tv Doc Film Deutsche Welle January 16, 2020 6:15am-7:00am CET
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easy he has rejected the safety of well trodden paths evidently they mean nothing to me always searching for never arriving at his destination he's recognized that true beauty and safety are incompatible and that the name of such beauty is perhaps by truth. these are these were the words used by the late nicholas harnoncourt to describe good don't crema you don't claim i. off the books and then put them in stuff yes of having grown up in a totalitarian state in the soviet union i rarely allowed myself to believe in foreign truths. i wanted to find my own voice.
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this is a mutant the goodness of this was that i feel the need to pass on everything i've experienced since. or much of what inspires me this was going to this everything you give away is preserved and one shouldn't try to hold onto anything for oneself because then it dawns stripped. put these at the rock center i need you in the position you. andy. the north pole for the existence of not me i saw the cause of the x. and you know just speak it all. i'm not a bucket of words i'm from the outset like a crime or served as an instrument to pass these things on you i wanted to do something for the youth of the baltic states which i know so well does it feel good that i was so inspired by these friendly faces and minds and so it's transpired
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that we've been together for more than 20 years and become a family or. was it this mood soon music is emotion as music is something in which we express our life experiences our feelings our own discoveries from. them and the basis of any discourse on music with another individual is openness. to all from. this to some of it whether it's with by doing or with arvo every collaboration is mutually enriching that was true and that's when it's enriching to sense that one is searching for the common denominator for why this music was written or the reason it should be played its message.
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the into the top of that i think that a raso was composed for tatyana and myself 40 years ago and yet it's lost none of its relevance. for us. and that's when it comes to composers that side generally believe in the principle of less is more is it just as with conductors who says that the hot and the glows too wrapped up in themselves are big on show but low on content. a person who serves a cause is modest especially in the. not so that he has his idea of how it should sound i have my idea of how it can sound we meet in the middle but what's key is the composition is this fuck.
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the salute so to me during your lifetime is a gift. to the soul so you want to master it in a way that satisfies you both. one day will be gone but the composition will live on this one but i could leave. this is this for the book purchase for the new features the children the story. of a suitable sneeze softly so moments just.
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for the future. is a. must harris is special to me that's. for 25 years i called it home. in 1901 we moved into our 1st apartment here in montana. you know at the time of course i didn't know that my youngest daughter gigi would be born here in paris. which is photography is a very important part of jeezy's life. every time i come to paris i try to see her and she just i hop. it's like someone else is your time.
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but. if we have a lot. 6 of you know all this with every. person it was harris has a very special connection with the arts where it's so vibrant so you feel very much at home in the city even if you don't live here would've wins it's 0 it's almost like actually. i think on the other side i'm really. good with the city police believe this but here in the same plan. for hugo is pacific. thank you.
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such things are often overlooked or so there is the world for your soul. good music is the. good music harbors a message and the boots are good performers convey that message of it is a mood shift from little. or not help my primary goal is to serve the composer. if you and i want to evoke emotions. for i want to be a mediator let's was to bring the music to life make it palpable. and allow it to move anyone who is open to listening.
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in the gulf is one this is where i get my 1st concert and where my parents played in the orchestra my grandfather taught at the conservatory here please. the brothers tried to live on this front as i was my father's 2nd lease on life than after his entire family his 1st wife and child and 35 relatives died in the reagan ghetto. that's 53 the he later forged a 2nd life for himself as a refugee in this and i was so to speak the product of that 2nd life in which he invested all his wishes and dreams. as
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a child i was burdened by his retelling of that terrible story over and over again i wanted to talk him out of it but of course i couldn't talk him out of it the deceased oh so you can. eat. shit. loads of. losing in the whole guns of my life began in this court yard so to speak it's always enjoyed being here and home with my grandparents. because grandparents allow
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you to be what you really are a child that's itself this is the balcony of the apartment so where is it. there the one with the little bird house stuffed with an endless green slope in winter it was a wonderful place for sledding and snowball fights. everything was lovely here if away from my father's incessant pressure to practice practice practice fun called the full name standing in front of. us in. full force that there can be no matter how much progress i made. no matter how much i accomplished it was never enough it was always you can do better you have to do better you have to do with this you have to be 10 times better than the others. over the years the decades i've remained slightly traumatized by that pressure even
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today i always believe i could be better than i am can that's it's just. me is it thief there is still a splinter of the wounded child deep within me still the child whose accomplishments were all too often dismissed with the phrase you can do better it's a shard of dissatisfaction with everything i've accomplished he lets the. it off. at the age of 18 i left my home town of brega from moscow.
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you all over. the as well in the book it was a wonderfully creative atmosphere where you immersed yourself in the music so as to avoid other unpleasant thing like in the month home instead of going to meetings you studied a new score and this borrowed a record that wasn't available in the shops for you when you escaped every day life by busying yourself with things that mattered. on the one hand you were under great pressure and faced severe restrictions on the other hand you were constantly searching for inner freedom. and say. its place in the. newsom's and it's up to speed in everything took place in this hall not just my
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student lives in the incredibly prominent artists performed concerts and world premieres were staged here. in the me and i remember the world premiere of shostakovich is so simple. and then when i performed as a soloist in the concert at. the tchaikovsky competition also took place in this hall which i was lucky enough to win. and so on and it was a great time and that's a time of great not only artists and performers and but also professors is one of those one student was common my at the end of my studies in one of master ice talk came to my concert them you know and afterwards he said something remarkable you don't get on he said i would never do what you're doing but you're right and you must go your own way was that he allowed me to believe in myself and sing against the law and when people you worship or admire trust in you think it gives you wings to fly the sing in the air pfluger. i thought the utilities
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flew. literally like you know me and usually i think. you usually. do get this new. mexico city bus from the fuselage missing. by this one just because that was what they should change for me it was a roll small someone was acoustics the 1st 2 if i'm with nuclear because the civilian national coach missed. yet the full justice of.
