I’m always very attracted to the polyphonic aspect of the guitar: it’s a crime if you have an arrangement and you have to cut a line just because the fingering doesn’t work.” Miloš is also enthusiastic about the general shape of Talbot’s writing: “very often, the orchestra is like a resonating board to the guitar, so the idea comes out of the guitar then the orchestra picks it up and it kind of spreads it around. You can contact him from https://bachtrack.com/files/88197-prom25-cr-bbc-chris-christodoulou-1.jpgMiloš playing Talbot's Ink Dark Moon at the BBC Proms, August 2018 There were moments I thought and was told I would never be able to play again.

It’s a process that really compares to nothing else.”Guitar concertos are a rare breed, not least because the guitar works so differently from the orchestral instruments with which most composers are considerably more familiar.

These cookies do not store any personal information.Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. Interview with Miloš Karadaglic First published: Friday 30 Aug 2019 Three years after suffering from a serious hand injury at the peak of his career, guitarist MILOŠ is back with his fourth studio album and a UK tour including the Darlington Hippodrome on Tuesday 24 September. Unable to play, he was forced to pull out of multiple engagements and studio dates, … He is a musical omnivore interested in almost all types of music, but with a particular love of Italian opera. It took time and a huge support network to heal and recover – I needed to rest, rebuild my self-belief and re-evaluate my relationship with music and the world I was part of. It is the music I love above all else.’For his performance at the Hippodrome he will be joined by members of the 12 Ensemble, in a programme inspired by his journey and showcasing the immense diversity of the guitar: from Spanish classics and Latin American rhythms to baroque dances and the Beatles.This tour and the album are a very personal scrapbook of music that will always have a special meaning to me – from Bach to the Beatles, Granados to Portishead, Piazzolla to Radiohead. Three years after suffering from a serious hand injury at the peak of his career, guitarist MILOŠ is back with his fourth studio album and a UK tour including the Darlington Hippodrome on Tuesday 24 September. I injured myself just because I did not understand that there is a limit on how far that can go and that being human is also no shame. Actually, the Albert Hall just has the most special atmosphere of any concert hall I know. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. Miloš Postpones Tour Due to Hand Injury Blair Jackson February 22, 2016 Miloš Karadaglic , whose latest CD/download, Blackbird: The Beatles Album , has been earning rave reviews (including from Classical Guitar ), and lots of press attention in general, has been forced to cancel his highly anticipated tour of the U.S. and UK because of an ongoing acute issue with his right hand. I was of course very nervous before-hand but mostly I was just insanely excited and focused. Suntory Hall, or the Philharmonic Hall in Osaka, which is arguably the finest concert hall in the world, it’s just electrifying when you have those places. Like the piano, the guitar is polyphonic: it can play melody, bass line and fills simultaneously (orchestrations by the great It was therefore important that he worked closely with Talbot from the beginning of the composition of The process was disrupted when Miloš suffered a career-threatening hand injury, which forced him to stop playing for many months, making it impossible for him to be 100% involved in every note in the way he had anticipated. And even with amplification and with the most famous of guitar concertos, Rodrigo’s The sheer difficulty of playing that third movement at full speed requires intensive rehearsal. He says: ‘This tour and the album are a very personal scrapbook of music that will always have a special meaning to me – from Bach to the Beatles, Granados to Portishead, Piazzolla to Radiohead.

It is the music I love above all else.I was born in Montenegro during the Balkan wars, in a very happy but isolated environment. It was a huge moment and to this day the best thing I have ever done.It’s not an accident that the guitar is the most popular instrument in the world.

So even before I actually did it, I had played that concert hundreds of times in my head. It comes after one of the biggest challenges of my life – suffering from a serious physical injury and a mental burnout – this programme is a musical reflection on that time and on my long journey back to full health. It comes after one of the biggest challenges of my life – suffering a serious physical injury and mental burnout – and the programme is a musical reflection on that time and on my long journey back to full health. I absolutely love the piece, I love working with Vedernikov, the BBC Symphony Orchestra is such a great group of players and really wonderful people. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent.

In the classical world, however, the guitar is still fighting for its place, although in the last decade things have changed dramatically.

It’s music that has stood the test of time, and which will stay for many years to come. This week on New Classical Tracks, guitarist Milos Karadaglic discusses how a performance injury and 2-year hiatus led to his new album, "Sound of Silence," which features pieces by Radiohead, Leonard Cohen, Paul Simon and the Magnetic Fields. “When I’m given a piece, I’m really good at making it work in the sense of bringing out fingerings and lines and melodies and things that sustain. On this tour, I hope that everyone will be able to find their own favourites in such an eclectic programme.

On 18 October 2016, Miloš announced via Facebook that he would be temporarily withdrawing from public performances owing to a problem with his hand.

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