Ruth Waterman
Musician Artist Writer
Ruth Waterman’s inclusion in the book The Great Violinists acknowledges her as one of the finest solo violinists of her time. Her concerts have taken her throughout the UK and US, and in Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy, Israel, South Africa and Mexico among others. She has performed on BBC television at the Proms, at the Royal Festival Hall in the presence of the Queen, on New York’s Great Performers at Lincoln Center, and on Russian State Television in the galleries of the Hermitage in St Petersburg, the first British violinist to play there. Concerto appearances have been with such orchestras as the London Symphony, BBC Symphony, English Chamber and Orpheus Chamber Orchestras.
Waterman’s reputation as a revelatory interpreter of Bach was cemented by her recordings of the solo Sonatas and Partitas and the complete Sonatas with Keyboard (Meridian), awarded top rating in BBC Music Magazine and Critics’ Choice in Gramophone.
Originally from Leeds, Ruth Waterman gained national attention when Yehudi Menuhin invited her to substitute for Nathan Milstein in a Mozart concerto under his baton at the Bath Festival. For many years she lived in New York, where she debuted in recital in Carnegie Hall’s International Artists series. While there, she began presenting radio programmes on the issues of music interpretation, an activity which combined two of her constant interests: the process of bringing music to life, and the deepening of the listener’s experience. These developed into her popular lecture-recitals, Ruth Waterman Explores & Performs, which were heard on the concert platform throughout the UK as well as abroad, and featured on the cable television channel Artsworld. After returning to England, her broadcasts broadened to include a BBC Radio 4 documentary Music and Memory in Mostar, chosen as a Pick of the Week, and Deep Listening on the series Something Understood.
Ruth Waterman has conducted orchestras in places as diverse as the Winter Palace in St Petersburg (Hermitage State Orchestra) and the ruins of Sarajevo (Mostar Sinfonietta). Her involvement with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra led to her directing performances across the US, Europe and South America, as well as recordings for Deutsche Grammophon.
Always interested in educating the next generation, Waterman was Adjunct Professor of Music at City University of New York, and has given master classes and lectures at Juilliard, Oxford University, Royal Academy of Music, St Petersburg Conservatory, Jerusalem Academy of Music, and many more.
In 2002 she was invited to conduct and teach in post-war Bosnia, where she continues to return almost annually. Her experiences there prompted her to write about making music in the aftermath of war in a book When Swan Lake Comes to Sarajevo, which was selected as a Book-of-the-Year by The Observer. She has often spoken at music, literary and art festivals, and has drawn on her experiences as a musician and writer in developing her play The Sound of Peace, which features live classical music.
New contents:
Music biography (shorter)
Music biography (longer) [as is]
CDs and Reviews [as is]
Listening [as is]
Activities [as is]
“A deeply admired artist”
International Record Review
“Powerfully memorable”
Gramophone
Biography

Ruth Waterman’s inclusion in the book The Great Violinists acknowledges her as one of the outstanding solo violinists of her time. She is also a broadcaster, conductor, public speaker and educator; and more recently a writer and painter.
Her concerts have taken her throughout the UK and US, and in Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy, Israel, South Africa and Mexico among others. She has performed on BBC television at the Proms, at the Royal Festival Hall in the presence of the Queen, on New York’s Great Performers at Lincoln Center, and on Russian State Television in the galleries of the Hermitage in St Petersburg, the first British violinist to play there. Concerto appearances have been with such orchestras as the London Symphony, BBC Symphony, English Chamber and Orpheus Chamber Orchestras.
Waterman’s reputation as a revelatory interpreter of Bach was cemented by her recordings of the solo Sonatas and Partitas and the complete Sonatas with Keyboard (Meridian), awarded top rating in BBC Music Magazine and Critics’ Choice in Gramophone.
