by Liana Vasilescu, photo SoNoRo
Since then,
since the first concert I went to, I felt a very strong, positive vibe - that
newborn sma l festival just seemed to have everything it needed to grow, to
develop, to cover an area untouched so far. And the 8 years since SoNoRo keeps
coming back, more varied and more visible proved that it was. A modern and
innovative festival which, through various programs and locations, through a
mix of different genres and incredible interpretations, succeeded to
demonstrate, in an inconspicuous way, that in contemporary society chamber
music is a form of communication - exciting, affordable and necessary. From the
start, there was a very wel defined purpose of the festival - to generate
loving and knowledgeable public and to raise awareness and educate the parts of
society that have no contact with classical music. Since the first edition,
SoNoRo was included in an international network of the kind, from Cantiere di
Montepulciano (Italy) to Kobe International Arts Festival (Japan) or sounding
Music Jerusalem (Israel). The SoNoRo Festival concept was also taken abroad:
SoNoRo’s first edition in Sofia took place in April, and in May the third
edition SoNoRo Arezzo was organized. The artists featured in the festival every
year are members of the ensemble Raro - Alexander Sitkovetsky (violin), Razvan
Popovici (viola), Bernhard Naoki Hedenborg (celo), Diana Ketler (piano), Adrian
Brendel (ce lo), Erik Schumann (violin) Alina Pogostkin (violin), Reto Bieri
(clarinet). Alongside them perform many other famous musicians, such as Marcelo
Nisinman (bandoneon), Konstantin Lifschitz (piano), Gi les Apap (violin),
Andrej Bielow (violin), Olivier Darbe lay (horn). A project with such a
trajectory has always more behind it than simply a good organisation - it has a
particular enthusiasm. And the man with this enthusiasm - the "ideas
man" - for SoNoRo is Razvan Popovici. With a lovely and peaceful position
as a violist in the Munich Chamber Orchestra, he suddenly decided, after 15
years, to return to Romania and to establish a chamber music festival.
Why? How? Who? And to al these questions - and
to some which inevitably appeared along the way, Razvan replied during a
leisurely August afternoon: Why - or how appears a festival of classical music?
What do you mean by it, what is there to say, what is the change in the image
that people have about classical music, what does not give you peace and pushes
you to do this?
A classical music festival can appear for several reasons: the lack of a sufficient number of such initiatives, in an effort to showcase a particular music or a person's madness is up to something, something that realy burns. In the SoNoRo Festival’s as we l as my case, I think al three reasons are valid. From the beginning we tried to build not only a festival but as something that can inspire others to brave action. SoNoRo always showed that the educated choice of both the musical programs and of the whole concept each year, is the initiative to be successful in the long term. I deliberately stayed away from populist decisions that can guarantee success in the short term, long term leading only to commonplace platitude and trivialization. I'm not exaggerating when I am saying that there are many “aficionados” who folow absolutely al of SoNoRo’s activities closely, both in the country and abroad. What we started to change in these seven years was diminishing the reservation from classical music of the young and successful in Romania. Although they had access to al material possibilities imaginable, they had only peripheral contact with this genre and virtua ly no desire to get closer. And to chamber music no desire at al. It is one of the great success, to open this extremely valuable universe to so many people and to make them curious. But I'm not a supporter of attempts to bring classical music on a stadium and to democratize it excessively. Such experiments have failed everywhere, no matter how proud some organizers are of their achievements to convert huge masses of listeners. Classical music needs to be discovered by each of them in an intimate, noble and personal framework.


Why do you
continue?
The
indescribable pleasure to do something which profoundly influences Romanian
cultural life in the long term. The excitement of playing annualy a very
dynamic game at the end of which I get to meet many happy faces. Personal
satisfaction from the stage during concerts. One glance into the packed hal
room proves that chamber music is the best existing music, a statement
confirmed by tens of thousands of people attending the SoNoRo concerts during
the previous years.
How did the
best moment until now look like? And how did it look like when you were about
to let go?
The 5 years
anniversary concert at the Bragadiru Palace, when the audience started to
spontaneously sing “Happy Birthday”. And in return, the artists threw newly
received roses to listeners.
To quit?
In the first year when, because of unfulfi led
promises, 20,000 euros were missing, two weeks before the start of the
festival. But, because SoNoRo was born under a good star, here we are at the
eighth edition! You're friends with all or most of those who play at SoNoRo.
You played with them or you heard them in the hall. This creates a certain kind
of energy, tension, pleasure of something else that makes SoNoRo absolutely
different from all other music festivals . The musicians invited are soloists
and chamber musicians with a worldwide recognition. I know the majority
personaly having played with them in different corners of the world. The most
of them started in Romania in the Festival’s concerts. The fact that many of
them have honored the invitation several times speaks for itself. I think the
personal and generous atmosphere of the Festival distinguishes it from the
start from other similar initiatives. Also, the very high artistic quality,
where both I and Diana Ketler (London pianist with whom I share the artistic
direction of the festival), have avoided any compromise, locates it in a place
where good reputation matters the most. And the love for detail is a priority
for the entire SoNoRo team, which, I think, is very visible in a l our
activities.
[IMG_770be06ba49a4d55.webp]
“I deliberately stayed away from populist
decisions that can guarantee success in the short term.”

