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She would give very interesting facts about composers’ <strong>lives</strong>. She was so knowledgeable about the<br />

composers she liked. And she was a very good pianist. She would practice the piano for hours every<br />

morning, without skipping a day.<br />

Hermann Gattiker (1899‐1959) was a journalist and a music critic who held concerts in his house<br />

in the historical quarter of Bern. 13 It was in his house that Magdi gave her first concert in 1944. 14<br />

Among the audience were the composers Edward Stämpfli, and Peter Mieg. Mieg, also a painter and<br />

a journalist was to be in her repertoire between 1960‐66; at least four times. She had started the<br />

Bern Conservatory in 1940 and was a student of Hans Albrecht Moser whose works she was to<br />

perform later. In musical theory she was the student of Albert Moeschinger. In the concert she gave<br />

in Gattiker’s house once again, in April 1945, it was Moeschinger’s “Toccata” that she played. In her<br />

long play she recorded in Milan in 1960s, besides other sonatas she played a capriccio of Mieg, and<br />

two toccatas by Moeschinger. 2 préludes in the same recording are those of Scelsi’s. 15 We learn from<br />

the <strong>book</strong> about these concerts that Magdi was to work with him later in the fifties in Paris. 16 It was in<br />

1946 that she went to Paris, to continue her piano education in “École Normale de Musique”.<br />

She was the student of Alfred Cortot 17 , whose courses in musical interpretation were said to be<br />

legendary. From the interview she gave in 1963, we learn she has studied there for four years and<br />

took lessons from Yves Nat 18 and Lazare Lévy 19 . These names, along with those mentioned in<br />

Gattiker’s house were leading intellectuals of their time, open to the world. Moser, of whom Magdi<br />

was a student in Bern, was a friend of Hermann Hesse. Besides his own literary works, he had<br />

published a <strong>book</strong> on the art of piano playing: Über die Kunst des Klavierspiels 20 . Lévy had toured<br />

throughout Europe, North Africa, Israel, the Soviet Union and Japan. When Magdi’s repertoire is<br />

studied closely, the contemporary composers she played then are mostly examples of the “avantgarde.”<br />

She also travelled back and forth between Turkey and Europe in the fifties and the sixties for<br />

concerts. Although we have the programmes of most of these, there are barely any recordings. There<br />

are only a few reviews, too. Although she continued to perform when she came to Turkey, she seems<br />

not to have found a place among the musical circles here. Instead of drawing conclusions about the<br />

reasons for this, I will continue with what I found out in my contact with people who were her<br />

friends, and students. It goes without saying that she was friends with almost everyone she knew as<br />

her Ueli once stated, “She was really interested in people she met, independent of where they stood<br />

in society; a deep curiosity for human beings without prejudice.”<br />

There are still people who remember how spectacular her concert in the Ses Theatre was. It was<br />

the first concert she gave in Turkey 21 . The Turkish audience knew her from her short recordings made<br />

for the Ankara and Istanbul radios. Among the audience was Yüksel Koptagel’s sister Günsel<br />

Koptagel‐İlal, who is still enthusiastic about the concert sixty two years after: “Oh, how well‐prepared<br />

she was!” she recounted me, “such a wonderful performance. She played Beethoven’s last sonata,<br />

Opus 111. It was for the 125 th anniversary of his death.” Of those people who knew Magdi, today<br />

there are very few who had heard her play. Magdi did not talk about herself. She talked about music.<br />

Yet, another witness is Leyla Pınar. 22 Magdi had worked as a part time piano instructor at the State<br />

Conservatoire of Istanbul in the seventies. However hard I tried, I could not reach any information<br />

relevant to her position there. No dates, no information as to her position. The administrative staff I<br />

talked to remembered her with warm feelings; that was all. I tried to learn something from a few<br />

professors there, some of whom might have been there when Magdi was teaching. Some did not<br />

even know she’d ever taught there. “Has she? Oh, it must be the other conservatory,” said one of<br />

them. There were others who said that they did remember her as they were students then, but no,<br />

they were not her students. Later, I learned from Leyla Pınar that she was assigned to the ballet<br />

department, teaching correpetition. She was also working at the State Conservatory then, and they<br />

were sharing the same lounge for part timers. “This lady had style,” she told me. “We were given<br />

pieces now and then, for our work. Magdi Hanım would immediately play them. It wasn’t any<br />

deciphering we knew of, she played brilliantly.” When I told her about Magdi’s being a student of<br />

Yves Nat, she told me what a great interpreter of Beethoven Nat was. “If I were to listen to<br />

Beethoven sonatas, I would make sure I would listen to those played by Yves Nat,” she said.<br />

Her student Selin remembers Magdi telling her that of all the composers Liszt was her favorite.<br />

375

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