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Music

Interview: Emanuel Ax

The modest virtuoso who is teaching the world to play

March 16, 2011 12:39
emanuel ax

By

Jessica Duchen,

Jessica Duchen

4 min read

It is 7am in Texas and Emanuel (Manny) Ax is off to the airport. Just hours earlier he gave an all-Schubert piano recital and he probably needed more sleep afterwards than he got; but he insists that he is happy to talk.

A quiet, self-effacing character and a genuinely poetic musician - the antithesis of the glitz that characterises some of his more populist colleagues - Ax is one of those too-rare souls who maintain a positive outlook, drawing out all that is best around them wherever they perform.

He is coming to London for two concerts this week: first, a performance with the London Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Vladimir Jurowski, in which he will play two short, contrasting concertos. Then two days later, on Sunday, he is at the Wigmore Hall for a recital devoted to some of Schubert's best-loved piano works.

Ax, who is 61, seems very much a New Yorker, but in fact he was born in Lvov, Poland, where his parents were fortunate to survive the Second World War. "They both lost their families. My father went into hiding and my mother was lucky enough, somehow, just to get by," he says. "They married after the war and I was their only child." In his early years he was sheltered to some degree from the tragedies that had blighted the older generation - "I knew as much about it as the average Jewish kid" - but eventually his parents decided to leave Poland.

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