, trailing cables – filled the stage for Opera Holland Park’s updating of Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera. We were in contemporary America – the work is set in Boston – with stars and stripes and power-dressing women. Director Martin Lloyd-Evans and designer Jamie Vartan alas seem to have forgotten what they learned two years ago in OHP’s stunning L’amore dei tre Re. Whereas there the action was disturbingly concentrated, here it was strewn confusingly across the wide stage. Despite Peter Robinson’s focused and perceptive conducting and, on a chilly night, the resilient skills of the City of London Sinfonia, the twains rarely met.

But there’s an urgent reason to see this show: the cast, which includes Olafur Sigurdarson, Gail Pearson and Rafael Rojas, indisposed on the first night but heroically replaced (from the pit) by David Rendall, has exciting style and panache. Together with the small, lusty chorus, they bring Verdi’s masterpiece to passionate life. The jewel is the assured, gleaming Amelia of Amanda Echalaz. Holland Park has nurtured this South African soprano, who was last year’s Tosca. She has power, looks and charisma. With work scheduled for houses throughout the world, Echalaz surely heads for stardom. Any performer who can make you forget your freezing extremities deserves the highest reward. An honorary degree maybe.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


The indie kid’s guide to classical

Chopin has made it on to Radio 1, courtesy of Muse’s latest hit United States of Eurasia. But don’t stop there,
kids: here’s where you and your iPod should venture next

Kids up and down the country are tuning in to Radio 1 and scratching their heads. What’s that weird, long piano section doing at the end of Muse’s new Bohemian Rhapsody-esque single, United States of Eurasia. Isn’t that (whisper it) . . . classical music? Being played on the nation’s favourite youth station? That’s right, kids, it’s Chopin’s Nocturne in E-flat major, Op 9 No 2 to be precise. So now, for all you puzzled young ‘uns out there, here’s how to get in to that classical music vibe . . .

How do you listen?

What you need to do is close the curtains, take your clothes off, lie face down with your teeth sunk deep into the carpet. Then get your butler to sprinkle your buttocks with rose petals and put on the 16-plus hours of Wagner’s operatic tetralogy, The Ring, before he retreats, locking the door on you, until the bloody ordeal is over. Not really: what you need is peace, quiet and concentration.

What am I supposed to be listening for?

Radio 3 helps here. It offers two great entry points to classical music. On Discovering Music (Sunday teatime), leading conductors take you passage by passage through a whole work, explaining what the composer was trying to achieve and what you might enjoy. In Building a Library (Saturday mornings), a critic anatomises different recordings of the same work in a manner that switches between the hilariously pernickety and the genuinely instructive – you can even download it as a weekly podcast.

What should I avoid?

For the time being, avoid anything labelled Salford Toccata by Harrison Birtwistle, explosante fixe . . . by Pierre Boulez, Helikopter-Streichquartett by Karlheinz Stockhausen. Stuff by Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenberg and Olivier Messiaen might well have you calling 999 and shouting hysterically “Fire in the pet shop! Fire in the pet shop!”

What should I try?

Download Thomas Tallis’s Spem in Alium and, if you have functioning ears, prepare to weep. It is a 10-plus minute, 40-part motet written in the late 16th century: a wall of sound more overwhelming than anything in Phil Spector’s philosophy.

Liked that. Now what?

David Mellor is, as we know, wrong about everything, but the name of his Classic FM show, “If you liked that, you’ll like this”, is helpful here. If you liked the Chopin on Muse’s single, then listen to some more Chopin music – say Martha Argerich’s 1965 concert of his sonatas, mazurkas and nocturnes. Or try the andantino from Schubert’s sonata in A – it’s what Isaiah Berlin insisted be played at his funeral. If you like Roy Orbison, Terence Trent d’Arby or – though you really shouldn’t – James Morrison, then you might well like lieder. Lieder is German for songs – helpfully as short as anything on Chris Moyles’s playlist, but more heartfelt than anything that comes from his mouth. Try some lieder cycles: Schubert’s Winterreise or Schumann’s Dichterliebe will shatter your heart. If you like Kraftwerk, you’ll probably dig minimalist music: try Steve Reich’s Music for 18 Musicians or his Different Trains.

Any chance I’ve heard any of this classical stuff before?

Remember Torvill and Dean hurling each other across the ice? Perhaps you weren’t even a twinkle in your dad’s eye then, but if you were, you might enjoy realising that that stuff they were skating to was Ravel’s Bolero and you’d get a kick listening to it properly. And then there was Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries used when Robert Duvall napalmed Vietnam.

Symphonies – they go on and freaking on. Help me over this experiential hump.

Don’t try (yet) the forbiddingly sculptured hours of Bruckner’s symphonies. Plump instead for Beethoven. You’ll know the opening to his fifth (“Da-Da-Da-Dah”) but stick around for its second movement which, if you have heartstrings, will pluck them mercilessly. If you don’t find the first movement of his sixth the perfect accompaniment to a summer walk in the country, then look into my eyes as I give you the frowning of a lifetime. For those of you whose attention spans have been ruined by daytime telly, Haydn symphonies (try his No 94th, the so-called”Surprise”) are often obligingly short.

