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DANIEL BARENBOIM

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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty DANIEL BARENBOIM

Mesaj  Admin C.tesi Haz. 27, 2009 12:46 am

Israel and Palestine
With respect to the Israel-Palestinean conflict, Barenboim has spoken about the need for both sides to begin to understand each other:

"There is no way Israel will deal with the Palestinians if the Palestinians do not understand the suffering of the Jewish people ... [N]ow fifty years after that we have to accept co-responsibility for Palestinian suffering. Until an Israeli leader is able to utter those words there will be no peace."

In an interview with British music critic Norman Lebrecht in 2003, he accused the Israeli government of behaving in a manner which was, "morally abhorrent and strategically wrong", and, "putting in danger the very existence of the state of Israel."

As a gesture of solidarity with the Palestinians, Barenboim has given performances in the West Bank. In one case he sneaked into Ramallah under cover of night to give a piano recital, after the Israeli government had told him that it would not permit him to go there because conditions were too dangerous.

In 1999, Barenboim jointly founded the West-Eastern Divan orchestra with the late Palestinian-American intellectual and humanist Edward Said, who was a close friend. It is an initiative to bring together, every summer, a group of talented young classical musicians from Israel and Arab countries.Barenboim and Said were among the recipients of the 2002 Prince of Asturias Awards for their work in "improving understanding between nations".

Barenboim wrote a book together with Said, Parallels and Paradoxes, based on a series of public discussions held at New York's Carnegie Hall.

In September 2005, Barenboim refused to be interviewed by uniformed Israel Army Radio reporter Dafna Arad, considering the wearing of the uniform insensitive to the Palestinians present. Then Israeli Minister of Education, Limor Livnat (Likud), was quoted as describing Barenboim as "a real Jew hater" and "a real anti-semite".

In December 2007, Barenboim and a group of some 20 musicians from England, the United States, France and Germany, and one Palestinian were scheduled to play a baroque music concert in Gaza. Although they had received authorization from Israeli authorities, the Palestinian was stopped at the Israel-Gaza border and told that he needed individual permission to enter. The group waited seven hours at the border, and then canceled the concert in solidarity.

Barenboim commented: "A baroque music concert in a Roman Catholic church in Gaza - as we all know - has nothing to do with security and would bring so much joy to people who live there in great difficulty.''

On January 12, 2008, after a concert in Ramallah, he declared that he had accepted honorary Palestinian citizenship, in what he hopes will serve as a public gesture of peace.

I hope that my new status will be an example of Israeli-Palestinian co-existence, I believe that the destinies of the Israeli people and the Palestinian people are inextricably linked.

Some Israelis have criticized Barenboim's decision to accept Palestinian citizenship. The leader of the Shas party demanded that Barenboim be stripped of his Israeli citizenship.

In January 2009, during the Israeli action in Gaza, Barenboim canceled two concerts of the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra in Qatar and Cairo "due to the escalating violence in Gaza and the resulting concerns for the musicians’ safety", according to the BBC.


Awards and recognitions
Léonie Sonning Music Prize, 2009
Royal Philharmonic Society Gold Medal, 2008
Goethe Medal, Praemium Imperiale, 2007
Commandeur de la Légion d’Honneur, 2007
Buber-Rosenzweig-Medal, 2004
Wolf Prize in Arts, 2004 (According to the documentary "Knowledge Is the Beginning", Barenboim donated all the proceeds to music education for Israeli and Palestinian youth)
Wilhelm Furtwängler Prize, 2003 (with Staatskapelle Berlin)
Tolerance Prize, Evangelische Akademie Tutzing, 2002
Prince of Asturias Awards, 2002 (jointly with Edward Said)
Großes Bundesverdienstkreuz, 2002
Honorary degrees
Doctor of Philosophy - Ph.D., Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1996
Vrije Universiteit Brussel, 2003
Doctor of Music - D.Mus., University of Oxford, 2007
Doctor of Music - D.Mus., SOAS, University of London, 2008
Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording:

Christoph Classen (producer), Eberhard Sengpiel, Tobias Lehmann (engineers), Daniel Barenboim (conductor), Jane Eaglen, Thomas Hampson, Waltraud Meier, René Pape, Peter Seiffert, the Chor der Deutschen Staatsoper Berlin & the Staatskapelle Berlin for Wagner: Tannhäuser (2003)
Grammy Award for Best Chamber Music Performance:

