A shuffle Maestro for the iPod audience
Today’s Guardian positively salivates over the news that Esa-Pekka Salonen (left) is taking over as principal conductor of the Philharmonia Orchestra in London from Christoph von Dohnanyi. Martin Kettle gushes that “in this new battle of the batons the only certain winners look likely to be the London music public, who can look forward to an orchestral life of a quality and diversity with which no other city can compete … Salonen’s wide-ranging, non-traditional approach makes him the closest thing any London orchestra could have found to Sir Simon Rattle. Short of tempting Rattle back from the Berlin Philharmonic, it is hard to think of a more exciting appointment for the Philharmonia to have made”. But slipped in among the purple prose are the key words that Salonen “will remain in charge in Los Angeles when he takes over the Philharmonia.”
Now if we leave aside the fact that some of the Berlin press may well have wished that Rattle had been tempted back from Berlin, we will soon have the Philharmonia headed by a conductor with one foot in London and one in the West Coast, and the London Symphony headed by Valery Gergiev, who will have one foot in London, one in Rotterdam, and his heart in St Petersburg. Shuffle Maestros may well appeal to iPod audiences, but there are many who would have welcomed an appointment by the Philharmonia in the style of Jonathan Nott at the Bamberg Symphony. This talented young conductor has raised an unknown band to world-class quality by working in the old Kappelmeister tradition, and keeping both feet, and his heart, firmly anchored in provincial Germany.
For more on shuffle maestros follow An Overgrown Path to Vienna Philharmonic in perpetual motion
Any copyrighted material on these pages is included for "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and other errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk
Now if we leave aside the fact that some of the Berlin press may well have wished that Rattle had been tempted back from Berlin, we will soon have the Philharmonia headed by a conductor with one foot in London and one in the West Coast, and the London Symphony headed by Valery Gergiev, who will have one foot in London, one in Rotterdam, and his heart in St Petersburg. Shuffle Maestros may well appeal to iPod audiences, but there are many who would have welcomed an appointment by the Philharmonia in the style of Jonathan Nott at the Bamberg Symphony. This talented young conductor has raised an unknown band to world-class quality by working in the old Kappelmeister tradition, and keeping both feet, and his heart, firmly anchored in provincial Germany.
For more on shuffle maestros follow An Overgrown Path to Vienna Philharmonic in perpetual motion
Any copyrighted material on these pages is included for "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and other errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk
Comments
Hello, it's a plus for London that Salonen's arriving, I think, but who is Kettle referring to when he says that the LA Philharmonic is "regarded as America's top symphony orchestra"? Certainly no one who's heard Cleveland or Chicago lately. Salonen has undoubtedly brought his LA musicians along, but their Mahler 5 last spring was listless.
Best, Marc
marc geelhoed
associate music editor/classical music writer
time out chicago
247 s. state st.
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this is still great news for the Philharmonia as well as ... British Airways
I agree it is one of his finest CDs. As well as superb performances of very good music it is noteable for its stunning sound. Appropriately it was made at the Todd-AO Scoring Studio in Studio City, LA. The Sony recording was produced by a very great producer and former EMI colleague of mine, David Mottley.
I agree it is one of his finest CDs. As well as superb performances of very good music it is noteable for its stunning sound. Appropriately it was made at the Todd-AO Scoring Studio in Studio City, LA. The Sony recording was produced by a very great producer and former EMI colleague of mine, David Mottley.
There is another interesting EMI connection with Salonen. His big break came when he took over a Philharmonia concert of Mahler 3 at the last minute when the scheduled conductor fell ill - a concert I was at. The Managing Director of the Philharmonia who had spotted Salonen and gave him the break was Christopher Bishop. As EMI's senior producer (and Grammy winner - see below) Bishop made many classic recordings with Boult, Previn, Muti, the King's Singers, David Munrow, and countless others.
Here are Paths to some related EMI links - A little piece of recording history, Her Master's Grammy, Reflections on the Philadelphia Orchestra, Simply chic symphonies? and Quiet celebration with friends.
As for Cleveland, given their rapidly declining fortunes in their own home town, it's no surprise they play so well away from it. I too saw one of their LA performances last year and I suppose they did blow the LA Philharmonic out of the water - if you are used to swimming in the shallow end of the pool.
So it is worth checking for comments on Killing classical music in the US as well.
Hi "PIiable,"
I should've made this clearer in my email: Salonen was NOT the conductor of that Mahler 5, it was Ingo Metzmacher in charge of that dull reading. But the orchestra didn't show the lovely flexibility and attention to dynamics of, say, the Cleveland Orchestra. Salonen with LA in Daphnis et Chloe remains a wonderful memory, however. Too inconsistent to be considered the greatest in the US.
Thanks, M