Originally from Leeds, Ruth Waterman gained national attention when Yehudi Menuhin invited her to substitute for Nathan Milstein in a Mozart concerto under his baton at the Bath Festival. For many years she lived in New York, where she debuted in recital in Carnegie Hall’s International Artists series. While there, she began presenting radio programmes on the issues of music interpretation, an activity which combined two of her constant interests: the process of bringing music to life, and the deepening of the listener’s experience. These developed into her popular lecture-recitals, Ruth Waterman Explores & Performs, which were heard on the concert platform throughout the UK as well as abroad, and featured on the cable television channel Artsworld. After returning to England, her broadcasts broadened to include a BBC Radio 4 documentary Music and Memory in Mostar, and Deep Listening on the series Something Understood.
Ruth Waterman has conducted orchestras in places as diverse as the Winter Palace in St Petersburg (Hermitage State Orchestra) and the ruins of Sarajevo (Mostar Sinfonietta). Her involvement with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra led to her directing performances across the US, Europe and South America, as well as recordings for Deutsche Grammophon.
Always interested in educating the next generation, Waterman was Adjunct Professor of Music at City University of New York, and has given master classes and lectures at Juilliard, Oxford University, Royal Academy of Music, St Petersburg Conservatory, Jerusalem Academy of Music, and many more.
In 2002 she was invited to conduct and teach in post-war Bosnia, where she continues to return almost annually. Her experiences there prompted her to write about making music in the aftermath of war in a book When Swan Lake Comes to Sarajevo, which was selected as a Book-of-the-Year by The Observer. She has often spoken at music, literary and art festivals, and has drawn on her experiences as a musician and writer in developing her play The Sound of Peace, which features live classical music.

Ruth Waterman has been known for many years as an outstanding violinist, broadcaster, conductor, speaker, and educator; and more recently as an exhilarating writer and painter.
By no means a prodigy, Waterman grew up in Leeds surrounded by music, her father playing the violin, her mother the piano, her elder sister the piano, and her brother the cello. She herself learned both the piano and violin from the age of five from her parents, deciding when she was twelve to focus on the violin. She studied at the Royal Northern College of Music from the age of nine with Hungarian violinists Endre Wolf and György Pauk.
She first came to national attention when Yehudi Menuhin invited her to play for him on a televised master class, in which she played the Beethoven Concerto. This was quickly followed by winning a prize in the first BBC Violin Competition, which led to many concerto broadcasts. At this point, her burgeoning concert schedule forced the reluctant decision to forgo a place at Cambridge University, where she had won a scholarship to study economics. By the following year, she had been decisively propelled into the limelight when she substituted at short notice for Nathan Milstein at the Bath Festival, playing a Mozart Concerto under the baton of Yehudi Menuhin.
Although Waterman was now recognised as one of the leading young violinists in England, she chose to continue her studies by going to New York, where her teachers were Ivan Galamian, Paul Makanovitsky, Dorothy DeLay and Paul Winter. After graduating from the Juilliard School, she complemented her solo work with many different kinds of music-making, from chamber music to orchestral leading to jazz. This exposure to a vast array of musical styles and musicians proved an enriching and broadening impetus to her development as an artist. She ended up staying in New York for over twenty years before settling in London.
Meanwhile, her New York debut was given with Rosalyn Tureck before a huge audience in Central Park, followed by a recital in Carnegie Hall’s International Artists series. Her interest in Bach was already simmering by this time, and she was embarking on her long search for a performing style by attending Baroque dance classes with the dance historian Wendy Hilton, and researching the issues of historical performance practice.
Waterman’s distinguished reputation as a revelatory Bach interpreter was confirmed by her recordings of the complete Sonatas with Keyboard (Meridian), winner of Critics’ Choice in Gramophone, and hailed as “by far the best violin/piano version ever recorded” by American Record Review; and of her unanimously acclaimed solo Sonatas and Partitas (also Meridan). Throughout her career, her all-Bach programmes have been much in demand, from Wigmore Hall to Avery Fisher Hall to the Aldeburgh Festival (at the personal invitation of Benjamin Britten).
She applies the same rigour and commitment to the music of all composers, her repertoire encompassing everything from Mozart to Elgar to Gershwin to Stravinsky. She frequently performs the complete sonata cycles of Bach, Beethoven, Schubert and Schumann, and loves to resurrect works that are out-of-print and out-of-favour.
