Originally posted by Anthina:
wow those posts are amazing. It's good to know people a bit better.
I'm Anthina, 20, from Germany and I've been a musician all my life. My dad's a musician and so my parents enrolled me at music school at the age of 6 and I started to play clarinet at the age of 8 (although I wanted to learn violin but my dad thought the first years would be a nightmare so I didn't..I'm pretty happy with clarinet now). With 14 my clarinet teacher put me into a clarinet chamber trio with bassethorn (basically playing Mozart) and we toured around Europe gaining a lot of experiences by doing workshops etc. By that time I started asking myself why we always play Mozart or Stamitz and never for example BEETHOVEN. I started researching and discovered Beethoven bit by bit. And it was amazing how that music moved me. I know there are still pieces I haven't listend to and it's fantastic to discover those.
When I graduated from school my plans were moving to the UK and study. So I did but after a couple of months I was forced to move back to germany due to fatal illness of my mother (yes, I am sharing this sad commonality with young beethoven and it's really weird to think about his situation being so similar to mine, well I am not a composer but by the human side...). My mother passed away soon afterwards and now I have to plan everything new. However my clarinet teacher somehow heard from all this and offered me to take me back as a student. So life's going on with music and still being young there are a lot of chances.
I don't think a life without music could be possible and everything in my family is about music. I've recently discovered a composer of the 18th century bearing my last name and being from the same part my family came from. So now I try to find out wheter I am related to that composer or not
For me Beethoven resolves the greatest composer ever having influenced my way of understanding music more than anyone else!
wow those posts are amazing. It's good to know people a bit better.
I'm Anthina, 20, from Germany and I've been a musician all my life. My dad's a musician and so my parents enrolled me at music school at the age of 6 and I started to play clarinet at the age of 8 (although I wanted to learn violin but my dad thought the first years would be a nightmare so I didn't..I'm pretty happy with clarinet now). With 14 my clarinet teacher put me into a clarinet chamber trio with bassethorn (basically playing Mozart) and we toured around Europe gaining a lot of experiences by doing workshops etc. By that time I started asking myself why we always play Mozart or Stamitz and never for example BEETHOVEN. I started researching and discovered Beethoven bit by bit. And it was amazing how that music moved me. I know there are still pieces I haven't listend to and it's fantastic to discover those.
When I graduated from school my plans were moving to the UK and study. So I did but after a couple of months I was forced to move back to germany due to fatal illness of my mother (yes, I am sharing this sad commonality with young beethoven and it's really weird to think about his situation being so similar to mine, well I am not a composer but by the human side...). My mother passed away soon afterwards and now I have to plan everything new. However my clarinet teacher somehow heard from all this and offered me to take me back as a student. So life's going on with music and still being young there are a lot of chances.
I don't think a life without music could be possible and everything in my family is about music. I've recently discovered a composer of the 18th century bearing my last name and being from the same part my family came from. So now I try to find out wheter I am related to that composer or not
For me Beethoven resolves the greatest composer ever having influenced my way of understanding music more than anyone else!
Thank you for starting this thread and for sharing your own story. Which composer are you possibly related to? Or are you telling yet?
In a similar vein, I went to a small crafts store here in Virginia a couple of weeks ago to have a print framed, and the salesperson who helped me was related to the composer Bedrich Smetana! I noticed his name tag and of course, had to ask, and sure enough, he was related. The only famous person that I know of that I can claim as a relative is Albert Einstein, and believe me, it hasn't helped me yet, if you know what I mean
Regards,
Teresa
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