|
ARTS/Christoph Eschenbach believes music saved his life, and it could do the same for everyone. Eschenbach: Embrace music, life Less than five minutes into Christoph Eschenbachs Dec. 6 talk at the Annenberg Center there was barely a dry eye in the house. Thats because Eschenbach, the Philadelphia Orchestras maestro, was telling a wrenching story about how the power of music saved a young lifehis own. As he explained to an audience brought together by Penns French Institute, Eschenbach was orphaned (by childbirth and war) as a young boy in 1940s Germany. Taken into a cousins household, the traumatized five-year-old stopped talking altogether. It was the sound of piano music in his new home that finally broke through his grief. When asked if he would like to play the piano, he uttered his first words in almost a year. I said Yes, said Eschenbach. Yes to music and Yes to life. Using the story as a way to explain his own devotion to music, Eschenbach also made it the jumping-off point for an impassioned plea for bringing music into the life of every child. Schools must have arts education, he said, so children can become complete human beings. Mahler, said Eschenbach, is a good entry point to classical music for young people because the composer deals with the expression of emotion in a deep way that appeals to young souls not yet shadowed by the layers of routine life. The conductor also urged his audience not to be put off by scary modern music. Beethovens Ninth Symphony, he noted, was labeled crude and hopelessly vulgar by contemporary critics. Everything new is difficult, said Eschenbach, but we can help each other to open eyes and ears to the new, and the possibilities it brings. After all, he said, there are more talented young composers and performers now than at any other time. And they can help us to save the world from misery. |
||||