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BBC Reith Lecturer 2006 - Daniel Barenboim

Published by Alex | Filed under Music Related



BBC Reith Lecturer 2006 - Daniel Barenboim
Audio | MP3 | ca 54 Mb | 128 kbps | ca 59 min | English
Date: 26-09-2007



Thirteen-year-old Daniel Barenboim playing Chopin in London in 1956. He’d given his first concert in Buenos Aires at the age of seven, and at the age of eleven he’d been declared a phenomenon by the legendary conductor Wilhelm Fürtwangler. His life has been and continues to be saturated with music. A virtuoso at the piano, he later became a supreme master of the podium. Currently he’s Music Director of both the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the Berlin State Opera. In these lectures he’ll be drawing on a lifetime of musical experience to demonstrate that music, as he puts it, is a
way to make sense of the world - our politics, our history, our future, and our very essence. Daniel Barenboim doesn’t shy from controversy. He’s shown himself willing to take courageous public stands. Six years ago he founded, against the odds, an orchestra made up of equal numbers of Arab and Israeli young members, the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, not least to demonstrate that it’s possible through music for people from warring factions to find peaceful co-existence.



Here one would find more information to the lectures - and one could listen to the whole lecture online







Music is a powerful way of building bridges between different cultures, religions and civilizations
(William Dalrymple)



No more Mirrors, please! Thank you



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