Singing when you practise can save you years, the cellist tells Ariane Todes

For our October issue, cellist Gary Hoffman spoke to me for nearly two hours about Mendelssohn’s Variations concertantes, for our Masterclass feature.

Actually, he’d spoken to me for as long the week before, on Mendelssohn’s Sonata no.2, only for the technology to let me down and the whole recording to be lost. You can imagine my mortification. As it was, Hoffman was fantastically understanding, and generous enough to speak to me all over again, this time on these variations: he was happy to give exposure to pieces he regards as an under-rated gem of the repertoire.

As well as the phenomenal detail, musical analysis and technical insight Hoffman offered that was specific to the piece itself, there was also plenty of general cello wisdom – too much to include in the article, so here it is.

Singing

‘Singing is the best way to practise. It saves so much time and goes right to the heart of the matter. Time saving isn’t the most critical thing – if it takes five years to get something right it’s worth it – but if you can find the most natural way in five minutes, why spend five years? We’ve used our voices from day one, long before realising that the cello is hard. I’ve found in teaching that asking people to sing, even if it’s an uncomfortable experience, almost always unblocks technical issues. Right away one is focused on what one wants to hear and the brain sends the right message to the parts of the body that are needed. It also instils the idea that all of these technical solutions should be a result of a musical impulse and not the other way around.’

Open strings

‘I always encourage young cellists to explore open strings because many are told to avoid them – and harmonics. For me these are colours like anything else. You can use them or abuse them, but I don’t agree with rejecting them without giving them some consideration.’

Urtext

‘In urtext editions you have the chance to see as much as possible of what the composer wrote rather than having to decide if you agree with what might or might not be another cellist’s idea of what it should be. That might be interesting, but I’d rather know what the composer wrote, and then discuss with other cellists what they think.’

Learning a piece

‘The first thing I do when I learn a piece is to put the piano part in front of me and either to play or sing the cello line, hearing the harmonies and chords, to get a sense the character. These are not things I decide that are then etched in stone, with my whole purpose after that to play that idea as best I can. It’s a constantly evolving process. Sometimes I’m sure that a certain idea is the right one because I hear it but I can’t do it yet, so I give myself more time and the option that I may have been wrong, which happens often. I tell myself it’s okay to change. None of these things are absolute solutions. One always has to be open to another possibility and to the process itself. Experimentation helps one learn and understand that there are many different options. That helps one’s performance be as spontaneous as possible, because one’s objective is not to do the best one can with a preordained idea, but to have an idea of how the piece goes, of what one wants to hear. Having tried many different things, one understands that no idea makes sense unless it relates to the previous idea and to what’s coming up. One can change constantly because of how one feels, the circumstances under which one plays, what one’s partner does.’

Markings

’If one goes through hoops to bring out every tiny indication, whether it’s an accent, sforzando or slur, and it sounds like we’re looking at it under a microscope, it takes away the natural quality. One should make these things come out as integral parts of the line without necessarily calling attention to them, unless they are dramatic gestures.’

Sforzandos

’A sforzando only has meaning within its context. It’s impossible to make an absolute rule about how a sforzando, fortepiano or sforzato should be played. Ultimately it’s always a combination of right arm and left arm.’