Monday, 15 April 2013

Australian Twin Violinists

Article written in 'The Hinterland Times'

This time last year, the Hinterland Times published a story about Sunshine Coast twin violinists Rawhinia and Astar Castle and their quest to raise money to buy better violins in order to progress their music careers.
We’re happy to share the news that they reached their goal sooner than
 expected. They recently purchased two beautiful antique German violins and are now ready to take on the world.
New violins and a dream to play at Royal Albert Hall


THE TWINS have spent a solid year playing at fundraising concerts and weddings, busking, baking biscuits to sell and accepting donations from far and wide and Katusha says it was the Hinterland Times article that really kickstarted the fundraising.
“People started calling offering help, ideas and money, mostly from around here, but also from around Australia — from Melbourne and north Queensland. Without that article these violins would not be here today.
“However, shortly after the article was published last year we released we had underestimated the amount of funds we would need to raise”.
They were finally able to raise most of the money to buy two 100-year-old German violins, however they had to borrow the last $3000 and are still paying off the debt. After searching every violin shop in Brisbane, they found their instruments at the workshop of Brisbane master violin
maker John Simmers.
Simmers had bought the violins at auctions in Europe, then impeccably restored them and had them for sale in his workshop. He was so impressed with the girls’ efforts, he gave them an extremely generous discount for each instrument, and a beautiful handcrafted German bow each.
“They have an incredible teacher, Spiros Rantos from the University of Queensland, and they had to take their instruments to him to make sure
they were up to standard,” says Katusha. “We took numerous violins to Spiros, which meant paying a week’s insurance each time. He was very impressed with both of these violins.”
The two, 100 year-old German violins.
The girls can’t wipe the smiles off their faces as they take their treasured new violins out of their cases and place them carefully on the table to show them off. Astar’s violin is made of a deep reddish maple and was made by German master craftsman Heinrich Theodore Heberlein jr in 1914.
Rawhinia’s violin is a honey-coloured maple made by Albin L. Paulus jr for the Royal Court of Saxony. It is a very rare ‘female’ violin with a one-piece back, which creates a warmer sound (most violins are made with two pieces of wood with a seam down the middle).
“We tried countless violins and these were the first ones we liked,” says Rawhinia and Astar adds, “Sound is really individual, you have to fall in love with it.”
“I’m really proud they've had the stay-in power to keep going and achieve their goal,” says their mother Katusha, a single parent who supports her daughters every step of the way. “It’s quite a wonderful thing to see your children learn. Violin is a very hard instrument to learn, and you
have to have a lot of resilience, tolerance and patience with yourself.
The girls laugh as they admit they make lots of mistakes and say the trick is trying to cover them up and not being too hard on themselves.
The girls were set on becoming violinists from the age of two and a half, and they saved to buy their first violins at six. Now at 14, after nearly five years of lessons, they are studying for their grade 8 AMEB exam (Australian Music Exam Board). The university acceptance level is grade 6.
The girls with Brisbane master violin maker, John Simmers.
“In the grade 7 exam they both got A-plus high distinctions, which are hardly ever given out,” says Katusha. “It is a real honour.”
Despite their exceptional musical talents and academic intelligence — they are studying senior years at distance education and are doing the beginnings of first year university level maths for fun — the girls come across as unpretentious, giggly, cheeky 14-year-olds not at all lacking in humility. They like to give their time to worthy causes, having played at fundraisers for the Daniel Morcombe Foundation, the Make A Wish Foundation and The Kids Like Nick Foundation.
“They performed at a palliative care unit at Prince Charles Hospital in Brisbane, and they bought all the beds out into the courtyard and made tents with the sheets,” says Katusha. “One of the patients had been a violinist with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra and her favourite piece of music was [Pachelbel’s] Canon. The girls didn’t know that, but they played that piece and the lady passed away just afterwards.”
In another big boost to their careers, the twins have just received a scholarship from the Queensland branch of the Country Women’s Association to pay a year’s worth of fees for the Queensland Youth Orchestra, and they’re excited to be joining the orchestra on a trip to Canberra to play for Australia’s leaders at Parliament House in June.
“There are 85 of us going down,” says Aster, and both girls light up with excitement when asked if their mum is going. “No!” they answer in unison with a shared glint of mischief in their eyes. Most of the musicians are of university age and the girls openly admit they like to play ‘twin tricks’ on them. Sounds like it’s going to be a fun trip.
Astar and Rawhinia hope to go to the University of Queensland and do a double major in maths and music, adding they have dreams of studying engineering and quantum physics and applying it to live performance.
One of the biggest highlights of their career was meeting and playing for Nigel Kennedy. Next they’d love to meet and play for Russian violinist Maxim Vengerov. Their ultimate goal is to perform at the Royal Albert Hall in London, and at the rate this determined, disciplined pair is achieving their goals, you get the feeling it may well happen in the not too distant future.

Sunday, 23 December 2012

We would like to wish everyone
Merry Christmas!!!!