Concerto performances have been with such orchestras as the London Symphony, BBC Symphony, English Chamber and Orpheus Chamber Orchestras. She has performed on BBC television at the Proms, at the Royal Festival Hall where she was once presented to the Queen, on Great Performers at Lincoln Center, and on Russian State Television in the galleries of the Hermitage in St Petersburg, the first British violinist to play there. She has appeared not only throughout the UK and US, but also in Germany, France, Spain, Portugal, Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy and Israel, among others. She delights in putting together unusual and stimulating recital programmes and has played with such distinguished pianists as Richard Goode, Michel Dalberto, Ruth Laredo and Artur Balsam, as well as other musicians like Elly Ameling, Peter Schreier, and Tabea Zimmermann.
Ruth Waterman broadcasts frequently on radio stations in many countries, and she has presented several talks on the BBC. During her years in New York, she became fascinated by the idea of communicating to audiences some of the issues that engage musicians in their work on interpretation. So in 1988, she began presenting a radio programme on WNYC on The Art of the Performer, which developed into her special presentations, Ruth Waterman Explores & Performs. These have been presented on the concert platform by Wigmore Hall and Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival, as well as in France, Germany, Israel and Russia. They have also been featured in a programme on the cable television channel Artsworld.
Waterman’s interest in education has also been directed towards the next generation of musicians. She has taught at the Royal Academy of Music and was professor at Queens College, City University of New York, where in addition to violin and chamber music, she devised and taught courses in repertoire and performance style. After a few years, her educational initiative was given full rein when she was appointed director of the summer chamber music programme. Now she frequently gives master classes and seminars during her travels, teaching at Juilliard, Oxford University (Wolfson College Lectures), St Petersburg Conservatory, Jerusalem Academy of Music, Royal Northern College of Music, New England Conservatory and many more.
Since returning to England, her activities have branched out in new directions. She has turned her hand to conducting, one of her first engagements being with the Hermitage State Orchestra in St Petersburg’s Hermitage in their series only Mozart. She regularly conducts the Mostar Sinfonietta, a relationship that began in 2002 when she volunteered to go to Mostar, Bosnia. Her audio diary of her initial visit, together with recordings of her interviews with the musicians about their experiences during the war, were made into a documentary for BBC Radio 4, Music and Memory in Mostar, which she wrote and presented.
Ruth Waterman has always enjoyed the written word, often writing her own programme notes as well as articles about music (BBC Music Magazine, the Strad, Classical Music, American String Teacher). Her experiences in Bosnia prompted her to consider the role of music in post-war societies, which resulted in her book When Swan Lake Comes to Sarajevo (Canterbury Press). This was selected as a Book-of-the-Year in the Observer, and has led to appearances at many literary festivals including the venerable Shakespeare & Company in Paris. As a poet, she has been published in many journals and was a recent prize-winner of the Troubadour International Poetry Competition.
Recordings and reviews
JS Bach: solo Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin BWV 1001-6

Buy from Amazon
A marvellous performance … played by a deeply admired artist. Waterman’s profound understanding of the essential continuity of thought in each of the movements of these works is well-nigh perfect … I have no hesitation in saying that … anyone who cares about great music should acquire this release.
International Record ReviewEverything here is deeply felt, the product of a profound engagement with the music, as Waterman’s own detailed booklet-notes make clear … Her creativity extends to elaborate decoration of the repeats in several movements. More like variations than improvised ornaments, they demonstrate her thorough absorption of Bach’s idioms. There’s so much here that’s stimulating and thought-provoking … a powerfully memorable performance.
GramophoneArresting and imaginative … obviously the culmination of years of exploration, it’s lived-in, it’s carefully considered, yet spontaneous-sounding, improvisatory, vital and startlingly effective.
BBC: CD ReviewJS Bach: complete Sonatas for violin and keyboard
By far the best violin/piano version ever recorded.
