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German Orchestra To Make Rare Visit By Western Musicians To Iran In

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  • German Orchestra To Make Rare Visit By Western Musicians To Iran In

    GERMAN ORCHESTRA TO MAKE RARE VISIT BY WESTERN MUSICIANS TO IRAN IN CULTURAL EXCHANGE
    David McHugh

    AP Worldstream
    Published: Aug 26, 2007

    A German symphony orchestra will play classics by Beethoven, Elgar
    and Brahms in Iran this week _ a rare visit from a European ensemble
    amid political tensions between the Islamic republic and the West.

    The 60-member Osnabrueck Symphony Orchestra, led by conductor Hermann
    Baeumer, will arrive Monday and perform Wednesday and Thursday in
    Tehran as the return half of an exchange that saw the Tehran Symphony
    Orchestra perform to a packed hall last year in Osnabrueck.

    The tensions between Iran and Western governments _ including Germany
    _ have been over efforts to halt Tehran's program to enrich uranium
    and U.S. accusations that Iran supplies militants with training and
    equipment to attack American forces in neighboring Iraq.

    Michael Dreyer, head of the Morgenland, or Orient, Festival in
    Osnabrueck that hosted the Iranians last year, said he hoped the
    concerts would remain nonpolitical cultural events. "It's a very small
    step in improving relations between the people in the two countries,"
    he said.

    As required in Iran, the female German musicians will play in
    headscarves _ as did the Iranian female musicians when they visited
    Osnabrueck _ and the program was submitted to Iranian authorities
    ahead of time.

    The orchestra will perform Ludwig van Beethoven's Leonore Overture
    No. 3; Sir Edward Elgar's Cello Concerto in E Minor, and Johannes
    Brahms' Symphony No. 4.

    Organizers are billing it as the first performance by a Western
    symphony orchestra in Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution, a claim
    officials at Iran's culture ministry said they could not confirm.

    News reports over the past several years indicate that the Armenian
    Philharmonic Orchestra has performed in Tehran, along with an orchestra
    from Ukraine and a chamber group from Waidhofen-Ybbs in Austria that
    accompanied a trade delegation. A four-member group from Hamburg,
    Germany specializing in contemporary music, ensemble Integrales,
    has been there twice in recent years.

    Nonetheless, a visit from a large-scale, highly professional Western
    classical ensemble will be a landmark event, Tehran Symphony Orchestra
    conductor Nader Mashayekhi said.

    "For such a good orchestra, of such size, it's the first time,"
    he said.

    "And what they're playing is, I think, a very important point, because
    it broadens the listening habits in Persia, because the Persian public
    listens to classical music, but lighter classical music, not Brahms
    Fourth," he said, using the old-fashioned term for Iran.

    "Brahms Fourth is not light, or the Elgar Cello Concerto. It's
    something that is being presented for the first time to a Persian
    audience."

    Under the former monarchy, Western visitors included the Berlin
    Philharmonic and its renowned conductor, Herbert von Karajan, who
    played three concerts in November 1975 _ one of them just for the
    shah and his guests, according to the orchestra's archives.

    Today, Western music and culture occupy an uncertain position. After
    ousting the shah in 1979 and establishing an Islamic republic,
    clerics outlawed all pre-revolutionary music.

    Some hard-line clerics say music comes between the faithful, and God
    and leads to impure thoughts, therefore being incompatible with the
    Shiite school of Islam that rules Iran. Secular songs were banned as
    un-Islamic, and in the early 1980s, police stopped cars to check tape
    decks and smashed offending tapes.

    In the 1990s, music gradually made a comeback in Iran under the then
    reformist president, Mohammad Khatami. In December 2005, the hard-line
    government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced a ban on Western
    music on state radio and television.

    But Western music and films banned by the state can be found on the
    black market. Satellite dishes dot the capital's rooftops, and a ban
    on them is rarely enforced.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Ali Akbar Dareini contributed to this report
    from Tehran, Iran.
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