Nigel Kennedy performs two NZ concerts
Media Release
6 NOVEMBER 2003
Nigel Kennedy performs two NZ concerts
Nigel Kennedy, Britain’s greatest living violinist, visits New Zealand in December to perform two concerts on Monday 15 December in Wellington, and Tuesday 16 December in Auckland.
For the first time since his worldwide multi-platinum success with Vivaldi’s Four Seasons more than a decade ago (becoming the highest selling classical disc of all time), Nigel Kennedy returns to Vivaldi to perform his new interpretation of the Four Seasons as well as the haunting Concerto in A minor for Two Violins and the late and rarely heard Double Concerto in D.
The concerts, which are sponsored by Mazda in association with the Lion Foundation and EMI, feature Nigel Kennedy accompanied by members of the Auckland Philharmonia, with guest artists Cora Venus Lunny (2nd Violin Soloist), Taro Takeuchi (Baroque Guitar and Lute) and Bogumila Gizbert-Studnicka (Harpsichord).
From “shattering intensity”, “bold and exhilarating” to “a violinist in a million”… critics have always been extravagant in the language they use to describe the effect the playing of virtuoso violinist Nigel Kennedy has on audiences. In the classical field, he has produced best-selling versions of concertos by Elgar, Brahms, Tchaikovsky and Beethoven, and his 1989 recording of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons stimulated the entire British classical market by over 25%. His concerts throughout the world are always sell-outs, and his countless awards and gold discs confirm his status as one of the most important and influential musicians Britain has ever produced.
There have always been two strands, however, to Nigel Kennedy’s playing, personified by his two most important mentors – Yehudi Menuhin (who personally paid the young violinist’s fees throughout his education at the Menuhin School); and Stéphane Grappelli, the legendary French jazz violinist who gifted him with a unique breadth of musical appreciation that he later matured in New York’s Jazz clubs while refining his classical skills at Juilliard under Dorothy DeLay.
Alongside his classical career, Nigel Kennedy has always maintained a keen interest in jazz and popular music, embarking on such ventures as arranging Duke Ellington's Black, Brown and Beige Suite, producing an album inspired by the music of Jimi Hendrix, and releasing a concert based on the work of The Doors. However, unlike other cross-over acts, all Nigel Kennedy’s record-breaking sales and concert achievements have been acquired while performing unabridged classical concertos.
< more…/page 2 Page 2…/Nigel Kennedy
performs two NZ concerts No one understands more than
NIGEL KENNEDY the touch, power and impact of Vivaldi’s music
– experience him performing it live in concert with members
of the Auckland Philharmonia: Monday 15 December – 7.30pm,
Michael Fowler Centre, Wellington Tickets $38-$125. Book at
Ticketek, phone 307 5000. To coincide with the New Zealand
concerts, EMI has released a new Nigel Kennedy recording of
Vivaldi’s Four Seasons with members of the Berlin
Philharmonic. It is a remarkable document, a more mature
reading of this widely popular piece with crisp production
and a harsher sound more akin to the original baroque
setting of this repertoire. Those who have the original disc
will be fascinated to hear his new approach; those new to
Kennedy will appreciate its ever-present musicality,
excitement and intensity. Nigel Kennedy, in concert with
members of the Auckland Philharmonia, is sponsored by Mazda
in association with the Lion Foundation and EMI. ENDS NIGEL
KENNEDY For the past 25 years, Nigel Kennedy has been
acknowledged as one of the world’s leading violin virtuosos
and is, without doubt, one of the most important violinists
Britain has ever produced. His virtuosic technique, unique
talent and popular appeal have brought fresh perspectives to
both the classical and contemporary repertoire. As a
child, Kennedy was Yehudi Menuhin’s most famous protégé,
studying first at the Menuhin School – following Lord
Menuhin’s death, it emerged that the legendary violinist had
personally paid the young Kennedy’s fees throughout his
education at the school – before moving to The Juilliard
School of Music in New York to study under the celebrated
teacher, Dorothy DeLay. During his career, Kennedy has
undertaken major tours throughout Asia, Australia, Canada,
Europe and the United States, performing with the world’s
leading orchestras and conductors, and has made appearances