Daniel Barenboim, Dale Clevenger, Larry Combs, Daniele Damiano, Hansjörg Schellenberger & the Berlin Philharmonic for Beethoven/Mozart: Quintets (Chicago-Berlin) (1995)
Daniel Barenboim & Itzhak Perlman for Brahms: The Three Violin Sonatas (1991)
Grammy Award for Best Orchestral Performance:

Daniel Barenboim (conductor) & the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for Corigliano: Symphony No. 1 (1992)
Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (with orchestra):

Martin Fouqué (producer), Eberhard Sengpiel (engineer), Daniel Barenboim, Dale Clevenger, Larry Combs, Alex Klein, David McGill & the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for Richard Strauss Wind Concertos (Horn Concerto; Oboe Concerto, etc.) (2002)
Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (with orchestra):

Daniel Barenboim (conductor), Itzhak Perlman & the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for Elgar: Violin Concerto in B Minor (1983)
Daniel Barenboim (conductor), Arthur Rubinstein & the London Philharmonic Orchestra for Beethoven: The Five Piano Concertos (1977) (also awarded Grammy Award for Best Classical Album)

Wolf Prize
In May 2004, Barenboim was awarded the Wolf Prize at a ceremony at the Israeli Knesset. Education Minister Livnat originally held up the nomination until Barenboim apologized for his earlier performance of Wagner in Israel.He took the opportunity to express his opinions on the political situation, referring to the Israeli Declaration of Independence in 1948:

"I am asking today with deep sorrow: Can we, despite all our achievements, ignore the intolerable gap between what the Declaration of Independence promised and what was fulfilled, the gap between the idea and the realities of Israel? Does the condition of occupation and domination over another people fit the Declaration of Independence? Is there any sense in the independence of one at the expense of the fundamental rights of the other? Can the Jewish people whose history is a record of continued suffering and relentless persecution, allow themselves to be indifferent to the rights and suffering of a neighboring people? Can the State of Israel allow itself an unrealistic dream of an ideological end to the conflict instead of pursuing a pragmatic, humanitarian one based on social justice?"

Education Minister Livnat and Israeli President Moshe Katsav criticized Barenboim for his speech.

Later, in March 2007, the New York Times quoted Barenboim as saying, "The whole subject of Wagner in Israel has been politicized and is a symptom of a malaise that goes very deep in Israeli society, a malaise that is also a result of being an occupying power for 40 years. I don’t believe that this is something that one can do and not feel an effect upon oneself. I think that the occupation is morally abhorrent. I don’t think any country has a right to occupy another, and certainly not we, the Jewish people, with our history."


DANIEL BARENBOIM
http://www.danielbarenboim.com/
DANIEL BARENBOIM Db13110

Daniel Barenboim (d. 15 Kasım 1942) Arjantin asıllı İsrailli piyanist ve orkestra şefidir. Buenos Aires, Arjantin doğumludur; annesi ve babası Rus Yahudilerindendi. Hem İsrail hem de İspanyol vatandaşlığı bulunmaktadır. Barenboim ilk piyanistliğiyle üne kavuştu ama şimdi bir orkestra şefi olarak biliniyor.




La Scala Filarmoni Orkestrası
Daniel Barenboim şef ve piyano
Bugüne kadar gerçekleştirdiği olağanüstü başarılı projeler ve barışçıl kişiliğiyle tanınan Daniel Barenboim sanatçı kimliğinin yanı sıra bir barış elçisi… Filistinli ve İsrailli sanatçıları bir araya getirerek, festival dinleyicilerinin geçtiğimiz yıllardan hatırlayacağı Doğu-Batı Divanı Orkestrası'nı kuran ve yakın bir zamanda İsrail ve Filistin arasında barış için bir örnek oluşturabilmesi açısından Onursal Filistin Vatandaşlığı'nı kabul ederek, dünyada hem Filistin hem de İsrail pasaportu taşıyan tek kişi olan ünlü şef gerçekleştirdiği her etkinlikte sanatın barış ve uzlaşma konusundaki önemini vurgulayan nadir sanatçılardan… Festivalin kapanış gecesinde Daniel Barenboim'in hem şef hem solist olarak yer aldığı bu konserde İtalya'nın en ünlü orkestrası La Scala Filarmoni Beethoven ve Berlioz'un yapıtlarını seslendirerek sanatseverlere unutulmaz bir gece yaşatacak...

