tv Arts Unveiled Deutsche Welle November 5, 2023 8:30am-9:00am CET
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i just got to use it with a lot say what grade the, which blog i couldn't live without much. hello. the song should be, it has a certain warmth in the town. it draws you and tugs with your heart stirring on. 2 6 6 6 6 mine, it's an adventure me, you have to really love the oboe and the sound of it to keep going on. right. that's the
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. 2 tassels monasteries, vineyards, stars, and fans of the classical music scene come together for the ryan gal music festival . we enjoy a night debit tally and music and learn the pitfalls of the capricious obo. but 1st we meet a world class cellist. soul good bet. it only takes sold get better. a few strokes of the boat's winds rolled her audience at the run down. music festivals to temperaments and passion did not fail to impress issue design. this is that i consider myself very lucky and able to live like this search assuring the stage with such wonderful orchestras and conductors. performing
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legendary repertoires, and to have an audience that follows you and believes, and you follow the an i'm lout, the, even though she's being one of the world's leading musicians for some time. there's no such thing as a routine performance for her to meet you this concept to extend the every concert is extremely important to me in mind. it's not just about having another data in my calendar. i want every concert to lead people with the feeling of almost having to come back again. but how and of mine so common, but i also want to keep sharing things of new projects, new ideas. no. yeah, and that's how you grow your audience. basically let me sign in and pick them out from and see the
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so the main son in spanish and the cellist looks up to her name, bringing a special radiance with her every time she's on stage. but there is a deeper meaning to it. is slow because the sudden shift i think was my destiny on the glue. but there's a powerful story behind my name. hobbins sorta it's my mother had lot twins before having made and just fell on. but she really wanted another child was the only thing the clanking have i already had an autistic sister who has left them. so it was very brain of her mind. but my father said, no, we can't have another child. it's too risky to feed and we've been through so much once a month, but my mother really wanted another and she said, if it's a girl, she'll be called saw me that because she'll bring this son back to our home if that to me can speak, i it just makes so it has nothing to do with music really stuck in. but i think there's a powerful emotionality behind a job with the dcf phone. i said,
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i'm sure some of those rays of sunshine that my mother probably felt when her child was born. he flowed in to me. if you me a call me, if you need to. the old event has mazda, of all the important sheila compositions. one such a peace is the last major orchestra was by the british compose of edward l got written in the shadow of war and his wife's soonest, as a kind of farewell, the society from the states. one of those comes out to us that gives a soloist a lot of room for interpretation. there's always this space to sing to cry or to infuse the music with
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a kind of rhetoric through sound again. so kind and i need that in my life. ok. this and that's what music gives me. it keeps me at the lucas kites, the she's also the co found the other music festival in switzerland. it even bids her 1st name. the solves the festival, the as a child sold a bet. so it was surrounded by music. her mother was a pianist at her parents recognized a talent totally on. however, the cello was not her 1st instrument of choice. talbot, as when i was young, i tried out many instruments and feelings. i tried to clarinet. the piano feels fly, sang and played the violin cups, giving them, but it became very clear that the cello was my instruments for the students since then thought this morning. so it was definitely both a choice and a passion. so why is it has to be this instrument and whether this is through
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intuition by now i was drawn in by the tunnel range of the jello at the antenna. were almost like a choir with all those possibilities be having lucas guides and soda bet to was born in argentina in 1981. at the age of 12, she moved to madrid with a parents and went on to study at the music academy in basel with the russian cellist, yvonne, money guessing of the winning numerous prizes. she found a global audience and can already look back on a career spending more than 2 decades. much christie met you. you people always talk about wanting to be young again. and i'll say oddly enough, i don't want that at all. commission by severe. she's me a gotten if i liked the feeling of being 40 already having experienced a lot, but with so much more to come able to have in the fetus to leave. and so how i think it's a wonderful a just where i can say, i've already seen a great deal of the music world shouldn't feed from the i'm much better at choosing
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what i want our days this how, who i want to work with velocity and the reasons for those choices should meet the vm job. i then view this, well, i think musical affinities are much more important to me today than having one concert more or one concert last these days. so good, that's a can choose with whom and where she plays. and this gives her a lot of freedom and control the many of the leading soloists, mostly men, launch a 2nd career, that's conductors, but get better is not considering going down that road. the is trusting it to me, not to the course. i'm fascinated by the incredible style and have an orchestra, but without my instrument, i would be missing something. view, denise,
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i would be the same. frost. it was a feeling as it is true, that needs be glasses on. one of the mill, a complete human being, of course, with or without much hello shown it and maybe slowly, but being on stage without my instrument, which is shaped to me as a person in so many ways. michelle, i wouldn't be the same. that's very small. i couldn't live without much. hello, 11, east. the 6 wanted to live in contest the right now. the cello is head lice, but she can imagine having other priorities in the future with less touring and more time for her family. the slower this when i finished the phone regardless of the fact that my body is aging, my will try to stay young and spirit. i think my spirit will need to carry on. mine