 Thanks for tuning in, A&R

Saturday, 22 December 2012

Astar and Rawhinia`s 2012 Update

Rawhinia and Astar Jamming
 Hi there,
    Thought I would give you a bit of an update on Astar and Rawhinia`s year. It has been quite dramatic and very exciting.
 First of all they have LOVED being members of Queensland Youth Orchestra (QYO2) . They are already eagerly waiting for orchestra rehearsals to start again in 2013! Fantastic music and a really great bunch of musicians.

Astar & Rawhinia are now very lucky to be studying violin under Spiros Rantos.
This year both girls sat their Grade 7 AMEB - both acquired high distinctions, so now practice, practice for Grade 8. Loads of scales and studies as well as pieces to learn. They love their lessons and continue to be passionate violin players.
Rawhinia and Astar Playing in a Nursing Home
 It is time for better quality violins - advanced players usually use violins worth between $7,000 and $20,000. 
Astar and Rawhinia Guest Musicians
  Astar and Rawhinia have been squeezing in fund-raising activities (saving for better quality violins) including performances, busking etc between QYO and SCYOs performances and rehearsals!. With loads of school assignments (year 9 & 10) and practicing violin and having lessons etc 2012 has flown.
Rawhinia and Astar playing to Palliative Care patients
A BIG THANK YOU TO ALL THOSE PEOPLE THAT HAVE FINANCIALLY SUPPORTED A & R THIS YEAR
Special thanks to Trudi Berg, Wouter Spitzers, Sally Buckner & Jarro Rykers for you have helped spread the sound of music near and far. 

Astar and Rawhinia Dressed To Kill - ready for performance
Astar and Rawhinia continue to fund-raise and are hoping to be able to purchase better sounding violins sometime during 2013. They have met loads of interesting and inspirational people at their performances throughout the year. It has truly been good fun!

Astar and Rawhinia Perform During Luncheon for Maleny Garden Club
Rawhinia and Astar Playing Duet for BRYO
Astar and Rawhinia Performing Bach

Listed below are a few of the concerts the girls have performed in 2012:

March     Brisbane Youth Orchestra
March     QYO2 Twilight Concert, OMB Brisbane
June        QYO2 Twilight Concert, OMB Brisbane
July         Buderim Nursing Home, Sunshine Coast
RSL         Hinterland, Sunshine Coast   - Music for diners
Sept        Workshop & performance with QSO, Caloundra Events Centre
Sept        QYO2 Twilight Concert  OMB, Brisbane
Sept        Make A Wish Foundation,  Coolum
Oct          Daniel Morecombe Foundation, Caloundra 
Oct          Prince Charles Hospital -Palliative Care, Brisbane
Oct          RSL Sunshine Coast
Oct          70th Birthday Party   Mapleton
Oct          QYO 2 Twilight Concert, OMB Brisbane 
Oct          Maleny Garden Club`s 60th Birthday Luncheon, Maleny Showgrounds
Nov         QYO Gala, QPAC Brisbane
Nov         SCYO  Gala, Caloundra Events Centre

A & R  Fund-raising for violins.  Biscuits anyone?

It`s school holidays now, but there is no such thing as a holiday when it comes to violin!  Though guess that playing beautiful music on the violin is as good as a holiday!

Here`s to creativity, practice, fund-raising and to the joy of music
Cheers,  A & R`s Nana







 


 

