Tag: Boston Pops

  • Loved or Feared Conductors: Fiedler vs. Reiner

    Loved or Feared Conductors: Fiedler vs. Reiner

    Is it better to be feared than loved?

    I note that ‘tis the season not only to be jolly, but for births of great conductors who reached full flower during the hi-fi era.

    Arthur Fielder’s birthday anniversary was on December 17. For 49 years, Fiedler (1894-1979) was music director of the Boston Pops. He was not the Pops’ first music director – the group was founded in 1885 as an offshoot of the Boston Symphony Orchestra (which Fiedler joined as a violinist in 1915) – but he was certainly its best-known and arguably most-beloved.

    Fiedler built the Pops into one of the best known and bestselling orchestras in the United States. He made his first recordings with the group in 1935. With the rise of PBS, he became a regular presence in American living rooms on “Evening at Pops” telecasts, beginning in 1970.

    Allegedly, the Fiedler-Pops partnership yielded more recordings than any other conductor-orchestra combo in the world, with album, single, tape, and cassette sales exceeding $50 million.

    Because of his phenomenal success as a light classics and crossover conductor, Fiedler’s talent in the more respected classical music repertoire was often overlooked. There’s a lot that he never conducted or that was never recorded, but in Liszt, Rimsky-Korsakov, and even Darius Milhaud, he was never less than first-rate. And as an accompanist to soloists like Earl Wild, he oversaw a number of popular (Gershwin) and cult (Paderewski) classics.

    I myself once underrated him, but my long experience in radio set me straight. Once you filter out the kitsch, you’ll find the man made some truly marvelous recordings. On the evidence of these, in a certain kind of music, he could stand toe-to-toe with any conductor in the world. I remember just randomly airing his recording of the “Nutcracker” suite one morning and being struck by how satisfying it was on every level.

    As for the splashy arrangements of showtunes and movie themes, and the amusing album covers (Fiedler surrounded by leotard or taffeta-wearing babes, or the one on which he dons Travolta’s iconic white disco suit for a program featuring arrangements of Bee Gees hits), the man knew how give the public what it wanted. How much he believed in the kitsch and how much was canny showmanship, I have no idea. I believe he laughed all the way to the bank, but if so, he did it wholly without contempt for his audience.

    Fritz Reiner (1888-1963), on the other hand, is the last person I would ever imagine on the dance floor. Reiner, born on December 19, was one of the most dreaded conductors, from a musician’s standpoint, in an era when tyrants of the podium still very much roamed the earth. With a glower that could make Karloff quake (though he resembled more Bela Lugosi), Reiner was forged in Hungary at the twilight of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Hungary at the time had quite the reputation for churning out great conductors. George Szell, Eugene Ormandy, Antal Doráti, Ferenc Fricsay, Sir Georg Solti, and István Kertész all achieved considerable international success.

    Among Reiner’s own teachers was Béla Bartók, with whom he studied piano. Reiner would later repay the favor with what many consider to be the benchmark recording of Bartók’s “Concerto for Orchestra.” He also worked closely with Richard Strauss in Dresden, and his recordings of Strauss’ works are equally revered. All in all, the Chicago Symphony under Fritz Reiner was a surefire choice to give the ol’ hi-fi a good workout in the early days of stereo.

    In 1928, Reiner became a naturalized American citizen. He began to teach conducting at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, where among his pupils was Leonard Bernstein. His first American post was as principal conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony. He took over the Pittsburgh Symphony for a decade, beginning in 1938. Then he spent several years at the Met. But it was as music director of the Chicago Symphony that he attained legendary status.

    For a master interpreter of some of the largest and most challenging works in the repertoire, his baton technique was notable for its precision and economy. Much of what he achieved, unfortunately, was through the brutality he exuded in rehearsals. Reiner emerged from an Old World steeped in aristocratic privilege. At the top of their profession, conductors then were regarded as gods-on-earth. When drive and ego were bolstered by absolute power, working conditions could become downright perilous. Before strong musicians’ unions, conductors exercised the authority to fire anyone on a whim. So when musicians played for Reiner, they played as if their lives depended on it – or at the very least their livelihoods.

