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Johan Sibelius was at a famous musical academy when he came into possesion of some calling-cards formerly belonging to a dead relative named Jean Sibelius. The name appealed to him and he gave himself that nickname. Almost the entire world thought Jean was his christened name and it stuck. The new Jean Sibelius finished his studies at the academy in 1889. He set out for Berlin, Germany to study with theorist Albert Becker. He was able to hear his new B major quartet before he left for home. Sibelius experienced the rare mental phenomenon called Synesthesia, a state of sensorial interconnections in which he "saw" sounds and "heard" sights (water might be the call of a bird, and violin music could be the color of the sky on a summer evening). Later in life, Sibelius met a biographer, Karl Ekman, who was doing a book about him. After Mr. Ekman interviewed Sibelius, he commented to reporters,"Our conversation darted about like a hare in the undergrowth. Before we knew where we were, Sibelius was juggling colors and sounds like glass balls, making colors resound and sounds glow, so that A major became blue and C major red, F major green and D major yellow..."
He sent a dispirited letter to his instructor, who immediately suggested that Sibelius go to see Hans Richter, a celebrated orchestrator in Germany. He was greeted like an old friend and referred to Karl Goldmark, who had not taught a student for some years, as well as Mr. Buchs, a more conventional man.
Jean Sibelius' 50th birthday was celebrated as a national holiday in Finland during the war years in the 1900's. He died in 1957, having lived to be ninety-two years old, but his spirit lives on in the hearts of those who love freedom and music.
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Written by
Berit from St. Paul
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The Jean Sibelius Web Pages
A deep site with comments and facts about Sibelius' music style.
Jean Sibelius: A Reminiscence
written by conductor Eugene Ormandy |
Last changed using MY HERO by Berit from St. Paul on: 6/4/2004 12:20:03 PM