American Record ReviewShe dances with grace and poise at any tempo. No-one catches better the jazzy – nay, the downright Carterish – polymeters in the last movement of the C-minor Sonata. Nor does anyone sustain better the endless Italianate arcs in the Adagios, where her every thirty-second and sixty-fourth knows its place and the big line emerges with effortless clarity … I have never heard the many passages in double stops including whole movements, like the Adagio of no.5, better in tune. They leave nothing to be desired. She knows that ornaments are meant not only to embellish but to add to expression. Hers sometimes bite, sometimes caress, and sometimes (as in the middle of the finale of no.6) shout, “Whee!” In short, these are instinctive, exuberant, visceral performances by someone with a complete standard technique (just listen to her thrilling bariolage in the second movement of no.2), but whose musicality and taste are far above the standard, and whose terpsichorean rhythm is of the elect … Waterman is an experience no Bach-lover should miss.
Fanfare Record Review, USViolinist Ruth Waterman has a particular affinity with Bach’s sublime sonatas for violin and obbligato keyboard: she has given talks and written about them, but above all communicates her obvious insight through these eloquent accounts. … deeply affectionate and affecting performances.
BBC Music MagazineVolume 1
Her playing speaks of total love and involvement from beginning to end. The eloquently controlled warmth of emotion with which she spins out melodies such as the opening Adagio or the haunting largo of the C-minor Sonata is enough on its own to make one want to forget life’s troubles and lose oneself humbly in Bach’s unique genius.
Critic’s Choice, GramophoneVolume 2
These thoughtful and finely nuanced Bach sonata readings entirely fulfil the high expectations raised by the first instalment … [which] bespoke nothing less than the utmost care and forethought. “Churned out” they certainly were not. The follow-up, offering the last two obbligato sonatas plus the two alternative movements for Sonata no.6 and the two sonatas for violin and continuo, is no less lovingly prepared. All the elements that were so enjoyable in that movingly sculpted release are present here too: the intensely felt but never heavy-handed lyricism; the lithe, rhythmic buoyancy in faster movements, the meticulous attention to local details of dynamic and articulation; and the long-range shaping created by involving crescendos and diminuendos, sometimes extending with outstanding success over a sequence of movements, as in Sonata no.6’s progression from the surprisingly subdued solo keyboard third-movement Allegro, through the halting phrases of the Adagio to the measured but steadily mounting joyousness of the final Allegro.
The texture is always clear, with the piano a full partner in the balance, and vibrato is used just enough to warm the tone… This is very fine Bach-playing. The sense of stillness and concentration in movements such as the Adagio of Sonata no.5 is unforgettable.
GramophoneWaterman communicates thorough joy in her fiddling, whether in super-charged moto perpetuos or in probing introspection. Supremely exuberant.
Los Angeles TimesThe Andante movement brought this large, rapt audience very near to tears. The playing was full of small beauties and innocent passion. Schubert would have been pleased.
New York TimesThe large audience was eating out of her hand… Waterman’s delight in Beethoven’s quirkiness, his capacity to surprise, challenge and animate, proved infectious and involving… Bridges were being built.
The StradA master interpreter … triumphant performance.
Stuttgarter ZeitungMost violinists would give their eye-teeth for the kind of legato that flows so effortlessly from Ruth Waterman’s instrument.
Washington PostListen
JS BACH
Sonata in E for violin and keyboard obbligato BWV 1016
From Movt 3: Adagio ma non tanto
Morey Ritt, piano
Meridian Records
JS Bach – Complete Sonatas for Violin & Keyboard
Volumes 1 & 2
JS BACH
Solo Partita no.2 in D minor BWV 1004
From Movt 5: Chaconne
Meridian Records
JS Bach – Sonatas & Partitas for Violin Solo
SCHUBERT
Sonata in D, op137 no1
From Movt 3: Allegro vivace
Arnaldo Cohen, piano
BBC Radio
ELGAR
Sonata op82
From Movt 2: Andante
Carole Presland, piano
Bayerischer Rundfunk
BRUCH
Concerto in G minor, op26
From Movt 1: Allegro moderato
BBC Philharmonic
BBC recording of live concert
“Ruth Waterman Explores & Performs”
JS BACH
From Solo Partita in B minor and Sonata in G minor
Live performance
Writings
Making Music: the Work of a Concert Violinist
Great music is like a lover who demands everything and gives everything. Performing it requires a huge range of skills – physical, intellectual, emotional – yet the final result, the moment of truth on the concert platform, must exude an ease as natural as breathing. All the years of preparation are aimed at knowing and loving the music so well that we can virtually become it as we play. To offer it in performance to the public opens the possibility of their also being drawn into its orbit. Our reward is in the doing: living great music in the presence of others is a profound joy, such that we are willing, even eager, to face the obstacles that stand in our way.
