Kevin John Edusei
(Copyright Marco Borggreve)
Rhinegold Publishing
Sergio A. Mims writes:
Here is a Rhinegold Publishing interview with conductor Kevin John Edusei.
Toby Deller
4th September 2017
After stints as a percussionist and sound engineer, taking up the baton has led Kevin John Edusei from success to success. He tells Toby Deller about his musical background, and how collaborating with the Chineke! Orchestra challenged his ideas about diversity in classical music
4th September 2017
After stints as a percussionist and sound engineer, taking up the baton has led Kevin John Edusei from success to success. He tells Toby Deller about his musical background, and how collaborating with the Chineke! Orchestra challenged his ideas about diversity in classical music
‘I started out as a classical percussionist and sound engineer
and producer for classical music,’ says German conductor Kevin John
Edusei, ‘and then swapped sides, so to speak: from behind the mixing
desk and the back of the orchestra, I went to the front of the orchestra
and the podium.’
Although it is rather unusual for a conductor to have a training in
sound engineering, Edusei’s early musical upbringing followed an
otherwise typical path for someone born in a small German city
(Bielefeld, located in the north west between Hanover and Dortmund). ‘I
started out with the piano then later, in my Sturm und Drang phase,
switched to classical percussion. I then became a junior student at the
music academy of Detmold, where there’s a famous Tonmeister course.’
Edusei went on to study sound engineering at senior music college
alongside his eventual specialism, conducting (and percussion). ‘Working
with scores, really understanding how orchestral scores work: certainly
there’s a lot of overlap between those two fields.’ Within four years
of leaving the University of the Arts in Berlin and the Royal
Conservatory of the Hague, he won the Dimitris Mitropoulos conducting
competition. His first chief conductorship appointment came in 2013, at
the Munich Symphony Orchestra, followed by a second at the Konzert
Theater Bern a year later.
Meanwhile, among his various guest invitations came an approach from
Chi-chi Nwanoku to come to the UK to work with Chineke! Orchestra in
2016. The collaboration resulted in the orchestra’s first CD release
earlier this year and resumes at the Proms for the orchestra’s debut
there on 30 August. Having heard about the all-BAME orchestra through
social media at the time of its first concert, he had immediately wanted
to be involved in some way. ‘When the phone call came from Chi-chi one
year later, I was totally surprised and happy and glad that they had
found me.’
At the same time, he admits to a certain wariness too. ‘In my career
and in my life, skin colour, of course it was an important issue, but my
career wasn’t based on being different or being an exception. My career
was based and is still based on my love of music and my personal,
individual skills as a musician. So when I heard about the project there
was also this sceptical voice inside me that said: “Why would you
pretend that there is a uniformity in skin colour?”’
But having conducted the orchestra, he says, ‘There was one thought
that really stuck with me: we are, still, all very different, every
single one of us. This was a very comforting thought, and maybe it needs
the picture of an all-black orchestra to break with a certain
stereotype of classical music.’
So there is more than one stereotype being challenged: not only that
classical musicians are white but that they are a certain type of person
with a certain character, say, or even with a certain kind of training.
He tells the story of the astonishment of one Viennese member of
Chineke! at the skill of a self-taught colleague from Burundi: ‘ “He can
really play! How’s it possible?” This is the sort of magic and emotion
that is connected to Chineke!’
That is not to play down the importance of his principal orchestra
job. ‘I find my work with the Munich Symphony extremely rewarding. We
are at the end of the third season of my chief conductorship and now I
have the feeling the orchestra responds a different way and we really
built something from the ground.
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