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Past
Events
Winter
Bass Workshop 2000
Adelaide July 10th-14th
Marryatville High School
Directed by Peter McLachlan

July
10-14 was the first workshop of its type to educate and encourage
young double bass players from around Australia . It was an outstanding
success with 44 students coming from Perth, Sydney, Brisbane,
Melbourne and Adelaide . Each day students had lessons with visiting
faculty, large group repertoire lessons, a lecture/master class
and an ensemble. For 5 days bass playing skills were stretched
and improved with world class teachers who imparted their musicality
and love of bass playing. Francois Rabbath (France) was the grand
master of the bass who amazed children with his virtuosity, humility
and warmth. George Vance (USA) author of the world's most popular
bass teaching method together with Joan Wright (Perth), Ken Poggioli
(Brisbane) and Peter McLachlan (Adelaide) encouraged students
with their knowledge of repertoire and understanding of technique.
Three
concerts brought the workshop to a close. Thursday evening Francois
Rabbath amazed all with his incredible virtuosity and on Friday
lunchtime the rest of the faculty played in a lunchtime concert.
The finale was on Friday night with all the students and faculty
playing the repertoire and ensembles prepared during the week.
Double
Bass can be a very lonely instrument to learn. Often a student
is the only bass player in their school. The benefits of bringing
44 bass players together was immense. They developed friendships,
peer support and mentors in older and more advanced players.
I
have been in the position of observing the students who attended
from Adelaide and the following are the outcomes I have seen with
this group.
Correct
technique and musicality were reinforced each day with a different
teacher. Such intense instruction coming from a diverse group
of teachers resulted in student understanding that is not normally
possible with one teacher.
For
a child to meet and have lessons with the world's greatest bass
player is an experience he/she will always treasure. Francois
Rabbath over the last 20 years has reinvented bass playing and
has raised the level of performance to new levels. Having been
exposed to an event like this, students have seen what is possible
when playing this instrument.
Some
comments from students, parents, and other teachers were:
"Thank
you sooooooooooo much for the bass week-it was fantastic!!!
I'm really enthusiastic about practicing, which has to be a good
thing." (Pippa , Tasmania)
"I
just wanted to say that I really enjoyed the workshop and can't
wait for the next one!!! I had a great time and learnt a lot about
my playing and enjoyed getting help from lots of different teachers.
I also made some really good friends." (Alex,
Adelaide)
"Sincerest
thanks for an unforgettable week of friendship and bass harmony"
(Parent, Adelaide)
"Peter's
contribution to the bass scene in Australia is inestimable, as
were the benefits to the students and teachers by the talents
of George, Peter, Joan, Francois and Ken. We hope that it may
be repeated one day." (Diana,
Sydney)
Review
- Francois Rabbath Elder Hall Thursday July 13, 2000
Rabbath
breathes life into double bass - by Rodney Smith
RARELY
do you encounter an artist with so extraordinary a level of synergy
in mind, body and instrument as double bass virtuoso Francois
Rabbath.
One
might need to go back as far as harpist Marshall McGuire in the
1996 Adelaide Festival to find such magic. As with McGuire, this
was not playing in a traditional mould. Rabbath's consummate ease,
authority born of maturity and power to hold the attention of
a breathlessly enthusiastic and very full Elder Hall audience
for an hour and 20 minutes without a break, were all placed at
the service of some very unusual music indeed, for the most part
his own.
Every
work was redolent with tonal subtlety of the kind usually reserved
for top cellists, an extended range of pitches and bowings beyond
most violinists, and the widest levels of dynamics from a whisper
to a thunderous fortissimo.
The
language itself was shot through with perfumed romanticism revisiting
Khachaturian, Prokoflev, Faure and Rodriguez alongside some
exotic modalities. And, truth to tell, when we got briefly to
real Bach it was imbued with similar characteristics. One began
to wish that even two consecutive bars in the entire concert might
have an even pulse.
But
such yardsticks are not for Rabbath. He has shown how the double
bass can be warmer, more humane and more fun, added immeasurably
to its stature and given it a voice ranging from pathos to puckishness.
We should be thankful for that.
©2008
BassWorks Australia
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