Contents
The physical challenge
The perpetual riddle: notation
Collecting information
Confronting the score
Joining up the notes
Placing the stresses
Rhythm
Narrative, accompaniment, pacing
Observation is the key
The heart of the matter
The moment of truth
The physical challenge
The most visible obstacle is the physical: the act of drawing sound from a wooden box by means of a length of horse-hair. It seems miraculous that any novice has the perseverance to persist past the out-of-tune, scratchy-tone stage. The violin has no frets to mark the notes, so the left-hand fingers must learn their spacing to the accuracy of a millimetre in order to create the pitches themselves. It usually takes many years before any fairly reliable accuracy is developed, and it requires constant vigilance to retain it. Precise spatial memory must be coupled with strength, suppleness, speed and stamina, the muscles being trained as carefully and rigorously as an athlete’s.
Meanwhile the right arm and hand must learn a completely different style of movement, a butter-smooth fluidity to set the strings vibrating evenly. The bow not only coaxes the sound from the instrument, but also conjures the colours and emotions in the sound and traces the contours of the phrases, giving voice to the music itself. The right hand must develop an acute sensitivity to the action of the bow on the strings, constantly adjusting its speed and weight and keeping its path absolutely true. And of course, both hands must be perfectly co-ordinated, the smart actions of the left-hand fingers timed exactly with the fluid motions of the right hand.
All this is further complicated by having to hold the violin itself, a constant that causes many a neck and shoulder injury. In fact, the universal nightmare of violinists is of dropping the violin!
Even when a serviceable technique is in place, each piece of music demands technical attention, the hands first learning to negotiate its unique order of notes, with its particular leaps and stretches and switch-backs; and then consigning this knowledge, through assiduous practice, to kinetic memory.
The perpetual riddle: notation
Being able to sound the notes physically prepares the ground for the fundamental work of transforming the musical text back into sound. It is no simple matter. Most of the music that we play was written by composers who are long gone, and who lived in different eras and cultures. Their compositions are preserved and handed down by means of a written text. At first, when music was almost always played or conducted by the composers themselves, the written text served as an aide-mémoire, only the main notes being necessary. Later, as music scores were disseminated and musicians other than the composers themselves began to play them, the need for a fuller notation became apparent. So markings were devised to provide more detail: signs for ‘loud’, ‘moderately loud’, ‘fast’, ‘getting gradually slower’, ‘sweetly’, ‘big accent’, and many others. These are certainly helpful, but obviously not at all definitive. Despite some recent composers specifying a torrent of playing instructions, the sound in a composer’s head has resolutely refused to be pinned down and penned.
The simple truth is that music notation is inadequate: sound cannot be translated into any other medium, neither words nor marks on paper. This realisation is of fundamental significance for the performing musician, in that it forces the need for interpretation.
Interpretation is therefore not an indulgence – something added to the written text; the very instant the bow touches the string, it comes into play, whether we are conscious of it or not. Despite the surprisingly widespread belief that all a player need do is to ‘play the notes’, this very concept is nonsensical, for as soon as notes are sounded, they have a full complement of attributes: intensity, attack, dynamic level (loudness), warmth, character, direction, length, speed and so on. So if we assert that we are merely ‘letting the music play itself’, it can only mean that we are forfeiting a conscious choice of attributes, allowing habitual, automatic ways of playing to overlay and strangle the voice of the composer.
The expressiveness of music is another issue that is widely misunderstood. All students have at some point been told, “Now play with expression”, implying that it is possible to play without expression. They may indeed be playing in a way that sounds bland, uninflected, monochromatic, mechanical, strait-laced, joyless, but this does actually convey an emotional message, and one that is powerful. Juliet would be quite alarmed to hear Romeo confess his love for her in a monochromatic tone of voice! The challenge for a musician, as for an actor, is to match the expression with the deeper meaning of the text, to be in tune with its underlying essence. And since music can be heard only through the mediation of a performer, we musicians bear the responsibility of presenting a fair and true interpretation. How do we go about this?