    Did it make for better musicmaking? You can’t argue with the excellence of Reiner’s Chicago Symphony. Unless, of course, you look to Fiedler and the Boston Pops.


    Reiner conducts Beethoven

    Big band Bach

    Benchmark Bartók

    Strauss’ “Salome”

    And, to keep it seasonal, “Waltz of the Flowers” from “The Nutcracker”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mgaS9CZ7KsQ

    Fiedler’s benchmark Gershwin with Earl Wild

    Conducting Liszt’s “Mazeppa”

    Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Le coq d’or” (“The Golden Cockerel”)

    Paderewski Piano Concerto with Wild and the London Symphony Orchestra

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-ZLIXCSZ70

    Perhaps one of Fiedler’s least-known recordings: Paul Hindemith’s “Der Schwanendreher,” with the composer as viola soloist

    Handel’s organ concertos with Carl Weinrich

    Fielder conducts “Waltz of the Flowers”

  • Jalousie Tango The Story of Jacob Gade

    Jalousie Tango The Story of Jacob Gade

    You probably know the melody, but do you know the composer?

    Jacob Gade (1879-1963) claimed that he was inspired to write his immortal tango “Jalousie,” or “Jealousy,” after reading a sensational newspaper account of a crime of passion.

    Gade was working in a cinema orchestra in Copenhagen at the time. The piece was first performed under the composer’s baton in 1925, at the Danish premiere of Douglas Fairbanks’ “Don Q, Son of Zorro.”

    Published in Denmark, Paris, and New York, “Jalousie” became an international sensation, featured in countless radio broadcasts and at least 100 films. The royalties allowed Gade to devote himself exclusively to composition and to set up a foundation for young musicians.

    The first recording of the work was made by Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops in 1935. Gade was so pleased with the result that he traveled all the way to Boston in order to thank Fiedler personally. While there, he took the opportunity to hand off the score for his new symphony. Many years later, Fiedler recollected that it was one of the worst pieces of music he ever looked at.

    As someone who enjoys a spoonful of ghost pepper-infused honey with his morning tea, I got a mild kick out of this video. Even in Denmark, apparently, some like it hot.

  • Connie Weldon First Female Tubist Dies at 88

    Connie Weldon First Female Tubist Dies at 88

    Constance “Connie” Weldon has died. She is believed to have been the first female tubist to attain a principal position with a major symphony orchestra.

    Weldon turned down an offer from the Rio de Janeiro Symphony in the early 1950s to continue her studies in Miami. Soon, she was touring with the Boston Pops. She also played at Tanglewood under Leonard Bernstein.

    Later, she became a member of the North Carolina and Kansas City Symphonies. During studies abroad, she served as principal tubist with the Netherlands Ballet Orchestra and acting principal tubist with the Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam.

    Back home, she joined the Miami Philharmonic and became an influential teacher at Miami University. From 1972 to 1991, she served as Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies at University of Miami School of Music (now the Frost School).

    At the time of her death, she was 88 years-old.

  • Leroy Anderson & Bernard Herrmann American Masters

    Leroy Anderson & Bernard Herrmann American Masters

    The composers Leroy Anderson and Bernard Herrmann rose to prominence, in their respective ways, through their invaluable contributions to American popular culture.

    Anderson (1908-1975), whose fluency in foreign languages (especially those of Scandinavia) made him an asset to the U.S. Army during the Second World War, was more or less staff composer for the Boston Pops.

    His early work for the Pops was as an arranger. It was Arthur Fiedler who recognized his talent and began requesting original work. Good call. Anderson turned out to be the Irving Berlin of American light orchestral music, producing hit after hit after hit: “Blue Tango,” “The Typewriter,” and “Plink! Plank! Plunk!” among them. Johnny Mathis scored a gargantuan success with his vocal rendition of “Sleigh-Ride,” for over half a century a holiday staple. Anderson’s “The Syncopated Clock,” a favorite from the start, became further entrenched in the popular consciousness as the theme music for “The Late Show,” a showcase for the CBS late night movie.

