Episodes
Series | First Broadcast | Comments |
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20230402 |
“No sooner had the last chords died away than I fled, horrified, into the street - All my hopes, all my belief in myself, had been destroyed. ?
Sergei Rachmaninov, previously the golden boy of the Russian music establishment, described the disastrous premiere of his first Symphony in 1897. He then descended into a three-year period of deep depression, unable to compose.
He was saved by a series of hypnosis sessions with Dr Nikolai Dahl, a viola playing physician. Rachmaninov, wrote of their sessions. “I heard the same hypnotic formula repeated day after day, “You WILL write a Concerto - It WILL be excellent - . ?
The Concerto that emerged and was dedicated to Dr Dahl was... Rachmaninov's Second Piano Concerto, one of the best loved pieces of music ever written, immortalised in the public consciousness by Eric Carmen. Brief Encounter and any number of romantic music playlists.
Now Georgia Mann has heard this story before and even told it on the radio, but has always been a bit sceptical. Can hypnosis really cure an artist to such a degree that they can go from despair to writing a masterpiece? Isn't it just for stage magicians and Disney villains?
The roots of modern hypnosis are often thought to lie with the Viennese Doctor, Franz Anton Mesmer in the 18th century, so Georgia visits Vienna and eminent hypnotherapist Dr Stella Nkenke to learn the roots of medical hypnosis, and how it can be used to help musicians today. She talks to guitarist CRAIG OGDEN about how he, like Rachmaninov, turned to the therapy to help cure a musical problem. And Georgia's scepticism is put to the test with a session in the hypnotic chair...
She enlists the mind of broadcaster MATTHEW SWEET to understand how film and literature have shaped our understanding of hypnotism today, and she sits down with pianists Nikolai Lugansky and Katya Apekisheva and musicologist Marina Frolova-Walker to understand more about Rachmaninov's story via his glorious piano music. Can we learn anything of his struggles in the heart-wrenching melodies of the Second Piano Concerto?
Producer - Hannah Thorne
Georgia Mann delves into the world of hypnosis and how it helped cure Rachmaninov.
`No sooner had the last chords died away than I fled, horrified, into the street - All my hopes, all my belief in myself, had been destroyed.`
Sergei Rachmaninov described the disastrous premiere of his First Symphony which plunged him into a three-year creative crisis, unable to compose.
And yet three years later the piece that finally emerged was his masterpiece - his Second Piano Concerto - one of the best loved pieces of music ever written, immortalised in the public consciousness by Eric Carmen. Brief Encounter and any number of romantic music playlists.
Rachmaninov dedicated it to a Dr Nikolai Dahl - and Dahl practised hypnosis. Rachmaninov put his revival down to a series of hypnosis sessions with Dahl who repeated the same hypnotic formula day after day, `You WILL write a Concerto - It WILL be excellent - .`
The roots of modern hypnosis are often thought to lie with the Viennese Doctor, Franz Anton Mesmer in the 18th century, so Georgia visits Vienna and eminent hypnotherapist Dr Stella Nkenke to learn about mesmerism, what exactly happens when we're under hypnosis, and how it can be used to help musicians today. She talks to guitarist Craig Ogden about how he, like Rachmaninov, turned to the therapy to help cure a musical problem. And Georgia's scepticism is put to the test with a session in the hypnotic chair...
She enlists broadcaster Matthew Sweet to help understand how film and literature have shaped our understanding of hypnotism today, and she sits down with pianists Nikolai Lugansky and Katya Apekisheva and musicologist Marina Frolova-Walker to understand more about Rachmaninov's story via his glorious piano music. Can we learn anything of his struggles and personality in the heart-wrenching melodies of the Second Piano Concerto?
Series | First Broadcast | Comments |
---|---|---|
20230402 |