The LSO's first conductor was a composer and violinist, of course.
What's the 'best' instrument for a would-be conductor to study?
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Hornspieler
[/QUOTE]Originally posted by cloughie View PostSolti was a pianist.
Fischer-Dieskau was a singer!
A good ear, a love of the sound of an orchestra in full flow, the ability to read music and to manage a load of musicians with varying levels of cantankerousness are probably the best chances of cracking the job!
What was Beecham's musical background?
To name some others*:
Violins Paavo Berglund, Willi Boskovsky, Bernard Haitinck, Neville Marriner,Yehudo Menuhin, Jan Pascal Tortelier.
Violas Rudolf Barshai, Raymond Leppard, Pincas Zuckerman
Cellos John Barbirolli, Lawrence Leonard, Mistislav Rostropovitch, Paul Tortelier.
Double Bass Serge Koussevitsky, Zubin Mehta.
Timpani Christopher Seaman
Wind and Brass: Charles Mackerras, Edo de Waart (Oboi) Alun Francis, Anthony Halstead, Maurice Handford, Norman del Mar, Eric Wetherall, (Horns) Geofrey Brand, Elgar Howarth, Otto Klemperer (Trumpets) Vernon Handley, Gordon Langford, Denis Wick (Trombones) Nicanor Zabaleta (Harp)
*To show no personal choice, I have listed these conductors in alphabetical order.
That's all that I can think of at the moment.
HSLast edited by Guest; 29-07-12, 09:10.
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I did'nt know that Klemperer was a trumpet player!!
I remember an anacdote, when Philip Jones first playued with the Philharmonia. This was when Klemperer was recording that marv elous set of Wagner orchesrtral music, and PJ played that opening of the Rienzi Overture! Klemperer was heard to say'not a bad trumpet player!)Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Well Beecham had the money to hire the country's best musicians and learn from them, but as he first became known as an opera conductor, one assumes that he could play the piano.[/QUOTE]
Beecham was not much of a pianist but he accompanied Nancy Evans (of whom he said, "Ah, yes, a godsend to the the tired businessman - a comely wench") in 1940 in recordings of three songs by his son Adrian.
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amateur51
Andre Previn played the piano as did Leonard Bernstein, Mikhael Pletnev and Dmitri Mitropoulos. Didn't Maurizio Pollini waggle the stick for a recording of Rossini's La Donna del Lago?
Pianists Andras Schiff, Murray Perahia, Stephen Kovacevich have all conducted and made recordings as conductors, I think.
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Hornspieler
Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI did'nt know that Klemperer was a trumpet player!!
I remember an anacdote, when Philip Jones first played with the Philharmonia. This was when Klemperer was recording that marvelous set of Wagner orchesrtral music, and PJ played that opening of the Rienzi Overture! Klemperer was heard to say 'not a bad trumpet player!)
three members of the trumpet section thought that it would be a nice idea to invite him out to
lunch. (Klemperer was a former trumpet player.) Afterwards, as they settled down to their
coffee and brandy, the conversation went as follows:
1st TRUMPET “Tell me, Herr Doktor, what do you think of Paul Kletzski?”
KLEMPERER “Kletzski? He's very good ... yes, very good but, I tell you, Bruno Walter! But still, Kletzski? Yes, very good but, gentlemen -- Furtwangler!”
2nd TRUMPET “We had him here last week, conducting Beethoven's Ninth.”
KLEMPERER “Really? He conducted that ? Very interesting .. yes, very interesting, but the Choral symphony?
Kleiber! Always, Erich Kleiber ... Still, Kletzski is very good.”
3rd TRUMPET “Well we thought he was rotten.”
KLEMPERER “I quite agree with you! He's rotten! HE'S ROTTEN !”
With Beethoven 9th still ringing in our ears, I could not resist reproducing this little story, told to me by that 3rd trumpet
HSLast edited by Guest; 29-07-12, 09:59.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostAndre Previn played the piano...
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Originally posted by salymap View PostI've just remembered that I have a cassette of Beecham accompanying Dora Labbette {?} at the piano, in some songs. One of his ladies, I believe.
And, sure it's true, but cannot visualise Sir Adrian Boult as a singer...........
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Originally posted by salymap View Post...And, sure it's true, but cannot visualise Sir Adrian Boult as a singer...........
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amateur51
Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostPlays, surely. It's perhaps not widely known that Previn taught himself the flute when called up and assigned to the 6th US Army Band. Amongst his works from this period were "completely bizarre band transcriptions of Shostakovich's First Symphony and Chabrier's Espana." (See his amusing autobiography No Minor Chords.)
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