When the Berlin Academy of the Arts asked if I would agree to
participate in a recital along with Josef Tal and learn his two works
for viola and piano under his guidance, I was thrilled. At the Berlin
University of the Arts I knowingly and willingly place myself in the
tradition of the most influential musicians of the 1920s: for me as a
violist, Paul Hindemith, Tal’s teacher, is always present as one of our
greatest composition teachers. In 1995 we organized a large-scale
international Hindemith Festival, during which almost all of Hindemith’s
compositions featuring the viola were performed.
This made me want to become better acquainted with works by
Hindemith’s pupils and his entourage. Tal was one of Hindemith’s most
well-known students, and one of those who most consistently took the
master’s ideas a step further. He also became a committed, fascinating
trailblazer in the field of electronic music (in which Hindemith had
already started experimenting in the late 1920s at the Hochschule für
Musik in Berlin, the forerunner of our University of the Arts). Josef
Tal initiated the Centre for Electronic Music in Israel in 1961 at the
Hebrew University in Jerusalem; at that time, he was one of the
country’s leading, most well-known composers.
I met Josef Tal when he was 94 years old. Our encounter was like a
journey into an unsettling past, marked by a great number of hardships
and upheavals he had personally endured. It also offered a revealing
glimpse into the outlook of composers in Israel, as well as previously
in Germany – even into compositional approaches from many eras he did
not live through himself.
Throughout our collaboration, Josef Tal proved to be a great thinker:
not just an analyst, but also an interpreter who consistently sought to
bring out the emotional aspect in music. He ascribed a decisive role to
that which lies “between the notes”. I like to call such an approach
Durchhören, i.e. “hearing through the music”. It can open many marvelous
avenues for the performer, particularly in music which does not seem
emotional or Romantic at first glance. (Hartmut Rohde)
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