Ludwig van Beethoven: Violin Sonata No. 5 “Spring, Scherzo” (Chloë Hanslip/Danny Driver)
She was also chosen to feature as the “infant prodigy violinist” in the film adaptation of Onegin, which starred Ralph Fiennes and Liv Tyler. “It was such fun,” she recalls, “they gave me 10 days to learn the cadenza from the Devil’s Trill sonata by Tartini, which is one of the hardest pieces in the repertoire. I remember being very disappointed, though, because I thought I was going to get lots of hair and make-up, and Martha Fiennes, the director, said, ‘Well, you’ve got the perfect Russian complexion, you don’t need any make-up.'”
Eugene Onegin, “Tatyana’s Letter”
Chloë Hanslip made international headlines when she was signed by Warner Classics at 13, and was lauded as the most brilliant player of her generation. Her debut album was released in September 2001 to great acclaim, and the second CD featured Bruch’s Concerti No. 1 and 3. “I’ve always been more mature than my years,” she says. “I don’t really see what a childhood is anyway. I’m very happy with my life. As long as you are happy, it doesn’t really matter whether you had a childhood.” Chloë always wanted to be a fully-fledged classical musician, “I wouldn’t be a crossover artist,” she insists. “I admire Vanessa-Mae for what she has done, but that’s not the way I want to go. I’m a straight classical artist. I think classical music should be played as the composer wrote it, not in some kind of arrangement with modern backing. I don’t think I ever want to go into pop-classical.” Although she was signed to record five discs for Warner Classics, the label fired her after only 2! While we are certainly aware of the Mafia-style tactics of the recording industry, it seems that inflated expectations led Chloë and her parents to become “increasingly assertive in their dealings with Warner Classics, and there came a point where corporate patience snapped.” Since then Hanslip has recorded a stunning CD with works by John Adams, John Corigliano and Franz Waxman. “The richness and clarity of her tone is beyond learning… this is the sort of performance that secures a reputation for life,” reports Gramophone. Hanslip now plays about 50 concerts a year and more than once was asked whether she had pushy parents? “No,” was her decided answer, “I was the pushy daughter.”
John Adams: Violin Concerto, (Excerpt)