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Kurt Adler

Kurt Adler (March 1, 1907 – September 21, 1977) was an Austrian classical chorus master, music conductor, author and pianist. He was best known as the chorus master and lead conductor of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City from 1943 to 1973.[1] He conducted orchestras in Europe, North America, Canada and Mexico.

Kurt Adler
Born(1907-03-01)March 1, 1907
DiedSeptember 21, 1977(1977-09-21) (aged 70)
NationalityAustrian/Czech
CitizenshipAmerican
EducationUniversity of Vienna (MA)
Occupation(s)Conductor, Pianist, Chorus Master
Known forConductor and Chorus Master, New York Metropolitan Opera, 1943–1973

Early life edit

Kurt Adler was born in Jindřichův Hradec/Neuhaus, Bohemia (now Czech Republic), during the Austro-Hungarian Empire to a bourgeois Jewish family. He was the only child of Siegfried Adler (born June 26, 1876 in Luka u Jihlavy, Bohemia), a textile factory owner, and Olga (Fürth) Adler (born April 3, 1882 in Sušice/Schüttenhofen, Bohemia (now Czech Republic).[2] Both parents were murdered by the Gestapo during World War II, after they were deported in 1942, from Vienna, Austria, to Izbica concentration camp, which served as a transfer camp, to the Bełżec extermination camp in Poland on May 15, 1942.[3] His paternal grandparents, Jakob and Eveline Adler are buried in Neuhaus (now Jindřichův Hradec), Hebrew Cemetery.[4] His maternal grandparents, Albert and Katherine Fürth are buried in Sušice (Schüttenhofen), Bohemia (now Czech Republic).[4]

During the 1930s many now-famous musicians, including Adler, emigrated to the United States to escape from Nazism. Adler left for the United States on October 9, 1938.[2] He sailed from Rotterdam, Holland in 1938 on the "SS Statendam".[5] He was naturalized on March 21, 1944.[6]

Education edit

Kurt Adler began studying music at age six under cantor Jacob Fürnberg, ),[7] His first public appearance was at age fourteen.

His entire musical education was in Vienna, Austria. Other teachers include Prof. Richard Robert, Fanny Boehm-Kramer, Prof. Alexander Manhart (1875–1936) (piano); Prof. Karl Weigl (1881–1949), Prof. Guido Adler (1855–1941), Prof. Wilhelm Fischer (1886–1962) (theory); Prof. Ferdinand Foll (1867–1929), also Hermann Weigert (1890–1955), Erich Kleiber (1890–1956) (conducting). In 1925, he graduated from the classical Akademisches Gymnasium, Vienna. In 1927, he earned a degree of Musicology from the University of Vienna, corresponding to Master of Arts, Philosophical Faculty of the University of Vienna.[8]

Life in the arts and humanities edit

Kurt Adler began his professional career in Germany on the musical staff of the Berlin State Opera. He later associated with the famous German Opera Theatre in Prague (where Rudolf, Szell and Schick also served) and with the Municipal Opera House in Berlin. He joined the Metropolitan Opera in 1943, under the management of Edward Johnson then in conjunction with Rudolf Bing, General Manager, from 1945 to 1973.

Maestro Adler's press announcement upon his recruitment as Chorus Master of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City said, "That since Giulio Setti's time, ten years ago, there never has been a single Chorus Master for the entire Italian, French, German, English repertoire and with my appointment, the gradual reorganization and training will again be centralized in one hand."[9]

Languages edit

English, German, Czech, Russian, French, Italian, Spanish, Latin, Greek, Romanian, Yiddish, Hebrew.[2]