Collecting information
Like good historians, we need to recognise the evolution of ideas and customs, and to collect as much information as possible. Preliminary spadework involves reading contemporary accounts of music-making in the particular time and place of the chosen composition. These include the writings of the composers themselves, teaching manuals, newspaper reviews – anything that may shed light on how a composer may have wanted his music to be played. Recent composers may have made recordings of their works, but these cannot necessarily be regarded as gospel: composers are not always the best interpreters of their own music and, like the rest of us, will play differently from one night to the next.
It is also crucial to know how the instruments of the time sounded, and how that sound would have been affected by the acoustics of the performing spaces. For instance, the practice of playing short notes with clear separation in certain eras is inextricably linked to the ample resonance of their halls. To achieve the same effect in a dry hall necessitates a longer touch than advocated then.
Since the violin has traditionally been the dance-master’s instrument, much of the music we play is based on dances. It is virtually impossible to capture the feel of a waltz or a tango without having seen it, or better still, having danced it oneself! So going off to the dance, or at least the dance studio, is all part of the day’s work.
And of course the total oeuvre of a composer is enormously revealing. To understand a composition entails entering a composer’s sound-world, and this needs total immersion. Burying oneself in his other compositions can foster a deep understanding and empathy, as well as providing days – months – years – of delight.
Confronting the score
When confronting a specific score of music, we proceed (like good scientists) by drawing on all our powers of observation. These can be stimulated by asking questions, one of the first being: whose notation is this?
For instance, a note written by Bach usually indicates a shorter sound than one written by Brahms. Two quavers (eighths) written by Gershwin indicate a completely different rhythm from two written by Beethoven. If we have done the spadework, we will know that music is similar to language in that its pronunciation differs by region and by period. Until about forty years ago, musicians played all music in the current fashion, reading the notation as if it were contemporary. These days, more and more performers look at the score with a historical eye, learning the language of each composer.
Joining up the notes
Just as in verbal language, musical sounds gravitate together, forming words and phrases. But music notation rarely indicates this. Imagine if English were written without any spaces between words, and without punctuation: it would be incredibly tedious to decipher it, though it could be done. In music notation, this omission allows much more room for misreadings because it is less specific and more fluid than language. With experience, a musician learns to read the signs contained in the harmony and rhythm and melodic lines to be able to join up the notes.
Once the words and phrases are in place, the search expands to finding sentences and paragraphs. Each grouping relates to the ones preceding and following, whether leading or receding, building, reiterating, preparing, or separating. And as each unit is heard in relationship to each other, an underlying structure begins to emerge. Particular notes or chords or groupings act like the pillars of a building and their presence must be marked as strong and intentional. In contrast, the remaining notes, by far the majority, serve as explanatory or ornamental additions and need to be played as such, adorning, modifying and expanding on the bare structure.
Placing the stresses
How notes are grouped together affects how they are to be stressed. As with words in English, notes in music need a variety of stresses to show how they belong together. For example, all the historical evidence suggests that two notes joined into a couplet should have the first note more stressed than the second (like a trochee). Playing couplets in this way corresponds to the correct pronunciation of words: a mispronunciation causes confusion. A performance containing a monotonous stream of notes is incomprehensible, and betrays a lack of understanding, like a speaker reading in a language he does not understand. Similarly, a string of couplets will not make sense if they are played with an equal stress on each first note; each couplet will relate to the next as words in a sentence, inspiring stresses of varying intensity and shape.
Violinists spend hours – years – practising to achieve a perfectly even sound, ironing out all the lumps and seams; but this basic technical skill is fatal if actually applied in performance. Classical music, like English pronunciation, lives by its inflections.
Musical groupings might not always be clearly delineated: great composers often blur the edges, writing phrases that seem to emerge from nowhere, and endings that do not feel final, that already contain the seeds of new beginnings. This is where the deeper excitement begins, with ambiguity and double meanings and false trails.
