Tag: Shostakovich

  • Michail Jurowski Dies at 76

    Michail Jurowski Dies at 76

    The conductor Michail Jurowski has died. His father, Vladimir, was a composer, and one his sons, also named Vladimir, is a conductor, who has appeared with the Philadelphia Orchestra many times. His grandfather was the conductor David Block.

    His family was friendly with Dmitri Shostakovich, and as a young man Jurowski would play four-hand piano with the composer. Aram Khachaturian and David Oistrakh were also frequent visitors.

    Russian-born, but of Jewish heritage, he claimed to have been hindered by the effects of anti-Semitism as a student. He graduated from the Moscow Conservatory and found early work at the Stanislavski and Bolshoi Theaters. Then he became an assistant to Gennadi Rozhdostevensky at the Moscow Radio Symphony.

    In 1989, he left Russia for Germany. He spent much of his career there, working in opera houses in Berlin, Dresden, and Leipzig, and as music director of the Northwest German Philharmonic, conductor of the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, and principal conductor of the WDR Symphony Orchestra. He was also active in Scandinavia, recording with orchestras in Sweden and Denmark, and in Argentina, where he conducted the Buenos Aires Philharmonic.

    In 1995, he made the first recording of Shostakovich’s unfinished opera, “The Gamblers.” In 1996, he collapsed in the pit during a performance of Mussorgsky’s “Boris Godunov.” It was a beyond-and-back experience, as his heart is said to have stopped for four minutes.

    My experience of Jurowski’s work is solely through his recordings, of which he made many, for labels such as CPO, Capriccio, Eurodisc, Naxos, and Sterling, among others.

    Another son, Dmitri, is also a conductor. A daughter, Maria, is a music teacher.

    Jurowski was 76 years-old.
    https://www.tellerreport.com/news/2022-03-20-conductor-michail-jurowski–working-like-a-drill.S1gcn_Nfc.html

    Conducting his father’s Symphony No. 5

    Adagio from Khachaturian’s “Spartacus”

    The complete ballet in Berlin

    Symphony No. 7 by the Georgian composer Giya Kancheli

    Schumann in Galicia

    In conversation (subtitled)

  • Ukraine: Culture Under Attack in Kharkiv and Odessa

    Ukraine: Culture Under Attack in Kharkiv and Odessa

    Kharkiv’s opera house and neighboring Philharmonic have been shelled. The opera house in Odessa is behind sandbags.

    Of course, these are centers of leisure. They are not residences or hospitals or schools or marketplaces. Their loss may seem insignificant beside atrocity, misery, and mounting loss of life.

    But as centers of culture, they are also powerful symbols, as culture is the very opposite of war. It implies cultivation, provides inspiration, and celebrates aspiration. It embodies the highest ideals, the very apex of what separates civilization from barbarity. When the opera houses are going full-steam, the only strife is on-stage. Okay, and maybe a little backstage.

    But a strike on “Freedom” Square? Seriously? The next thing you’re going to tell me is that they’ve shelled Babi Yar.

    Oh, wait a minute…

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/03/01/ukraine-russia-babyn-yar/

    What would Shostakovich think?


    TOP: Odessa National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre (left, during World War II; right, today)

    BOTTOM: Kharkiv State Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre

  • Remembering Bernard Haitink

    Remembering Bernard Haitink

    By the time I learned last night of the death of Bernard Haitink, there was little I could do about it. I had had a late dinner and watched a movie, and it was all I could do to brush my teeth and struggle through a chapter in bed.

    With the dawn of another day, I can share my recollection of working as a clerk at Sam Goody in the 1980s – essentially signing my paycheck back over to the company in exchange for CDs – and the piecemeal acquisition of my first Shostakovich cycle, with Haitink conducting. Really, in the early days of compact disc, if you wanted all the symphonies, there weren’t any other options. I’ve since acquired complete cycles by Kondrashin and Barshai, and powerful one-offs by any number of other conductors, but I’ve always hung on to Haitink. He also took a remarkable interest in Vaughan Williams, recording all the symphonies, unusual for a major conductor outside of England – especially so for someone from mainland Europe.