Engagements edit

  • 1927–29 Assistant Conductor, Berlin State Opera. First opera conducted, Peer Gynt (Grieg).
  • 1929–32 Conductor, Prague German Opera Theater.
  • 1932–33 Conductor, Berlin Municipal Opera House.
  • 1933–38 Conducting symphony concerts and opera all over Europe.
  • 1933 Conductor of orchestral concerts, Vienna Grosser Musikvereinssaal.
  • 1933 Founder of the Unio Opera Company, Vienna.
  • 1933–35 First Conductor, Academic Opera and Ballet Theater of the USSR, Kiev.
  • 1935–37 Founder, Musical Director, and first conductor of the Symphonic Orchestra Stalingrad (U.S.S.R.).
  • 1938–43 U.S.A. Conducting concerts and concertizing as pianist all over U.S. and Canada.
  • 1938–39 Pianist, three transcontinental tours of the United States.
  • 1939–41 Musical Director, Friendship House, New York City.
  • 1943 Assistant Conductor to Leopold Stokowski, Metropolitan Opera, New York City.
  • 1943–73 Chorus Master, Conductor, Metropolitan Opera, New York City, New York (USA).
  • 1944–47 Musical Director, Opera Nacional and Opera de Mexico, Mexico City.
  • 1952 Musical Director, Central City Opera Festival, Central City, Colorado.
  • 1954 Musical Director of opera performances at Greek Theatre, Hollywood, California.

Conductor of numerous broadcasts and television performances of operatic and symphonic music.

Teaching positions edit

  • 1929–32 Organizer and Conductor of the Students Orchestra of the German Academy of Music (Deutsche Akademie für Musik und darstellende Kunst in Prag), Prague, Czechoslovakia.
  • 1934–35 Conductor, orchestra of the Kiev Conservatory of Music, Kiev (Ukraine).
  • 1935–37 Professor of the Opera class at the Conservatory of Music, Stalingrad (U.S.S.R.)
  • 1938–41 Teacher of piano, theory; classes in chamber music; coach; New York City.

Quotes edit

  • Asked, "What do you consider your outstanding achievement?" Response, "Having escaped Hitler, having founded and directed the first Symphonic Orchestra Stalingrad." Asked, "What has helped you most in your career?" Response, "Artistic honesty, sense of humor, treatment of fellow artists (singers, chorus, orchestra) with utmost consideration for their values as human beings." Asked, "What has been your most thrilling musical experience?" Response, "First time when I heard Toscanini conduct with the Scala in 1928." Asked, "If you hadn't chosen your present career what would your second choice be?" Response, "would not have talent for anything else." Asked, "Are most of your friends musicians?" Response, "all kinds of intellectuals."[2]
  • "Many instrumentalists and singers insist on putting themselves into the foreground. Yet though they may be strong personalities or have complete mastery of their medium, still I would not call them real artists. A real artist must be humble. Vanity has been the core of many virtuoso careers but it also has been the end of genuine artistic growth. Psychologically, an accompanist and coach must try to search for and understand where the roots of his soloist's artistry lie. These roots are as varied as the individual artists. Faith – religious, metaphysical, or materialistic – is one of the strongest roots; faith in oneself is part of it. Some great artists – Richard Wagner, for instance – were extremely self-centered, compensating for this fault by preaching altruism in their works. This brings us to another root of artistry: compensation for shortcomings in one's makeup – atonement for real or imagined sins and errors. A third very important root is rebellion against family, upbringing, or an adverse fate. Among those who rebel are some of our greatest artists, who have become what they are by surmounting seemingly overwhelming odds. Complacency is not a good stimulus to artistry."[10]
  • "In your world of rapidly changing values – welcome changes when they are the results of technical and scientific progress – spiritual, ethical, and artistic values tend likewise to change, but much more slowly, and not always for the better. What the future will bring, no one can say. I should like to venture the opinion that the vistas opening for us will render us more humble, more concerned with inner or spiritual values. Our technological advances should give us more time; we shall need culture and be able to afford it."[11]

