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Maxim Vengerov – Living
the Dream
Bonus material – Vengerov playing Wieniawski in concert in Moscow
Produced, directed and filmed by Ken Howard
NTSC 16:9, Disc Format DVD-5, Linear PCM stereo, all regions,
Subtitles D, F EMI CLASSICS 5034029 [71:00]
I
remember seeing this documentary on British television though
I don’t think the bonus feature was aired, at least not in
full. It’s devoted to Vengerov’s “Sabbatical Year.” He had
reached thirty and in 2005 withdrew from his hectic performance
schedule to study jazz improvisation with Didier Lockwood
in Paris. It coincided with the writing of a concerto for
Vengerov by the Israeli composer Benjamin Yusupov which required
Vengerov to play the viola, the electric violin and dance
the tango. Can’t see Milstein ever have done that – but then
Vengerov is a charmer and open to offers.
The
film is a collage of sights and sounds. We move from Abbey
Road in London to Moscow to Siberia, Istanbul, Amsterdam,
Galilee, Hanover, and Paris. We eavesdrop on the recording
session of the Beethoven Concerto with Rostropovich, and
the cameras were in situ some months before when the two
men met for a piano accompanied run through of the work in
Vienna. Whether you think the results the acme of sublime
depth or catatonic boredom is matter of taste I suppose,
though I incline to the latter view. What’s not in doubt
is the strength of feeling that existed between the two men.
I like Rostropovich’s instruction to Vengerov in Vienna “ No,
you are being too selfish there.”
The
Moscow concerts reveal an unusual slice of repertory – Kreisler’s
arrangement for violin of the eighteenth variation from Rachmaninoff’s
Paganini variations; Ian Brown of the Nash Ensemble is the
trusty pianist throughout. We see Vengerov’s parents, drop
in on a convivial evening at the parental apartment, hear
from his first teacher and see snippets from a Vengerov-led
master class or two. Perhaps the most poignant of all scenes
are those set in his home town of Novosibirsk in Siberia, snow covered and still
exerting a powerful pull on the violinist’s imagination;
he talks of the feel of a snowball in one’s hand as Proust
talked of madeleines. These youthful memories are reinforced
by an old film of Vengerov as a child, wearing a white smock,
playing Schubert’s Rondo. His old friend and colleague, Vadim
Repin is briefly interviewed – and there are shots of the
two boys fiddling away together for dear life, summoning
up those antique duels between Leopold Auer’s students. Rightly
there’s a brief clip of Zakhar Bron, their teacher, in an
old teaching film.
Vengerov was so coiled a player that, like perhaps most classical
soloists, he couldn’t play and tap his foot at the same time.
This made for difficulties with Didier Lockwood whose class
he joined. Lockwood is a laid back soul, in favour of finding
the inner child and nurturing it against life’s vicissitudes,
but he clearly encouraged Vengerov. The tango lessons reveal
his charming, straightforward approach to matters beyond
the violinistic and this is well contrasted with the more
serious business of meeting Yusupov in Israel to have preliminary discussions on the concerto.
Vengerov lived in Galilee from the age of sixteen and his
sense of affinity with the landscape and country is unaffected
and touching.
Quite
a large part of the programme is given over to rehearsals
for – and segments from the performance of – the Viola Tango
Rock Concerto. This was given in Hanover where I doubt they
could quite anticipate the funkier aspects of tango, lighting
effects and Harley Davidson simulating electric violin. Vengerov
certainly seems to measure up in the tango stakes in the
final movement where he sheds his viola, his bullish masculinity
matched by the feline sexuality - this stuff is catching – of
his tango partner, the liquid and beautiful Christiana Pahla.
The bonus is a complete performance of Wieniawski’s Op.15
Variations on an original theme with Ian Brown, filmed in
the Moscow Conservatory, where Wieniawski taught for three
years.
So, with batteries recharged, his Sabbatical over, Vengerov
hopes to conquer new mountains with renewed vision. It will
be interesting to see which areas of the repertoire he will
pursue, with which conductors - now that Rostropovich is
dead - he will forge true alliances, and how intensively
he will embrace the chamber repertoire – trio as well as
sonata work. Time, as they say, will tell.
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