G.P.

To content | To menu | To search

Tag - St Petersburg

Entries feed - Comments feed

Wednesday 22 August 2007

Master class of Leonid Korchmar - an introduction

Tomorrow my old teacher from St Petersburg Conservatory, Leonid Korchmar will arrive to Finland to teach on a master class organized by me. I have been toying with this idea ever since I moved back to Finland from St Petersburg, but only now I had enough contacts, enough free time and enough willpover to push through with this project.

I have gathered a group of open-minded conductors and conducting students who are curious enough to take a look at the Russian school of conducting. Or "one Russian school of conducting" would probably be a better description, since many schools coexist in Russia, most of them good or at least highly interesting.

What is so special about the so-called "Russian school of conducting"? I think the remarkable characteristic of Russian musicians is their scientific approach towards mastering their instrument. For example, Russians took the violin, an Italian instrument, and looked very carefully at how to perfect the technique of playing this instrument. And see - they have generally the very best school of string playing in the whole world (and yes, the teachers of the great violin players these days coming from Korea and China either are Russian or studied in Soviet Union)! The same thing they succeeded in doing with piano playing!

Now, conducting is totally a different matter, since there is no physical instrument to play on. But nevertheless several Russian teachers tried to codify the technique of influencing this human instrument. And they paid great attention to the fact that this instrument is very sensitive to subtle emotional and psychological impulses.

There are other "conducting systems" too, of course, but somehow they all fail to give the whole picture of conducting. So many times the conducting books are either traffic policing manuals or simply consist of a bag of tricks without underlying basis for technique. I have studied conducting in three countries and done several master classes in different parts of the world, and met so many conductors from all over the world during competitions that I can say with confidence: The Russian schools of conducting produce the most even output of professional and technically solid conductors. Why can't the West compete in this field? I have my opinions on that, but let's discuss it some other time!

Thursday 19 July 2007

Blog cleaning day

Today I had time to do some updates and maintenance to my blog diary. In the Luxembourg section I added a newspaper clip about the competition, which I received today (thanks Anne!). In addition I put the photos of my concert in St Petersburg to the "right place" chronologically, as well as the poster pics which I had time to take just now. Otherwise the cleaning has been just cosmetical... I am also hoping to get adding some more pictures from Hot Springs to that section. Thanks for the pics Andrew!

Aside from that I am thinking of how to make my blog more interactive. Of course it essentially is a travel diary, but I would not mind getting some responses from my colleagues and other people interested in conducting and orchestras. So if you have any ideas how to make it more interesting, I will be glad to try them out!

Wednesday 11 July 2007

Working hard

Today it became obvious how hard work conducting is: I woke up early to study Stravinsky Apollon Musagete for the orchestra session - which went very well actually - and after that I had to gather myself to study Ravel La Valse and conduct it with the pianists.

Maja_conducts_pianists.jpg Maja at the piano session

At the break in our piano session maestro Simonov showed me his notes from our first meeting 3 years ago in St Petersburg. It is incredible how organized he is - I remember him writing on his laptop during that master class, but I never would have believed that he has saved all he wrote and was able to dig it out to show it to me today. Apparently he makes a file about every person he is teaching!

Anyway, the comments he made back then were really harsh - his impression of me after the first lesson must have been very bad. On the second day he wrote something positive too: "made progress", "feels the music"... Now, after this master class I will get a couple of pages of notes from these 10 days. That should be interesting!

Wednesday 27 June 2007

St Petersburg update - pics and a review

I received today two photos of my concert in St Petersburg last month (thanks Anna!), as well as a link to a review (in Russian). I did not have time yet to read the review, but in case it says any nice things about the concert I might translate a couple of lines into English!

I put the photos in the entry I wrote in SP. Enjoy!

Tuesday 15 May 2007

Rehearsing

Second day of rehearsals with the State Hermitage orchestra. Tomorrow comes the soloist, and let's see what happens to the modern concert piece, Jukka Tiensuu's "Puro" clarinet concerto. It has been quite a challenge to rehearse it without the soloist!

I did not remember how tired St Petersburg can make you. After both rehearsals I just had to nap for a couple of hours! Maybe the warm and humid weather has something to do with it as well... But I remember the same feeling from my student days here - always feeling somehow tired and out of tune.

P.S. I add below the photos of the concert on the May 18th which I received a couple of weeks after the concert.

St Petersburg Camerata

Conducting the Krause overture

St Petersburg Camerata and Kriikku

Me and soloist Kari Kriikku after performing Jukka Tiensuu's clarinet concerto "Puro"

- page 2 of 3 -