And this points to an important way in which music can reflect our experience of life and of ourselves; as a continuous flowing, without discrete beginnings and endings, like a river that changes direction and intensity only imperceptibly.
Rhythm
Understanding how the notes belong together allows the performer to ask further questions. Is this piece a fantasy, with a free and fluid rhythm? or a march with a strict regular beat? or a dance with its individual lilt? Playing in strict rhythm is appropriate only for march-like music, and even then the quality of rhythm can be subtly varied to sound solemn or pompous, funereal or resolute or bouncy. Most other music requires some flexibility to a greater or lesser degree. Because music notation is not capable of indicating rhythmic subtleties, and because composers know better than to try to ‘prescribe’ rhythmic freedom, performers need to be alert to this issue.
Many listeners, especially non-performers, fall into the trap of assuming that performers are “taking liberties with the music”, when in fact they are following the underlying spirit perfectly. On the contrary, it is those performers who play a waltz without a lilt, or a fantasy without caprice, who are taking the liberties.
Narrative, accompaniment, pacing
Almost all music contains narrative: a progression of motifs (phrases), themes (melodies) and intensities that correspond to the plot of a story. The most complex narratives can involve a number of themes that interact, affecting each other like protagonists in a novel, developing new characteristics, and visiting exotic places as they ride on the seas of changing harmonies.
Though music is usually thought of as mainly melodic, it is interesting that some composers place more value on the narrative than on the melodies themselves. Beethoven often chooses themes that can hardly be called melodic or even attractive, but his focus lies in their manipulation and development. Rather than painting a static picture, his music depicts a journey.
Accompaniment – the sounds in which a theme is clothed – is also important in conveying narrative, and we need to get to know it just as intimately. What is it adding? Is it active or passive? Is it threatening in its harmonies or rhythm? Is it in conflict with the melody? Does it lead in unexpected directions? Is it echoing the melody, or making fun of it?
As the general character and the order of events become clear, so does the rise and fall in tension, and we can begin to understand how the work is paced. Some pieces contain only one big climax, some two or three, and others eschew climaxes altogether. All assumptions (and desires) regarding contrasts and drama and excitement must be laid aside. After all, a composer may choose to write a movement that fluctuates only mildly in character, like an Impressionist painting with a restricted palette of pastels. Whether the music is mesmerisingly tender or unrelentingly angry, the performer must place his trust in the composer’s skill by putting all his eggs in one basket.
Observation is the key
In all these issues, observation is the key to understanding and the score must be mercilessly questioned. This means taking note of the big picture and the small picture, asking what is occurring at each moment. Most of us walk through life with only one eye open: those with both eyes open are normally called saints or enlightened ones. At least a musician has the opportunity to investigate the music time and again, to re-run the score, go back to the beginning, put it aside and dust it off as often as our time and patience permit. And patience we must have in abundance. A great work of art brims over with layers of ideas and emotions, unexpected twists and turns, ambiguities and subtleties. And as we live on, developing greater capacities of observation, we notice more and more.
The heart of the matter
In making music, observation is useless on its own. Its indispensable twin is emotional responsiveness, the ability to connect emotionally with all that we observe. Only when emotional responsiveness is added to the cauldron together with historical awareness and meticulous observation, can the written score begin to be transformed back into music.
For every feature that is noticed in the score, we need to ask, how does this make us feel? What is the emotional import? For instance, if a harmonic modulation is unexpected, is it a welcome guest or an unwelcome intruder? Is it a mild surprise or an earth-shattering event? The answers lie always in the score itself; but we need to be emotionally open to be able to find them.
Being emotionally open is an attitude most of us seek throughout our lives, but it is an essential quest for musicians if we are to relate to everything that happens in a piece of music. If a composer has drawn on a large emotional store, a performer must also have such a store to draw on. Playing the work of several composers demands an even greater capacity for empathy. But there are few of us who do not shy away from certain emotions; not everyone feels comfortable expressing intimacy, rage, anguish. Some of the strangest emotions to express on stage involve vulnerability or fragility. It takes enormous confidence to play in a tentative way…
Perhaps we place too great a burden on ourselves by expecting to be able to play a wide variety of music; it would be wiser to recognise our emotional boundaries. If we do not have the key to unlock the emotional secrets of a particular piece of music, it should be seen as a mark of respect that we refrain from playing it.