at the most important festivals in Europe and the US. Major
débuts have included his 1977 London Royal Festival Hall
performance of Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto with the
Philharmonia under Riccardo Muti; his début with the Berlin
Philharmonic in 1980; and his New York orchestral début in
1987. Kennedy has attracted an enormous amount of UK and
international media attention throughout his extraordinary
career. His television appearances have been wide and
varied; his interpretations of both Bruch’s Violin Concerto
and the Vivaldi Four Seasons were the feature of television
specials and he has been the subject of ITV’s This is your
Life. He has given two Royal Command Performances in the UK
– at Birmingham’s NEC for the Prince’s Trust, and at the
London Palladium for the Royal Variety Performance before
Her Majesty the Queen and His Royal Highness The Duke of
Edinburgh. A major EMI artist since the start of his
career, Kennedy’s multi award winning discography is
extensive. He has made two highly acclaimed recordings of
Elgar’s Violin Concerto; the first, with the London
Philharmonic and Vernon Handley, achieved gold disc status,
was voted 1985 Record of the Year by Gramophone magazine and
was awarded Best Classical Album of the Year at the BPI
Awards, selling in excess of 300,000 copies. His recordings
of the Brahms and Beethoven Violin Concertos have each sold
over 100,000 copies and Kennedy’s landmark recording of
Vivaldi’s Four Seasons earned a place in the Guinness Book
of Records as the best selling classical work of all time.
Over two million copies have been sold and the album
remained top of the UK classical charts for an amazing six
months. Other major recordings include the Tchaikovsky
Violin Concerto with the London Philharmonic; the Bartók
Solo Sonata together with Mainly Black, Kennedy’s own
arrangement of Ellington’s Black Brown and Beige Suite; the
Sibelius Violin Concerto with the City of Birmingham
Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Simon Rattle; Walton’s
Violin Concerto with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and
André Previn; and the Bruch and Mendelssohn Concertos with
the English Chamber Orchestra conducted by Jeffrey Tate. EMI
has also released an acclaimed disc of Kennedy’s own
compositions, Kafka. Kennedy’s recording of the Brahms
Violin Concerto with the London Philharmonic, under the
direction of Klaus Tennstedt, was released in March 1991,
and in June 1992 Kennedy joined forces with the
NDR-Sinfonieorchester and Klaus Tennstedt to record the
Beethoven Violin Concerto. Also in Kennedy’s catalogue are
chamber works by Debussy and Ravel, and Berg’s Violin
Concerto. Kennedy launched Always Playing, a popular book
about part of his life – the violinist is loathe to call it
a biography – at the Edinburgh Book Fair in August 1991. It
was published in paperback the following year. In 1992,
Kennedy took the controversial and highly publicised
decision to withdraw completely from public performance.
During this period EMI issued A Portrait of Nigel
Kennedy. Following a five year sabbatical, in April 1997
Kennedy made a triumphant return to the international
concert platform. Even though the performance took place
during the run-up to the British general election, news of
Kennedy’s reappearance occupied the front pages of national
newspapers. The Times critic declared, "Only one British
violinist in my lifetime has produced anything as bold and
exhilarating as that. It is his playing, though, that most
reveals Kennedy’s new maturity. No other violinist on earth
could manage the astonishing stylistic transition
presented." The Daily Telegraph stated, "Here was a reminder
that Kennedy is a violinist in a million." Since then,
Kennedy has been in constant demand on the international
circuit, touring major venues in countries throughout the
world, including Australia, Austria, Canada, Denmark,
Germany, Ireland, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, Poland,
Spain, Switzerland and the UK. In 1998 he made a highly
acclaimed North American tour, his first for over five years
and, since then, he has returned to the US many times. On
his return to the studio, Kennedy re-recorded the Elgar
Violin Concerto, alongside Vaughan Williams’ The Lark
Ascending, with Sir Simon Rattle and the City of Birmingham
Symphony Orchestra. The Daily Telegraph reviewer commented,
"The unaccompanied cadenza in the finale has a greater
spine-tingling eeriness than I have ever experienced before
and the closing bars unleash a quite shattering intensity."
