With wild hair, dove-like hands, and a faux middle-European accent (as the son of a Polish-born cabinet-maker who emigrated to and worked in London), Leopold Stokowski certainly knew how to work a crowd. But he also knew his way around a score.
He could be flamboyant in manner, controversial in his interpretations, and an easy target for parody. But he was also magnetic and, at his best, a true magician of the podium.
I hope you’ll join me today for both of my Saturday radio shows as I honor Stokowski on the anniversary of his birth. (He was born on this date in 1882). You’ll find more information at the bottom of this post.
Stokowski was a natural for the movies. He appeared in more than a dozen motion pictures and documentaries and was frequently parodied in cartoons during Hollywood’s golden age. His most enduring film has been Walt Disney’s “Fantasia,” in which he conjures flights of animated fantasy from his art deco perch, and even shakes hands with Mickey Mouse. The recordings made for the actual film pioneered multi-channel stereo.
Stokowski always did have a reputation for embracing experimental technologies to capture or even enhance the fidelity of sound. On stage and in the recording studio, he was meticulous in arranging his musicians to achieve the sonic results he desired. It was really he who established the so-called “Philadelphia sound,” with its celebrated string sonorities, which he managed to replicate to a greater or lesser extent with many of the orchestras he worked with.
The quintessential Stokowski performance often stood apart for its dramatic flair and opulence. He was often at his best in the colorful French and Russian classics, where he really knew how to make the instrumental colors pop. But he also had an insatiable curiosity and a drive to introduce new music and unusual, off-the-beaten-path works.
On the other hand, there were occasions when he could truly astonish by driving a Mozart symphony like a team of wild horses. You truly never knew what this sorcerer was going to pull out of his hat.
One should never come to a Leopold Stokowski performance with an air of complacency, even if one thinks one knows the music inside out. Equally, one should never learn a score from a Stokowski recording. The extent of his recreative powers can only be fully appreciated when listening to him once you’ve heard everyone else. (There was often a lot of creativity in his “recreativity.”)
Some of his inspirations were genius – I love when he holds the chorus at the end of his London Phase 4 recording of Ravel’s “Daphnis and Chloe” Suite No. 2 – and in case it isn’t provocative enough, he actually has the engineers thrillingly boost the sound – but even for me, his swooning additions to his 1970s recording of “Siegfried’s Funeral March” are a bridge too far. Not everything he did will delight everyone, but the guy was not afraid to take chances.
Stokowski, who trained as an organist, possessed intimate knowledge of the keyboard music of Johann Sebastian Bach. At a time when such repertoire would have been comparatively unknown to orchestra subscribers, Stoky brought Bach to the concert hall by way of his own imaginative transcriptions. Hard to believe these were considered controversial at the time.
Clearly, Stokowski was a remarkable figure for so many reasons. Among them was his astonishing longevity. At the time of his death in 1977, at the age of 95, he had signed a contract that would have kept him busy in the recording studio until he was 100. It’s astonishing that so many of his late recordings were as good as anything he had ever done.
In common with Oscar Wilde, Stoky knew there is only one thing worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about. His ever-evolving origin story. His wealthy marriages. His celebrity love affairs. His elegant bearing and riveting showmanship. It’s not just because of Bugs Bunny that music-lovers still revere him or toss up their hands in incredulity and gasp “LEOPOLD!”
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Join me on KWAX Classical Oregon for “Sweetness and Light,” Stokowski conducts music by Ottokar Novacek, Paul Dukas, Fikret Amirov, Johann Sebastian Bach, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Claude Debussy, this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 PDT.
Then on “The Lost Chord,” Stokowski conducts Wagner in vintage recordings featuring the Philadelphia Orchestra, this Saturday evening/afternoon at 7:00 EDT/4:00 EDT.
Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!
https://kwax.uoregon.edu/
Tag: Richard Wagner
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Leopold Stokowski on “Sweetness and Light” and “The Lost Chord”
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Wagner on Facebook A Birthday Celebration
I frequently get comments from people suggesting that I collect some of my posts for publication. Of course, I know they mean well, and I don’t doubt the quality of my writing, but I usually take these kinds of remarks with a grain of salt. After all, what long-term worth could Facebook posts, so many of them tailored to promote radio broadcasts or tie-in with other ephemeral events in the world of classical music, possibly hold?
But then on a major birthday anniversary, I’ll do a search and go back over my old posts about Richard Wagner (born on this day in 1813), for instance, and I’ll actually be intimidated by how good they are. How am I supposed to compete against the writer who produced those?
Sure, there are days when I’ll only have time to jot a few sentences, select an image, and include a link; but if I find myself with a good hour while my mind is still fresh in the morning, my goodness, how I can fly! Post after ever-loving post, distinguished by knowledge, wit, and flair. I could cut-and-paste any one of these and then get on with my day. After all, I am getting new readers all the time, and I don’t flatter myself that, even among the regulars, the posts are so memorable that they will linger in anyone’s thoughts after a couple of years. But I do try to keep it fresh and reinvent the wheel, or perhaps build a better mousetrap, when I can.
