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Into the light

Composer Rebecca Clarke with her viola
TULLY POTTER COLLECTION

Why it took nearly a century for an important, beautiful concert piece for cello and piano from a 20th-century female composer to be published is incomprehensible. We can certainly blame contemporaneous sexist attitudes towards women, but was there also something more personal here?

The Rhapsody for cello and piano by Rebecca Clarke was the last in a series of three works supported by the rich and powerful American patron Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge (who commissioned only a few female composers but many male ones). The British composer’s Viola Sonata had nearly won the big prize at the 1919 chamber music competition in Berkshire, Massachusetts. It was only denied the top award because the judges did not believe a woman could write such excellent music. (The winning composition was Bloch’s fine Suite for viola and piano, and the judges opined that he’d probably written Clarke’s piece as well.) This gross injustice did, however, bring Clarke one piece of good fortune, namely the support and friendship of Coolidge herself. Shaking off the judges’ snub, she went ahead and produced her very effective Piano Trio (1921) and the Rhapsody (1923) for cello and piano.

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The Strad
December 2019
VISUALIZZA IN NEGOZIO

Altri articoli in questo numero


The Strad
Editor’s letter
Each great instrument has a story to tell. Waiting
Contributors
CELIA COBB
SOUNDPOST
Letters, emails, online comments
FRONT
Brain training
Can learning a musical instrument have a positi ve eff ect on a child’s mental health? Players and teachers give their thoughts on the psychological benefits for young people
Lighting up the sky
An aerial journey for double bass and strings
TAILPIECE Sting in the tail
Titanium continues its rise as a material for instrument fittings
Life lessons Laura van der Heijden
Seven years after winning the BBC Young Musician competition, the British cellist discusses how different forms of music making inspire her
Managing a good ending
When a child wants to stop instrumental lessons, teachers have a duty to bring matters to a positive close, argues violin teacher Celia Cobb
History in sound
This year’s Krzy?owa-Music event marked several anniversaries, among them the festival’s own fifth birthday. Tully Potter attended a wealth of chamber concerts featuring young musicians and established artists, each staged in venues of historical significance
FEATURES
A MASSIVE ACHIEVEMENT
Made in 1677, the ‘Romanov’ Nicolffati viola is one of the maker’s late masterpieces. Alberto Giordano and Rudolf Hopfner investigate its turbulent history and examine how it fits into the Amati family’s oeuvre
A TREASURY OF SOUND
The Royal Danish Orchestra has been adding to its collection of fine stringed instruments for centuries – but there is revolution as well as evolution behind its distinctive string sound, which is unmistakable whatever the repertoire and whoever the conductor, finds Andrew Mellor
LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION
As the founder of Music in Vision, Kathleen Ross has built a business from supplying professional musicians for on-camera roles. Introducing instrumentalists to the world of film and TV can be challenging, but, she writes, ensuring that musicians in background parts are convincingly portrayed is well worth the effort
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This year marks the 50th anniversary of the death of Emile Auguste Ouchard, as well as the 40th of his son Bernard – both regarded as among the 20th century’s finest bow makers. Thomas Martin, Andrew McGill, Martin Lawrence and George Martin examine the legacy of the Ouchard dynasty, particularly focusing on their double bass bows
A CONDUCTOR’S TALE
Music director Manfred Honeck has brought a distinctly European flavour to the Pittsburgh Symphony. Gavin Dixon spoke to him at his summer festival in Wolfegg, Germany, as he prepared to embark on a tour of Europe with his Pittsburgh forces – and discovered how his time as a violist in the Vienna Philharmonic helped him to become the conductor he is today
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DAVID STIRRAT
A close look at the work of great and unusual makers
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HONORATA STALMIERSKA
A peek into lutherie workshops around the world
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BERG VIOLIN CONCERTO
ln the first of two articles, Leila Josefowicz explores ideas of feverishness, hallucinati on, death and resurrecti on in the second movement of a great 20th-century concerto
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Reviews
Your monthly critical round-up of performances, recordings and publications
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