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is a the see show, but i have to see how my body deals with growing all the mind complicates. you need a lot of energy for this lifestyle of a and the most difficult thing is all the traveling living needs to see if that's endlessly packing your bags and never being at home, the flu, to house to sign so couldn't on the older i get loving the more i appreciate the meaning of time, both sides be the way that not only having time for your loved ones is bruce, but also for yourself. resign. and even though mitsy said it's the
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and now it's off to the monasteries, where says thurston months once lived in arithmetic, seclusion to night the cloister of april, bosky abbey is hosting an evening of italian music. the music finished. this music carries a certain freshness and vivacity for me. it has a friendly nature and represents how experience italy be and why so many people travel. they're on vacation, and he's also see the lot as a in unoccupied inventory and italian night, which begins with music from the baroque period. for me, switching me this liveliness is a typical of the a tell you in baroque genre, all these especially to talk on you area and also vivaldi in the small concerto grosso. i know i have this energy, these fish being,
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don't want to see it. the music from the italian broke to here. there's no, no, for this almost groovy. hus brock's likely pulsating. read them. seeing that most of the mental i see it for me, this kind of a tell you and music is all about emotions about joy. see it with the most similarly with the for the fairly broke dance music by end today. ask like when you, eddie, he played to looped at the courts of the aristocracy and also performed as a singer. the music from the net pony tunnel as he called himself, is sure she want of even the fine folks on you to use is the thought from the area has this kind of rhythmic phase so called the ground based on human dig line is actually always the same rhythm, repeating itself decent and representing this dance like fundamental rhythm plus his best. plus it creates a certain groove, and then the 2 violins dance on top of that. the speed, my mistake,
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they play with the rhythms, sometimes like skins over them hanging on them. sometimes they play against each other. constitutions. this dance between the 3 parts is what makes this be so fascinating and so sense of lading. i absolutely love this piece. for me, comes polish to the farmers. the stairs. and monastery of the box is one of the hind or festivals most stunning performance then use this year. the orchestra features guest obo as christina gomez. good. like what does it tell you music mean for her, the same load, this all, this melodic expressiveness. and this beauty of the melody, the elegance of the music, the composer to mazda, it'd be known, it is considered one of the most inventive melody composers of his time. also for the elbow, the this unit. and this has been said to me is the beauty of this over can share to for me is i'd be
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known as ability to emphasize the virtuosity of the obo, well simultaneously writing these astoundingly beautiful melodies device. and this should intervene to skype during his lifetime, be known, he was one of the most famous composers in italy. he primarily wrote operas, but also composed 18 works for although he had a unique style, the shaft. yeah, you can see, i mean, he creates this emotional depth, which i think encourages the listener to immerse themselves in the promotional side of the music. if i lived in these a good friends for less zeit to dylan nice, really special. this is vicky spears on this this piece by other
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central my channel is a particular significance for go do i. 2 2 2 the interesting side for me on these and contain no one knows the exact date that this concerto was composed. oh, good moment. but we believe it was written in the early 18th century, this austin's in yahoo! that for a long time, it was even unclear whether the work was written by him or his brother, benedetto, marcelo, who though they needed to my table and city. but in any case, it's now seen as an archetype of an old book in chatham. i just had to put the since it was the 1st solo concerto, written specifically for the instrument and said to this instrument because she, him, because she gave him for the italian baroque music lifted some mark all over europe. and arguably, it's most famous composer was antonio peabody. von vivaldi
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was a composer with a real sense for have seen capt. churning the mount sea. and now since it's very present in this concerto grosso, oliver's ticket is this vehicle. each dog can immediately feel it within the 1st movement of mind. move on, there's a groove and 3 time that just invite to the dances. thompson, the. that groove is mainly driven by the orchestra's string section. and what, what a telling you music be without its violence to this day. they are among the best in the world. and the most expensive the council, which from disguise each piece of the origins of how the violin is played, and the whole evolution of the violin all the way back to its invention, let's say, can somehow be traced to easily find the 21 and a to leave just has an immense cultural tradition when it comes to the violin and
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especially so they promote enough. so good kind. it sounds like meet the was the only the goal is to promote. now you can barely walk. 20 made is without saying, allude to re, uh, the workshop of alludes the making and fixing violins. and i think that promotion is now the place where most filings are sold in the world that includes new and old instruments and equipment. 2 there's no doubt that italian violins are world renowned due to their unique tone, the each call with this to be sure you tell. i think the typical italian violence sound has a certain warmth and the tone minutes in tone. it draws you in, tugs that your hard string us around on. there's this kind of essence to the sound that is so alluring, time with items. so obviously that's how i think it also has to do with the italian sense of athletics and a beauty. let me tell you in and so, and that includes them. unity of the charlotte does the highest option high to him,
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clung the and that beauty certainly did not escape the audience in kind. go the and now we turn our attention to in a tory a slate difficult instrument. christina gomez go. dory has mastered the obo but not without a lot of patients in deep breath. christina gomez go to a from spain has achieved what only very few do a solo to be with the but the ease being e my of the sofa and that's, i mean i'm always looking for a warm sound even though that's basically the opposite of the oboes nature taking time from then until the war. but a warm sound drama doesn't mean that it is only sounds nice or warm. why shouldn't