Publications edit

  • 1943 Adler, K.: Songs of many wars, from the sixteenth to the twentieth century. New York, Howell, Soskin 1943, 221p. Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler. (A collection of fighting songs which oppressed people of all times and nation have sung in their fight against tyranny.)
  • 1953–1956 Adler, K.: Operatic anthology: celebrated arias selected from operas by old and modern composers, in five volumes / compiled by Kurt Adler. New York, G. Schirmer c1953–1956. Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler.
  • 1955 Adler, K.: Famous operatic choruses. New York, G. Schirmer c1955, Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler.
  • 1956 Adler, K.: The Prima donna‘s album: 42 celebrated arias from famous operas. New York, G. Schirmer c1956, Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler.
  • 1960 Adler, K.: Songs From Light Operas for soprano. New York, G. Schirmer 1960, Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler.
  • 1965 Adler, K.: The art of accompanying and coaching. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press 1965.
  • 1967Adler, K.: Phonetics and diction in singing: Italian, French, Spanish, German. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press 1967.
  • 1968 Adler, K.: Duets from the great operas, for soprano and baritone. New York, G. Schirmer 1968, Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler.
  • 1968 Adler, K.: Duets from the great operas, for soprano and tenor. New York, G. Schirmer, Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler.
  • 1971 Adler, K.: The art of accompanying and coaching. New York, Da Capo Press
  • 1974 Adler, K.: Phonetics and diction in singing: Italian, French, Spanish, German. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 2nd ed.
  • 1975–1977 Adler, K.: Operatic anthology: celebrated arias selected from operas by old and modern composers, in five volumes / Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler. Rochester, N.Y., National Braille Association 1975–1977.
  • 1976 Adler, K.: The art of accompanying and coaching. New York, Da Capo Press
  • 1980 Adler, K.: The art of accompanying and coaching. New York, Da Capo Press
  • 1985 Adler, K.: The art of accompanying and coaching. New York, Da Capo Press

Personal life edit

 
Daughter Eveline Adler, late 1990s, New York City

On March 10, 1948, Adler married Irene Hawthorne (1917–1986) (birth name Irene McNutt), former prima ballerina soloist of the Metropolitan Opera.

On September 16, 1965, Adler married Christiane Tocco. One daughter: Eveline [12]

On September 21, 1977, Adler died at home in his sleep, in Butler, New Jersey, of uremia/chronic glomerulonephritis.[12]

His hobbies included stamp and book collecting.

His athletics included soccer, field hockey (All Austrian 1926), Track and Field, swimming, tennis, and ping-pong.

His instruments were piano, organ, harmonica, harpsichord, and celeste[2]

Bibliography edit

  • 2009 Václav Urban: Kurt Adler. Ein leben für die Musik. Aus dem Tschechischen übertragen, herausgegeben und mit Ergänzungen versehen von Hana Pfalzová. ConBrio Verlagsgesellschaft, Regensburg 2009. (104 p.) ISBN 978-3-940768-13-1
  • 2007 Václav Urban: Kurt Adler (1907 Neuhaus – 1977 New York). 1. vyd., Jindřichův Hradec, Kostelní Radouň, 2007, 140 p., ISBN 978-80-87107-00-3
  • 2000 Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, Centennial Edition. New York: Schirmer Reference, 2000, p. 21, ISBN 0-02-865525-7 (set), ISBN 0-02-865526-5 (vol. 1)
  • 1997 Rudolf M. Wlaschek: Biographia Judaica Bohemiae, 2 vol., Dortmund: Forschungsstelle Ostmitteleuropa, 1997, 75 S., ISBN 978-3-923293-57-5
  • 1995 Walter Pass, Gerhard Scheit, Wilhelm Svoboda: Orpheus im Exil – Die Vertreibung der österreichischen Musik von 1938 bis 1945, Wien: Verlag fur Gesellschaftskritik, 1995, 409 p., ISBN 978-3-85115-200-5
  • 1989 Alain Pâris: Dictionnaire des interprètes et de l'interprétation musicale au XXe siècle, Paris: Éditions Robert Laffont, 1989. 906 p., ISBN 2-221-50323-6
  • 1982 John L. Holmes: Conductors on record, London: Victor Gollancz, 1982, 734 p., ISBN 0-575-02781-9
  • 1979 Index to music necrology: supplement to the 1977 necrology, Notes (Music Library Association), 1979, p. 855
  • 1978 "Kurt Adler – obituary", in: Opera News, Feb 4, 1978, p. 30
  • 1976 Paul Frank, Burchard Bulling, Florian Noetzel, Helmut Rosner: Kurzgefasstes Tonkünstler Lexikon – Zweiter Teil: Ergänzungen und Erweiterungen seit 1937, 15. Aufl., Wilhelmshaven: Heinrichshofen, volume 1: A-K. 1974. ISBN 3-7959-0083-2; Bvolume 2: L-Z. 1976. ISBN 3-7959-0087-5
  • 1969 One of the props, in: Opera News, Jan 25, 1969, p. 26–27
  • 1951 J.T.H. Mize: The international who is who in music, Fifth (Mid-Century) Edition, Chicago: Who is Who in Music, 1951.

