Atlantica - 01.03.2001, Blaðsíða 17

Atlantica - 01.03.2001, Blaðsíða 17
A T L A N T I C A 15 airmail Which place in Iceland holds your fondest memories? It is impossible for me to think of what is especially important in Iceland. I like to drive here, I like the lakes and the mountains, but I’m not a “fondest memories” type of person. My way of looking at things is much more widespread. The nature and peo- ple, the climate and the atmosphere appeal to me, and I find the people here are very egalitarian. They have lived very hard lives in past centuries, and I believe that builds character. The Icelanders have created a society that is the envy of many soci- eties in the world and I have respect and admiration for them. If you were to select the work of any composers from any era to create a soundtrack that illustrates the Icelandic landscape, which piece/pieces would you choose and why? I don’t think in such terms. Music is not a means of illustrating. It communicates something far more elemental. The kind of music you would be talking about would be a soundtrack for a film, a piece of music that relies on the film to give it meaning. I certainly wouldn’t chose any music from the great composers... and the Icelandic landscape is so grandiose that it is like sound itself. It doesn’t need any music. Why do you believe music is so important in our daily life? Music gives us something for our spirit. It can enrich our inner world and put us on another level. Is that all music? There is a lot of rubbish. The so called “pop” and “rock”. It is ubiquitous. I don’t know if it really has a positive element. It is so often aggressive and superficial. You need a very short attention span for this kind of music. It is so very easily understood, boom boom, slap, slap... not much essential communication. This kind of music is very often aggressive, and aggression is not what we need. Did you listen to Björk’s album, Homogenic, for which she collaborated with some of the Icelandic Symphony’s musicians? How do you feel about these kinds of popu- lar and classical music collaborations? I don’t know Björk. I am not interested in pop music. I might have seen her on the television screen once, but I didn’t stop to listen. I am sorry. I know she is very important to Iceland, but to me she is an unknown quantity. How then do you think classical music can be made more accessible to young people? It is not that difficult. It is a question of education from primary school. It only takes some effort from the beginning to draw young people into something that is essential. You see, what you call “classical” music I call “serious” music. A friend of mine introduced music lessons to 12- and 13-year-old children in Moscow. More than half of those children stayed with the class for one, two, three years, up to graduation. They loved these lessons, beginning with simple music, [and moving on] to what you might call quite difficult music. And they stayed with music all their lives, and never betrayed it. You see, what is involved here is the whole world and all of exis- tence. That’s not the case with “light” music. It’s just one, two, three, gone. Jennifer McCormack is a staff writer ...the Icelandic landscape is so grandiose that it is like sound itself. It doesn’t need any music.“ ”(Vladimir Ashkenazy) 09-15 ATL 2/01 Airmail cmsx 20/2/01 12:47 pm Page 15
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Atlantica

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