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ISTANBUL: Istanbul hosts young talent Sergio Tiempo and Zurich Chamb

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  • ISTANBUL: Istanbul hosts young talent Sergio Tiempo and Zurich Chamb

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 15 2012

    Ä°stanbul hosts young talent Sergio Tiempo and Zurich Chamber Orchestra


    He's quite young but already considered one of the most significant
    talents of his time. Touching the ivories of the piano when he was
    barely more than a baby, he later shared the stage with the masters of
    classical music.

    Sergio Tiempo, a pianist of Argentinean and Venezuelan origin, will
    come to Ä°stanbul for a concert with an international team along with
    him. The Zurich Chamber Orchestra, founded after World War II, will
    accompany Tiempo on April 19 at Ä°Å? Sanat Concert Hall. Armenian
    conductor Ruben Gazarian will conduct the orchestra, which will
    perform pieces by Chopin, Mozart and DvoÅ'ák.

    `My mother, Lyl Tiempo, is a remarkable piano teacher who devoted her
    life to teaching children with her own wonderful method,' says Tiempo,
    who started playing the piano at the age of 2, in an interview with
    Today's Zaman. `Therefore the house was always filled with children
    playing the piano. I suppose I didn't want to feel left out, so I
    asked my Mom to teach me as well and since I was so motivated she
    conceded in spite of my age. I'm sure it must have been a lot of work
    for her.'

    `My sister, Karin Lechner, who is seven years older than me, started
    making a professional career as a pianist before me,' says Tiempo, who
    started his professional career at quite an early age. `I would say
    that my professional career officially started when I was 14 years old
    and I played in a recital series at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw.
    However, I had already been playing sporadically.'

    For Tiempo, his entire music career has been a process of learning and
    evolution. `The crucial points in my career were marked by musical
    encounters which transformed me as a musician rather than particular
    career-making events,' he says. `So I would have to say that my
    encounter with Martha Argerich, of course, was one of the most
    fundamental, and later my musical connection with Mischa Maisky, and
    my collaboration with Christoph Eschenbach, Gustavo Dudamel and
    Claudio Abbado, my very few but very moving encounters with Nelson
    Freire, just to mention a small handful. Each one of these events
    marked a turning point in my musical development as well as in my
    career.' Tiempo particularly qualifies his encounter with Argerich,
    one of the most prominent pianists today, as `one of the greatest
    gifts' in his life. `She continues to teach me without knowing it,' he
    says. `She is such an enormous source of inspiration that she doesn't
    even have to be there for her to continue teaching. It would take me
    days to explain what it was like and what I was able to take with me.
    But just imagine what it would be like if you admired Superman all
    your life and one day he came to teach you how to fly.'

    Seeing the colors

    `There are too many elements involved to describe in a few words one's
    way of relating to music, since it is as vast as one's relation to
    life itself,' says Tiempo, trying to define his own approach to music.
    `But if there is one characteristic that I would underscore it would
    be the fact that I always try to play any piece of music as if it was
    the first time that I had ever heard it, as if I was writing it
    myself.'

    This is how Tiempo defines himself. Gramophone magazine describes
    Tiempo as `a colourist in love with the infinite variety a piano can
    produce.' `I just see the colors that I imagine in my mind,' says
    Tiempo `and I do everything I can to bring them to life through the
    piano. It's not always easy but if you don't let yourself see them in
    the first place then it is simply impossible.'

    For Tiempo, it is too early to decide whether today's musicians are as
    creative as the great masters of classical music like Beethoven,
    Mozart and Chopin. `Most of these great composers weren't considered
    that great until later, and often until after their own deaths,' notes
    Tiempo. `There is so much music being written everywhere that only
    time and luck can filter the true masterpieces from lesser ones. Also,
    it is infinitely more difficult to compose at a time when so much has
    already been done! When a masterpiece is created, it is often
    something which breaks with what has been done before then and which
    speaks to the future, so by definition we are not ready for it yet.'

    Tiempo's personal music preferences vary in a wide range of genres. `I
    love jazz and Brazilian music,' he says. `I also love tango. But I
    also enjoy pop, rock, rap, soul, salsa, meringue and so on. I have no
    limitations in taste as long as it's authentically and beautifully
    done.'

    Despite coming to Turkey for the first time, Tiempo is already
    familiar with Turkish musicians. `I love Fazıl Say. He is a wonderful
    artist and a very warm and charming person,' he says. `I am so excited
    to go to Turkey. This will be my first time ever in this wonderful
    country. I'm just really happy to be going there soon.'

    It seems that Tiempo will be very busy in the near future. `I have
    many exciting projects waiting for me,' he says. `Among them, I will
    be playing a Ginastera Concerto in Los Angeles with Gustavo [Dudamel]
    and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Also, I'm expecting a new CD to come
    out in September with tango music that I recorded with my sister, and
    another recording project involving Chopin's `Ã?tudes' for next year.
    Several tours are lined up for me in South America, Asia and Europe.'




    From: A. Papazian
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