RPO resound Newsletter, 20th Anniversary Edition 2014 | Page 6

Tim Steiner, Workshop Leader Tim Steiner is at the forefront of creative leadership within music Community & Education contexts. He has led hundreds of workshops, events, international projects and concerts for the Orchestra over the last twenty years. When I first began working with the RPO’s Community & Education Department in 1993 I spent hours discussing with then manager, Judith Webster, exactly what we were there for. Neither of us considered our work to be concerned with teaching people about classical music, nor developing audiences. It was more about developing the Orchestra and the kind of artistic organisation it might be. We were passionately interested in the idea of an orchestra as a virtuosic flexible ensemble that had the ability and intent to inspire all sectors of society. On one day, it might be a traditional symphonic concert in the Royal Albert Hall, on another, a collaboration with an opera group, and on another, the creation of new work with homeless people. devising and commissioning its own material, and working in partnership with a wide range of communities. A key collaboration was with Magdala Opera, a community opera company based in Nottingham. We produced a suite of Webernesque pieces based on haiku, with a sound rather close to Cage's Aria. The work developed incredibly organically as a trust gradually developed between all the musicians. Everyone took risks. Everyone supported everyone else. This work was presented at the Association of British Orchestras conference in 1997. It was a serious work, both artistically and socially. It was new, challenging, and we felt a revolutionary spirit. Alongside such work we established the Whatever the work, it all stemmed from Noisy Kids series of family concerts. By the notion of music and musicians as a the middle of the nineties, most players had come to dread children's and vital and fundamental part of society. family concerts. They were mostly very Much of the work was experimental; staid, rough and ready affairs with both in artistic terms and, most unengaged performances to distracted crucially, in the ways in which it audiences presented by out of engaged musicians from the Orchestra touch celebrities. and the various communities with The Noisy Kids concerts were which we worked. developed as something of an A select group of around fifteen RPO antidote. Our early editions, in the musicians developed their intense Royal Albert Hall, were somewhat commitment to this work, into an anarchic affairs with huge audiences. understanding of the communities we I'd imagined a rather updated meeting visited, as well as actively reflecting on of Marx Brothers' Vaudeville and the ways in which such work informed Hoffnung. We somehow, managed to their playing within the Orchestra. This mix a variety of chaotic musical developed into a collaborative ensemble sketches and comical asides with called Sharp Edge; improvising, increasingly ambitious programming and audience interaction. One of our aims was to juxtapose serious challenging performance with noisy, cartoonish interludes. One such occasion saw us attempting to convey the quality of then leader, John Carney's 1697 Stradivarius to the audience by demonstrating that it could double as a baseball bat (to this day, some musicians have still not realised he switched instruments!). John approached the front of the stage, wielding his violin. As I propelled a ball toward him he took a swing, struck the ball, and the violin snapped into two. There was a collective sharp intake of breath by the 3000 audience and Orchestra. The hall was silent. But then, John, slowly and calmly, picked up the remains of his instrument, turned to the audience, and in his laconic US droll announced, "Don't worry, I'll just play with the body." A true professional!” The last twenty years have been full of such adventures. Adventures that stretched the musicians way beyond their usual call of duty. Adventures that have seen the RPO extending music-making beyond the traditional confines of the concert platform and exploring the outer reaches of society. Music is about people, it is about personality, and it is about inspiration. For twenty years, now through its new guise RPO resound, the RPO has been inspiring in the widest possible context.