Saint-Saens Concerto in San Antonio
Yes, I escaped the winterstorms in Germany and travelled for 20 hours to San Antonio for two concerts of Saint-Saens. Crazy? No, travelling is fun: I watched the new James Bond movie and "Dreamgirls", read my book (Shalimar the Clown by S. Rushdie), slept 3 hours and was almost sad, that the journey was over so quickly.
...and after the performance
After doing the Haydn D now for the fifth time this year, I slowly get the hang of it. Now I understand why some musicians tend to play the same pieces over and over - it does get easier after a while.
Haydn D in Monte Carlo before
I am sitting in the breakfeast room of the Mirabeau hotel, enjoying a nice croissant with a café au lait, not yet ready for Haydn...
Well, I still have 2 hours, but it is not easy for me to play at 11 in the morning, needs some mental preparation, since I like it dark outside when I have to perform :) But I am looking very much forward to this, because the conductor Walter Weller is an old friend of mine, wonderful person to be around, full of anecdotes (yesterday he told me that he met Richard Strauss when he was 6 years old) and great stories from old Vienna.
Prokofiev Sinfonia Concertante in Amsterdam
I don't know if anybody might find it interesting what I have to say after a perfomance, especially since I stated in an earlier blog that I am my own worst judge, that I never know how I played. But at least I know what I felt, and I asked you now to say if I should continue writing directly after concerts or not.
Haydn in Nashville - bad travelling...
There seems to be some kind of curse on my travelling to the US this year. Already the trip to San Diego was in both direction hindered by missed or cancelled planes. To Utah the same thing, and now I had to fly to Nashville....It started already on the day of my departure. My original flight from Berlin via Frankfurt and Washington was supposed to leave at 2:35 pm on Feb 13. That gave me enough time to practice in the morning, go to my weekly tennis lesson (which I missed already 4 times in a row this year...), shower, pack, lunch with wifee and travel - well, when I got home after tennis at 11:50 am there was a message on my cellphone informing me, that my flight Frankfurt-Washington had been cancelled, the only chance would be to fly via Munich, at 12:50 pm.
Prokofiev Sinfonia Concertante in Utah
Just got back to the hotel after playing a run-out performance with the Utah Symphony in Ogden, 32 miles from Salt Lake City.I had to play one of my favourite concerti, the Sinfonia Concertante by Prokofiev, a piece which works really well if one takes the markings of the composer seriously - shaves off about 10 minutes from performances. Actually rather simple: just don't drop to half speed whenever there is a slow tune to milk. Think long lines, think like a singer, and immediately the piece grows and becomes much more effective.
Never Sick...
I am never sick. Actually I am normally even bragging about my desire to "sick", thinking of being able to stay in bed all day, to read books, papers, to listen to music, hoping of hot tea and the pity of the loved ones... Well, what can I say - after the snow storm in Dallas couldn't stop me on my way back to Europe, and the century storm "Kyrill" two days later delayed my homecoming from Jersey for only five hours, it was my son Janos who gave me his infection - a little flew.
Elgar and Sports in San Diego
The last few days have been a reminder to me why I love so much what I am doing: to play a beautiful piece with an enthusiast orchestra and a very fine conductor while having time to do some outdoor activity and making new friends - what else could one want from life?
Concentration
Bob asked in one of the last Blogs how my Reger went last week. The situation was that I tried to force myself to learn music which I have to play respectively record next year.
On Tour with my son János
For the first time ever I had to take my son János to concerts with me, because his mother has some on her own somewhere near Miami.
Willkommen zu Alban's Blog
Since a while I started thinking of starting my own blog in order to get some more feedback from fellow musicians or general audiences about the way I see, feel and understand music making, the music "scene" or business as well as general things in culture. I have no idea if there is a real interest for this, but I thought I'd check it out and see what happens...