As we know, JB died very suddenly in the summer of 1970. The last decade of his career had also been the busiest, as he shuttled between Manchester, London, Houston and other international locations, made recordings, planned seasons and was generally engaged in the business of being a very successful conductor.
I've read that one (if not the main) reason for his status as a blur of activity during this period was his desire to achieve some form of financial security. He hadn't been so bothered about his finances earlier in his career but the late fifties/sixties saw him looking to the future with some concern - hence, the upped work-rate.
It can't have helped that this period of potentially profitable work coincided with the election of Harold Wilson's Labour government of 1964-70, with his punitive taxation policies on high earners. Ironically, after Wilson was turfed out of power by the elecorate in June 1970, Barbirolli himself was dead - many ascribing his early demise to over-work.
Impossible to prove anything, of course, but it's hard not to conjecture that Barbirolli's untimely death may have been facilitated by the stresses caused by living under an incompetent, dysfunctional and vindictive Labour government. Personally, I'd be happy to forgo the Open University, the devaluation of the pound, the drunken tomfoolery of George Brown and Wedgwood Benn's 'stamps without a sovereign's head' for the Meistersinger recording we would have had if JB had lived.
I've read that one (if not the main) reason for his status as a blur of activity during this period was his desire to achieve some form of financial security. He hadn't been so bothered about his finances earlier in his career but the late fifties/sixties saw him looking to the future with some concern - hence, the upped work-rate.
It can't have helped that this period of potentially profitable work coincided with the election of Harold Wilson's Labour government of 1964-70, with his punitive taxation policies on high earners. Ironically, after Wilson was turfed out of power by the elecorate in June 1970, Barbirolli himself was dead - many ascribing his early demise to over-work.
Impossible to prove anything, of course, but it's hard not to conjecture that Barbirolli's untimely death may have been facilitated by the stresses caused by living under an incompetent, dysfunctional and vindictive Labour government. Personally, I'd be happy to forgo the Open University, the devaluation of the pound, the drunken tomfoolery of George Brown and Wedgwood Benn's 'stamps without a sovereign's head' for the Meistersinger recording we would have had if JB had lived.
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