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    CultureMap Video

    Liberace of the fiddle: Rebel violinist brings his dance club music — and $3 million instrument — to Houston

    Joel Luks
    Sep 19, 2013 | 10:24 am
    Liberace of the fiddle: Rebel violinist brings his dance club music — and $3 million instrument — to Houston
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    It may have been an early childhood romance that first inspired Edvin Marton to pick up the violin, but his tryst with the fiddle wasn't love at first sight.

    When he was 5 years old, Marton (née Lajos Csűry) had eyes for a little girl he met in kindergarten class, but as luck would have it, she wouldn't give him the time of day. He approached his mother for advice. She suggested that he learn a delightful little tune to serenade his crush on her birthday. Marton practiced and practiced in hopes of winning her heart — and he did.

    After his performance, Marton received a peck on the cheek.

    Marton, in Houston to perform his "Stradivarius Show" on Friday night at Wortham Theater Center as part of the Brilliant Lecture Series, comes from a family of musicians. His father is a violinist. His mother is a violinist. His grandparents, violinists. His younger sister, he says, having grown up in such an immersive environment, believed that everyone — every family — played the violin.

    Marton soon discovered, however, that he disliked practicing vehemently. The prankster would trick his father into thinking he was hard at work by playing a pre-recorded tape of violin exercises. In the meantime, Marton would escape through his bedroom window to join his pals in a game of soccer. Marton even timed his absences to the minute. He would reappear just before the cassette would end — roughly 45 minutes — to turn over to the second side so he could return to the sport.

    "I'd sit on the violin on purpose to break it," he says. "Because we lived in a small village, it would take a week for another violin to arrive. I was happy I didn't have to practice for a few days, but my father — oh boy — you can imagine how upset he was."

    "My father wanted me to be somebody. As a kid, I didn't understand my talent. He felt my talent."

    Punishments that included not being fed breakfast until after an hour of practice seemed harsh at the time. But many years later, Marton appreciates the discipline his parents instilled in him while growing up in Vinogradov, Ukraine.

    "My father wanted me to be somebody," he explains. "As a kid, I didn't understand my talent. He felt my talent. And I'm thankful to him for never giving up on me."

    At 8 years old, Marton was accepted to the Central Tchaikovsky Music School in Moscow. Four years later, he made his solo debut with the Moscow Symphony Orchestra. But after being accepted to Dorothy DeLay's studio at The Juilliard School in New York City, Marton's journey shifted from classical performance to rock star.

    Perhaps the Liberace of the fiddle? Marton does have a penchant for dramatic costumes, feathers and special effects.

    "Something was missing in my life," Marton explains. "It was after an emotional concert at the Berliner Philharmonie — I played the Brahms concerto — that I realized what it was: It wasn't my music. I needed to play my own music to express what I was feeling."

    In the Big Apple, Marton mingled with DJs and frequented many underground dance clubs. He found his voice in a blend of classically themed melodies with contemporary dance grooves. But Marton's father did not agree.

    "He was really mad at me," Marton says. "He wanted me to record the Tchaikovsky concerto. He wanted me to pursue traditional classical music. He didn't understand why it was important for me to do my own thing."

    Would Vivaldi write for electronic instruments if he were alive today? How would Puccini feel about his tender melodies being set to thump-thumping bass lines? Would Paganini rock out to Marton's style or would he roll his eyes in contempt? And Marton ponders these questions as he writes what he hears in his head, but the uncertainty doesn't deter him from forging ahead.

    Four of the five albums Marton recorded are in this fusion style. His "Tosca Fantasy" and "Romeo and Juliet" were featured in the Torino 2006 Olympic Winter Games gala spectacle that included a collaboration with figure skating gold medalists Evgeni Plushenko, Tatiana Totmianina and Maxim Marinin. In 2008, Marton won the Eurovision Song Contest with the song "Believe," co-written with Dima Bilan, a popular Russian actor and singer/songwriter.