References edit

  1. ^ Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, Centennial Edition. New York: Schirmer Reference, 2000, p. 21
  2. ^ a b c d e From the Metropolitan Opera Association, Inc., New York Press Bureau Artist's Questionnaire, Nov. 13, 1945
  3. ^ United States Holocaust Museum Archive, Washington DC
  4. ^ a b Václav Urban: Kurt Adler (1907 Neuhaus – 1977 New York). 1. vydání, Jindřichův Hradec, Kostelní Radouň, 2007, pp. 11–13, ISBN 978-80-87107-00-3
  5. ^ United States of America Declaration of Intention and Petition for Naturalization, National Archives and Records Administration, Northeastern Region, New York, New York
  6. ^ One of the Props. Opera News, January 25, 1969, s. 27
  7. ^ Václav Urban: Kurt Adler. Ein leben für die Musik. ConBrio Verlagsgesellschaft, Regensburg 2009, p. 27. ISBN 978-3-940768-13-1
  8. ^ Václav Urban: Kurt Adler (1907 Neuhaus – 1977 New York). 1. vyd., Jindřichův Hradec, Kostelní Radouň, 2007, p. 36–39, ISBN 978-80-87107-00-3
  9. ^ From the Metropolitan Opera Association Press Announcement, New York, New York, Nov. 13, 1945
  10. ^ Adler, K.: The art of accompanying and coaching. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press 1965, p. 182.
  11. ^ Adler, K.: The art of accompanying and coaching. Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press 1965, p. 3.
  12. ^ a b Staff. "Kurt Adler, 70, Conductor Of 20 Different Operas At Met During 22 Years", The New York Times, September 22, 1977. Accessed July 2, 2011. "Kurt Adler, opera conductor and chorusmaster of the, Metropolitan Opera from 1945 through 1973, died yesterday after a long illness. He was 70 years old and lived in Butler, N.J."

External links edit

  • Czech home page of Kurt Adler
  • E-book about Kurt Adler in Czech (PDF, 29 MB)
  • Place a picture of Adler's grandparents tomb stone in Neuhaus, Czech Republic
  • METOPERA DATABASE – The Metropolitan Opera Archives Multi-field search – Adler, Kurt
  • www.yadvashem.org Search – Adler, Siegfried and Adler, Olga
  • Dokumentationsarchiv des österreichischen Widerstandes March 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Search – Adler, Siegfried and Adler, Olga