In 1998 Kennedy devoted a recital disc to the works of the
great violinist and composer, Fritz Kreisler. He has also
produced and released The Kennedy Experience, works based on
and inspired by the music of the legendary Jimi Hendrix. In
1999 Kennedy joined forces with one of the world’s leading
cellists, Lynn Harrell, to produce a critically acclaimed
disc of chamber works by Bach, Ravel and Kodaly; later that
year EMI released Classic Kennedy, a collection of short
pieces with the English Chamber Orchestra, which shot
straight to No.1 in the UK classical charts. The following
year Kennedy released a concerto based on the work of rock
band, The Doors. 2000 saw the release of Kennedy’s first
recording of works by Bach, a programme featuring four of
the composer’s best known works: the Concerto for Two
Violins in D Minor, the Concerto for Oboe and Violin in D
Minor and the A Minor and E Major Violin Concertos. Directed
by the violinist himself, it also represents the first
recording collaboration between Kennedy and one of the
world’s oldest and most revered orchestras, the Berlin
Philharmonic. During the 2000/2001 season, Kennedy gave
major international concerts with the Berlin
Philharmonic. In 2000 Kennedy was presented with an award
for Outstanding Contribution to British Music at the UK Brit
Awards, which took place at London’s Royal Albert Hall; the
following year the same body awarded Kennedy the coveted
Male Artist of the Year – the violinist headlined the
televised awards ceremony with a performance of Bach with
the Berlin Philharmonic and stunned the audience with an
exhilarating interpretation of the Monte Czardas with Kroke,
a trio of Polish musicians based in Krakow. 2002
engagements included further concerts with the Berlin
Philharmonic performing Vivaldi Concertos, and concerts with
Kroke. 2002 also marked the 25th anniversary of Kennedy’s
London début – a number of celebratory performances marked
the occasion including a Greatest Hits tour with the Polish
Chamber Orchestra in the autumn; also to celebrate his 25th
anniversary EMI released Kennedy’s Greatest Hits. In
September 2002 Kennedy was appointed Artist Director of the
Polish Chamber Orchestra, a role Kennedy’s teacher and
mentor, the late Lord Menuhin, once held. EMI releases for
2003 include an album of works influenced by Klezmer, Arabic
and Gypsy music, with the trio, Kroke, and Kennedy’s eagerly
anticipated re-recording of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons with the
Berlin Philharmonic. Kennedy is passionate about football
and has long been a devotee of Aston Villa, attending as
many matches as his schedule allows. He recently married his
long-time partner, Agnieska; he has one son, Sark, and
divides his time between homes in Krakow, London and
Malvern. Nigel Kennedy’s Violins "The Cathedrale", the
Stradivarius Nigel used to play, was not his, but
fortunately, by the time he really wanted a violin of his
own, somewhere in the States another violin popped
up… "The American fiddle proved to be a Guarneri. These
violins are not as much publicised, but even more exciting.