    For his Houston show, Marton will play on a $3-million, 1697 Stradivarius violin on loan from a Swiss bank. He describes the sound as rich, warm, a perfect commingling of Romanticism and virtuosity, also a combination that accurately characterizes his music. Songs including "Malibu Sunset," "Fanatico" (video recorded at the Great Wall of China) and "Grandioso" stem from his obsession with the natural world.

    As for his relationship with his father, Marton says that things have come full circle.

    "After one of my shows, my father said to me, 'I understand now how you feel. I know now why you wanted to compose this music,' " Marton says. "Now I can concentrate on making beautiful music — all the time."

    The video of Marton's song "Fanatico" was recorded at the Great Wall of China.

    Brilliant lecture series presents Edvin Marton preview September 2013 Great Wall of China
      
    Courtesy photo
    The video of Marton's song "Fanatico" was recorded at the Great Wall of China.
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    Movie Review

    How to Train Your Dragon remake puts a fresh twist on the original

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 12, 2025 | 4:14 pm
    Toothless and Mason Thames in How to Train Your Dragon
    Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures
    Toothless and Mason Thames in How to Train Your Dragon.

    Let’s get it out of the way right at the top: The new live-action How to Train Your Dragon, coming a mere 15 years after the original animated film, serves no real purpose other than to make more money for Universal Pictures and Dreamworks Pictures. However, unlike Disney’s approach toward remaking their animated movies, this attempt manages to succeed on its own merits instead of being a half-baked vessel for nostalgia.

    As fans will remember, Hiccup (Mason Thames) lives in Berk, a town on a remote island populated by Vikings who constantly have to defend themselves against rampaging dragons. Hiccup’s dad, Stoick (Gerard Butler), is the community’s vaunted leader, with a legacy that seems impossible for Hiccup to measure up to, especially since he’s stuck in the armory alongside Gobber (Nick Frost).

    But Hiccup has a knack for inventions, and his use of one new weapon during a dragon attack takes down a feared Night Fury. Finding the wounded dragon deep in the forest, Hiccup decides against killing it, leading to an unexpected bond between the two of them. Most of the film shows Hiccup trying to prove himself to his townspeople, including the fierce Astrid (Nico Parker), while also nursing the dragon he dubs Toothless back to health with the help of another one of his ingenious creations.

    Written and directed by Dean DeBlois (who’s had the same roles on all four HTTYD films), the film is most notable for how engaging it is despite it retelling a story many already know and love. The biggest reason for this is a pivot away from telling a story mainly for kids toward one that feels like an extremely light version of Game of Thrones. Almost right away, there are real stakes for the people in the film, and the way DeBlois and his team stage the scenes, the danger can be felt by the audience.

    This sense of “realness” comes through especially well in the scenes between Hiccup and Toothless. The design of Toothless is faithful to the original, but the CGI makes the dragon feel amazingly believable. And when they start flying, the film literally and metaphorically takes off. At multiple points, the camera seems to have trouble keeping them in frame, a smart move toward verisimilitude when the filmmakers clearly could have made it an overly smooth watching experience.

    Even though it’s more serious than the original, the film still has plenty of fun to offer. Characters like Gobber (who replaces his two missing limbs with odd contraptions) and the ragtag group of teenagers who come to be in awe of Hiccup’s skills at taming dragons provide more than a few laughs. Hiccup isn’t quite as goofy as he was when voiced by Jay Baruchel, which turns out to be a good thing as his sense of purpose amps up the drama of the story.

    Thames’ performance gets better and better as the film goes along, as Hiccup goes from town whipping boy toward hero. He really shines in the last act when he’s given a few scenes that show off his acting range. Parker is equally good, demonstrating the girl power needed for the role, but also the softness of a potential love interest. Butler, the only actor reprising their voice role, is a great presence who sells the outsized personality of Stoick.

    Against the odds, this new version of How to Train Your Dragon is equal to the success of the first film, accomplishing the goal of making it feel like you’re watching the story for the first time. If live-action remakes are going to continue to come out, future filmmakers should study this film for how to respect both the history of the franchise and the audience paying good money to be entertained.

    ---

    How to Train Your Dragon opens in theaters on June 13.

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