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link those of i'm going to and i want to create a sound with a lot of flexibility and color at the same time i'm talking on the did come. 2 with a brilliant technique and great sensitivity, christina gomez go to a, has played her way to the top in a very short space of time performing as a soloist with the most renowned international orchestras and conductors. as a child. she originally wanted to learn the clarinet, but the music teacher persuaded her to take up the i but the she had an you. so i can be showed me a picture and said, look, it look similar to the clarinet, only with a small mouthpiece within the limits. i mean, if i known back then what kind of work that would involve, i don't know if i'd have chosen the obo, which i think you will give it ask event, but i like the look of the instrument at the time. the funding you said without
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knowing what it sounded like, i chose that and introducing the disclosure and that's how i came to the obama. and so coming to. 2 2 2 2 6 6 6 6 that is considered a difficult instrument, especially when it comes to the breathing technique. 6 2 is the same plan as much to it's a small mouth piece and you have to blow the air very quickly on is it's a bit scary. and 1st of all the reads for beginners are much softer roll so you can get used to it. feed nice stuff, that means i'm on you can v on funding con. 6 2 6 2 passages. 2 easy. 2 2 code taking a breathing is used. c as seen, if it doesn't look good, you would, you have to really love the obama and the sound of it to keep going on. right. that's a ma, but that's not the case for me. this why defined so far? i'm still really happy. the scale being is not
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christina gomez go to a has great seminar. not only has she most of the instrument to technical perfection, the oh but also requires craftsmanship because the mouthpiece has to be made from scratch for every performance. 6 6 9 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 moves the, the, the 1st time you move to buy the chain to cut it out, measure it, cut it up again. the measure is again the dish to me. so you have to measure the density, measure the hardness and then you have to scrape it very much. have me do you need really sharp knives that look like this? this will also when you go to work with really tiny pieces of wood, tyler from home, it's very complicated. and at the end,
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you don't know if the pieces will work or not. he said completed the process when i'm in the advisement of how well they work. also depends where you are, veteran or the next, the on off and you know on that's why you always have to have the different reads with you or this list. when this reading was mind, it's a constant adventure. she didn't everybody the by how and you never truly get bored playing the obama. it kind of longer, violet. it could even by the time to go and speak with christina gomez go to a has no time to get thought when she's not too in the world. she's, we're hosting in the land. in 2013, she became the 1st solo but with up to the minute stuff in there. 2 2 she was only $23.00 at the time and played under the bed tone of daniel baron boy in. 2 the past had nice silver twins cuz that had such a huge impact on me. and i have the good fortune to work with him
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a lot. and so yeah, and in very different ways on in c, f, a, she didn't invite, not just in the orchestra. so and then, but as a soloist in columns in chamber music, in opera, everything on this had miss, vaguely cnn, and really made a big impression on me. the, the way he understands the music you're getting all the way he works, have the attention he pays to detail. he's the getting it up to him. unfortunately, this generation of legends is slowly disappearing. now you got along some the go to a has of us to webpage was also playing contemporary pieces such as this one by british composer charlotte, bright speaker asking me to and i'm, i'm sure myself a very open minded person visual and i think it's important and actually necessary to incorporate contemporary music into the repertoire and rip it why it's important
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that we as artists, bear the responsibility to slay this new music and ensure that it's heard it on 4222 is the same noise and we'll seek to speed and meet z and then a tile and society and the audience will decide whether the pieces will last forever or not. all of this to get done for the skype. glad went well the new but for they have to be heard. is he get held of in. 6 she's only in her early thirty's, but christina gomez go to a has already been teaching at the building university at the out to 8 years. she wants to pass on some of her experience onto her students. to me, she's this piece piece this month for me. it's important to support the new generation. finish on time. if i can convey a part of what i feel with the music you them them already more than happy me them we can seem and seem to be shown me. i'll look please,
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of course. so when you have an instrument in your hands, that is so difficult to master so, so it can be a little frustrating kind is month to month. it was just heat and design. i tried to pass on certain principles to my student god, such as dead occasional and perseverance for so and above all, to love the obo and the music very much. and for all of this month viewable and even sickly, because you really can't do this job without love. you have to work very, very hard to mom was quickly see a finished guessing. i'd like to run down music festival is only a brief intimate. so for christina gomez, go to a schedule is packed until the end of the year, the subsidies trust me. i played with almost all the conductors i dreamed of working
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with begins in the and i've also played with the orchestra's. i always wanted to play with the most, all for me then or the case on coz a me the, me, the east now i'm more interested in what the future holds. have you shown on the, for the, gets much a new conductors. the new orchestra's will bring, so it'd be noisy begin. that's what interest me now to get in that that and that's for them is quickly gets met into is he in the it's been a long time since christine and gomez go to a was a new come a she's put her stamp on the scene with a unique style and she's always looking for new challenges. the
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business dw news line from berlin officials and gaza say an air strike on our refugee camp, kills more than 30 people as follows, of strength and school. whereas the, when says thousands of displaced causes were sheltering. also coming up the u. s. re state support for humanitarian pauses in the findings. but there is disagreement with eric nations calling for a ceasefire. us secretary of state anthony blinking says that would only allow her .
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