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Music

The woman putting the feeling back into Bach

The composer's work should make you want to dance, says violinist Ruth Waterman.

May 20, 2011 11:57
Many musicians are “hamstrung by convention” when they play Bach’s violin pieces, says Waterman

By

Jessica Duchen,

Jessica Duchen

4 min read

The violinist Ruth Waterman should probably be a household name, such is the quality of her musicianship. But perhaps that is also the reason she isn't. Throughout her career she has chosen a route more individual than the mainstream concert circuit, one that has allowed her to focus in earnest on her first great passion - the music of Bach.

Now a CD has been released in which she performs Bach's complete solo violin sonatas and partitas - an interpretation that represents the sum of her lifelong exploration of the composer's work.

Waterman's story began in Leeds, where she was born into one of Britain's best-known musical Jewish families. Fanny Waterman, who founded the Leeds International Piano Competition (and at 91 is still its chairman and artistic director), is her aunt; cellist David Waterman, a member of the Endellion String Quartet, is her brother; and their sister, Wendy Waterman, was a child prodigy pianist who performed a concerto at the Royal Festival Hall when she was only nine.

Both parents played musical instruments and they made sure their children experienced plenty of live performances, Waterman says. There were fine concerts at Leeds Town Hall, since the local concerts committee would "capture" visiting orchestras on tour en route from London to Scotland.

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