Tag: Péter Eötvös

  • Péter Eötvös A Composer’s Conducting Genius

    Péter Eötvös A Composer’s Conducting Genius

    It’s been observed (and borne out) that composers are not always the best interpreters of their own music. But when composer Péter Eötvös turned his hand to conducting Beethoven, the result was one of the most thrilling 5th Symphonies I have ever heard.

    Eötvös, born in Transylvania, was aided and encouraged by Zoltán Kodály at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, and Béla Bartók was in his blood.

    He continued his studies in Cologne with Bernd Alois Zimmerman. He also apprenticed with Karlheinz Stockhausen, working as Stockhausen’s engineer and copyist, and kept up his modernist credentials as a founding member of the live electronics-heavy Oeldorf Group and director and conductor of the Pierre Boulez-founded Ensemble InterContemporain.

    In addition, he was drawn to the music of Renaissance madman and murderer Carlo Gesualdo and American jazz.

    Eötvös composed in many genres, including experimental music for film and at least 13 operas.

    To my ears, he was at least as good a conductor as he was a composer. Eötvös died yesterday at the age of 80. R.I.P.


    Conducting Liszt’s “Dante Symphony”

    His own “The Gliding of the Eagle in the Skies”

    “Dialog mit Mozart”

    Beethoven (each of the four movements posted separately)

    I https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nj7NYoVxceo

    II https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0SlWenglLw

    III https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFvpmRbFm_0

    IV https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qm5nuSwcMlM

    Eötvös speaks

  • Celebrating Beethoven’s 250th Birthday

    Celebrating Beethoven’s 250th Birthday

    Happy birthday, Beethoven!

    Well, here we are. Your 250th birthday – what would have been the biggest celebration in classical music (at least until 2027, the 200th anniversary of your death) – and we’re all sitting at home with our records. That’s okay. I’ve got plenty of good ones. Anyone care to share any of their favorites?

    Here’s a montage of 42 conductors and 1 pianist, performing the most famous opening in all of Western music. It really gives a sense of what different interpreters can bring to a piece of music (also, in Barenboim’s case, the effect of an unstifled sneeze). Performance matters!

    Here’s one from 2007 that I find quite compelling, led by the Hungarian composer Péter Eötvös.

    My candidate for craziest stick technique:

    Perhaps more instructive is this traversal by line-riding bikes:

    Clearly, this symphony is bulletproof.


    Beethoven as he appeared in 1804-05, while he was at work on his “Fifth”

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