To be emotionally open also means to be free from the shackles of our instinct. Our automatic pilot must be switched off. For instance, it is tempting to play music in an intense style, especially if it is labelled ‘great’ music. In fact, we are living at a time when intensity in performance is considered obligatory. But great art does not shout all the time; it knows that there is enormous power in gentleness.
Similarly, great music is not always earnest and serious. A mature work of art often reflects an integrated view of life, and like a wise person, will contain the wonderful sense of humour that seems to be a part of wisdom. It is well to remember that all the great composers wrote with a delightful wit, and our storehouse of emotions must have it polished and ready.
If we truly listen to our own responses to the music, we may find our interpretations flying off in unusual directions. It takes courage to stay the path of innovation, but we must not look back. We must shake free of the clutches of both stultifying tradition and current fashion. We must banish all thoughts of the critics’ wrath or the audience’s incomprehension. In short, we need to be absolutely fearless in our search for the heart of the music.
The moment of truth
The final demand made of a performing musician is that all the work that goes into the understanding and preparation of a piece of music must be embodied in one single moment at the appointed time and place of the performance. There can be no false starts, no second tries. Our muscles and co-ordination must be on top form, our concentration unwavering, and our emotions laid bare like a surgeon’s instruments, available for the work ahead.
No matter how many times the music is played, we need to be able to capture the spontaneity of the moment. It can be tempting to relax into the relative security of playing as we did last night, or last week, but a re-heated performance will never come alive.
For our task is to breathe life into the music, to re-create it with all the excitement and commitment of the composer himself at the white-hot moment of composition. It is an immense privilege, one that renders us both humble and powerful. The paradox is that it is only by being intensely alive as ourselves that we can be entirely at the service of the music – be totally in its thrall.
In this way, both performer and listener are lifted out of the everyday, into an enchanted space where countless shades of emotion are brought into play, where a kaleidoscope of sound dances in our ears, and we finally connect and reconnect to our innermost being.
This article first appeared in the journal Humanitas
Interpretation: Music and Painting
I’d always believed that the act of painting was an act of creation as opposed to the re-creative act of the performing musician, who brings to life the work of a composer. But an artist colleague pointed out that, on the contrary, painting is an interpretative activity too: a painter ‘interprets’ a tree, a face, an interior in two dimensions.
As my years of painting have accumulated, I have become more and more fascinated by the many different images emerging in response to exactly the same object. Perhaps my interest in portraits comes from the innumerable expressions and appearances exhibited by a face, often within a few seconds. Even when I started to work from photographs, I was astonished, at first, by the huge resulting variety of work from the same photograph, as presumably I focussed on different aspects of what I was seeing. For example one photograph inspired a painting of a young woman, a middle-aged woman, and an older woman, the motionless face somehow containing the past and future as well as the present.
Of course faces are endlessly intriguing because of the richness of qualities and contradictions so often expressed there – though not always. I feel it a disadvantage to know the person I’m painting, as any knowledge predisposes the painter and can distract from honest observation. It’s all too easy to see kindness, authority, disturbance in a face once one assumes it is there; for me it’s much more interesting, and challenging, to search for the truth – the many truths – of what is actually observable, and what feelings arise from these observations.
This approach is very similar to how I go about interpreting music. I’d rather not know what Beethoven had for breakfast, or what he felt when he realised he was losing his hearing, because this can lead me astray and fatally poison my reactions to the score. I’m very aware of the unpredictability of human responses, even to the large, predictable life events. And the art that we produce during those times, whether in writing, music or painting, can either be a reflection of what we are feeling, or equally an escape, or a rogue emotion that bubbles up unbidden. A case in point is precisely when Beethoven wrote of his anguish at becoming deaf while composing his three violin sonatas opus 30: the first sublimely serene, the second wildly angry, and the third playfully witty.
Whether interpreting a Beethoven sonata or a 42-year-old face, my starting point is to look for what is there. Then having been captured and enraptured, the task is to develop ways to convey and express what my curiosity has uncovered.