Sanatın Güncesi Müzik dünyasının entelektüel savaşçısı Daniel Barenboim.
Açık Radyonun ilgi ile izlediğim bana göre en keyifli programlarından biridir “Cuma Adlı Adamlar“ Sponsorluğunu İzel Rozentalin yaptığı ve Cross Kalemlerinin katkılarının bulunduğu bu söyleşi ,yıllardır Ömer Madra ve Halil Turhanlı arasında Felsefe sohbetleri şeklinde sürer gider.Bu haftaki sohbetleri “Entelektüel “ kavramı üzerineydi.
Tarihin geçmiş sayfalarında  ve yaşadığımız yüz yılda entelektüelin kim olduğu, neyi ifade ettiği, sorumlulukları ve toplum dinamiklerindeki yeri tartışıldı.

Soluksuz izledim.

Etimolojik açıdan bu sözcüğün Latince “Intelectus”dan (zihin) türediğini söyleyebiliriz. Geçen yüzyılda Rusya’da kullanılan “Entelijansiya” kavramını da gözden kaçırmamak gerek. Bir yandan Çarlığın despotizmine öbür yandan Ortodoks Kilisesine karşı çıkan hukukçular, doktorlar, öğretmenler, mühendisler gibi okumuşlar kümesini imlemek için kullanılmış ve  tek tek bireylere değil de, bir gruba verilen ortaklaşa isim olarak kullanılmıştır. Bunu tekil şahısa indirgediğimizde daha çok, her konuya ilgi duyan, araştıran, eleştiren, sorgulayan, tartışan hesap soran ve muhalif bir kimlik çıkar karşımıza. Fakat bu kimliğini akıl ve bilinçle destekleyerek dünyalar yaratmayı da hedefleyen bir kimliktir bu. Tüm insanların barış ve mutluluk içinde yaşama ilkelerini sonuna dek savunan bir kimlik.

Buna göre entelektüel sayılmak için, bir insanın edinmiş olduğu bilgileri tam özümsemiş, yanı sıra bildiği bütün bireysel denetleme kurallarına da uygun bulmuş olması gerekir. Bununla birlikte entelektüelin dolaysız veya dolaylı olarak insanla, insani şeylerle ilgili bir şeyler  söyleyen  ve eyleme geçebilecek bir insan olduğu, olması gerektiği de açıktır.

Bir dünya insanı: Barenboim .

Dünyanın en saygın müzisyenlerinden Daniel Barenboim, bana göre entelektüel tanımını yaşamı kurgusunda en çok hak etmiş dünya insanlarından biridir.Köklü bir Rus Yahudi ailesinin ilk oğlu olarak 1942’de Buenos Aires’te doğan Daniel Barenboim, 1952’de Viyana'da  ilk kez piyanist olarak sahneye çıktı. Orkestra şefliği kariyerini 10 yıldan fazla süreyle birlikte çalıştığı İngiliz Oda Orkestrasıyla geliştirdi.. 1975-89 arasında tam on dört sene Orchestre de Paris’in Müzik Direktörlüğünü yaptı. 1991’de Sir Georg Solti’nin yerine Chicago Senfoni Orkestrası Müzik Direktörlüğü görevini 15 yıl sürdürdü.

Barenboim’un yaşamındaki bence en önemli yanı, İsrail - Filistin sorununun çözümü için, verdiği çaba ve insanlık başarısıdır.

Edward Said’le birlikte her iki toplumu bir görerek çalışmaları, birlikte kurdukları Arap ve İsrailli gençlerden oluşan orkestraları  Doğu-Batı Divanı ile tüm dünyada konserler vermesi insanlık barışına atılan örnek adımlardır. İsrail’de ilk kez Wagner çalarak elli yıllık tabuyu yıkması, bir İsrailli olarak Berlin Filarmoni Orkestralarıyla sürdürdüğü çalışmalar, onun  hem eylemci - müzisyen, hem muhalif, kısacası  gerçek bir Entelektüel unvanını  fazlasıyla hak ettiğini gösteriyor.

