Richard Bratby

The problem with Klaus Makela

Plus: a Figaro at the Royal Opera House that doesn’t so much sparkle as glow

Klaus Makela has potential but where's the personality? Image: BBC / Chris Christodoulou

Klaus Makela is kind of a big deal. He’s a pupil of the Finnish conducting guru Jorma Panula – the so-called ‘Yoda of conducting’ – and he’s chief conductor of the Oslo Philharmonic as well as the Orchestre de Paris. Within the next three years he’s scheduled to take the baton at both the Chicago Symphony and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam: blue-chip international positions, with fees to match. So we’re going to be hearing a lot more from maestro Makela, though possibly not in the UK where he has almost certainly (barring the LSO and Covent Garden) been priced out of the market. He is only 28, though apparently his agents would prefer it if you didn’t talk about that.

Makela has potential by the bucketload: personality might take a little longer

And yet the history of music is peppered with prodigies: artists who appear, on the face of it, to be too young to have attained competence let alone genius, and yet somehow had access to the sublime.

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