    For many, Haitink’s memory will be indivisible from his long association with the Concertgebouw Orchestra of his native Amsterdam. He also held important conducting posts with the London Philharmonic Orchestra (1967-1989), Glyndebourne Opera (1978-1988), the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (1987-2002), the Staatskapelle Dresden (2002-2004), and the Chicago Symphony (2006-2010). Chicago wanted him longer, but he declined, citing his advancing age. His final concert was in Lucerne, on September 6, 2019, with the Vienna Philharmonic.

    As a music-lover, concertgoer, and record collector for over 40 years, I am sorry to lose anyone as prominent as Haitink has been. He was one of the last lions of the podium of his generation. It’s funny that he received so much recognition for his performances of the core Germanic repertoire (especially Brahms and Beethoven), since I mostly found his recordings in this department to be rather uninteresting. He did, however, often deliver in unexpected places.

    He received nine Grammy nominations, for a complete Beethoven cycle, Beethoven’s “Missa solemnis,” Brahms’ “A German Requiem,” and Mozart’s “Don Giovanni,” but also for recordings of Vaughan Williams’ “A Sea Symphony” and “Sinfonia Antartica” and Holst’s “The Planets.” He won twice, for Janacek’s opera “Jenufa” in 2003 and again in 2008 for a later recording of Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 4.

    Here are some links to a few of my favorite Haitink recordings:

    A live performance of Shostakovich Symphony No. 15

    Debussy’s “Images”

    A concert broadcast of John McCabe’s “Chagall Windows”

    Since today is Liszt’s birthday, from Haitink’s complete recordings of the symphonic poems, “Die Ideale”

    Finally, the European Union Youth Orchestra giving its all in a Haitink specialty, Bruckner’s Symphony No. 7

    Bernard Haitink was 92 years-old. Thank you, Maestro, and R.I.P.

  • Dawson & Shostakovich Symphonies Stream Free

    Dawson & Shostakovich Symphonies Stream Free

    My pick for most awesome stream of the weekend? This double-bill from the Fisher Center at Bard College of knock-out mid-century symphonies by William Levi Dawson and Dmitri Shostakovich.

    Dawson’s “Negro Folk Symphony” was first performed by Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1934. The composer extensively revised the piece after a trip to West Africa in 1952. Stokowski was the first to record it, but chances to experience it in concert have been few.

    Shostakovich composed his Symphony No. 7, the “Leningrad,” as a display of hope and defiance during the Nazi siege of the city in 1941. The work was given its premiere in Moscow, by the Bolshoi Theatre Orchestra. It was next performed in the West, in London (by Henry Wood) and New York City (by Toscanini), after the score was smuggled out of the Soviet Union on microfilm, by way of Tehran!

    The symphony was finally performed in Leningrad itself on August 9, 1942, with the concert blasted on loudspeakers into the enemy lines after three thousand high-caliber shells had been lobbed into the Germans. Furthermore, Shostakovich employed a grotesque quotation from Hitler’s favorite operetta, “The Merry Widow,” to mock the Nazi “invasion.”

    The “Leningrad Symphony” enjoyed tremendous popularity during the war years, but in the decades since, its musical merits have tended to be overshadowed by its propagandistic origins.

    This weekend’s concerts will be played by The Orchestra Now (TŌN) under the direction of Leon Botstein. The concerts will take place on Saturday evening at 8 pm and Sunday afternoon at 2 pm EDT.

    Tickets are available in-house at the Fisher Center’s Sosnoff Theater. For those of us at home, the concert will stream free. Make your reservation here:

    Shostakovich & Dawson

  • Yuri Simonov Wild Conductor Turns 80

    Yuri Simonov Wild Conductor Turns 80

    Is Yuri Simonov, who turns 80 today, a live-action Warner Brothers cartoon? The only thing missing is the celluloid dickey rolling up like a blind. It only gets more preposterous as it goes on. You’re welcome to watch the whole thing, but on the assumption you’ve got places to go and things to do, I’m cueing it up to around the 12:30 mark.

    BONUS: Simonov conducts Shostakovich’s “Festive Overture.”

    If you can look past the histrionics, Simonov is actually a very fine conductor, who deserves to be much better known in the West. He just gets a little carried away, that’s all. Evidently he must be a trip to see in concert, but he takes his rehearsals very seriously. Here he is preparing Wagner, so that in concert he can let “The Flying Dutchman” really fly.

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

    You can’t argue with success. Simonov conducts Tchaik 4 in Budapest:

    Happy birthday, Maestro!

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