Kurt Masur died on 19.12.15
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Roehre
Very, very sad news
A great loss to music, and we have mustn't forget that without him, there might have been a great bloodshed in 1989 and German Unification would have been much more difficult, with violence and likely a much later fall of the Berlin Wall
RIP Kurt Masur
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostVery, very sad news
A great loss to music, and we have mustn't forget that without him, there might have been a great bloodshed in 1989 and German Unification would have been much more difficult, with violence and likely a much later fall of the Berlin Wall
RIP Kurt Masur
A good man
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Richard Tarleton
As Roehre says....the obituary does get round to it eventually. Hopefully obits this side of the pond will start with his role in 1989. One of those musicians who also qualify as great human beings. Just a couple of sightings in my case - a Strauss 4 LS (with Flott)/Bruckner 4 in the RFH, and a Cardiff concert, both with th LPO.
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A great humanitarian and peacemaker, as musicians so often are, he gave moving performances of Britten's War Requiem.
His time at the Leipzig Gewandhaus is fondly remembered, with classics like the Beethoven Overtures, R Strauss with Jessye Norman and many works of Gewandhauskapellmeister Mendelssohn.
RIP
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Concerts of his that stay in the memory are Proms with the Leipzig Gewandhaus, the LPO and NYPO and also with the NYPO and Leipzigers in Symphony Hall, Birmingham. A couple of Beethoven Choral performances remain firmly in the memory. He had an idiosyncratic way of conducting, never used a baton and looked a big bear of a man on the podium. I could never make out a beat but he got good results however it was achieved. Roehre rightly mentions his role in 1989.
RIP Kurt Masur"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Black Swan
Music has suffered the loss of a great man. He single handedly saved the NYPO after years of decline. We will not see his kind again. His knowledge and humanity went far beyond the concert hall.
RIP Kurt Masur
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post
I recently acquired Masur's 1990s Leipzig Beethoven cycle and I think it's superb, one of the more under-rated cycles in the catalogue and a real find. One of the most memorable concert moments I recall was at a New York Philharmonic Prom when he sat on the conductor's rostrum tapping his feet away to 'Oh I can't sit down' from Porgy and Bess as an encore."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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The Kurt Masur website has a guestbook for anyone who wants to share memories or send condolences to the Masur family:
I only saw KM live once, in April 2000, leading JSB's St. John Passion, with Peter Schreier as the Evangelist. Perhaps PS' voice lost the bloom that I recalled from his records, but he had the part down cold, and acted up the Evangelist to the hilt, playing up the dramatic theatrical side of things. It was relatively big-band JSB that KM had led, but nothing turgid about it, paced quite well, and done without an intermission.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThat's a wonderful and beautifully written obituary in the NY Times.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Some more English-language tributes to KM:
Gramophone: http://www.gramophone.co.uk/classica...masur-has-died
The Guardian: http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2...rmonic-dies-88
Deutsche Welle: http://www.dw.com/en/kurt-masur-cond...-88/a-18929857
I can cull some German articles later.
Originally posted by Caliban View PostWith a feisty yet elegant New York boot aimed at Zubin Mehta (& Boulez) while she's at it...
"This city has not done right lately by Pierre Boulez, who turned 90 in March. The New York Philharmonic — of which he was music director from 1971 to 1977, in a tenure now often criticized as recondite in its programming (untrue) and dire in its ticket sales (ditto) — did nothing to honor the birthday."
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