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The reach of notes


Posted: Jul 27, 2008 at 0225 hrs IST
Updated: Jul 27, 2008 at 0225 hrs IST

Suhel Seth

Managing Partner, Counselage

Sometimes human disability can turn into a compelling magnet as it did in the case of Julius Caesar in the good old days, or for that matter with Beethoven whose symphonies always belied his deafness or even in politics when one took a look at a wheel-chair bound war President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

I have always believed that raw human talent can always overcome these disabilities and pave the way for an amazing showing of that talent, and nowhere does it do so better than in music. Prague, the city of romance, has church music being conducted by the deaf and you never know they are so till you are asked for some donations at the end of the concert. In fact, Prague is home to perhaps Europe’s finest music school, just steps away from the Charles Bridge. Except that all its students are blind. So when you walk beside that school, the wafting piano concertos make the atmosphere surreal as it were and it is then you realise the power of the human will.

Last week I underwent a similar magical experience. Lajatico is a small Italian village which sits at the cusp of three provinces in Tuscany: the provinces of Sienna, Florence and Pisa. It is about a 30 minute drive from Pisa and about an hour away from Florence. Surrounded by rolling hilltops and bubbling with sunflower fields, the place is magical to say the least. Lajatico is the birthplace of Andrea Bocelli, the finest tenor in the world today, who went blind at 12 and continues to live with that to this day. Bocelli, who was found wandering the streets of Tuscany by some music executives belonged to a rich family: even to this day, his father owns a tractor company. Every year, on July 20, Bocelli celebrates his birth and the magic of Lajatico in a concert that is held at the Theatro di Silenzio (the Theatre of Silence) which is an open air amphi-theatre of sorts, and what is unique about this concert is the fact that you have an undiluted Bocelli, who moves away from his legendary renditions of Ave Maria to sing some other classics. This year the theme was around Italian theatre and cinema. Inspired by the movements seen in Fellini’s films or for that matter in the opera, Bocelli gave us an inspired performance with a setting that only...

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