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‘My viola gives me space to be myself’

Musician Shiry Rashkovsky has organised a classical music festival in a London cafe - first steps to bringing back live music in the pandemic

October 29, 2020 11:47
shiry
4 min read

Walking down Clerkenwell Road, you might not expect the attractive café at number 91-95 to be one of the hottest classical musical venues in London. The Fidelio Orchestra Café has been the unlikely hero of 2020, one of the first places to begin staging live music after lockdown. It has been bringing some of the best international musicians in London — of the calibre of Stephen Hough, Nicola Benedetti and Angela Hewitt — to perform to small, socially-distanced audiences who also enjoy a three-course dinner created by the chef Alan Rosenthal. Fidelio’s proprietor and driving force, Raffaello Morales, has swiftly adapted the café and its music to the demands of our time — and made it a smash hit.

When the café was first preparing to open early in 2019, the British-Israeli violist Shiry Rashkovsky, who lives nearby with her husband and daughter, spotted it and popped in to investigate. The result is that she has joined forces with Morales to create a new festival called Up Close and Musical. Devised pre-Covid, it was intended for last May, but when lockdown struck, it moved wholesale to autumn. With suitable adaptations and reduced audience capacity, it is set to run throughout the weekend of November 6 to 8.

Rashkovsky is hoping the event will be seen as a symbol of hope and optimism, and stresses that the venue will be made assiduously Covid-safe. “I think that the idea we’re going ahead despite London being Tier 2 is encouraging in itself and hopefully will inspire people to want to come along,” she says. “If anything, knowing that Fidelio has been working since July should be reassuring, because you know they have the requisite experience and have adapted to all the changes that have come along.”

She credits this success story to Morales’s galvanising creativity: “Raffaello is an incredibly driven person and he does not give up,” she says. “He’s like a brook: he just goes round all the stones and solves the problems. For instance, the space is relatively small, but he handles it positively; there’s no stage, but that’s good because it gives you more flexibility. When I first met him I thought it would be great to try and create a festival there because he seemed so open to ideas — and my intuition was correct.”