Simon Rattle
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 69 |
Date of birth | January 19,1955 |
Zodiac sign | Capricorn |
Born | Liverpool |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Magdalena Kožená |
Candace Allen | |
Elise Ross | |
Albums | Bernstein: Symphony No. 2 The Age of Anxiety |
Children | Eliot Rattle |
Sacha Rattle | |
Jonas Rattle | |
Milos Rattle | |
Anezka Rattle | |
Job | Actor |
Conductor | |
Education | Liverpool College |
Royal Academy of Music | |
Organ | BPO; LSO; CBSO |
Parents | Denis Guttridge Rattle |
Pauline Lila Violet | |
Listen artist | www.youtube.com |
Songs | SongsOnce More Unto the BreachHenry V · 1989 I. AllegroThe Complete Piano Concertos · 2008 2. AirBaroque · 2020 View 25+ more |
List | Once More Unto the BreachHenry V · 1989 |
Upcoming events | Lucerne Culture and Congress Centre |
Groups | Berliner Philharmoniker |
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment | |
Alma mater | Royal Academy of Music |
London | |
UK | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 457930 |
Waldbuhne 2015
Waldbuhne Concert: American Night
Berlin philharmonic New Year's Gala
Listen with Your Eyes
Bernstein: Wonderful Town
Tony Palmer's Film About the Salzburg Festival
Gidon Kremer: Back to Bach
Sophie's Choice
L'Enfant et les Sortilèges and L'Heure Espagnole
Sir Simon Rattle Conducts Borodin, Mussorgsky & Shostakovich
Brit Award for Best Classical Recording
Classic Brit Critics Award
Fryderyk Awards – Most Outstanding Polish Music Recording
Shakespeare Prize
Classic Brit Award for Male Artist of the Year
Classic Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music
Fryderyk Awards – Best Polish Album Recorded Abroad – Classical Music
Classic Brit Award for Ensemble/Orchestral Album of the Year
Porin Award for Best Foreign Classical Music Album
Wolf Prize in Music
Grammy Award for Best Orchestral Performance
Simon Rattle Life story
Sir Simon Denis Rattle OM CBE is a British-German conductor. He rose to international prominence during the 1980s and 1990s, while music director of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Rattle was principal conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic from 2002 to 2018.
Last night of the Proms: Sweltering heat fails to dampen the audience's spirits
......
Felix Klieser: The problem-solving French horn player of the BBC Proms
...By Beth RoseBBC Access AllLook at the BBC Proms poster this year and you ll spot some classical big-hitters - the conductor Sir Simon Rattle and cello superstar Sheku Kanneh Mason...
Proms to launch with Ukrainian premiere and Lesley Manville
... " Highlights of the 2023 season include Sir Simon Rattle conducting Schumann s Das Paradies und die Peri on 22 August, and Mahler s 9th Symphony on 27 August, in what will be his final appearances with the London Symphony Orchestra...
King's Coronation: Conducting the Westminster Abbey service is a 'daunting job'
... " The conductor and pianist was speaking to the BBC as he unveiled the programme for his final season as musical director of the Royal Opera House, after which he will replace Sir Simon Rattle as chief conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra...
BBC Proms 2023: Self Esteem, Horrible Histories and BBC Singers on line-up
... Self Esteem, who has received Mercury Prize and Brit Award nominations for her forthright, feminist pop anthems, will play in Gateshead on 21 July, launching a weekend of music that will also includes work by Mozart and Brahms, and a CBeebies concert that will Ahead of the launch, it had been reported that several prestigious musicians, including Sir Simon Rattle, were over proposals to cut salaried posts in the BBC s English Orchestras by around 20%...
Queen's legacy creates more diverse Order of Merit
... The new appointments will join current members such as environmentalist Sir David Attenborough, conductor Sir Simon Rattle, parliamentarian Baroness Betty Boothroyd and Egyptian-born heart surgeon Sir Magdi Yacoub...
Felix Klieser: The problem-solving French horn player of the BBC Proms
By Beth RoseBBC Access All
Look at The Bbc Proms poster this year and you'll spot some classical big-hitters - The Conductor Sir Simon Rattle and cello superstar Sheku Kanneh Mason. But look closer still and you'll clock a suave French Horn player…and his toes. Felix Klieser has been described as a virtuoso and has performed all over The World , but born without arms he plays The instrument with his left foot.
" It was a little miracle, " Felix says, that he became a French Horn player at all.
Not because of his limb difference but because when he asked to learn The instrument, aged four, His Family had no idea what he was talking about.
