Too Lonely!
Monday, November 18, 2019, 11:30am
In the fall of 1886 Gustav Mahler was the director of the Leipzig Opera house. In a letter that he wrote to his friend Friedrich Löhr, he spoke of positive experiences with composer Karl Reinecke and pianist Anton Rubinstein. He spoke in less positive terms of his relationship with Leipzig Opera...
Festival or Funeral?
Friday, November 15, 2019, 11:30am
Charles Villiers Stanford was described by a contemporary as “vibrant, untiring, and humorous,” traits that put him at odds with the organizers of the Leeds Festivals in the first years of the twentieth century. Stanford became the conductor of the Leeds Philharmonic in 1898, but had his conflicts...
A Natural Solution
Thursday, November 14, 2019, 11:30am
Although American pianist and composer Edward MacDowell would soon come to grief in his dealings with administrators at Columbia University, he had a strong rapport with his students, in part because he broke down the barriers of formality. Perhaps the same shyness that made MacDowell a reluctant...
The Assistant
Wednesday, November 13, 2019, 11:30am
As assistant conductor of the New York Philharmonic twenty-five-year-old Leonard Bernstein was to sit in on all rehearsals and learn the scores well enough to be able to conduct them in place of Artur Rodzinski or any guest conductor. On November 13, 1943, as he attended the Town Hall recital of a...
Keep Your Day Job
Tuesday, November 12, 2019, 11:30am
Thomas Gainsborough was one of England’s great painters. He thought that he could become a fine musician too. One friend had grave doubts. In the 1770s Henry Angelo and his wife hosted gatherings that brought together various kinds of artists. In memoirs he wrote in 1830, he recalled that...
A Simple Twist of Fate
Monday, November 11, 2019, 11:30am
In 1916 Spanish composer Enrique Granados was in New York for the world premiere of his opera Goyescas . The opera ends with a tragic duel in which the protagonist dies in the arms of his beloved. By a simple twist of fate, Granados would soon experience a real-life tragedy every bit as poignant...
More Than They Bargained For
Friday, November 8, 2019, 11:30am
As a child pianist, Erich Wolfgang Korngold had impressed Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss. By 1934, when the composer came to Hollywood, he wasn’t about to let a movie producer tell him how to do his job. Hal Wallis had brought Korngold to town for Warner Brothers, to tailor the music of Felix...
The Congressman and the Conductor
Thursday, November 7, 2019, 11:30am
In 1938 twenty-six-year-old Erich Leinsdorf was in New York building a career as a conductor for the Metropolitan Opera when his visa expired, requiring him to return to Austria. For professional and personal reasons, it was a bad time to go home. Young Leinsdorf had risen quickly in the ranks of...
Saved!
Wednesday, November 6, 2019, 11:30am
On November 6, 1891, Peter Tchaikovsky had just conducted his new symphonic poem Voyevode in a Moscow concert arranged by his young editor Alexander Siloti. The applause seemed restrained, and when Tchaikovsky came back into the artists’ greenroom, he destroyed the manuscript and told the attendant...
Viva L'America!
Tuesday, November 5, 2019, 11:30am
Ruggiero Leoncavallo was hoping to revive his career with a conducting contract or a commission for an opera when he agreed to undertake an American tour in the fall of 1906. He traveled with plenty of company–seven singers and the 75-piece La Scala orchestra–and all of them were in for a tough...
American Enlightenment
Monday, November 4, 2019, 11:30am
Pianist Henri Herz was dismissed by Robert Schumann as a mere “stenographer,” but in the 1830s he was the most fashionable and sensational keyboard player in Paris. In 1845, when he wanted big money to bankroll his new piano manufacturing firm, Herz headed for America. In his book My Trips to...
The Latest from Paris
Friday, November 1, 2019, 11:30am
At the beginning of November 1853, Franz Liszt wrote from Weimar to violinist Joseph Joachim in Hanover about musical discoveries he had made during a recent visit to Paris: As for news from Paris, I have none except for the vigorous rehearsing of Meyerbeer’s new opera L’Étoile du Nord at the Opéra...
The Séance
Thursday, October 31, 2019, 11:30am
One night in 1887 William James, the celebrated psychologist, and George Henschel, the English composer and conductor, arrived at a rundown house on Rutland Street in Boston. With them was singer Nettie Huxley, whose mischievous expression was at odds with the somber purpose of the visit--to...
Surprise!
Wednesday, October 30, 2019, 11:30am
October 31 was Mozart’s name-day–the feast day of Saint Wolfgang, for whom Mozart was named--and when the day came around in 1781, the twenty-five-year-old composer was in for a surprise. A few days afterward he wrote from Vienna to his father Leopold in Salzburg: Just as I was going to write to...
The Offensive
Tuesday, October 29, 2019, 11:30am
Joseph Haydn had suffered long enough while employed by Prince Nikolaus II of Esterháza a musical poseur said to have the disposition of “an Asian despot.” He put up with lack of respect and low pay, but in 1796, when the Prince’s administrator sent Haydn a letter expecting him to pay the debts of...
The Status Symbol
Monday, October 28, 2019, 11:30am
Over the course of more than thirty years, Joseph Haydn had worked for three princes of the Esterházy family. The fourth one was a force to be reckoned with–and so was Haydn. Prince Nikolaus II said that he liked music, but many musicians claimed that he didn’t know much about it. By 1794, when...
We Are Barbarians Up Here
Friday, October 25, 2019, 11:30am
At the end of October 1897 English composer Frederick Delius was nervous. He was in Norway to conduct music he had written for Gunnar Heiberg’s play, The Council of the People. The play satirized the Norwegian parliament and Norwegian pomp in general, and Delius had made his music suitably caustic...
Used!
Thursday, October 24, 2019, 11:30am
While he was in Paris for performances of his opera Il Trovatore, Giuseppe Verdi took time to attend to some urgent business. On October 21, 1855, he wrote a fervent letter about the need to get international copyright protection for his works, which were being pirated in England because there was...
Robbed
Wednesday, October 23, 2019, 11:30am
In his memoirs Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov gives us a close and colorful look at his fellow composer, Alexander Borodin: I always thought it strange that certain ladies...who apparently were admirers of Borodin’s talent as a composer, relentlessly hauled him to all kinds of charitable committees,...
A Dream Come True
Tuesday, October 22, 2019, 11:30am
It’s not unusual for musicians to have nightmares about things going wrong during performances. It is unusual for one of those nightmares to come true, but it happened to an organist named Elizabeth Harbison David. In 1907 David was to accompany a performance by soprano Ernestine Schumann-Heink in...