Bugün entelektüel olduklarını betimlenen aydınların sorunu, sahip oldukları ahlaki otoriteyi; kitle dalkavukluğu, milliyetçi çığırtkanlık, sınıf çıkarları gibi “kolektif ihtirasların örgütlenmesi” adını verdiği şeye devretmiş olmalarıdır. Benda’nın tanımına göre; gerçek entelektüeller, her türlü  zorluğa göğüs germe, sürgüne gönderilme, yersiz yurtsuz kalma pahasına  kimliklerini koruma riskine girmek durumundadırlar. Temel  özellikleri, dünyevi kaygılarla aralarındaki gevşemez bir ilişki olan simgesel şahsiyetlerdir onlar.  Bu yüzden de sayıları çok olamaz. Her şeyden önce de statüko karşısında, neredeyse daimi bir muhalefet durumunda olmaları gerekir. Benda‘nın tasarladığı biçimiyle, gerçek entelektüel imgesinin hala çekici ve güçlü bir imge olduğunu düşünüyorum.

Entelektüel biyolojik, psikolojik ve toplumsal olarak kendisiyle değil, mantıksal olarak kendi aklı ve benliği ile tutarlı olan adamdır. O halde yine bir çoklarının sandığı gibi, entelektüelde değişmek daha doğrusu evrim geçirmek bir kusur değildir. Tersine eğer aklı, ulaştığı yeni bilgilerle bireysel değerleri değişmişse, kendi kendisiyle tutarlı kalıp, toplum nezdinde itibarını kaybetmemek gibi bencilce; çıkardan kaynaklanan bir kaygıyla değiştiğini, yanılmış olduğunu, şimdi artık farklı düşündüğünü, en azından kendisine bile itiraf edememesi bir kusurdur diye düşünülmelidir.

Kısacası Entelektüel: insanoğlunun yeryüzündeki varoluş serüvenini anlamaya çalışan, bilgi ve deneyimleriyle içselleştirmeye yönelendir.  Ve Barenboim bana bu imgeyi tüm çıplaklığı ile hissettiriyor.

Bu etkileyici görüntüyle bana duyumsattığı, yıllar önce başlayan bir projede orkestra şefi ve piyanist İsrailli Daniel Barenboim, ile  eski arkadaşı, Filistinli düşünür entelektüel Edward Said' in elele çıktıkları müzik maratonunun Said'in ölümüne rağmen barışa yönelik örnek çabalarının halen sürmesidir. Böylesi evrensel bir düşünceyi hayata geçirmek için el ele vermeleri, entelektüel insan olmanın sorumluluğuyla varmak istedikleri ütopyayı gerçekleştirme çabalarının kanıtıdır.

Bugüne kadar gerçekleştirdiği olağanüstü başarılı projeler ve dünya barışına katkılarıyla tanınan Daniel Barenboim ortaya koyduğu  her etkinlikte, sanatın, barış mutluluk ve insanlar arası uzlaşma konusundaki önemini vurgulayan ender sanatçılardan biridir.

Bu sene otuz yedincisi gerçekleştirilecek olan İstanbul Müzik Festivalinde kapanış gecesi Daniel Barenboim'in hem şef hem solist olarak yer alacağı konserde İtalya'nın en ünlü orkestrası La Scala Filarmoni Beethoven ve Berlioz'un yapıtlarını seslendirerek sanatseverlere unutulmaz bir gece yaşatacaktır.Gelin bu entelektüel dev müzisyen ve dünya insanını yeniden bir kez daha izleyelim..


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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty Geri: DANIEL BARENBOIM

Mesaj  Admin C.tesi Haz. 27, 2009 12:47 am

Daniel Barenboim (born in Buenos Aires, Argentina on November 15, 1942) is a pianist and conductor. He lives in Berlin and holds citizenship in Argentina, Israel, and Spain. He also holds a passport issued by the Palestinian Authority. His grandparents were Russian Ashkenazi Jews. Barenboim first came to prominence as a pianist but is now perhaps better known as a conductor. He is also known for his work with the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, a Sevilla-based orchestra of young Arab and Jewish musicians that he co-founded with the late Palestinian-American scholar and activist Edward Said (whom Barenboim called his best friend).

Barenboim has been an outspoken critic of the Israeli settlements and of Israel's government since Rabin. He is also a supporter of Palestinian rights. In 2001, he sparked a controversy in Israel by conducting the music of Wagner in concert, as such a performance had not been staged in Israel since 1938 and was informally taboo.