That said, coming as I am, off COVID, perhaps now would be a good time simply to offer a choice of a few past Wagner posts for you to enjoy as you may. Thank you for reading, and happy birthday, Richard Wagner!
Simon Callow, Wagner’s irrational frothing about the Jews, and migraines (written while suffering from a severe headache)
The ”Siegfried Idyll” and Siegfried Wagner
More on Siegfried, the nicest of the Wagners
Wagner and the movies
Revisiting Hans-Jürgen Syberberg’s “Parsifal”
https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1079437736308622&set=a.883855802533484
Reflections on Alex Ross’ “Wagner: Art and Politics in the Shadow of Music”
Richard Wagner: Show me the money!
Wagner and Brahms truce for Christmas
Liszt puts Wagner in the grave
Otto Klemperer meltdown after a performance of ”Lohengrin”
”Lohengrin” with dwarfs and drag queens
https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1171672253751836&set=a.883855802533484
Wagner roasted by the famous
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Carl Tausig: Liszt’s Impish Prodigy
Having had the opportunity to listen to Franz Liszt’s “A Faust Symphony” a couple of times over the past few days, my thoughts lighted on Carl Tausig. Amusingly, now that I think about it, it was during the movement associated with Mephistopheles. And wouldn’t you know it, today is Tausig’s birthday.
Tausig was Liszt’s supremely talented, though impish protégé. Some say that he was his greatest pupil.
Tausig joined Liszt in Weimar at the age of 14. Energetic to a fault, he got up to all sorts of mischief, including sawing the ends off piano keys in order to make the instrument more challenging to play. He also hocked the original, unpublished manuscript of “A Faust Symphony,” an entire year’s labor, for a mere pittance. Fortunately, Liszt was able to retrieve it.
Tausig then joined Richard Wagner in his political exile in Switzerland, where the boy’s boisterous behavior caused the operatic master his own share of distress. There must have been something exceptionally endearing in his personality, since he was always quickly forgiven.
At a birthday celebration for the young pianist, Liszt predicted, with a twinkle in his eye, that Tausig would become either a great blockhead or a great master.
Regrettably, his career was cut short. He died of typhoid fever, aged only 29 years.
Happy birthday, Carl Tausig, scamp to the Romantic masters.
2 Concert Etudes, Op. 1
Fantasia on Moniuszko’s “Halka”
PHOTOS: Carl Tausig (left), with Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner, looking vexed
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Wagner’s Birthday Broadcast Vintage Recordings
Time to get out the crazy party hats. You know, the ones with the horns and feathers. May 22 is the birthday of Richard Wagner (1813-1883). This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll honor the composer with an handful of vintage recordings.
American baritone Lawrence Tibbett never actually sang the role of Wotan on stage, in the context of a “Ring” cycle. However, he did record “Wotan’s Farewell and Magic Fire Music,” magnificently, in 1934, with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Leopold Stokowski.
Karl Muck was a casualty of anti-German sentiment during his time as music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, which, unfortunately, happened to coincide with the First World War. Be that as it may, he was held in the highest regard by fellow musicians and thought by many to be one of Wagner’s finest interpreters. We’ll hear a fascinating 1927 recording of the Transformation Music and the beginning of the Grail Scene from Act I of “Parsifal,” made at the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth.
The recording employs the original bells designed by Wagner, which would be melted down by the Nazis for ammunition during the Second World War. So this will be a rare opportunity to experience the “Parsifal” Wagner actually knew. Muck was principal conductor of the Bayreuth Festival since 1903. He conducted “Parsifal” at Bayreuth 14 times between 1901 and 1930.
Incidentally, it was on this date 150 years ago – Wagner’s 59th birthday – that the composer laid the cornerstone for his Bayreuth Festival Theater.
Finally, we’ll return to “Die Walküre” to wrap things up on a buoyant note with Siegmund and Sieglinde’s love music from Act I, which concludes with the lovers fleeing together into the welcoming spring. Nine months later, Sieglinde gives birth to Siegfried, the saga’s hero-without-fear. Lotte Lehmann strikes sparks with legendary Danish heldentenor Lauritz Melchoir in a 1935 recording with Bruno Walter and the Vienna Philharmonic.
The power of these performances remains undiminished by the passage of time. It’s a Wagner power hour on “Vintage Wagner,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.
PHOTOS: Lotte Lehmann as Sieglinde and Lauritz Melchior as Siegmund
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Wagner Birthday Siegfried WWFM Dragon Music
Happy birthday, Richard Wagner! Watch Siegfried slay Fafnir, and then tune in for more dragon music on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Saturday evening at 6:00 EDT, WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.
Illustration by Jason Seiler
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