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SEEN
AND HEARD ARTICLE
Karim’s
Journey :
Anne Ozorio previews Christopher Nupen’s new film (AO)
Christopher Nupen’s classic films about music and musicians are
being shown in a retrospective on BBC4 TV during this summer. To
start the season, there’ll be a special screening and recital at
the Barbican Theatre in London on 1st May 2008, of the
very latest film, Karim’s Journey. Who is Karim, one might
ask ? What journey ? Why is this complete unknown included as
part of a series which features great artists like Jacqueline du
Pré, Barenboim, Zuckerman and so on ?

Karim Said - Picture © Allegro Films
But as Nupen says, when the earlier films were made, Du Pré,
Barenboim, Zuckerman and their group were unknown themselves:
they were very young then, and the time was long before they
became the legends they are now. When the cameras were rolling,
no-one could have predicted that Jackie’s career would end far too
soon, or that Barenboim’s many achievements would include founding
the West-Östlichen Divan Orchestra.
The West-East Divan Foundation holds workshops each summer where
young musicians from different backgrounds come together for the
joy of making music. After one concert, Daniel Barenboim walked
up to the piano and said, “”Ladies and Gentlemen, I have a
surprise for you. You are going to hear someone who has not
appeared so far.” And in walked a diminutive boy. “This is Karim”,
said Barenboim, “You heard him last year when he was 10 and now
he’s 11”. And Karim started to play Mendelssohn’s Rondo
capriccioso. “I was so touched”, says Nupen. “I thought, how
is it possible for a boy this age to create so much music out of a
few slow chords ?”. Nupen had started filming Pinchas Zuckerman
when Zuckerman was only 19, but good musicians start very early.
Following Karim’s development might be interesting, whatever he
might do in his career. So Nupen suggested gradually filming his
progress over time. “Oh! I’d like that!” piped the youngster.
His parents were more protective. “Television”, said his mother
“does too much harm. We don’t want that for our son”. So the film
deliberately does not attempt to present Karim as anything other
than what he is now, a young person starting out on a journey
through life, wherever it may lead.
“Whatever he will do in the future”, says Karim’s mother at the
end of the film, “I hope he will have a fulfilled life. Even if he
does become famous, I hope he will remain modest”. Too much
pressure can certainly harm. At music school, Jacqueline du Pré
was so unhappy that she stopped playing for a while and what makes
Karim’s Journey so interesting is that it shows how modern,
nurturing approaches can work. When he was five, Karim’s piano
teacher, who’d trained in Moscow, recognised his natural ability
and put him on a more demanding course, but he took to it well.
His parents encouraged him to participate in the West-East Divan
foundation programme which encourages education “through” music
as well as “of” music. Barenboim’s commitment to helping young
musicians reflects the support his own parents gave him when he
was a boy. Because the best opportunities were in Europe, they
moved with him, and were there when he was introduced to circles
like those around Furtwängler and Markevitch.
Karim was also fortunate to attend the Purcell School in Britain.
He was so happy there that his father noted that he was “homesick
for school” when he went home for holidays. The Purcell School
has a “glorious atmosphere”, says Nupen. Students are encouraged
to develop themselves in an environment where they work together
outside the formal curriculum. Karim started his own afternoon
sessions playing with a few friends, and soon so many wanted to
join in that they called themselves the “Beethoven Orchestra”.
Although most of the students were older than Karim, they found
his enthusiasm infectious. When Nupen asked one of them what it
was like to work with Karim, the student said “He’s so VERY funny
!”
No-one knows what the future will hold for Karim Said, but he’s
developing a personality which will stand him in good stead
whatever he may choose to do. Nupen has observed him grow up and
says he has “astonishing maturity for his age but without a hint
of precocity”. That’s quite unusual. He comes over as a well
balanced, level-headed person who loves making music – playing,
conducting, composing. Nupen’s film simply shows Karim as he is
at this point in his life. It documents what it’s like to grow up
in an environment where creativity is encouraged along with a
healthy approach to life. Perhaps when and if he does become
famous, he will, as his mother hopes, remain “modest” and firmly
rooted in values that really count.
The film “Karim’s Journey” will be screened at the Barbican
Theatre on 1st May, 2008 at 7.30. Please see the
Barbican web site for details.
The BBC will be showing a series of films by Christopher Nupen on
BBC Four over the summer. When the original TV programmes were
broadcast, audiences went up dramatically each week, proving that
there was an untapped new audience for classical music, for whom
film enhanced the experience of listening.
Anne Ozorio
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