E-String

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  • rank_and_file
    • Jan 2025

    E-String

    For those who do not have access, from The Times today:


    "Royal Northern Sinfonia/Rubikis at Sage, Gateshead

    Richard Morrison
    Published at 12:01AM, February 2 2015
    Rated to 4 stars

    Hearing the spirited Royal Northern Sinfonia play in its magnificent home is always a pleasure, but this concert was made doubly fascinating by an extraordinary incident. Shortly into the finale of Prokofiev’s Second Violin Concerto the young soloist, Hyeyoon Park, snapped the E-string on her fiddle. That helter-skelter movement has barely half a bar of respite for the soloist, but in one of those half-bars Park swivelled to the RNS’s legendary leader, Bradley Creswick, who — as if by telepathy — instantly handed her his instrument and took hers.

    Creswick then looked pleadingly round his colleagues while the Prokofiev swirled onwards (I should add that this was being broadcast live on Radio 3), and someone in the second violins passed him a new E-string in plastic packaging. After several unsuccessful attempts to open it with his fingers he ripped the plastic with his teeth, and proceeded to fix and tune the new E-string in about 19 seconds.

    By this time, however, the music was hurtling towards the final, terrifying passage in which the soloist must deliver thousands of prestissimo semiquavers. To play this live on radio on someone else’s fiddle could be professional suicide. So in another half-bar’s respite, Park spun round again, reclaimed her own instrument and returned Creswick’s. The manoeuvre was conducted with such choreographic precision by both musicians that you might have thought they had rehearsed it, and Park went on to play the ending with fierce ebullience.

    That old showbiz adage — the show must go on — can rarely have been so nervelessly upheld. The trouble was that the Incredible Fiddle Exchange was the only thing anyone talked about afterwards, which was rather sad for the young Latvian conductor Ainars Rubikis. His interpretations of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony and Mark-Anthony Turnage’s rather depressing A Quiet Life weren’t bad — but he had been comprehensively upstaged by an E-string."
  • Old Grumpy
    Full Member
    • Jan 2011
    • 3652

    #2
    Originally posted by rank_and_file View Post
    For those who do not have access, from The Times today:


    "Royal Northern Sinfonia/Rubikis at Sage, Gateshead

    Richard Morrison
    Published at 12:01AM, February 2 2015
    Rated to 4 stars

    Hearing the spirited Royal Northern Sinfonia play in its magnificent home is always a pleasure, but this concert was made doubly fascinating by an extraordinary incident. Shortly into the finale of Prokofiev’s Second Violin Concerto the young soloist, Hyeyoon Park, snapped the E-string on her fiddle. That helter-skelter movement has barely half a bar of respite for the soloist, but in one of those half-bars Park swivelled to the RNS’s legendary leader, Bradley Creswick, who — as if by telepathy — instantly handed her his instrument and took hers.

    Creswick then looked pleadingly round his colleagues while the Prokofiev swirled onwards (I should add that this was being broadcast live on Radio 3), and someone in the second violins passed him a new E-string in plastic packaging. After several unsuccessful attempts to open it with his fingers he ripped the plastic with his teeth, and proceeded to fix and tune the new E-string in about 19 seconds.

    By this time, however, the music was hurtling towards the final, terrifying passage in which the soloist must deliver thousands of prestissimo semiquavers. To play this live on radio on someone else’s fiddle could be professional suicide. So in another half-bar’s respite, Park spun round again, reclaimed her own instrument and returned Creswick’s. The manoeuvre was conducted with such choreographic precision by both musicians that you might have thought they had rehearsed it, and Park went on to play the ending with fierce ebullience.

    That old showbiz adage — the show must go on — can rarely have been so nervelessly upheld. The trouble was that the Incredible Fiddle Exchange was the only thing anyone talked about afterwards, which was rather sad for the young Latvian conductor Ainars Rubikis. His interpretations of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony and Mark-Anthony Turnage’s rather depressing A Quiet Life weren’t bad — but he had been comprehensively upstaged by an E-string."
    Enjoyed that r_&_f - thanks!!

    Comment

    • Petrushka
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 12329

      #3
      Didn't Maxim Vengerov once break a string and carry on playing some devilishly difficult concerto without turning a hair by using the remaining three strings?

      Can someone fill in the details?
      "The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink

      Comment

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