Nick van Bloss plays Bach and Mozart
7:30pm - Thursday 12 November 2009

Nick van Bloss with London Octave

Nick van Bloss's extraordinary talent as a pianist is inextricably bound up with the Tourette's Syndrome he has suffered since the age of seven. The piano represents his sole release from the estimated 38,000 tics he undergoes each day as his muscles contort and contract involuntarily, usually in a strict motor rhythm.

A Londoner, he began to learn the piano at the age of 11, and found that his symptoms went into abeyance as he played. "As soon as I touched the keys, my tics went away," he explains. "Everything that the piano gave me was satisfying my Tourette's. I would always be dying to get to the piano, to place my fingers on the keys and just have a feeling of absolute, tactile delight. Now, as then, those 88 keys still implore me to touch them."

He entered the Royal College of Music at the age of 15 as a Junior, attending full time from the age of 17, studying with Yonty Solomon, taking master-classes with figures such as Tatiana Nikolayeva, and winning prizes for his playing.

In 1994, aged 26, Nick van Bloss played a televised recital in Poland at the Chopin Festival. This, 15 years ago, proved to be his last public appearance before his return to the concert hall with the performance of Bach and Beethoven at Cadogan Hall in April 2009. His Tourette's had reached a level of severity that prompted a retreat into a personal, rather than public, world of music, freeing him from competitive pressures. In his years away from the concert platform, Van Bloss wrote an autobiographical book, Busy Body, published in 2006; the following year he was the subject of a BBC Horizon documentary, Mad but Glad, which explored the connection between neurological conditions and creativity. It featured an encounter with the renowned neurologist Dr Oliver Sacks who, having documented van Bloss in his book Musicophilia, infers a link between Tourette's and his prowess as a pianist. Highlighting the compulsion of Tourette?s sufferers to touch objects repeatedly in a strict motor rhythm, Sacks describes touch as 'an essential form of exploration', and music as 'a heightening and intensification of emotion that is immediately translated into action'.

Since 2008, van Bloss has been recording with award-winning producer Michael Haas, who says that in polyphonic music, such as Bach, Nick offers a superhuman degree of precision and individuality with each voice, while never losing overall transparency,- and who feels that van Bloss's Chopin and Rachmaninov are characterised by a 'crystalline solidity' which enables him to build and shape works with total security and 'achieve a near-perfect balance between vibrancy of keyboard playing and sweep of musical vision.'

Nick van Bloss is in little doubt of a connection between his neurological condition and his desire to make music: 'I am more convinced than ever that the Tourette's is the fuel. It's the fire within, the burning energy. I know that, without the Tourette's, I wouldn't feel creativity in the way that I do.'

Founded by cellist Dietrich Bethge in 1988 from London's leading musicians, London Octave aims to approach the baroque and classical repertoire in a fresh and vital manner, often without a conductor. Through their regular London season at St Martin-in-the-Fields, the South Bank and on BBC Radio 3, London Octave has attracted a loyal following of concert goers. London Octave's recent CD, 'Better Baroque,' featuring well-known baroque masterpieces, was described as "an absolute gem full of sparkle and wit" in Metro. Soloists appearing with the ensemble during this and last season include: James Bowman, William Bennett, Yvgeny Sudbin, Neil Black, Marisa Robles, Crispian Steele Perkins, Lorraine McAslan.

"No conductor to interfere with the joy of the performance." Anabelle Hoffman - violinist

"Bethge's Better Baroque" Time Out



Programme
Mozart - Salzburg Symphony in D
Mozart - Piano Concerto in E flat K449
Bach - Piano Concerto in F minor
Bach - Brandenburg Concerto No.3

London Octave
Nick van Bloss
Piano
Dietrich Bethge Director


For directions click here »



Online booking is now closed for this concert, but tickets may be purchased by calling the box office on +44 (0)20 7766 1100 Monday to Saturday, 10 to 5pm.

For Bank Holiday Monday concerts, the Box Office is open for telephone and in-person bookings on the preceding Sunday from 12 to 5pm and on the Bank Holiday Monday from 12pm until the end of the interval of the concert.


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Sat, 31 July

09:00 Morning Prayer

11:00 Jamaican Independence Service

19:30 Evening Concert


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