Colin Bell is a novelist and poet - formerly a television producer-director.

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Hello and welcome! I am Colin Bell, a novelist and poet, previously a TV producer-director of arts programmes, also known as the blogger Wolfie Wolfgang. My novel Stephen Dearsley's Summer Of Love was published in 2013, my next novel Blue Notes, Still Frames will be published in October 2016 - check them out on Amazon. I hope you find something here among my daily blogs. I write about anything that interests me - I hope it interests you too. Let me know.
Showing posts with label Menuhin's Children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Menuhin's Children. Show all posts

Monday, 2 December 2013

My Every Day Poets poem for Yehudi Menuhin is published






Over the weekend, I was going to write about my old friend Yehudi Menuhin but there was a problem with my website  providers and this site was down for over 24 hours. My apologies to everyone who tried to access my site during that time. So I'm going to write that blog today because my Fibonacci poem/elegy for the great violinist was published on Saturday by Every Day Poets and I can now give you the link to read it (and, if you want, vote for it on the page's star system):

http://www.everydaypoets.com/yehudi-menuhin-by-colin-bell/

In my television days, as a producer-director,  I worked with Yehudi Menuhin on a number of programmes including his very last film project, my documentary Menuhin's Children where we filmed him teaching twelve seven year old children the first stages of violin playing once a month for a year. Sadly Yehudi died during the making of this film and when we completed it, it became a tribute to his genius. We had become friends too during these monthly times together and, on the last day that we worked together (in February 1999), he asked if he could accompany me on my walk around the location when I customarily looked for shots that would mark the passing of the seasons. This gentle stroll in Guildford, Surrey (my birthplace) was not just about the beginnings of the new Spring but it was also the last time I was to see him, he died unexpectedly only weeks later in Germany. There was a spirit of calm, relaxation but also melancholy in the air that day which stayed in my memory and became the starting point for the Fibonacci poem that has just been published.



Yehudi Menuhin was a great violinist and a great advocate for peace and toleration through the world and I felt privileged to have known him.  I hope that the poem goes some way towards expressing my gratitude for the time we spent together.


In the spirit of completion, here's a short trailer for my film Menuhin's Children - it was first shown by the BBC and then all over the world:




Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Menuhin and Me and Menuhin's Children



Yehudi Menuhin filming Menuhin's Children, September 1998

Yesterday I wrote about my Fibonacci elegy poem about the great violinist Yehudi Menuhin and how it will be published, probably next March, by Every Day Poets. A few people asked me about the photograph that I put up on yesterday's blog. It showed a memorable moment in my television career when I was producing a series of masterclass shows with Yehudi Menuhin for Granada Television.




The photograph is framed and hangs on the wall in my study and I enjoy having it there to remind me not just of my affection for Yehudi Menuhin but also as a record of that moment when one of the greatest violinists in the World played his violin just for me. We were talking about what he should play to illustrate a particular point and, with his typical modesty,  he asked my opinion as if it could possibly be as valid as his.


Yehudi Menuhin rehearsing for Celebration Masterclass, 1990

During that week that we worked together in, I think, 1990, we struck up a rapport and talked of other ways in which we could work together in the future. It was one of those conversations that led to the idea of a television documentary recording a possible project where we would select a group of children for him to teach from scratch. We developed the idea to include a British state school where music was not a specialist subject and where there was no violin teacher. Bearing in mind, the splendid Granada series 7 Up, we also decided to choose children aged 7 and to see if music really could make a difference to their lives. It took eight years to convince a broadcaster to go with this idea but eventually I got the BBC to commission it in 1998. Sadly, this was after our first generation of seven year olds had grown too old for the experiment but we started again and  found a school in Guildford, Surrey and proceeded, with the expert guidance of the Russian violin professor Natalia Boyarsky, who had experience of choosing potential violinists in the then Soviet Union and who was now, and still is, a teacher at the Yehudi Menuhin School in England. There was much scepticism from school teachers and parents alike but the chance was too good to turn down the opportunity to be taught by such a distinguished musician. Yehudi was thrilled and we planned a schedule where he could come to the school once a month for a year to teach the twelve selected seven year olds. Filming started in September 1998 and, from the start, I knew that the results would be delightful and, yes, an important experiment in the value of music in schools.


Yehudi Menuhin shows Menuhin's Children round the Yehudi Menuhin School, 1999

I will always be sad that the many delays in getting this project going on British television took so long because after just six months, I had a phone call telling me that Yehudi had died quite unexpectedly in a Berlin hospital. We finished the film without him but to the plan he had agreed and, luckily, with the distinguished violinist Rosemary Furniss taking his role as principal teacher. The documentary, Menuhin's Children, co-produced with EuroArts-Primetime,  was screened on BBC2 the following year and subsequently all around the World.  Those seven-year olds are now twenty-one years old but sadly, British broadcasters turned down ideas of following the children's progress.

I Googled Menuhin's Chldren this morning to see if there were any records of this programme and I found this on Utube, a promotional clip made, I think, by the facilities company that hired us the film crew and editor. I was grateful to see some of those shots again and hope that the documentary proper might reach the screens again as a memorial to a great musician and a wonderful experiment.

As for those twelve "Menuhin's Children" - they were great kids and I wish them all well in their adult lives. I hope too that they sometimes think about the gentle musician who taught them from his heart.




Stephen Dearsley's Summer Of Love by Colin Bell

Stephen Dearsley's Summer Of Love by Colin Bell
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