Tag: Cleveland Orchestra

  • Remembering Christoph von Dohnányi

    Remembering Christoph von Dohnányi

    For some reason, Christoph von Dohnányi didn’t come to Philadelphia much. I can recall he came through on tour once, probably with the Cleveland Orchestra. I’m sure he must have come through more than that, but if he did, I never heard him live. He was music director in Cleveland from 1984 to 2002 (having conducted the orchestra for the first time in 1981) – enough to keep anyone’s hands full, I suppose. But I knew him from his recordings, naturally.

    He had an interesting lineage. His grandfather was the eminent Hungarian composer, pianist, conductor, and educator Ernst von Dohnányi (born Ernő). His uncle, on his mother’s side (also his godfather), was the theologian and anti-Nazi dissident Dietrich Bonhoeffer. A number of his family members were part of the German Resistance movement during World War II. Several, including his father and uncle, were detained in concentration camps and executed when Dohnanyi was 15.

    The young Dohnányi set out on an academic career with an intention to study law, but in common with so many musicians who pursued that course, in the end succumbed to the siren lure of music.

    In 1951, he first came to the United States to study with his repatriated grandfather at Florida State University. The elder Dohnányi had actually met and played with Brahms.

    Christoph is now being widely lauded for having “restored” to the Cleveland Orchestra to its former excellence, following the lackluster tenure of Lorin Maazel, who succeeded George Szell (who of course made the orchestra). Maazel was appointed music director over the voluble protests of its musicians. Be that as it may (or may not; was the orchestra ever bad?), Dohnányi learned firsthand how difficult it was to emerge from the shadow of a legend. He once quipped, “We give a great concert, and George Szell gets a great review.”

    Dohnányi defined the difference between them: Szell, a notorious martinet (my words, not his), drilled the musicians mercilessly and drove them with a palpable sense of inner intensity. Dohnányi, on the other hand, assimilated the lessons he learned in the opera house, beginning as an assistant to Georg Solti in Frankfurt, not worrying so much about bar-lines, but following the example of singers in allowing the music to breathe.

    Eventually, he would become music director in Frankfurt. He also held posts at the opera houses of Lübeck and Hamburg. Later, he brought staged opera to Cleveland.

    Among his orchestra positions, he was chief conductor of the Staatsorchester Kassel and the WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne. Following Cleveland, he was principal guest conductor, and then principal conductor, of London’s Philharmonia Orchestra. In 2004, he became chief conductor of the North German Radio Symphony Orchestra, a position he held until 2010.

    Of course, he guest conducted all the great orchestras of the United States (including Cleveland), as well as most of them in Europe, and also the Israel Philharmonic. Throughout, he remained active in opera.

    Although wholly devoted to music, he was not a flashy conductor and preferred to keep a low profile. He acknowledged that he was a strong leader, but he was never one for razzle dazzle.

    Dohnányi died on Saturday. Today would have been his 96th birthday. R.I.P.


    Interestingly, I note that I don’t have all that many of Dohnányi’s recordings in my own collection, although I have had dealings with many of them over the course of my career in radio. Of the ones I do own, I have great affection for his first recording of Mendelssohn’s “Die erste Walpurgisnacht,” with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus. He’s the conductor on favorite recordings of the Busoni Piano Concerto (with Garrick Ohlsson) and the Philip Glass Violin Concerto (with Gidon Kremer). I also have the recording of Alban Berg’s “Wozzeck” he made with his wife, Anja Silja. I’m sure there are more, but not many. The comparative neglect is attributable to my deficiency and not his.

    Dohnányi made a number of recordings of the works of Antonin Dvořák (including the Symphonies Nos. 6, 7, 8 & 9, the Piano Concerto, and the “Slavonic Dances”). These received heavy air play for decades, especially by a certain host who shall remain nameless, during my years at the local classical music radio station. Since today is also Dvořák’s birthday anniversary, here’s a link to his recording of the Symphony No. 7.

    He was also a champion of Hans Werner Henze. Thanks to Mather Pfeiffenberger for directing me to this link to orchestral fragments (Adagio, Fugue and Maenads’ Dance) from “The Bassarids.” In 1965, Dohnányi conducted the premiere of Henze’s “Der junge Lord” (which he also recorded).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJd8EQZc7XY

    Of course, he was widely acclaimed for his Brahms. Here’s a live performance of Brahms’ 1st in Hamburg, from 2007:

  • George Szell Composer Conductor?

    George Szell Composer Conductor?

    Did you know that one of the most revered – and feared – conductors of the 20th century was also a composer? Or at least he was, at one time.

    George Szell, the musical martinet who built the Cleveland Orchestra into one of the world’s finest – even as he drove 40 percent of its musicians to seek psychiatric help, according to clarinetist Murray Khouri, who wasn’t joking – at 11 toured Europe as “the next Mozart.”

    By 17, Szell added conducting to his precocious skills as a pianist-composer and soon determined the latter discipline was where his future lay.

    If his own music reminds you of Richard Strauss, Szell was very much from that world. At 18, Szell was appointed to Berlin’s Royal Court Opera, where Strauss was music director. He quickly earned the older composer’s admiration and friendship. Strauss once said that he could die a happy man knowing that there was someone who could perform his music so perfectly.

