Saturday, August 17, 2019

Sergio Mims: FinalNoteMagazine.com: Creative Hunger with Stewart Goodyear


Sergio A. Mims writes:

The classical music musicians magazine Final Note has just recently posted an interview with the acclaimed pianist and composer Stewart Goodyear in which he talks about his early interest in classical music as a young child, his career, his compositions (including Callaloo which was just recently released on the Orchid Classics) and working with the Chineke! Orchestra. 

Final Note Magazine

August 2019

Interview and photos by
Frances Marshall



Described as ‘one of the greatest pianists of his generation’, Stewart Goodyear met with Final Note Magazine to talk about his path into classical music and how to safeguard the future of the industry.

Tell us about your first experiences with music.

I felt like music was my life from the very beginning…It was what made my heart beat. My father died of cancer a month before I was born, and I knew him through his record collection that I was constantly going through. His collection consisted of records of The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd…and two box sets of complete symphonies by Beethoven and Tchaikovsky.

What brought you into the world of classical music?

The first moment I heard those box sets, something electric sparked within me. To me, classical music was freedom of expression, and limitless creativity…a music that inspired so many different interpretations and responses. Being a painfully shy person as a little boy, it was through this music that first gave me the hunger to communicate and share my feelings with friends, relatives, and eventually with audiences and new listeners. I was 3 years old when I decided that I had to be a classical musician. There was no other choice for me.

You’ve performed with many of the world’s finest orchestras, what is the secret to achieving the optimum collaboration with an ensemble?

Keeping that hunger to communicate. I love collaborating with artists, and every ensemble that I have the honour of working with breathes new life within me. Every rehearsal, performance and recording is a learning and deeply inspiring experience, and makes every moment forever new and exciting. When I work with a conductor and all the members of an orchestra, I feel like we are collectively feeding off each other, and sharing our personal thoughts, philosophies and feelings through the power of musical interpretation.

You frequently work with the renowned Chineke! Orchestra, tell us more about your work with this group.

We first worked together last summer, performing at Queen Elizabeth Hall, and then recording Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, and my suite for piano and orchestra, “Callaloo”. A year later, we toured these two pieces in seven cities in the UK. Every moment working with these wonderful musicians was an immense joy, and getting to hang out with them was a blast! I have great memories of riding together to different cities on our tour, talking about our lives and our start as musicians, toasting life with a pint of beer, and revelling in the feeling of camaraderie and support.

When and why did you begin your work as a composer?

To me, composing music was inseparable to interpreting other composers’ music. I have always been enthralled by how each composer shares their own personal voice with the listener, and have wanted to do the same. I was 8 years old when I first started composing…I went to a choir school in Toronto, and my first compositions were motets for my choir to sing. I wanted to devour every orchestral score there was, learning about timbres and colours, and write for orchestra…..that was my dream! 

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