От Ташкента до Карнеги-холла: музыкальное путешествие Бехзода Абдураимова
Узбекский пианист Бехзод Абдураимов рассказывает о своём музыкальном пути — от скромных начинаний в Ташкенте до выступлений на знаменитых концертных площадках по всему миру.
Совместно с Agency of Information and Mass Communications of Uzbekistan
ЧИТАТЬ ДАЛЕЕ : http://ru.euronews.com/2025/08/05/ot-tashkenta-do-karnegi-holla-muzykalnoe-puteshestvie-behzoda-abduraimova
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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 and also playing recordings for me. I guess I had an inspiration from that age because of my mother.
00:18I was very lucky because I had my mother at first as a first teacher, then Tamara Popovich. She was very famous for working with kids, with talented kids, and giving them a foundation, technical foundation, and a general understanding of music.
00:43And after that, at the age of 16, I moved to Kansas City, to the United States, to study with another compatriot of mine, Stanislav Yudenich, who comes also from Tashkent.
00:58So I've studied with him, and that was a different kind of work. It was about refining your technique, understanding the styles, and different composers, and the language of music.
01:13Being on stage, I feel a responsibility. Because we, as musicians, performing musicians, we 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 trying 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, but 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, if 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. You 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 came up with, something the most beautiful, because it doesn't depend on any politics or anything else.
02:58It's just pure. It's a very proud moment for humankind, I think, not just a nation.
03:05So, I always loved music, from my experience, as a child. Yes, there were some moments where I didn't want to practice, to be honest, sure.
03:15But I always loved music. I always tried to be a professional musician, play around the world, in all these great concert halls.
03:28I was dreaming, let's say, about playing at the Paris Philharmonies, Sydney Opera House, Carnegie Hall in New York City, or Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles.
03:38So, it all came true. As a kid, I was always excited, you know, around New Year's time.
03:51One of my favorite movies was Home Alone. There is a moment in the second part, Home Alone 2, in New York City,
04:01he meets this woman, and then she takes him, little Kevin, she takes him to some concert hall, a very beautiful concert hall,
04:11and then they listen to music, to a symphonic orchestra. And I always wondered, as a kid, I was wondering,
04:18what is this concert hall? So beautiful, so amazing. And 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, this was the Carnegie Hall.
04:42In New York City, the most famous concert hall in the world. So, that dream, while I was seven years old, came true.
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