Every
now and then, just when you thought you had things all
neatly arranged in their proper order, someone comes along
and not only upsets everything you've done, but demands
that you change your entire way of thinking before you
can even begin to put them back together again. François
Rabbath is one of those people.
Born in Aleppo, Syria into a musical family of six boys
and three girls, François discovered the double
bass at the age of thirteen when one of his brothers brought
an instrument home and allowed him to experiment with
it. When the family moved to Beirut, Lebanon he found
an old copy of Edouard Nanny's Contrabass Method in a
tailor shop and with some difficulty, since he read neither
music nor French, began to teach himself. After nine years
of work in Beirut, François saved enough money
to move to Paris for a year. He was eager to go to the
Paris Conservatory, meet with Monsieur Nanny and show
him what he was able to do with the bass. When he applied
at the Conservatory he was disappointed to learn that
Nanny had died in 1947. He was also told that auditions
were to be held in three days and that he would never
have enough time to learn the required pieces. He asked
for the music anyway and returned three days later to
finish first among the applicants. However, his stay at
the Conservatory was a brief one, since it didn't take
very long to see that he was not only far ahead of the
other students but of the professors as well!
While in Paris he began to earn his living as an accompanist
for Jacque Brel, Charles Aznavour, Gilbert Becaud, Michel
Legrand and others. In 1963 he made his first of many
solo record albums. Although never advertised or promoted,
the Phillips album Bass Ball became one of the most sought
after recordings of its time.
From
1964 he became active composing much music for movies
and the theater. At the same time he started to play solo
recitals, first in France, then throughout Europe. His
American debut was in Carnegie Hall in 1975.
François
Rabbath's uniqueness stems from his refusal to accept
any traditional limitations. Whether performing his own
fascinating compositions, the music of others or the classical
repertoire, one is always moved by his profound musicianship
and dazzling virtuosity. You quickly discover that he
brings you such a sense of security that the most difficult
passages sound effortless.
In
1978 Rabbath met the American composer-double bassist
Frank Proto. A close friendship quickly developed when
the two discovered that they had many shared musical experiences
and philosophies. Neither had any respect for the boundaries
that separated classical, jazz and ethnic musicians. Both
were as comfortable playing chamber music at a formal
concert one day and improvising with jazz musicians the
next. In 1980 the Cincinnati Symphony asked Proto to compose
a concerto especially for Rabbath. The resulting Concerto
No. 2 for Double Bass and Orchestra was premiered by Cincinnati
in 1981. Two years later the Houston Symphony asked Proto
to write another work especially for Rabbath. The Fantasy
for Double Bass and Orchestra was premiered in Houston
in 1983. Rabbath has since played the work around the
world. Their third collaboration, the Carmen Fantasy ,
began life as a work for double bass and piano. Rabbath
again premiered the work in Cincinnati in July of 1991
with the composer at the piano. Proto orchestrated the
work in the spring of 1992. All three works have been
recorded and are available on the Compact Disc Frank Proto:
Works for Double Bass and Orchestra. Their most recent
collaboration has been on Proto's Four Scenes after Picasso
- Concerto No. 3 for Double Bass and Orchestra.
We
are fortunate in that Rabbath has recorded constantly
through the years. His sequel to Bass Ball - Multi Bass
'70 is still available, as is Live Around the World, a
collection of his own compositions recorded in concert.
The original Carmen Fantasy for Double Bass and Piano
with the composer at the piano, was recorded recently
along with his own Concerto No. 3 and Two Miniatures -
Carmen!
The
importance of François Rabbath to the development
of double bass playing can be compared with that of Paganini
to the violin. Since the early 1800s when Nicole Paganini
established the violin as a virtuoso instrument, solo
violinists have practiced the most brilliant of instrumental
art. Meanwhile, the development of double bass playing
had been seriously neglected. The great and popular 19th
century composers did not consider the bass worth their
attention and in turn the bass repertoire did not attract
potential virtuoso performers with enough genius to change
the situation. It demanded an artist with the unique qualities
of François Rabbath to break this impasse.
-taken from www.francoisrabbath.com
11/09/2004
François
will be performing 3 concerts (Master Series 2, Fire and
Ice) with the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra in the week
leading up to the National Bass Workshop.
Click
here for Concert Information