Giuseppe Guarneri del Gesu was a contemporary of Stradivari
and created his beautiful pieces in Cremona, Italy. The
choice between these two distinguished maker is a matter of
personal taste but most of the players I admire have found
it necessary to move on to a Guarneri: Heifetz, Stern,
Kreisler and Zukermann all belong to the Guarneri club. This
particular example, the Lafont, was called after its first
owner in 1736 and was considered good enough to take on
Paganini in a playing contest, which Lafont lost but which
caused Paganini to claim that the Lafont’s sound quality was
superior to his own. In 1880 it came into the hands of Adolf
Brodsky, and has the distinction of being used by Brodsky on
4 December 1881 to premiere Tchaikovsky’s great violin
concerto. This particular violin was apparantly fabulous
and, somehow, pressure was brought to bear and it was flown
to my Oslo concert in 1990. It was everything they had said
and more - the tone qualities were astonishing and it
sounded far more sophisticated. It was even a slimmer
instrument than the Strad, and felt more comfortable. The
trouble was that it was even more than the Strad! Grief on
grief: having heard just how much better the Guarneri
sounded, the Cathedrale was never going to feel more than
second best. In a fast-moving chain of events literally
unimaginable a year before, I bought the Strad and
immediately traded it towards the Guarneri. It was a supreme
moment for me: since I was five years old I had been playing
violin, I had struggled and achieved most of the
conventional highpoints, and yet it took until that moment
to be able to curl my fingers around the neck of a
top-quality fiddle and call it mine." (From Always
Playing, a book about part of Nigel Kennedy’s life) The
story of the Lafont Guarneri “del Gesu” It subsequently passed
to a Paris violin repairer and maker called Thibout and was
sold to a London-based dealer called Davis. He sold it to a
well-known collector called James Goding, a brewer by trade,
who died in 1857 and whose collection was auctioned by
Christie’s. The violin returned to France as it was
acquired by the most famous French violin restorer-maker of
the 19th century, namely J.B. Vuillaume. The original
certificate, dated 29 November 1857, still exists. In it he
states that he has sold the violin to Jean de Kousminski, a
Russian amateur violinist from Kiev. The Vuillaume
certificate is interesting because it refers back to Lafont,
saying that this violin was his favourite and the one that
he habitually used for public performances. Kousminski
kept the violin for many years and eventually sold it to
Adolf Brodsky in 1880-81. This great Russian violinist gave
the first performance of the Tchaikovsky Concerto, almost
certainly on the Lafont Guarneri, on 4 December 1881 in
Vienna under the baton of Hans Richter. Brodsky
subsequently settled in England and was doubly famous as the
founder of the Brodsky Quartet and as the leader and
occasional conductor of the Hallé Orchestra. After
Brodsky’s death, the violin passed out of sight until 1991
when, in the quest for a suitable replacement for Nigel’s
“Cathedrale Strad”, it was discovered for sale with the
Chicago firm of Bein and Fushi. The rest is history, as they
say. Nigel played the violin for the first time in Oslo, and
it was love at first sight. The violin is in excellent
condition with glorious golden yellow varnish. The pine of
the upper table (top) has two very distinctive parallel sap
marks running the full length of the instrument. There are
several other great Guarneris that were made of the same
tree. The back is a two-piece one of maple with a broad
strong grain. Altogether it is a great looking and sounding
instrument. Vivaldi – Nigel Kennedy and
members of the Berliner Philharmoniker East Meets East – Nigel
Kennedy and the Kroke Band Greatest Hits Nigel Kennedy Greatest Hits Duos For Violin
& Cello Classic Kennedy The Kennedy
Experience Kreizler Edward
Elgar – Violin Concerto in B minor Op. 61 Kafka Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D major, Op.
35 Ludwig van Beethoven: Violin
Concerto Sibelius: Violinkonzert Johannes Brahms – Violin Concerto in D Op.
77 Antonio Vivaldi – The Four
Seasons Sibelius Violin Concerto / Symphony No.
5 Bruch: Violin Concerto No.1
in G minor. Op. 26 Let
Loose William Walton Viola Concerto /
Violin Concerto Bartók: Sonata for Solo
Violin Tchaikovsky –
Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35 Elgar
Violin Concerto in B minor, Op. 61 Salut d’Amour and other Elgar
Favourites Nigel Kennedy Plays
Jazz
Tuesday 16 December –
7.30pm, Aotea Centre, Auckland
The
Auckland Philharmonia receives major funding from Creative
NZ and a major grant from Auckland City.