Five downloads to getyou started

Schubert: the Trout Quintet

Bach: Brandenburg Concertos

Mozart: Clarinet Concerto

Beethoven: Symphony No 9

Puccini: Madame Butterfly

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Conductor dies at Swiss suicide clinic

Sir Edward Downes, who conducted first Sydney Opera House performance, ends life with wife, Joan, in Switzerland

One of Britain’s most respected conductors, Sir Edward Downes, and his wife, Joan, a choreographer and TV producer, have died at an assisted suicide clinic in Switzerland, their family said today.

Downes, 85, was almost blind when he and his 74-year-old wife, who had become his full-time carer, travelled to Switzerland to end their lives, a family statement released to the BBC said.

Born in Birmingham, Downes had a long and distinguished career, including conducting the first performance at the Sydney Opera House. He worked with the BBC Philharmonic and the Royal Opera House in London.

The statement from the couple’s son and daughter, Caractacus and Boudicca, said they “died peacefully, and under circumstances of their own choosing”.

The statement continued: “After 54 happy years together, they decided to end their own lives rather than continue to struggle with serious health problems.”

The couple died at a clinic run by Dignitas, the Swiss organisation that operates a specialist euthanasia service.

The Downes family said: “Our father, who was 85 years old, almost blind and increasingly deaf, had a long, vigorous and distinguished career as a conductor.

“Our mother, who was 74, started her career as a ballet dancer and subsequently worked as a choreographer and TV producer before dedicating the last years of her life to working as our father’s personal assistant.

“They both lived life to the full and considered themselves to be extremely lucky to have lived such rewarding lives, both professionally and personally.”

Downes was knighted in 1991.A Metropolitan police spokesman said Greenwich CID had launched an investigation.

“We continue to investigate the circumstances of their deaths. [There are] no further details at this stage,” he said.

In the past, police have investigated cases in which British people have travelled to the Dignitas clinic. Anyone assisting a person to commit suicide could face up to 14 years in prison.

Prosecutors have not pushed forward cases against families and friends of the growing numbers of Britons who have travelled to Dignitas to die, however, and there is fierce debate about whether the law should be changed to protect people from prosecution.

Last December, the Crown Prosecution Service announced it would take no action against the family of 23-year-old Daniel James, who travelled to Switzerland to die after being paralysed from the chest down in a rugby accident.

The police did not investigate the deaths earlier this year of Peter and Penelope Duff, who became the first terminally ill British couple to be helped to die together in Switzerland.

Last week, the House of Lords voted against an attempt by the former lord chancellor Lord Falconer to relax the law on assisted suicide. His amendment to the coroners and justice bill would have allowed people to help someone with a terminal illness travel to a country where assisted suicide is legal.

Debbie Purdy, who has multiple sclerosis, is seeking to clarify the law in the House of Lords. She wants a ruling that her husband will not be prosecuted if he helps her travel abroad to die.

Some people fear that relaxing the law on assisted suicide would lead to an increase in cases, and put people at risk of being pushed into taking their own lives. Gordon Brown is against a change in the law.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Havana welcomes Royal Ballet

Visits will be among most high-profile cultural exchanges since Fidel Castro took power in 1959

Cuba has blended diplomacy and art by inviting two flagship western cultural institutions, Britain’s Royal Ballet and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, to perform in Havana.

The visits will be among the most high-profile cultural exchanges with the west since Fidel Castro’s guerrillas seized power in 1959, turning the island into a communist outpost which has outlasted the cold war.

Royal Ballet dancers are due tomorrow to start a five-day programme which the Cuban government has billed as a landmark cultural event. Tickets are sold out and at least three of the performances will be shown on big screens outside the Gran Teatro in central Havana. Officials from the New York Philharmonic visited the city in recent days to investigate performance venues and logistics following an invitation from the culture ministry, a rare opening to a high-profile US institution.

“With these invitations the Cuban leadership is indicating a desire to expand the field of contact with musical and cultural leaders from the US and EU, which may lead to greater diplomatic contact down the road,” said Dan Erikson, author of the Cuba Wars and an analyst at the Inter-American Dialogue.

The Obama administration has responded in kind by granting the orchestra an exemption from the draconian US embargo, a four-decade old policy designed to isolate the island. Vice-president Joe Biden said the proposed trip was a “wonderful project”, Zubin Mehta, the orchestra’s president, told the New York Times.

That marked a departure from the Bush-era policy of “squelching” cultural contacts and could presage further relaxations, said Erikson. “There is likely to be a reopening of cultural exchanges as occurred during Bill Clinton’s presidency. Obama will certainly be more open to initiatives with ‘ping-pong’ diplomacy, and we may soon see the administration support basketball diplomacy.”

Cuba, once an international pariah, has been welcomed back into the diplomatic fold by Latin America and has been courted by Chinese, Russian and European governments and corporations, not least because of its offshore oil reserves.