Biography

Marriages
In 1967 Daniel Barenboim married the renowned British cellist Jacqueline du Pré at the Western Wall, Jerusalem. The marriage lasted until her death from multiple sclerosis (MS) in 1987. His friendship with musicians Itzhak Perlman, Zubin Mehta, and Pinchas Zukerman, and marriage to du Pré led to the famous film by Christopher Nupen of their Schubert "Trout" Quintet. Collectively, the five referred to themselves as The Kosher Nostra.

After suffering confusing symptoms for more than a year, du Pré was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis and retired from music in 1973. In the early 1980s, Barenboim began a relationship with the Russian pianist Elena Bashkirova, with whom he had two sons born in Paris: David Arthur, born 1983, and Michael Barenboim, born 1985. Both were born prior to du Pré's death in 1987. Barenboim tried to keep his relationship with Bashkirova hidden from du Pré and believes he succeeded. He and Bashkirova married in 1988. David is a manager-writer for the German hip-hop band Level 8, and Michael is a classical violinist.


Career
Barenboim started piano lessons at the age of five with his mother, continuing to study with his father Enrique, who remained his only teacher. In August 1950, when he was only seven years old, he gave his first formal concert in Buenos Aires.

In 1952, the Barenboim family moved to Israel. Two years later, in the summer of 1954, his parents brought him to Salzburg to take part in Igor Markevitch's conducting classes. During that summer he also met and played for Wilhelm Furtwängler, who has remained a central musical influence and ideal for Barenboim. Furtwängler called the young Barenboim a "phenomenon" and invited him to perform the Beethoven First Piano Concerto with the Berlin Philharmonic, but Barenboim's father told the maestro that it was too soon after the Holocaust for a child of Jewish parents to be performing in Berlin.

In 1955 Barenboim studied harmony and composition with Nadia Boulanger in Paris.

Barenboim made his debut as a pianist in Vienna and Rome in 1952, Paris in 1955, London in 1956, and New York in 1957 under the baton of Leopold Stokowski. Regular concert tours of Europe, the United States, South America, Australia and the Far East followed thereafter.

Barenboim made his first recording in 1954 and went on to record several complete cycles:

the piano sonatas of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
the piano sonatas of Ludwig van Beethoven
the piano concertos by Mozart, as both conductor and pianist
the piano concertos of Beethoven, first with Otto Klemperer and later as conductor and pianist with the Berlin Philharmonic
the piano concertos of Johannes Brahms, with John Barbirolli and Zubin Mehta
the piano concertos of Béla Bartók, with Pierre Boulez
Following his debut as a conductor with the Philharmonia Orchestra in London in 1967, Barenboim was invited to conduct by many European and American symphony orchestras. Between 1975 and 1989 he was music director of the Orchestre de Paris, where he conducted much contemporary music.

Barenboim made his opera conducting debut in 1973 with a performance of Mozart's Don Giovanni at the Edinburgh Festival. He made his debut at Bayreuth in 1981, conducting there regularly until 1999.

Barenboim served as music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra from 1991 up to 17 June 2006. Barenboim expressed frustration with the need for fund-raising duties in the United States as part of being a music director of an American orchestra.

Barenboim, whose home is in Berlin, has been music director of the Staatsoper Unter den Linden (Berlin State Opera) and the Berlin Staatskapelle since 1992. He has tried to maintain the orchestra's traditional East-Germanic sound and style. He has constantly worked to maintain the independent status of the Staatsoper.He now is conductor for life at the Berlin State Opera. On 15 May 2006 Barenboim was named principal guest conductor of the La Scala opera house, in Milan, Italy.

In 2006, Barenboim was the BBC Reith Lecturer, giving five lectures called 'In the Beginning was Sound' from London, Chicago, Berlin, and twice from Jerusalem in which he meditated on music, how it is created, one's experience of it, and its place in life. In the autumn of 2006, Barenboim gave the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures at Harvard University entitled 'Sound and Thought'.

In November 2006, Lorin Maazel caused some controversy by submitting to the board of directors of the New York Philharmonic (NYP) Barenboim's name as his nominee to succeed him as the NYP's music director. Barenboim, in turn, responded that while he was flattered, "nothing could be further from my thoughts at the moment than the possibility of returning to the United States for a permanent position." In January 2007, Barenboim further demurred on this question by generally stating his lack of interest in any United States music directorship, "at the moment." In April 2007, it was reported that Barenboim expressed no interest in either the New York Philharmonic's music directorship or their newly created principal conductor position.

