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  • 5 mesi fa
Da Tashkent alla Carnegie Hall: il percorso musicale di Behzod Abduraimov

Il pianista uzbeko Behzod Abduraimov descrive il suo viaggio musicale, dagli umili inizi a Tashkent alle esibizioni in luoghi storici di tutto il mondo.

In collaborazione con Agency of Information and Mass Communications of Uzbekistan

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI : http://it.euronews.com/2025/08/05/da-tashkent-alla-carnegie-hall-il-percorso-musicale-di-behzod-abduraimov

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00:00My mother is a piano teacher and she was the one who started teaching me all the basics in music
00:10and also playing recordings for me. I guess I had an inspiration from that age because of my mother.
00:22I was very lucky because I had my mother at first as a first teacher, then Tamara Popovich,
00:30she was very famous for working with kids, with talented kids and giving them a foundation,
00:38technical foundation and general understanding of music.
00:43And after that, at the age of 16, I moved to Kansas City, the United States, to study with another compatriot of mine,
00:54Stanislav Yudenich, who comes also from Tashkent. So I've studied with him and that was a different kind of work.
01:03It was about refining your technique, understanding styles and different composers and the language of music.
01:13Being on stage, I feel a responsibility because we as musicians, performing musicians,
01:30we serve as a bridge, let's say, between the composer and the audience.
01:37So we are spending many, many hours learning the score and also understanding the score and
01:48trying to interpret and transfer the composer's intentions to the audience.
01:55Of course, it's not like you just copy whatever is written and then play like a robot,
02:01but you have to put your feelings, emotions.
02:07Any audience member who comes to the concert, even if they are not familiar with classical music,
02:12if they feel something, if I could awake some emotions in them, it's a success.
02:19One of the challenging things is simply is you are never home.
02:29You have to travel, you have to fly, check in, check out and long flights,
02:33but you get used to it and changing time zones and feeling constantly jet lagged.
02:40Classical music is something that will always be with us. It's something that human beings
02:52came up with something the most beautiful because it doesn't depend on any politics or anything else.
02:59It's just pure. It's a very proud moment for humankind, I think, not just the nation.
03:05So, I always loved music from my experience from as a child. Yes, there were some moments
03:12where I didn't want to practice, to be honest, sure. But I always loved music. I always thrived to be
03:23a professional musician, play around the world in all these great concert halls. I was dreaming,
03:30let's say, about playing at the Paris Philharmonies, Sydney Opera House, Carnegie Hall in New York City or
03:37Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. So, it all came true.
03:44As a kid, I was always excited, you know, around New Year's time. One of my favorite movies
03:53was Home Alone. There's a moment in the second part, Home Alone 2 in New York City,
04:02he meets this woman and then she takes him, little Kevin, she takes him to some concert hall,
04:10a very beautiful concert hall, and then they listen to music, to a symphonic orchestra.
04:15And I always wondered, as a kid, I was wondering, what is this concert hall? So beautiful, so amazing.
04:24And it became a dream. One day, I would like to perform on that stage.
04:29So, I was, what, 24 years old, and I'm on stage of Carnegie Hall, and then it came to my mind,
04:40this was the Carnegie Hall. In New York City, the most famous concert hall in the world. So,
04:46So, that dream, while I was seven years old, came true.
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