" I'd never been to a concert, I'd never met a horn player and in My Family there was No One Making Music . My parents said: 'Err, what is a French Horn ? " he told The .
His Family did some research and lucked out. In The German city of Göttingen, where Felix grew up " there was one Music School and at The Music School there was one horn teacher".
Felix enrolled and a life-time of Problem Solving began.
Questions rapidly stacked up. How would he play an instrument that requires one hand to support The Horn and The Other to create The Sound ? Without fingers, how would he use The Valves to change The Note ?
At first it wasn't a problem at all. As a child Felix could sit on The floor and reach The Mouthpiece with someone holding The Horn .
As he grew, he worked with a " creative person who can build strange things" to develop a stand which holds The instrument in place.
As for The lack of fingers, Felix realised he could kick his left leg up and angle his foot to use his dexterous toes just as well.
The Position is an impressive sight, even to Felix.
" When I see myself it looks very interesting and very spectacular. But when I play by myself it's a very comfortable position, " he says. " It's something I can do for hours. "
The biggest challenge was not an obvious physical one, it was making The French Horn actually sound like a French Horn .
It consists of a 12ft brass tube, which curls round into an open " bell" where The Sound comes out. Horn players put their right hand in The Bell to create The familiar, haunting, sound you might have heard in popular film music like Jurassic Park .
Without a hand to put in The Bell , Felix realised he would have to create The tone entirely through The Way he Played .
" There was no teacher who could teach you How To play The Horn in this way. It was more trial and error. I've just my lips, I've just my air, " he says.
" You have to control The air in a different way and Take Care of The Position of your lips, of your tongue. This Was maybe The Most challenging thing, I practised a lot. "
This technique sets Felix apart from other players.
He was recognised very early on in his studies as exceptional by any standard, but even those closest to him doubted he would be accepted into The Classical Music world.
LISTEN: You can hear more from Felix on The .
As a teenager, Felix studied at Hanover University of Music, Drama and Media and won a prestigious prize. At The Time , he and his teacher were interviewed for a newspaper.
The Reporter asked Felix if he planned on a professional career.
" My answer was something like: 'Maybe it could be possible, I don't know because I'm still at school''. "
Then his teacher, a famous player, interrupted him. " It's a good hobby For You , but you will never be a professional horn player. Never, never, never. You don't have The Right hand, and The Bell works differently. It will never work'. "
It was a Sliding Doors moment for Felix, who abruptly and unexpectedly learned life offers you two options.
" You have to decide, should I try to show that it is possible or should I give up? These situations happen quite often in My Life , " he says.
Rather than strive to become a professional musician, Felix simply wanted to " play The French Horn as good as possible, " and see how far that would take him.
It has taken him all over The World , to The South Coast of England where he recently completed a two-year residency with The Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and even On Tour with The Singer , Sting.
But he says The biggest lesson he learned goes back to his early years.
" The Most important thing, when I grew up, is to learn to solve problems, " he says.
" I never knew what is possible for me and what is not possible. But when you have a way of thinking, 'Ok, I can solve every problem,' then you have many, many possibilities in your life.
" And this is not A Question of having a disability or not, because in The End all of us has something where he or she thinks 'Ok, there is a limit'. "
Felix faced a serious challenge recently. One that is relatable to all of us - Getting Through The Covid-19 pandemic.
As a professional musician, he went from having a full concert schedule to nothing.
" I stopped practising because it was not necessary anymore, " he says. " Then I bought a PlayStation and did a lot of PlayStation, " using The controller with his toes.
One Day it occurred to him: " Maybe it's a little bit sad for my horn to be in The case and not to be useful anymore? "
He took it out and they became re-acquainted. After All these years together he gave it a name - Alex . He even bought some googly eyes to bring Alex To life.
Then he cast his eyes around and wondered what non-musical activities Alex could get involved with if he wasn't being Played - Cooking was The First to come to mind and to entertain his online followers.
Even now with a full concert schedule Once Again , Alex lives a very fulfilled and varied life for a horn.
It has been a fun way to connect with fans all over The World but some will get to watch Felix play in London when he takes to The Stage at The Royal Albert Hall for his Bbc Proms debut on 2 and 3 August.
He will perform Mozart's Horn Concerto No. 4.
" I'm excited, " he says. " For me The Most important thing is to get to know The Audience here.
" When you're young and start a career then you're looking to play with famous conductors, famous orchestras. But right now I want to play music for people to make The World a little bit more beautiful. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com