VANESSA-MAE'S COMING FIDDLING UP A STORM
from Denis Millar ( South Africa )
Pint-sized violinist Vanessa-Mae, whose acoustic-techno and classical
albums have sold millions of copies around the world, will tour South
Africa in March.
The award-winning artist was recently in Johannesburg, to get "a feel
for the country" before she returns to perform next month. And she's
looking forward to visiting the Mother City for the first time when she
comes back.
"I'm really keen to see Cape Town. My tour will consist of six concerts,
and, while I know that the major one will in Johannesburg on March 24,
I'm pretty sure that Cape Town will be included in the itinerary. It's a
place I really want to go to anyway," she said in a telephonic interview
yesterday.
"When I return I'll be bringing a rock band with me, as well as a
classical ensemble. My shows will be a blend of styles, some techno,
some classical, some pop.
"I hope I'll also get a chance to hear some indigenous African music as
well. I was in Soweto a few days ago and a group of young
instrumentalists performed a concert for me, but it was mainly classical
music. It was lovely, but next time I'd like to hear some local music,"
she said enthusiastically.
Vanessa-Mae is as well-known for her ground-breaking approach to
performance as she is for her attractive publicity shots, having
established herself as a classical child prodigy before the age of 10
and then going on to explore new alternative violin music using both
acoustic and modern electric instruments and a series of sultry
photographs from the age of 13. Now in her 18th year, she has the
distinction of selling millions of both her classical and pop albums
internationally, being EMI's best-selling new artist in 1995 and 1996.
She won numerous awards including the World Music Award for Best-selling
Classical Recording Artist and the Klassik Best-seller of the Year
award. In addition, her multi-platinum pop album is still on the
Billboard Top 20 Chart a year-and-a-half since its release.
She has performed in front of rock crowds of more than 50 000 people
(upstaging such veterans as Status Quo and Rod Stewart), and regularly
attracts standing ovations of 20 minutes or more. Vanessa-Mae is the
only artist to have headlined a classical concert in the Royal Festival
Hall in London in the same week as selling out a techno-fusion concert
at the Royal Albert Hall. She was the featured star at the Hong Kong
hand-over celebrations in Happy Valley and has also had the honour of
opening a Knicks game at Madison Square Garden.
Her latest pop release is Storm, which incorporates many different
genres within a sophisticated electric-acoustic package.
"I worked with a lot of musicians on Storm including a Welsh choir, a
full orchestra and percussionists. But we also put together a lot of
samples and synthesised sounds, creating an integrated mix," explained
Vanessa-Mae. "My South African tour will feature 90% Storm material."
After South Africa she will move on to perform in Canada as touring has
been a major part of her career outside recording. During 1995-7 she
spent two years on a world tour playing more than 200 concerts.
So is this teenager something of a workaholic?
"No, I don't think so," Vanessa-Mae responded with a grin in her voice.
"I have deadlines and I have many engagements, but essentially I do it
for enjoyment. I've been doing it for a long time." Born in Singapore,
Vanessa-Mae moved to London when she was four, and that was when she
started lessons on violin and piano.
"I suppose I haven't really stopped working for over a decade," she
quipped.
Do people tend to lump her in the same category as enfant terrible Nigel
Kennedy, yet another maverick string player?
"Well, apart from the fact that we're both British and we both love
playing the violin and we both don't wear conservative clothes, I don't
really think we have too much in common. Nigel is essentially a
classical performer, whereas I experiment with totally new forms of
sound," she said with a laugh.
In terms of making a unique impact, she's dead right there. Vanessa-Mae
and her violin have opened up a whole world of music to audiences who
may never have made the cross-over from pop to classical, or vice-versa,
without her. South African audiences can look forward to an aural treat
next month
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