Tours with the Amstel Quartet are the times I relax most during my professional flow throughout the year. A lot of my best ideas are born during tours: CD concepts, concert programs and musical ideas for example. The only things I do on tour is playing, driving, eating, sleeping, meditating, emailing, planning the rest of the period and relaxing. At home I run from here to there, trying to keep up with things. Everyone knows I am on tour and that gives me freedom.
The most obvious thing we learn on tour is that we get the chance to develop our musicality in a spontaneous way combined with a singular flow. In the beginning of the tour we rehearse a lot, but after some concerts we get in the - what we call - the tour flow. We have the music down and things start happening spontaneously. We don't know how it happens and we cannot predict it. It's actually quite magical. Back home we all have our own lives and our own flow. We do gigs, teach, manage our careers, but on the road we can forget most of this.
The tour flow works starts when we are already on the road for about a week. We each do our own things during the day and we drive to the venue. We warm up in the hall and relax before the concert starts. We do our thing on stage and don't discuss it so much anymore. We accept whatever comes out (up to a certain extent), grab some dinner and get back to the hotel. During the concerts we are so loose and especially trusting, that a lot happens. Mistakes too, of course. But other things as well. When we worked with one of our favorite musical theater directors, Henk Schut, he told us about the 'fifth man'. When we play, there is another person created. The quartet is not the sum of its parts but a whole new personality. Everything we do is aimed towards that person. In fact, he is the Amstel Quartet. During tours, the fifth man's personality is developed to a different level. And we take him home to the Netherlands. The funny thing is, the fifth man takes decision that maybe none of us would take as a solo musician, or even suggest or approve during a rehearsal. But during the tour flow he doesn't mind us too much, he goes his own way.
Yesterday a student during a masterclass asked us how we keep a quartet together. That was a very good question. Sometimes we don't even know ourselves. I told him there are two main difficulties you have to keep into account:
-How much does each of the members want to play together and what choices is everyone prepared to make? During school it is relatively easy. All the quartet members are into music 100% and prepared to go all the way for it. But after school it is a different story. Each gets his own life. How do you deal with that? We chose to keep living in Amsterdam to be able to find rehearsal time. How much do you want to play together? How do you deal with each other's choices? Those are all things yo need to get straight. Talk about it. And take decisions.
-The other thing is, how do you deal with one another for days in a week, every day in a tour, differences of opinion during rehearsals, about music, planning, choices, etc.? The fifth man of course is very important. But respect, trust and acceptance are also keywords in keeping a quartet together with everyone feeling happy.
This student also asked us why we like to play quartet so much. It is because of the medium itself - it just sounds great, the repertoire freedom - we develop our own personal repertoire, and the simple fact that you have more fun with four than by yourself - also because we share responsibility, musically, careerwhise, etc. For example, if I don't feel 100% during a concert, the other guys will notice this and compensate for me. We cover for each other. It's a great system!
vrijdag 22 oktober 2010
On tour with the Amstel Quartet
Tours with the Amstel Quartet are the times I relax most during my professional flow throughout the year. A lot of my best ideas are born during tours: CD concepts, concert programs and musical ideas for example. The only things I do on tour is playing, driving, eating, sleeping, meditating, emailing, planning the rest of the period and relaxing. At home I run from here to there, trying to keep up with things. Everyone knows I am on tour and that gives me freedom.
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