Joseph Guarneri,
known as “del Gesu” to distinguish him from his father, also
called Joseph, made the violin in 1736. The early history of
the instrument is unknown, but it came into the possession
of the great French violinist Charles Philippe Lafont, whose
name it carries, some time during the early 19th century.
Lafont died in 1830, so he would have owned it when both
Beethoven and Schubert were alive.
Discography
Released: October
2003
EMI 5576472 Compact Disc
Released: June 10th 2003
EMI 5575112 Compact Disc
Released:
2002
2 Compact Disc – EMI – 5573992
1 Compact Disc –
EMI – 5573302
Johann Sebastian
Bach
Released: 2000
EMI 5570162
Nigel Kennedy,
Violin
Daniel Strabrawa, Violin
Albrecht Mayer,
Oboe
Berliner Philharmoniker
Released:
2000
Composer: The Doors
Arrangement : Jaz
Coleman
Conductor: Peter Scholes
Orchestra: Prague
Symphony Orchestra
Label: Decca 4673502
Released: 2000
Ravel / Handel / Bach /
Kodály
Nigel Kennedy ,Violin
Lynn Harrell,
Cello
Released: 1999
English Chamber
Orchestra
EMI CDC5568902
Inspired by the music of Jimi
Hendrix
Released: 1999
Sony
Kennedy –
Violin
Emma Black – Cello
Doug Boyle - Guitar and
Dobro
John Etheridge – Guitar
Dave Heath –
Flute
Rory McFarloane – Bass
Kate St. John –
Oboe
Gerri Sutyak – Cello
Produced by Nigel Kennedy
1999
Released: 1998
EMI
Ralph Vaughan
Williams – The Lark Ascending
Released:
1997
EMI
Sir Simon Rattle – City of Birmingham
Symphony Orchestra
Released:
1996
EMI
Produced by Nigel Kennedy & David
Bottrill
Tchaikovsky – Variations on a Rococo Theme,
Op.33
Released: 1993
EMI
London Philharmonic
Orchestra – Okko Kamu
Northern Symphony Orchestra – Yan
Pascal Tortelier
J.S. Bach: Preludio from Partita No. 3
J.S.
Bach: Allegro Assai from Sonata No. 3
Released:
1992
EMI
Klaus Tennstedt - Sinfonie-Orchester des
NDR
Tchaikovsky:
Violinkonzert
Released: 1992
EMI
(Sibelius) City of
Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Sir Simon
Rattle
(Tchaikovsky) London Philharmonic Orchestra, Okko
Kamu
Released: 1991
EMI
Klaus Tennstedt – The London
Philharmonic
Released: 1989
EMI
Nigel Kennedy – English
Chamber Orchestra
Released: 1988
EMI
Simon Rattle – City of
Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
Schubert: Rondo in A for violin and
strings
Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto in E minor, Op.
64
Released: 1988
EMI
English Chamber
Orchestra
Conducted by Jeffrey Tate
Released: 1987
EMI
Co-produced by Nigel
Kennedy and Nick Robbins; Engineered by Nick Robbins
Drum
programmes by Dave Heath
All arrangements by Nigel
Kennedy and Dave Heath except “Drive” arranged by Dominic
Miller and Nigel Kennedy
Released: 1987
EMI
André Previn –
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Duke Ellington: Mainly Black
Released:
1986
EMI
Alec Dankworth, double bass
Chausson – Poème for
Violin and Orchestra
Released: 1986
EMI
London
Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by Okko Kamu
Released:
1984
EMI
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Conducted by
Vernon Handley
Released: 1984
Chandos
Peter Pettinger,
Piano
Steven Isserlis, Cello
Released: 1984
Chandos
Peter Pettinger,
Piano