I've had two striking experiences which have led me into thinking about the education of the young in music.
The first, two of my granchildren, siblings in two Camden schools - the older has just gone up to secondary - singing in the Camden Schools Music Festival at the Royal Albert Hall two weeks ago.
The second, joining an audience yesterday to witness Kate Gould, cellist, coaching a piano trio, then a string quartet, of young musicians as part of the Winchester Chamber Music Festival, of which Kate is artistic director.
I was able to watch a live stream of part of the Camden concert, brilliantly organised with multiple conductors directing their schools' choirs and orchestras in Zadok the Priest, my grandchildren in their respective choirs. I found myself in unexpectedly deep emotion while watching. I wrote to a friend of the 'raw energy of adolescent voices' which so moved me. I don't know how Camden manages to do all this - The Royal Albert Hall! - but it struck me forcibly that this is what can be done and what should be done by local authorities to get children involved in all kinds of music in their teens.
The same emotion welled up for me watching and hearing a brilliant trio of teenagers practising a Haydn trio; then a young quartet in the first movement of Dvorak's American Quartet. As a musical enthusiast not musically trained it was tough for me to hear the individual changes in tempo, intonation, fingering and bowing that Kate encouraged, but the overall change in the performance was nonetheless clear.
The first, two of my granchildren, siblings in two Camden schools - the older has just gone up to secondary - singing in the Camden Schools Music Festival at the Royal Albert Hall two weeks ago.
The second, joining an audience yesterday to witness Kate Gould, cellist, coaching a piano trio, then a string quartet, of young musicians as part of the Winchester Chamber Music Festival, of which Kate is artistic director.
I was able to watch a live stream of part of the Camden concert, brilliantly organised with multiple conductors directing their schools' choirs and orchestras in Zadok the Priest, my grandchildren in their respective choirs. I found myself in unexpectedly deep emotion while watching. I wrote to a friend of the 'raw energy of adolescent voices' which so moved me. I don't know how Camden manages to do all this - The Royal Albert Hall! - but it struck me forcibly that this is what can be done and what should be done by local authorities to get children involved in all kinds of music in their teens.
The same emotion welled up for me watching and hearing a brilliant trio of teenagers practising a Haydn trio; then a young quartet in the first movement of Dvorak's American Quartet. As a musical enthusiast not musically trained it was tough for me to hear the individual changes in tempo, intonation, fingering and bowing that Kate encouraged, but the overall change in the performance was nonetheless clear.
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