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I started teaching at the Trossingen Hochschule fur Musik in 2002. For several reasons, this was quite unexpected. It is not that I did not want to teach - I would give master classes on almost every concert tour – I just never expected to have a teaching position so soon. I had always known that at some point I would build a class of my own ,to which I could transmit the knowledge that I have gained through many years’ experience performing and studying music.
Quite
early in my performing career,
I realized that I had developed a personal approach to music and to clarinet
playing, one that is influenced by diverse schools and philosophies but
which stays apart and unique. This is due to the direction my life has taken.
I was lucky to have great artistic figures as my mentors: Yitzchak Kazap
who taught me everything about playing the clarinet, Richard Lesser who
taught me what it means to be a professional musician, Chaim Taub who taught
me what music is all about, and Mordechai Rechtman who showed me how to
phrase. On top of all this, many of the techniques and musical ideas that
I have today are products of my autodidactic character, a trait that has
shown itself, so they say, through several generations in my family.
Since I never had a formal higher education, I have always felt myself to
be free from academic and typically thought-of-as-correct ways to play the
instrument. After a long period of processing and searching, I came up with
my own style of playing.
Although
at first I hesitated to accept this teaching position, I soon realized that
it would be a great opportunity for me to start building my own school of
clarinet playing. The challenge was too exciting and complex to let it get
away.
No help came from many of my colleagues in Germany. I was surprised (and
later quite amused) to discover in the newspapers that the clarinet section
of the Berlin Philharmonic had started a petition calling for my hiring
as Professor in Trossingen to be rescinded. Looking back I can say that
this was probably the moment that I decided to take the job. I will not
answer here the factual errors and the paranoiac beware-of-the-dangerous-Satan’s
influences atmosphere in the petition. You can judge for yourselves by clicking
here Chen
Halevi's Petition.
I can happily say that the young generation in Germany did not take the
friendly advice given to them and that they are now coming to audition for
my class in great numbers. Currently half of my students use the German
system – much more than almost any professor who signed the petition.
(The average numbers in German universities are 25 percent German system
and 75 percent French system.)
But a particular system of clarinet is not what I am looking for. Excellence
is.
My goal is to make a class for the very best. Not that I have anything against
music education for all, it’s just that I prefer to teach and advise
the best of the best. I realize that this is not very popular way of thinking
in today’s world but I feel that this is where I excel, and that this
is where my influence could be most decisive. It is different when I give
master classes; there I try to pass my love and passion for the instrument
to whomever wants to listen.
The class in Trossingen is considered to be one of the top and there is
a feeling that this is where things are ‘happening.’ I personally
am very content with how things are developing. Not bad for a new class
started only four years ago.
.
My teaching method focuses on six topics grouped into two different categories.
The first category (there is always something of a false classification
here) is technical, and includes scales, etudes, and orchestral excerpts.
For me, this aspect of study is very important, and I always insist on going
back to the basics and improving our technical skills. This is the way I
work myself. The second category of study is musical and includes three
pieces from different epochs, which we work on at the same time. Modern
music is obligatory! All students also participate in the Orchestra and
play masterpieces from the chamber music repertoire. finally the most advanced
students also study on period instruments both with me and in collaboration
with our noted period instruments department.
Here’s a photo of my class after a class concert and lots of Italian
wine...
(Click on the image to enlarge the photo)