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Desert Island Discs: Archive 2005-2010

Daniel Barenboim

Desert Island Discs: Archive 2005-2010

BBC

Society & Culture, Personal Journals

4.4804 Ratings

🗓️ 7 May 2006

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sue Lawley's castaway this week is the pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim. As this year's Reith Lecturer on Radio 4 he described how he interprets and understands life through music. On Desert Island Discs he gives a personal insight into his own life and career. He was a child prodigy - the only son of musical parents, he gave his first piano recital at the age of seven and when he was 11 the legendary conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler described him as 'a phenomenon'.

His marriage to the British cellist Jacqueline du Prè made them the most celebrated musical couple of their day - but less than two years after they were married, she began to show symptoms of multiple sclerosis - the disease that would kill her. In a moving interview recorded in his home in Jerusalem, Daniel Barenboim talks frankly about their relationship and the cruelty of her illness; he reveals his own musical influences and also discusses his plans to spend more time playing the piano, after stepping down as Music Director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra later this year.

He would, Daniel says, only take musical scores to the island, and not records.

[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]

Book: Ethics by Benedict Spinoza Luxury: A piano with a mattress

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, it's Nicola Cochlin. Young people have been making history for years, but we don't often hear about them. My brand new series on BBC Sounds sets out to put this right. In history's youngest heroes, I'll be revealing the fascinating stories of 12 young people who've played a major role in history and who've helped shape our world. Like Audrey Hepburn, Nelson Mandela, Louis Braille and Lady Jane Grey,

0:24.7

History's Youngest Heroes, with me, Nicola Cochlin.

0:27.8

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:30.3

Hello, I'm Krista Young, and this is a podcast from the Desert Island Discs Archive.

0:35.4

For rights reasons, we've had to shorten the music.

0:38.4

The program was originally broadcast in 2006,

0:41.8

and the presenter was Sue Lawley.

1:01.7

Music My castaway this week is a musician.

1:10.4

He's one of the finest exponents of classical music alive in the world today, a brilliant pianist and conductor and a music director of the first rank. For the past five weeks,

1:12.2

he's been delivering his vision of music in the BBC's Reith Lectures here on Radio 4. Today, we've

1:18.6

come to his house in Jerusalem, overlooking the walls of the old city, to hear what pieces of

1:23.9

music matter most to him and how they relate to a life vivid with achievement and incident.

1:30.2

I've had my share of suffering in life, he said, and very often in those bad moments, music comes

1:36.2

into my brain and the unhappiness will give way to something more pleasant and easier to live

1:41.1

with. He is, of course, Daniel Barrenboehm. Daniel, music is and always has been your life,

1:48.0

I know that, ever since you were born in Argentina. Would you go as far as to say it was the first

1:53.7

language you ever knew? I don't know, because in a way I don't think of it only as a language,

2:00.5

because language creates very

2:02.4

precise associations whereas music creates associations that very often are not

2:09.0

precise and having said all of that I think I must have been conscious of music

2:15.8

very very early on because my parents and I lived in a rather

2:22.6

small flat in Buenos Aires. Both my parents taught piano so that whenever the doorbell rang,

...

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