Sunday, 17 June 2012

A Rare Case Of Double Vision

RAWHINIA AND ASTAR CASTLE are not only identical twin girls but they have identical musical talents.
These highly motivated and attractive teenagers are the youngest violinists in the Queensland Youth Orchestra (QYO2), and can count internationally renowned violinist, Nigel Kennedy as one of their friends.
The girls and their single mum, Katusha, spoke to HT Editor from their home on the Sunshine Coast.
NOW I have to say, at the outset, that I was never quite sure whether I was talking to Rawhinia or Astar. It was also unnerving that each girl had the uncanny knack of finishing perfectly the other one’s sentences. (To help you out reading this story, Astar is in the pink top.)
“We heard Nigel Kennedy play ‘The Four Seasons’ when we were very little,” said Astar with remarkable poise for a 13 year-old. “We both knew right there and then that we wanted to play the violin, so we started saving, even though we were only two and a half years old. We finally bought our first violins when we were six.”
Katusha, the twins’ mother, has always given the girls her whole-hearted support for their musical aspirations. While she loves to listen to the girls play, she is not musical herself but recalls with a deep sigh the girls’ first response to the sound of a violin.
“When the girls were just two and half and they said they wanted a violin I laughed at them not taking them seriously. But every birthday and Christmas after that they saved.”
Being interested in early childhood herself, Katusha was quick to spot academic intelligence in her twin girls. They were quick to read, and before they were four they had already worked their way through the Enid Blyton library. They also have photographic memories – an ideal asset for learning music.
When they were about eight years old British violin virtuoso, Nigel Kennedy visited Brisbane and the twins wrote to him hoping to meet him.
“We got tickets to Kennedy’s concert,” said Astar, “and he invited us to come back stage after the concert. We cheekily asked him to sign our three quarter violins, and he did!”
“He quite liked their quirky sense of humour,” said Katusha with a sense of pride. “So now, whenever he comes to Australia he will ring the girls and ask them to come to his performances, and his private parties … which are just for him, his band and his friends… very late nights, but what an honour!”
“He came out again in 2010 and we went to one of his parties,” said Astar, “and that’s when he asked us to play for him.” “… Yes but at 1.30am in the morning!” laughed Rawhinia.
Katusha recalls Kennedy was very impressed with the way the girls worked with each other, without either of them realising that’s what they were doing. He has asked the girls to keep in contact with him as they progress, and wants to meet privately with them if they ever go to Europe, in fact Kennedy said “a trip to
Europe would be an asset to the twins musical education”. For the past four years the twins have had private
lessons with Adam Piechocinski, a local Sunshine Coast based violin teacher, originally from Poland.
With so much music practice, it was the girls who suggested home schooling to their mother. They do their lessons from there home through phone and internet conferencing, and they get to see school friends on open days at Brisbane School of Distance Education.
“I got involved last year in the Home Education System, when I wrote the girls school program for Years 8 and 9.
I found that because they have a very high IQ it was hard for me to keep up with them. They are now in Year 9 at BSDE. They’re doing Year 10 science and a very advanced level of maths. In English I decided to keep Astar and Rawhinia in Year 9 so that they wouldn’t finish high school too early. Otherwise they will be too young to move on to university.”
The girls are just as advanced with their music. They are already at Grade 7 AMEB level but their teacher doesn’t want them to sit their exam until they acquire new violins. The entire family… mother, grandmother and the twins… when their tight schedule permits, are street busking, playing at weddings or baking biscuits for local events, to raise at least $10,000 needed for two quality European violins.
Astar and Rawhinia have set up a fundraising account at the Maleny Credit Union for anyone who would like to contribute to their violin quest. (See end of story).
Not surprisingly, Astar and Rawhinia want a professional career in music. They are already the youngest violinists in the Queensland Youth Orchestra 2. Next step though is university. As if their timetable isn’t full enough, the twins have also started a four year business degree which they are hoping to complete by the time they are in Year 12.
“We want to go to the conservatorium,” adds Astar, “but we’re not sure which one, whether it will be Melbourne, Sydney or Brisbane. “
While professional violinists are rare, Katusha is conscious that her daughters have special talents, quite apart from their looks and their youthful passion to succeed.
When the Castle twins are not playing the violin they are sitting at the piano, playing the guitar, the clarinet, the flute, or composing violin pieces.
“I am very fortunate to be constantly surrounded by beautiful live music,” said Katusha with a satisfied smile. “I have these wonderful passionate musicians that I hear every day, so I count my blessings”.
Lend your support to help these extraodinarily talented locals girls become future world renowned performers…fundraising account to raise money for two violins for
Rawhinia and Astar Castle:
Maleny Credit Union BSB: 704-606 Acc. No: 200101553 A & R Castle

Wednesday, 11 April 2012

THE GIFT OF GIVING

Rawhinia and Astar


Yesterday I had the pleasure of enjoying Rawhinia and Astar's performance at a nursing home on the Sunshine Coast, where the girls played to over 60 residents.
It was amazing to see the difference, first-hand, that music can make in people that are aged. When we arrived at the home, the residents (who are quite old) were sluggish and not interested in communicating with other residents or myself. Then the girls played a variety of classical pieces. Straight away the audience were alert and tapping, singing and swaying to the music. After the girls finished their set the residents cheered and requested an encore. The difference was astounding, we now had a room of alert communicative people. They were so happy and as the girls said "FULL OF LIFE. Completely transformed".
 Both Astar and Rawhinia were so pleased that they had the opportunity to give this gift to the residents at the nursing home.

The gift of giving is a wonderful thing!

Cheers Katusha

Sunday, 11 March 2012

Alexander Headland Wedding

Hello again,

Astar and Rawhinia, now 13, are still mad about violin and belong to two orchestras one being the Queensland Youth Orchestra. So loads of time taken up with violin as well as the huge amount of schoolwork that is necessary for grade 9 and 10. (A & R are doing grade 10 science).

They did though, manage to squeeze in playing for a wonderful little wedding on the coast last month. This is a sneeky photo of them warming up for the wedding. Hope you like it.
Tuning up for The Wedding
Cheers, Katusha

Monday, 9 January 2012

Healthy Hints - 2012 List of Important Things To Do

HAPPY NEW YEAR
Let`s make this the best year ever! Plenty of music and plenty of creativity!

Please check out my short list of some important things to do in 2012

Tune in to the Healthy Hints Page,
Cheers   Christabel