    It’s good that he felt that way, because Szell wound up having to conduct the first half of the world premiere recording of Strauss’ “Don Juan,” when the composer overslept. Since a 78-rpm record could only accommodate four minutes of music per side, the session was planned in four parts. Strauss walked in just as Szell was completing the second and thought it so good, he allowed it stand. The complete performance was issued under Strauss’ name.

    Szell credited Strauss as being a major influence on his conducting style. For Strauss’ part, he continued to keep track of his protégé even after Szell settled in the United States.

    By then, for Szell, there would be no more composing. He did, however, keep up with his pianism, which came in handy during rehearsals. Occasionally, he also played and recorded chamber music.

    He brought all his experience to bear on his quest for artistic excellence on the podium. That he was a triple-threat was like gilding the lily for one already as threatening as George Szell.


    One of Szell’s early compositions, “Variations on an Original Theme”

    World premiere recording of “Don Juan” (1917), with Szell and Strauss conducting

    Szell as a Mozart pianist

    Szell’s benchmark modern orchestra Haydn

    While on tour with the Cleveland Orchestra in Tokyo, and with only two months to live (he was terminally ill with cancer), Szell conducted what may very well be the most thrilling performance of Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2 I have ever heard, certainly on a par with the classic Barbirolli account with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra

    Szell speaks!

    Szell on “The Bell Telephone Hour” on NBC. These days, you won’t even find something like this on PBS.

    Szell rehearses Beethoven

    Szell conducts Beethoven and Bruckner in Vienna

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

    Happy birthday, G.S.!

  • George Szell Autocrat Genius Cleveland Orchestra

    George Szell Autocrat Genius Cleveland Orchestra

    All’s Szell that ends well.

    A notorious autocrat from an era when autocrats were tolerated, respected, and even revered on the podium, George Szell was a formidable perfectionist, even to the extent of lecturing the Severance Hall custodians on the proper way to mop a floor and what kind of toilet paper they should be supplying in the restrooms.

    When he took over as music director in Cleveland in 1946, straight off, he fired 12 of the orchestra’s 97 players and signed the rest to short-term contracts. His aim was to rebuild the ensemble into a force to be reckoned with. “A new leaf will be turned over with a bang,” he declared. By the time of his death in 1970, 40 percent of his musicians were seeing psychiatrists.

    Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau noted “his compulsive need to always have an opinion different from others and his considerable paranoia when it came to the orchestra’s ill-will.” Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they don’t hope you fall down the stairs and break your neck.

    He may have been a bit of a martinet and a world-class S.O.B., but Szell’s goal was a lofty one. He whipped Cleveland into one of the country’s top orchestras – which is to say, one of the best in the world. If he expected much of his musicians, he himself never phoned-in a performance. He was always hyper-prepared, and in rehearsals, nothing escaped his notice. It was not unusual for him to take everything apart and rebuild it from the ground up, even at the expense of his musician’s nerves. Sometimes it backfired, and the orchestra was so wrung out, it had nothing left for the actual performance.

    While the uncanny precision of Szell’s Clevelanders was often praised, many of their performances were criticized for a perceived lack of warmth. Certainly, there is enough documentary evidence to prove that on occasion Szell could indeed catch fire and inspire his players. He is much kinder in filmed rehearsals than his reputation would suggest.

    He may have been a little tightly wound, but you can’t quibble with the results. Thank your lucky stars you didn’t have to work for him, but boy, he certainly could conduct!

    Happy birthday, George Szell.


    Szell’s benchmark modern orchestra Haydn:

    While on tour with the Cleveland Orchestra in Tokyo, and with only two months to live (he was terminally ill with cancer), Szell conducted what may very well be the most thrilling performance of Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2 I have ever heard, certainly on a par with the classic Barbirolli account with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra:

    Szell as a Mozart pianist:

    One of Szell’s own, early compositions, “Variations on an Original Theme”:

    Szell speaks!

    Szell on “The Bell Telephone Hour” on NBC. These days, you won’t even find something like this on PBS.

    Szell rehearses Beethoven

    Szell conducts Beethoven and Bruckner in Vienna

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

  • George Szell Birthday A Perfectionist’s Legacy

    George Szell Birthday A Perfectionist’s Legacy

    Today is the birthday of George Szell (1897-1970). A notorious autocrat from an era when autocrats were tolerated, expected and even revered on the podium, Szell was a formidable perfectionist, even to the extent of lecturing the Severance Hall custodians on the acceptable way to mop a floor and what kind of toilet paper they should be supplying in the restrooms. Okay, he may have been a little tightly wound, but you can’t quibble with the results. Thank your lucky stars you didn’t have to work for him, but boy, could he conduct!

    Szell’s benchmark modern orchestra Haydn:

    While on tour with the Cleveland Orchestra in Tokyo, and with only two months to live (he was terminally ill with cancer), Szell conducted what very well may be the most thrilling performance of Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2 I have ever heard, certainly on a par with the classic Barbirolli account with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra:




    Szell as a Mozart pianist:

    One of Szell’s own, early compositions, “Variations on an Original Theme”:

    Szell speaks!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INKhc-WM_eM

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (93) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (126) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (189) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (101) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (141) Mozart (87) Opera (203) Philadelphia Orchestra (89) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (107) Radio (87) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Receive a weekly digest every Sunday at noon by signing up here


RECENT POSTS