Since succeeding his ailing older brother last year President Raúl Castro has mooted economic reforms and cultural openings to break the Caribbean island’s sense of stagnation. Economic reforms have stalled and renewed austerity mean less fruit, vegetables and electricity for an impoverished population.

But European diplomats in Havana said there was marginally more cultural tolerance. “It’s a bit more relaxed,” said one. Despite the financial crunch arts subsidies still support selected performers and keep opera, cinema and theatre available to almost all. The irony is that Fidel Castro has a tin ear and is one of the few Cubans who cannot sing or dance.

The Royal Ballet’s 150-strong team of dancers and technicians is reportedly the first ballet company to visit Havana since the Bolshoi, emissaries from the government’s Soviet ally, performed almost three decades ago.

The shows, three in the Gran Teatro, two in the Teatro Karl Marx, are part of a tribute to the legendary grand dame of Cuban dance, Alicia Alonso, who at 88 remains head of the National Ballet of Cuba.

Carlos Acosta, Cuba’s globetrotting ballet star, helped broker the visit and will perform alongside his British colleagues. The programme will include Swan Lake, Don Quixote, Wayne McGregor’s Chroma and Kenneth MacMillan’s Manon.

With Havana and Washington both giving the green light the New York Philharmonic said it hoped to accept Cuba’s invitation within weeks after inspecting concert halls and nailing down details such as budgets and equipment storage.

Mehta said there were provisional plans to perform on 31 October and 1 November at the 900-seat Teatro Amadeo Roldan, with the philharmonic’s incoming music director, Alan Gilbert, conducting.

The institution made history last year by performing in Pyongyang, one of the most striking examples of “orchestra diplomacy”.

Relations between the US and North Korea did not then improve – actually they nosedived – but the visit continued a tradition of classical music leaping political barriers.

In 1956 the Boston Symphony Orchestra became the first major US ensemble to visit the Soviet Union during the cold war. The New York Philharmonic, under conductor Leonard Bernstein, followed three years later. London’s Philharmonic Orchestra brought Beethoven, Brahms, Dvorak and Haydn to capacity crowds in Mao’s China in 1973.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


‘One day I’ll tire and turn to golf’

The great Ferruccio Furlanetto is now 60 – and at the top of his game, writes Martin Kettle

Ferruccio Furlanetto is still buzzing. “What a sensational night,” he says, of the opening performance of The Barber of Seville at the Royal Opera House on Saturday. “The atmosphere is still electric here.”

With its cast headed by the young Peruvian tenor Juan Diego Flórez, the show was always going to be a sell-out. But what Covent Garden could not have bargained for was just how outstanding the rest of its stars would prove – nor how much publicity they would get after the US mezzo Joyce DiDonato broke her leg and kept going.

Furlanetto, who plays the repulsive music teacher Don Basilio, is the most level-headed and experienced of these singers. Yet, when I meet the great bass at the ROH two days after that premiere, his excitement is still evident. Furlanetto knows he will never match the thrill Flórez can generate – no bass ever could – but the Italian, who turned 60 this spring, is still a singer in his prime. After a long period of singing mainly Mozartian roles (Leporello, Figaro and Don Giovanni) at all the great houses, he has gravitated to the classic 19th-century Italian bass roles. And, over the next 12 months at the ROH, Britain has the chance to hear him in no fewer than three.

Don Basilio is the first. “I didn’t really like the role until this week,” he says. “Too much of a grotesque.” You can judge his performance for yourself next week, when the opera is shown live on BP’s countrywide summer screens. Then, in September, comes the return of his masterly Philip II in Verdi’s Don Carlo, in Nicholas Hytner’s 2008 production. And next summer, he plays Fiesco in what is sure to rank among the season’s hottest tickets – when Plácido Domingo takes on the first major baritone role of his career, in the title role of Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra.

Furlanetto yields to no one in his admiration for Domingo, but he is surprisingly frank about the fact that this will be unknown territory: “I am sure Plácido is attracted by the special charisma of Boccanegra as a character. It is a very theatrical part and Plácido loves these roles. But in all these years of his incredible career, I sincerely never had the feeling that he could be a baritone. Still, if you want to try something, then why not?”

Furlanetto, too, will occasionally try something new. In January, he will take on Rodgers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific; then in 2011, he makes his debut as Baron Ochs in Der Rosenkavalier, a rare venture into a major German role, and one that worries him. “Italians can sing most easily in Italian and Russian because of the vowels,” he says. “In German, the consonants get stuck in your throat.”

Most of his career, though, has been built on the principle that a singer must stick to what suits his voice. “The key to having a long career like mine is the right technique and the right repertoire. You should use your voice as nature intended it to be used. When you are young, it is easy to be caught by the glamour of doing something out of the ordinary. But it can kill your instrument. We are working with human flesh: even if you have a good technique, you can hurt yourself.”

How long can he go on? “For as long I have fun. One day I will start to get tired. Then it will be time to play golf.” He still plays off a handicap of five – so watch out.

The Barber of Seville is broadcast live on the BP Summer Big Screens on 15 July. Details: www.roh.org.uk

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds