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tv   Arts.21  Deutsche Welle  August 21, 2022 9:30am-10:00am CEST

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an epic, moreover, water. the water is becoming a scarce commodity. isn't worth dying of thirst. the global struggle for water. first. 45 minutes on d w. ah, we've got some hot tips for your bucket list. ah, no magic corner track hotspot for food. please check and some great cultural memorials to boot d w, travel off we go. ah, the locations absolutely beautiful, and i also enjoy the audience. i think it's a great audience that comes, ah, yes, scribbling offices here. you really do get a sense of the history and everything that's happened
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ah oh, a rich cultural landscape with monasteries wine in history of plenty. the setting for the rhine gal, music festival, here in western germany. with 170 concerts from jazz through classical, the festival is one of the largest of its kind in europe, especially popular the mozart night at aber buck abbey. ah, for mozart maniacs and anyone who prefers their classical music on the lighter side, or 1st at the festival springs orchestra from the san in switzerland. ah,
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ah, ah. mm hm. if it is on woodside, his music de lindsay, well, i'd say mozart's music, if it's played well now, which is precisely the place so it's intended to reach go. i thought he spoke the mind and the heart honest nurses are the same time on. so does his to son about hans, what's so special about mozart's music channels, either way i see it. his music is a microcosm of humanity from, from of the human side of life. from the mansion cited this, laban slow gang on the day, a small child musical prodigy crisis racked creator of world famous operas,
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symphonies, and chamber music, her complex, yet accessible, ah, they're now rehearsing for the perceived concern to an early work by mozart. says and strip is once of him of light, it's a piece that accompanies us everywhere, additions, competitions and also concerts. and i think it's the concerto i play most often that you love us, but it's not always easy. i and you always have to find something new, try and tease out new appeal. so i, the piece may look simple, but there's so much depth to it. and you're always discovering new aspects. that's the brilliant thing about mozart, there are simply no limits. i can cancel oh ah, for the french, the soonest. so see,
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give me performing. it apr. buff. abby is a particular highlight. ah, yes can said is the blues needs an awful man. every concert is connected to the place where it's played. lesson acoustically in the 1st instance of course, ski, the lentils, whether you're playing in a church outside or in a hall steeped in history, you can feel it, man, and fiend with us. yeah. here you really do get a sense of the history and all the things that have happened. she was talking about sits in the sunshine monastery was founded in 1136. to day visitors flocked to the monument with its eventful history from times of conflict and prosperity. the flourishing center for trade and wine rowing began to decline in the 16th century. the monks left the abbey in 18 o 8. it was then turn into a penitentiary and psychiatric clinic. the abbey was an important spiritual sight.
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but it did have a dark side to. to abbotts met a violent end here, the perfect backdrop for the thriller, the name of the rose, which was found here. a murder mystery set in a medieval monastery. sharinda's crossing above his will, a back monastery is such a mystical place for me even by his will. few because it has such a varied history. she naughty under feet and of course that it is a place created for the vent ation has gone to go to see ellen gate and vent that are all the same kinds of intrigues that we know about from the vatican. for example, finding the way into the mix. but at the same time that to me it's also a very sacred place hiding ah, the sacred and mystical place. but also one that's filled with light. just right for mozart's music, unique in its close juxtaposition of light and dark moves. ah ah
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. 6 didn't fire the teeth gum? yes, it certainly has deaths. and it's also difficult for the musicians i and because the simple is always difficult to mind. info, what appears to be simple math because maybe you always have the feeling you've heard it before on a more to day. the brilliant thing about mozart thought, who must have been a pop star, eyes time given sign with upper melodies that people were whistling on the street on a couple of days later, talking off if casa, because they are so catchy, but not simplistic fun of our evening i infiniti for the evening, perfectly showcase is the breadth of mozart's earth. the shifts of mood and atmosphere could hardly be greater ah,
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from vivacious and catchy melodies. on the open air stage, we switched to the basilica and the solemn sounds of a wind sextet. busy ah, ah, wind ensemble became increasingly fashionable in mozart's lifetime. for those commissioning works, chamber ensembles were a cheaper alternative to the full orchestra. this piece was performed outdoors as night music. remedies a music cat on that month. if ever you hear this music live as it is, if it heightens your awareness of the universal osmond it thus is for that there is something greater than our scope of the site. a large or small line on grossest
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tighter or dusk had no. and that can help to restore harmony with the headset. after all, we all have access to this music in cities regardless of what side run it, gallo, festus, i. and that can only unite us actually, and we're fine. i'm oh oh and in an intimate space like this, mozart's music and the emotional power can unleash find its full expression. ringback
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even it has multiple decon, natalie once was calfskin come in. i think mozart's music can really give us strength in its indescribable beauty and in its sacredness. highly kindled and, and that it has been there for centuries and always edified a so not as fun. you, madame, of our aunt went on and i think it's really important to just finish, especially in times of crisis site and to have something. hm. that makes you think yes. yard. often it's worth getting up again to morrow and not bring your head in the sand coffin is unmistakable. ah! and as the spectacle comes to an end, the audience just can't get enough. in the face of current crises, mozart's music offers us an oasis of peace and joy.
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within comedy, as mozart is good for much more than the little nightmare, the festival has set aside for him. wine has been grown for a good 1200 years at schloss, johan his bag. now it's cultivating another kind of spirit, providing the stage for won't. when mount violinist, julia fisher. she's making several guest appearances at the hind l. music festival . here she performs with her quartets, ah, ah, thanks, heavens it for me is the essence of my musical life. i enjoy playing with it, whispers i enjoy going on tour with mistress. but in the end, i am the most fulfilling time for me is playing chevy music. ah,
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it gets very intimate in a quartet. i'm. you have to get along with each of the place. we have to function 2 of us against 2 of us, a 3 of us against one, all 4 together. i mean it's, it gets quite complicated and you need time to understand how the others are actually working. 2 ah, the form you sessions have known one another since 2010 when they 1st got together for you will yeah. fisher's own music festival. that's when the idea where the quartet was born. although not all 4 were convinced of it right away. ah, at 1st i really important because you have to sort of keep up part of
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you will want to sort of the 5th person. it's like for an individual one and the favorite personally of the quartet ah, for musicians or experienced performers. some had been playing in large orchestra for years. others had achieved success as soloists, but working with the you or your fish, a quartet often ment, exploring entirely new directions. ah, there's something specific about the 1st violin part. the part where the 1st violin is leading the group fences and very often comes from the composition itself. and of course also julia is and sort of this is where you used to give a command and people follow. and i think dipole. busy sorry, learning curve for her that she had to sort of take everyone into town.
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ah, very good did. but when they get together, the sun is greater than apart like the retreat and artistic retreat where you just know you, you, you will be surrounded by amazing colleagues. very high level of performance i'm playing, but also it's a lot of fun. there's really not much more you can reach for as a musician. ah, you cannot play string quartet just like that. it's actually the most difficult of mation. and it only works if you work together over the years. so and more often i'm gregory larry. if i think about it, how,
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how we play 10 years ago and what we achieved, and that those 10 years if you need that time you yeah, fisher started learning violin at just 3 years old. her 1st teacher was gala fisher, her mother, a pianist. she taught her daughter both instruments. it was a tough regimen, but also an ideal spring board for little you. yeah, fish as great ambition. ah, for me it was clear from the beginning that i wanted to be musician. whenever i was off from and i was 3 my entire childhood when i was off what i wanted to view as when i was growing up, it was always being a musician. i never ever had another wish for my profession. in 1995, she won the famed menu in competition for young violinists signaling her arrival on
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the scene meeting man. and he made a huge impression on me and that was a very, very important and very inspiring. actually, my teacher's 1st reaction was that, ah, if i won the 1st price and the level wasn't very high, so she didn't take it as a, as an amazing thing that they want. she just saw all the work that still had to be done. ah, it was lots of blood, sweat, and tears, but worth at all. now you efficient place with the world's top orchestra's getting a good 80 concerts a year. her repertoire include some $100.00 works for orchestra and chamber music. 2 2 2 0, if a collaboration goes well, she keeps working with the new missions involved, but sees open for new ideas. fisher has taken home several awards, like the bbc music magazine award, the artist of the year gramaphone award,
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and germany's order of merit. oh it's nice to receive prizes um, but it's a little good like the applause of that is not going to change my opinion on that. usually fisher's recipe for her own success is self confidence and self criticism. since 2006, she's been sharing that recipe through teaching in 2011. she took up a post at munich academy of music and theater, and often performs with her students. in 2017, she launched her own music website. the you? yeah, fish a club and achieved a piece of autonomy in the fiercely competitive classical market on it. she can release her latest recordings and information about her work, but she decides what to publish and what interviews to give. i don't feel the need to, to share my lunch with people or with my fans or something like that. but i do want
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to share certain aspects of my cultural and musical life. so when i hear a new piece or if i want to promote peace and of course i'm very happy to use m v, the platform of the internet to do so. you as isha has become a regular at the hein gal, music festival appearing on its stages for over 20 years in various constellations . ah, they're the pieces absolutely beautiful and i also enjoy the williams. i think it's a great audience that comes and then it's, it also has something to do with the fact that, you know, i get the opportunity to do what i want to do. compositions from 3 centuries are on this year's play bill at the idyllic schloss johan his bag. the concert is sold out and the musicians relaxed in the end. it's a,
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it's not work. it's, it's pure joy for me to play in the court and even more he is. i'm making music with my friends. i mean, i'm so happy to see the 3 of them. if you play well, ha, that's the beauty of it. ha ah ah with ah ah, and no time to dance. ah!
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the ryan go music festivals. colombian nice young musicians from latin america improvise arising performance on stage. ah . but while at aicpa monastery, they also touch on the more delicate side of music. many musicians have gained international experience here. ah, columbia's classical music scene, certainly benefits ah, these orchestra i think, is the most important her music activities us that are in, in, in the country right now. so i found these orchestra's them the most important
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opportunity that any wish out of the country half. so i feel very proud though to say about i'm a member of visual philharmonic orchestra, columbia, columbia, you still owe money. it has been very important in my life in my year. these decline and personal life though, because the circus fact is like a family. it's very beautiful. they enter ye bad. it's has a ringo. music festival. the musicians also play in a number of smaller and symbols. most of them started making music at an early age . by now, they are something like musical ambassadors of a new burgeoning columbia. that goes down well at home. i study in the, in a school that was very musical and these were for a lot of the music and sports. so my friends are very used to lots and bob,
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i think i'm, they are very proud of me because i was very constancy at the very beginning. so now for example, playing in europe, i receive a lot of massage of my friends saying that i'm very proud of you. and that's f for that. you make a, it's, in always, it's showing ha, only the most talented young musicians are accepted into disreputable youth orchestra. ah, colombia is a vast country, so additions take place via video castings submitted by the musicians which are evaluated by an international jury. oh . since 2010 over 600 young people have received grants for their efforts. during history was founded by private columbian foundation. very much in the tradition of
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other youth orchestras, but with one crucial difference. ah, he's at cooper. visual net is i can muzzle, you could call the people from this foundation visionaries exact. okay. they said, okay, we want to form an orchestra there, put quality music at the forefront recount the quality it out as to the. so it's not a social project with the motto, like, get the kids off the street in an instrument, into their hand. male to strategy, gainesville, that an instrument to hunt i'm does is that's the motto of others who have set up youth orchestras, a social program standard himself. he program it fuels is. and what does that mean, selena de quality it well, because it means that we have only the best musicians from around the country limit ah, in addition to european music, the works of latin american composers and integrity,
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part of the repertoire. and by including latin american music, the youth orchestra promotes columbia's rich musical history abroad conductor, a mentor, undress roscoe estrada, works regularly with leading orchestra's in europe. but this un sambal, in particular, holds special significance for him. i need to live up as a god for a tour, no matter where it takes you is in itself important for an orchestra and all the more for a youth orchestra, of course, especially artistically, musically. i'm into this i gazelle, and for us, of course, in our specific case, we get to see the world when we play outside columbia can into that we get to discover the world, the humming and we played in some of the best halls in europe. and i hope us discrete andres rosco strata came to vienna, the cradle of classical music, a 20 years old to study conducting. in the meantime, classical music has gained more and more importance in his home country.
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neighborhood dunc diesel case has been done generally, not only thanks to this orchestra, but in general, a lot has been happening in south american music. the f big to give a comparison, lived when i was still living in columbia over 20 years ago. there were only a few universities where you could study music and maybe 3 or 4 and then you she could store you like tired of you and today there are 20 or 30 nancy what a pricing busby door. that means there's enough demand gain, oak naca. it means there are many young people who are actually interested in doing it stuffy. that's a they really want to do at work and does markings if they're happy with it and inspires. and that's beautiful. will data should ah, and does support the classical music scene increases. so does the competition. nor did any can vendors, only a few will make it to the top shelf. i mean becoming a professional musician and coming to europe for example, and getting into
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a great position in a good orchestra. to kidding does is yeah. the ema in it's like with everything in life, vicki got only a few make it the ones who are really outstanding. and of course you need a wide base like a pyramid for something to grow so that some can really make it to the top dish pizza. 2 many, this extraordinary and sambal. sure, that ambition. i really one through a story about a i think that it, this is my a, bring the bad in not the ration in this moment. and i e, i really want to have the opportunity to leave her berella. but a and come back to columbia, it's a very important them me, i really want to come back and to share all the knowledge i would path i the needs like a way to, to say thank you. like,
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can't read that it where he was born. and i've been, it's like a dream that i have. ah ah ah ah ah ah, ah.
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