The renowned Russian cellist who makes his Israeli debut at the Sixth Eilat
Chamber Music Festival this weekend says he has no real answer to the question
“How do you manage to live several lives simultaneously, being an active
performer, conductor, writer, teacher, jury member in cello competitions and
festival organizer?” “I think that for me, this switching of activities serves
as a substitute for rest,” he says in a phone interview from his London
home.
Alexander Ivashkin, who was described as an outstanding cellist by
Mstislav Rostropovich, an excellent musician by John Cage, and an outstanding
person in present-day music activities by Krzysztof Penderecki, performs
throughout the world as a soloists with the best orchestras and also plays
chamber music. But starting his music studies at the Gnessin Special School of
Music for gifted students at the age of five, he still remembers how he cried
when he realized he was going to play the cello. “It was an ugly instrument I’d
never seen before and I simply hated it, but to be accepted to the piano
department, you needed to already have a good command of the
instrument.”
Later, studying both instruments at the same level, he was
advised by Rostropovich to stay with cello “because it gives you a chance to
make a better living,” he smiles.
And he never regretted it. “In the 20th
century, the cello developed rapidly and has undergone a tremendous change. Not
only the repertoire grew immensely and is almost as rich as that of the piano,
but the style has changed as well.
Now playing the cello does not
especially mean producing beautiful melodies or playing with fat tone, it means
all sorts of techniques.”
Graduating from the Gnessin Institute with a
double degree as a cellist and musicologist, he started his professional writing
experience as a music critic. His first book was dedicated to composer Charles
Ives “and was real research work,” while his books about composer Alfred
Schnittke “were not about musicology but rather biographies.”
In 1989,
Ivashkin and his wife “signed very good teaching contracts with the Canterbury
University in Christchurch, New Zealand. It was an extremely unpleasant time in
Russia, and I simply did not want to be there,” he recollects, adding that he
actually never left his country, since he has dual citizenship and still keeps
an apartment in Moscow. In 1999 they settled in England, and “this too was a
great move because despite the tough competition, London offers a musician a lot
of performing possibilities, as well as good exposure. In New Zealand, you can
get a great local review, but that’s it.”
Ivashkin is famous not only as
a performer of the standard cello repertoire but also an avid champion of modern
music, with many composers, such as Alfred Schnittke, dedicating works to
him.
“I was always interested in playing contemporary music. That is why,
while still living in Moscow, I founded the Bolshoi Soloists ensemble, which
existed for 12 years during very difficult times in 1970-1980s. We played a lot
of contemporary music – that of Cage, Kagel, Penderecki – and commissioned music
to Schnitke, Gubaidulia, Denisov. Quite soon, I will world premiere a cello
concerto by Vladimir Tarnopolsky.
This is a very complex piece, not
written in a traditional cello way, so I’m learning a lot.”
And he
elaborates: “For me, playing contemporary music is a good lesson in how to play
any music. I’m trying to play Brahms, Beethoven and Bach as if it were written
today: otherwise, you will follow clichés that other people have created. It
simply teaches you how to read between the lines.”
Alexander Ivashkin
performs at the Eilat Chamber Music Festival on March 25 at 5 p.m. For more
details: www. eilat-festival.co.il
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