    Herrmann (1911-1975) was staff conductor for CBS radio. In this role, he introduced American audiences to an impressive array of comparatively arcane music for the era, including works by Charles Ives, Nikolai Myaskovsky, Gian Francesco Malipiero, Edmund Rubbra, and Richard Arnell.

    He fell in with Orson Welles, with whom he worked on radio shows like “Mercury Theatre on the Air” (including Welles’ notorious adaptation of “War of the Worlds”). When Welles went to Hollywood, Herrmann went with him, to write the music for “Citizen Kane.” This would be the first of decades worth of finely-crafted film scores, always orchestrated by Herrmann himself (an unusual practice in Hollywood) and always perfectly suited to the images on screen, or their psychological underpinnings.

    Of course, Herrmann is best-known for his collaborations with Alfred Hitchcock (including “Vertigo,” “North by Northwest,” and “Psycho”), but he also wrote top-notch, ear-opening scores for producer Charles Schneer and special effects artist Ray Harryhausen (most notably “Jason and the Argonauts”). Amazingly, he won only a single Oscar, for his work on “The Devil and Daniel Webster,” in 1941. Herrmann died of a heart attack shortly after completing the recording sessions for Martin Scorsese’s “Taxi Driver,” in 1975.

    Happy birthday, gentlemen! Thanks for all the music.


    Staying up late with “The Syncopated Clock”

    “North by Northwest”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xBxjwurp_04


    PHOTOS: Cranky Herrmann needs caffeine (left); sunny Anderson remembers his royalty checks

  • Anderson & Herrmann American Music Legends

    Anderson & Herrmann American Music Legends

    Today marks the birthday anniversaries of two composers who, in their own individual ways, gained fame through their invaluable contributions to American popular culture. Interestingly, both died 40 years ago.

    Leroy Anderson (1908-1975), whose fluency in foreign languages (especially those of Scandinavia) made him an asset to the U.S. Army during the Second World War, was more or less staff composer for the Boston Pops.

    His early work for the Pops was as an arranger. It was Arthur Fiedler who recognized his talent and began requesting original work. Good call. Anderson turned out to be the Irving Berlin of American light orchestral music, producing hit after hit after hit: “Blue Tango,” “The Typewriter,” and “Plink! Plank! Plunk!” among them. Johnny Mathis scored a gargantuan success with his vocal rendition of “Sleigh-Ride,” for over half a century a holiday staple. Anderson’s “The Syncopated Clock,” a favorite from the start, became further entrenched in the popular consciousness as the theme music for “The Late Show,” the late night movie, shown on CBS.

    Bernard Herrmann (1911-1975) was staff conductor on CBS radio. In this role, he introduced American audiences to an impressive array of comparatively arcane music for the era, including works by Charles Ives, Nikolai Myaskovsky, Gian Francesco Malipiero, Edmund Rubbra, and Richard Arnell (Classical Discoveries’ Marvin Rosen!).

    He fell in with Orson Welles, with whom he worked on radio shows like “Mercury Theatre on the Air.” When Welles went to Hollywood, he brought Herrmann with him to write the music for “Citizen Kane.” This led to decades of finely-crafted film scores, always orchestrated by Herrmann himself (an unusual practice in Hollywood) and always perfectly suited to the images on screen, or their psychological underpinnings.

    Of course, Herrmann is best-known for his collaborations with Alfred Hitchcock, but he also wrote top-notch, ear-opening scores for producer Charles Schneer and special effects artist Ray Harryhausen (including that for “Jason and the Argonauts”). Amazingly, he won only a single Oscar, for his work on “The Devil and Daniel Webster,” in 1941. Herrmann died of a heart attack shortly after conducting the recording sessions for Martin Scorsese’s “Taxi Driver,” in 1975.

    Happy birthday, gentlemen! Thanks for the music.

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