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Oliver Zeffman: Making things happen

The music stopped for conductor Oliver Zeffman when the pandemic hit, but he soon thought of new projects, he tells Jenni Frazer

June 24, 2021 12:06
Oliver Zeffman 31
6 min read

Oliver Zeffman introduces himself and laughs — I think — at his own life-story —“born in north London, grew up in Tufnell Park, went to Highgate School, played the violin from when I was four…” His brother Henry writes for The Times and their sister is at law school.

Zeffman speaks very fast, but does not, on Zoom at any rate, wave his arms about. That movement is reserved for his professional life, in which the 28-year-old is one of Britain’s most admired and innovative musical conductors.

We are in discussion because he has just released the second of his two major projects of the last couple of years, an extraordinary film, Live at the V&A, made in the newly refurbished Raphael Court of the Victoria and Albert Museum. The acclaimed violinist Viktoria Mullova returns to play, for the first time in 30 years, with the Academy of St Martin in the Fields (ASMF), and the resulting film, as the camera swoops and flows with the rise and fall of the music, is exquisite.

The viewer’s eye falls on the remarkably confident Zeffman, then Mullova and the ASMF musicians, and then on the glorious Raphael Cartoons, glowing as freshly as the day they were painted in 1515. The Cartoons, depicting biblical scenes, are among the glories of Renaissance art and are on permanent loan to the V&A from the Queen. Last year, taking advantage of the lockdown closure, the V&A revamped the Raphael Court, with its improvements including upgraded acoustics. It is plain that it was a joy to play in the space — Zeffman says the acoustics are “now more resonant than in most concert halls”.