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i think you'll salute the new post about when i am a graded from the soviet union i was looking for the freedom that the world was willing to offer me this relief found life in moscow hard so i was denied permission to leave for concerts song there were restrictions placed on my repertoire that i couldn't always play the music i wanted to play which incidentally also happens today now and again. back in the soviet union the reasons
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were ideological now the commercial business basically not much different to see. there's always pressure i've learned to live with the pressure. and i don't give up so easily when i believe in something that sort of i often when it was longer there was a lot of almost like i said something like that better than that and the one thing you know that i did it was thrilling to expose. the loss of her sister you know those new moves and cool most of the summer and those still so those are the little political 6 6 6 6.
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josh and think that in the. end of. my 1st born daughter is a journalist. because we talk and argue about a lot of things together. but we also have valuable discussions and very often i feel that she's a pillar of support for example when i'm writing. you know. you have this existing deal until in theory
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a little bit of it because you know which room was the boat to move the thing with so it's the super bowl is one you know is it 10 years old. the good movies because it was and i think. so is that because of those and that's why you saw me in this because the reason that i think that one and those knew about them when you believe . that one of. these are laid out. in the same. there's. a status and certainly has an ascetic function. from the.
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music also has an ethical function which is it's why i'm going now to a moscow theater director has been arrested on charges of investment. as an outsider and i like many others do not believe the legal proceedings are fair and that's why i'm going to the theater and performing a concert to benefit the center of state to make a statement on this was and yes that's all i want with a violin with my project to adapt the cello preludes. back to the violin it's a statement.
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suddenly i had this idea to combine the music with photographs because i wanted to transfer the experience of this music into a parallel world. and then i was inspired by the pictures of. a photographer and a composer who experienced the same period of life in the soviet union in different ways. if something that can do some good and these pictures we can connect to people we never knew but who speak to us that and the music echoes that experience.
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but i will say that the film institute's fine young and in today's new voice we met 2 years ago in dresden when he was the soloist and go by do you know his offertory of if. i ask him you don't. perform with my orchestra in moscow. i mean initially he was hesitant particularly given the political situation . i told him we'd have to play something unconventional and then he suggested vine back and forth. with felix treat me lucky to have enlisted a musician not to get on stature it's a real treat for the audience in moscow. sure moscow political. history is how i.
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through this fine he's too when i came on stage i felt this was history in the making for the house was full to the rafters. and the audience really clung to every note of faith as if it were divine inspiration. but that's really how it felt this incredibly exciting to listen to him play and to perform with an.
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. thank you for all of this not just a few more i'm sorry i got a question about the person so it's confusion. people to understand the scope of my life insurance coverage. so. it's finished for something. like this but i suppose i see nothing in the cupboards in the us because the. system. you plan. to use when it's really the solution it's the price. and size and the constraints of the life of an itinerant artist is more of a curse than a gift because you don't have a home or hardly have a home to call especially if you're successful. you adapt but
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to miss from no one on japan fascinates me because i'm captivated by this country school and the way it upholds so many of its traditions and slow remaining so welcoming. and in all its offensive position pan has really assumed a special place in my heart over the course of almost 40 visits of us and from this the atmosphere is permeated by an incredible sense of respect for everyone once if you'd be hard pressed to find such a culture of respect anywhere else in the world. while you still unclear. thank you
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just in shock find it very hard to simply relax though i could use a few relaxation master classes because the pressure is always mounting on but my strength is abating. parts of the globe nowadays every young artist believes that when they're in demand they have to perform every day like serve up something new every day but that's a waste of talent they no longer take the time to reflect so or grasp the essence of a composition because there's hardly any time to contemplate such questions as what am i doing here why am i here am i only here for my own. pleasure for the
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you mean you mean so thats thank he's munna know it's of finally on i thank my nearly 400 year old amati violin which so wonderfully personifies the concept of love music does not tolerate hatred instead it awakens strength and hope the through that's what so precious about music this is the it's what lends us hope that the world and its people will not fall prey to madness and mad men. and bombs in the room.
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every 2 seconds a person is forced to flee their home nearly 71000000 people have been forcibly displaced the consequences to satirise our documentary series displaced depicts traumatic humanitarian crises from around the world you know. what a good thing we don't need and i didn't go to university to kill people i don't know i thought the or to have my boss come to me and tell me to kill someone and he got mad and if i don't they'll kill me. people feel for their lives and their future so they seek refuge abroad but what will become of the person who stay behind it's a. little my husband went to peru because of the crisis that i wanted that if he hadn't gone there we would have died of hunger. just this week.
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this is the news live from berlin and more extreme weather will be part of our future australia's bushfires are just one result of the warmest decade ever recorded and a major new study is showing that the carbon dioxide released by those fires is making global conditions even worse also coming up the german parliament debates a controversy.
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