In 2008 he was given the honour to conduct the world famous New Year Concert of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra on the first of January 2009.

Barenboim made his conducting debut at the Metropolitan Opera in New York for the House's 450th performance of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde on November 28, 2008.


[edit] Music

Daniel Barenboim leads a rehearsal of the West-East Divan, 2005.Daniel Barenboim is considered one of the most prominent musicians of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, as both pianist and conductor. He is noted for his mastery of conveying musical structure, and for a deep sensitivity to harmonic nuances.

In the beginning of his career, Barenboim gained widespread acceptance mainly as a pianist. He concentrated on music of the classical era, as well as some romantic composers. Notable classical recordings include: the complete cycles of Mozart's and Beethoven's piano sonatas, and Mozart's piano concertos (in the latter, taking part as both soloist and conductor). Notable Romantic recordings include: Brahms's piano concertos (with John Barbirolli), Mendelssohn's Lieder ohne Worte, and Chopin's nocturnes. Barenboim also recorded many chamber works, especially in collaboration with his first wife, Jacqueline du Pré, the violinist Itzhak Perlman, and the violinist and violist Pinchas Zukerman. Noted performances include: the complete Mozart violin sonatas (with Perlman), Brahms's violin sonatas (live concert with Perlman, previously in the studio with Zukerman), Beethoven's and Brahms's cello sonatas (with du Pré), Beethoven's and Tchaikovsky's piano trios (with du Pré and Zukerman), and Schubert's Trout Quintet (with du Pré, Perlman, Zukerman, and Zubin Mehta).

Notable recordings as a conductor include: the complete symphonies of Beethoven, Brahms, Bruckner and Schumann, many operas by Wagner, and various concertos. Barenboim has written about his changing attitude to the music of Gustav Mahler; he has recorded Mahler's Fifth, Seventh and Ninth Symphonies and Das Lied von der Erde. He has also performed and recorded the Concierto de Aranjuez by Joaquín Rodrigo, with John Williams as the guitar soloist.

In his later years, Barenboim widened his concert repertoire, performing works by baroque as well as twentieth-century classical composers. Examples include: Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier (which he has played since childhood) and Goldberg Variations, Albeniz's Iberia, and Debussy's preludes. In addition, he turned to other musical genres, such as jazz, and the folk music of his birthplace, Argentina. He conducted the 2006 New Year's Eve concert in Buenos Aires, in which tangos were played.

Barenboim has rejected musical fashions based on current musicological research, such as the authentic performance movement (see quotation at the end of this paragraph). A notable example is his preference for some traditional practices, rather than fully adhering to Bärenreiter's new edition (edited by Jonathan Del Mar) of Beethoven's symphonies, in his recording of those works. Barenboim has opposed the practice of choosing the tempo of a piece based on historical evidence, such as composer metronome marks. He argues instead for finding the tempo from within the music, especially from its harmony and harmonic rhythm. The general tempi chosen in his recording of Beethoven's symphonies, reflecting this belief, usually adhere to early twentieth-century tradition, and are not influenced by faster tempos chosen by other conductors such as Roger Norrington and David Zinman. In Barenboim's recording of the Well-Tempered Clavier he makes frequent use of the right-foot sustaining pedal, a device absent from the keyboard instruments of Bach's time (although the harpsichord was highly resonant), producing a sonority very different from the "dry" and often staccato sound favored by the influential (and highly individual) pianist Glenn Gould. Moreover, in the fugues, one voice is often played considerably louder than the others, a practice impossible on a harpsichord, that according to some scholarship, began in Beethoven's time (see, for example, Matthew Dirst's book The Iconic Bach). Indeed, when justifying his interpretation of Bach, Barenboim claims that he is interested in the long tradition of playing Bach, that has existed for two and a half centuries, rather than in the exact style of performance that existed in Bach's time:

The study of old instruments and historic performance practice has taught us a great deal, but the main point, the impact of harmony, has been ignored. This is proved by the fact that tempo is described as an independent phenomenon. It is claimed that one of Bach's gavottes must be played fast and another one slowly. But tempo is not independent! ... I think that concerning oneself purely with historic performance practice and the attempt to reproduce the sound of older styles of music-making is limiting and no indication of progress. Mendelssohn and Schumann tried to introduce Bach into their own period, as did Liszt with his transcriptions and Busoni with his arrangements. In America Leopold Stokowski also tried to do it with his arrangements for orchestra. This was always the result of "progressive" efforts to bring Bach closer to the particular period. I have no philosophical problem with someone playing Bach and making it sound like Boulez. My problem is more with someone who tries to imitate the sound of that time...

