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Georgia on my mind

BBC Music Magazine

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December 2025

A product of the fertile Georgian music system, star pianist Mariam Batsashvili speaks to Michael Church about Beethoven, artistic freedom and teaching via social media

Georgia on my mind

'I was born twice,' said the great Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin. 'In Kazan I opened my eyes to life, and in Tbilisi to music.' What is it about music and the Georgians? Some members of that Caucasian tribe believe there's a special musical gene hardwired into their DNA. And walking through the streets of their capital Tbilisi one sunlit Sunday morning, I felt the force of that idea.

imageI came upon a group of young men with tear-stained faces, clutching bottles of vodka and singing a slow and beautiful polyphonic lament. This was their way of mourning a friend who had died in a car crash, and would I like to join them for a shot? I walked on past newspaper vendors selling piano sheet-music, and where else in the world would you see that? Meanwhile, in the streets surrounding Sioni Cathedral, impromptu circles of middle-aged men were singing folk songs in immaculate three-part counterpoint: all spontaneous, with no one in charge.

Lodging with Georgian friends, I had noted the contrapuntal perfection with which they sang on feast days round the dinner table – no matter how much they'd drunk. But nothing prepared me for the biggest surprise I encountered on that walk: a children's choir, out in the street being taught a traditional Georgian song, full of awkward jumps and dissonances. Their teacher let me watch, and after an hour the young singers had not only mastered it (without a score) but had also learned all three parts.

Tchaikovsky conducted in Tbilisi, and Verdi reworked Aida there; though the city's conservatoire was discriminated against by Tsarists and Soviets – both seeing it quite correctly as a hotbed of Caucasus nationalism – it was always a cradle of musical excellence.

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