Every now and then I have a great urge to discover more about John Culshaw - but the clever old so-and-so seemed to cover his tracks very effectively and no-one seems to have known him well (no-one still alive at any rate).
A few years ago he was posthumously outed by the gossip columnist Norman Lebrecht and someone mischievously tinkered with his Wikepedia entry to suggest he had been the first victim of the AIDS virus, before it had been properly named or diagnosed.
I think his cause of death was more likely to have been biohepatitis; and - an extraordinary statement by the man-eating diva Regine Crespin apart ('I adored John Culshaw, but he only liked snakes') - there's nothing to suggest he took either (or any) bus, apart from the over-fastidious personality revealed by his prose style (Ring Resounding and the unfinished Putting The Record Straight are essential reading; I've not been able to pick up either off is novels, which go for big bucks these days).
I am a fan of his production style - it may be unfashionable nowadays but, for me, it will always epitomise Decca's buccaneering years, when the company was breaking new ground and establishing the reputation it still enjoys today (though it's no longer a company, of course). Some have accused Culshaw of claiming a larger share of the credit for this than he warranted but I don't think he did - his criticism of the likes of Maurice Rosengarten have elicited wearingly predictable accusations of anti-semitism. His anecdotes about refusing to carry Karajan's fur coat when the latter flung it at him as if he were just another flunkey (thereby determining the course of their professional relationship) is a great story; his tale of how Josef Krips ruined the career of a young Decca staff producer is a horribly cautionary tale.
I wonder if anyone on here actually met Mr. Culshaw at any point?
A few years ago he was posthumously outed by the gossip columnist Norman Lebrecht and someone mischievously tinkered with his Wikepedia entry to suggest he had been the first victim of the AIDS virus, before it had been properly named or diagnosed.
I think his cause of death was more likely to have been biohepatitis; and - an extraordinary statement by the man-eating diva Regine Crespin apart ('I adored John Culshaw, but he only liked snakes') - there's nothing to suggest he took either (or any) bus, apart from the over-fastidious personality revealed by his prose style (Ring Resounding and the unfinished Putting The Record Straight are essential reading; I've not been able to pick up either off is novels, which go for big bucks these days).
I am a fan of his production style - it may be unfashionable nowadays but, for me, it will always epitomise Decca's buccaneering years, when the company was breaking new ground and establishing the reputation it still enjoys today (though it's no longer a company, of course). Some have accused Culshaw of claiming a larger share of the credit for this than he warranted but I don't think he did - his criticism of the likes of Maurice Rosengarten have elicited wearingly predictable accusations of anti-semitism. His anecdotes about refusing to carry Karajan's fur coat when the latter flung it at him as if he were just another flunkey (thereby determining the course of their professional relationship) is a great story; his tale of how Josef Krips ruined the career of a young Decca staff producer is a horribly cautionary tale.
I wonder if anyone on here actually met Mr. Culshaw at any point?
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