Barenboim has continued to perform and record chamber music, sometimes with members of the orchestras he has led. Some examples include the Quartet for the End of Time by Messaien with members of the Orchestre de Paris during his tenure there, Richard Strauss with members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra during his tenure there, and the Clarinet Trio of Mozart with members of the Berlin Staatskapelle.

Daniel Barenboim conducted the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra's New Year's Day Concert 2009 in Der Musikverein, (http://www.wienerphilharmoniker.at/) He had a short message to the audience in which he stated: "Let's pray for human justice in the Middle East".


Conducting Wagner in Israel
On July 7, 2001, Barenboim led the Berlin Staatskapelle in part of Richard Wagner's opera Tristan und Isolde at the Israel Festival in Jerusalem. The concert sparked controversy. Wagner's music had been unofficially taboo in Israel's concert halls (although recordings of it were widely purchased and listened to) since the Kristallnacht in 1938, because of revulsion with the racial anti-Semitism that Wagner had espoused in print - which presaged and quite likely influenced Hitler. Previously the Palestine Philharmonic had performed Wagner's music. Barenboim had long opposed the ban, regarding it as reflecting what he calls a "diaspora" mentality that is no longer appropriate to Israel. In a conversation with Edward Said (published in the book Parallels and Paradoxes) he says that "Wagner, the person, is absolutely appalling, despicable, and, in a way, very difficult to put together with the music he wrote, which so often has exactly the opposite kind of feelings ... noble, generous, etc." He calls Wagner's anti-Semitism obviously "monstrous", and feels it must be faced, and argues that "Wagner did not cause the Holocaust."

Barenboim originally had been scheduled to perform the first act of Die Walküre with three singers, including tenor Plácido Domingo. However, strong protests by some Holocaust survivors, as well as the Israeli government, led the festival authorities to ask for an alternative program. (The Israel Festival's Public Advisory board, which included some Holocaust survivors, had originally approved the program.)

Barenboim agreed to substitute music by Robert Schumann and Igor Stravinsky for the offending piece, but expressed regret at the decision. At the end of the concert he announced that he would play Wagner as an encore and invited those who objected to hearing the music to leave, saying, "Despite what the Israel Festival believes, there are people sitting in the audience for whom Wagner does not spark Nazi associations. I respect those for whom these associations are oppressive. It will be democratic to play a Wagner encore for those who wish to hear it. I am turning to you now and asking whether I can play Wagner." A half-hour debate ensued in Hebrew in the hall, with some audience members calling Barenboim a "fascist." In the end, according to reports in the Israeli press, about 50 attendees walked out, and about 1000 remained, applauding loudly after the performance. (According to Israeli newspaper interviews, at least one who remained in attendance was a Holocaust survivor, again undermining the simple assertion that all survivors opposed the performance of Wagner in Israel.)

Barenboim regarded the performance of Wagner as a political statement, and said he had decided to defy the taboo on Wagner when a news conference he held the previous week was interrupted by the ringing of a mobile phone to the tune of Wagner's Ride of the Valkyries. "I thought if it can be heard on the ring of a telephone, why can't it be played in a concert hall?" he said.
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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty joue Debussy

Mesaj  Admin C.tesi Haz. 27, 2009 5:48 pm

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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty Brahms, concerto pour piano n.2 op.83

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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty Chopin - Vals nº1

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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty Carlos Gardel - Daniel Barenboim

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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty Ravel - Bolero - Daniel Barenboim (1º)

Mesaj  Admin C.tesi Haz. 27, 2009 6:03 pm

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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty Ravel - Bolero - Daniel Barenboim - (2ª)

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DANIEL BARENBOIM Empty Manuel de falla - Danza del fuego

Mesaj  Admin C.tesi Haz. 27, 2009 6:09 pm

Daniel Barenboim with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra from the Kölner Philharmonie (Germany)



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