Tag: Conductors

  • 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”

  • Abbado at 90 A Personal Take

    Abbado at 90 A Personal Take

    I noted earlier that Claudio Abbado would have been 90 today. While I do enjoy some of his recordings, I haven’t always found most of his interpretations to be all that interesting. That is to say, they haven’t always connected with me, personally.

    Undoubtedly, there will be those who feel differently. As I mentioned in my previous post, I’ve got some Abbado recordings that I do like, but I don’t know that I would describe any of them as desert island material, except perhaps for his recordings with Argerich.

    Granted, there is probably no conductor who has been equally successful at everything, and every conductor has an off-day. Also, music is tied to performance, so it’s always different. One night an interpretation will sing, and the next it will sink.

    I’m curious, are there any other big-name conductors who, more often than not, hit you the way I describe? I know I’ve got a few.

    And in case you are offended by what is, after all, merely my opinion, remember: Abbado has been adored by millions, and I’m just some schmo on the internet.

  • Conductors Composing Beyond the Podium

    Conductors Composing Beyond the Podium

    The best conductors are more than just interpreters. They are partners in creation, who will secret mansions into existence from the mere blueprint of a score. Many have had experience creating such worlds from scratch. This Thursday morning on WPRB, we’ll focus on original compositions by artists that have become better known for their reputations on the podium.

    Skipping over, for the moment, musicians who have received plaudits as recognized composer-conductors (Leonard Bernstein, Pierre Boulez), or those from the distant past (Felix Mendelssohn, Gustav Mahler), we’ll hear neglected music by Victor de Sabata, Antal Doráti, Sir Eugene Goossens, Otto Klemperer, Igor Markevitch, Jean Martinon, Paul Paray, André Previn, Evgeny Svetlanov, George Szell, and Wilhelm Furtwängler (on his birthday).

    Join me for original works by conductors who genuinely know the score, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. The conductors are always properly grounded, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Szell Järvi and Conductor Birthdays on WWFM

    Szell Järvi and Conductor Birthdays on WWFM

    It’s a conductor’s holiday! I hope you’ll join me for recordings of triple-threat George Szell, on the anniversary of his birth. We’ll hear Szell as conductor, pianist, and composer. It’s also the 80th birthday of Neeme Järvi. We’ll have more conductors (or better) than you can shake a stick at, today from 4 to 7 p.m., on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • WWFM Salutes Barbirolli Kajanus & Chung

    WWFM Salutes Barbirolli Kajanus & Chung

    It was Ralph Vaughan Williams who dubbed Sir John Barbirolli “Glorious John.” This afternoon on WWFM, we’ll enjoy some of his glorious recordings.

    In fact, it’s a great day for conductors. We’ll also salute Robert Kajanus, a colleague of Jean Sibelius, who did much to promote the music of his friend, including making the first recordings of the Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 3 & 5.

    In addition, it’s the birthday of South Korean conductor Myung-Whun Chung, a pupil of Messiaen, who demonstrates a certain flair for the music of Danish composer Carl Nielsen.

    We’ll enjoy examples of their artistry and more, between 4 and 6 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

    Then stayed tuned to hear music written for film adaptations of girls’ literary classics on “Picture Perfect” at 7:00. More on that to come!

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