kurt, adler, confused, with, vienna, born, conductor, opera, house, director, kurt, herbert, adler, march, 1907, september, 1977, austrian, classical, chorus, master, music, conductor, author, pianist, best, known, chorus, master, lead, conductor, metropolitan. Not to be confused with the Vienna born conductor and opera house director Kurt Herbert Adler Kurt Adler March 1 1907 September 21 1977 was an Austrian classical chorus master music conductor author and pianist He was best known as the chorus master and lead conductor of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City from 1943 to 1973 1 He conducted orchestras in Europe North America Canada and Mexico Kurt AdlerBorn 1907 03 01 March 1 1907Neuhaus Austro Hungarian Empire now Jindrichuv Hradec Czech Republic DiedSeptember 21 1977 1977 09 21 aged 70 Butler New Jersey United StatesNationalityAustrian CzechCitizenshipAmericanEducationUniversity of Vienna MA Occupation s Conductor Pianist Chorus MasterKnown forConductor and Chorus Master New York Metropolitan Opera 1943 1973 Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Life in the arts and humanities 4 Languages 5 Engagements 6 Teaching positions 7 Quotes 8 Publications 9 Personal life 10 Bibliography 11 References 12 External linksEarly life editKurt Adler was born in Jindrichuv Hradec Neuhaus Bohemia now Czech Republic during the Austro Hungarian Empire to a bourgeois Jewish family He was the only child of Siegfried Adler born June 26 1876 in Luka u Jihlavy Bohemia a textile factory owner and Olga Furth Adler born April 3 1882 in Susice Schuttenhofen Bohemia now Czech Republic 2 Both parents were murdered by the Gestapo during World War II after they were deported in 1942 from Vienna Austria to Izbica concentration camp which served as a transfer camp to the Belzec extermination camp in Poland on May 15 1942 3 His paternal grandparents Jakob and Eveline Adler are buried in Neuhaus now Jindrichuv Hradec Hebrew Cemetery 4 His maternal grandparents Albert and Katherine Furth are buried in Susice Schuttenhofen Bohemia now Czech Republic 4 During the 1930s many now famous musicians including Adler emigrated to the United States to escape from Nazism Adler left for the United States on October 9 1938 2 He sailed from Rotterdam Holland in 1938 on the SS Statendam 5 He was naturalized on March 21 1944 6 Education editKurt Adler began studying music at age six under cantor Jacob Furnberg Neuhaus 7 His first public appearance was at age fourteen His entire musical education was in Vienna Austria Other teachers include Prof Richard Robert Fanny Boehm Kramer Prof Alexander Manhart 1875 1936 piano Prof Karl Weigl 1881 1949 Prof Guido Adler 1855 1941 Prof Wilhelm Fischer 1886 1962 theory Prof Ferdinand Foll 1867 1929 also Hermann Weigert 1890 1955 Erich Kleiber 1890 1956 conducting In 1925 he graduated from the classical Akademisches Gymnasium Vienna In 1927 he earned a degree of Musicology from the University of Vienna corresponding to Master of Arts Philosophical Faculty of the University of Vienna 8 Life in the arts and humanities editKurt Adler began his professional career in Germany on the musical staff of the Berlin State Opera He later associated with the famous German Opera Theatre in Prague where Rudolf Szell and Schick also served and with the Municipal Opera House in Berlin He joined the Metropolitan Opera in 1943 under the management of Edward Johnson then in conjunction with Rudolf Bing General Manager from 1945 to 1973 Maestro Adler s press announcement upon his recruitment as Chorus Master of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City said That since Giulio Setti s time ten years ago there never has been a single Chorus Master for the entire Italian French German English repertoire and with my appointment the gradual reorganization and training will again be centralized in one hand 9 Languages editEnglish German Czech Russian French Italian Spanish Latin Greek Romanian Yiddish Hebrew 2 Engagements edit1927 29 Assistant Conductor Berlin State Opera First opera conducted Peer Gynt Grieg 1929 32 Conductor Prague German Opera Theater 1932 33 Conductor Berlin Municipal Opera House 1933 38 Conducting symphony concerts and opera all over Europe 1933 Conductor of orchestral concerts Vienna Grosser Musikvereinssaal 1933 Founder of the Unio Opera Company Vienna 1933 35 First Conductor Academic Opera and Ballet Theater of the USSR Kiev 1935 37 Founder Musical Director and first conductor of the Symphonic Orchestra Stalingrad U S S R 1938 43 U S A Conducting concerts and concertizing as pianist all over U S and Canada 1938 39 Pianist three transcontinental tours of the United States 1939 41 Musical Director Friendship House New York City 1943 Assistant Conductor to Leopold Stokowski Metropolitan Opera New York City 1943 73 Chorus Master Conductor Metropolitan Opera New York City New York USA 1944 47 Musical Director Opera Nacional and Opera de Mexico Mexico City 1952 Musical Director Central City Opera Festival Central City Colorado 1954 Musical Director of opera performances at Greek Theatre Hollywood California Conductor of numerous broadcasts and television performances of operatic and symphonic music Teaching positions edit1929 32 Organizer and Conductor of the Students Orchestra of the German Academy of Music Deutsche Akademie fur Musik und darstellende Kunst in Prag Prague Czechoslovakia 1934 35 Conductor orchestra of the Kiev Conservatory of Music Kiev Ukraine 1935 37 Professor of the Opera class at the Conservatory of Music Stalingrad U S S R 1938 41 Teacher of piano theory classes in chamber music coach New York City Quotes editAsked What do you consider your outstanding achievement Response Having escaped Hitler having founded and directed the first Symphonic Orchestra Stalingrad Asked What has helped you most in your career Response Artistic honesty sense of humor treatment of fellow artists singers chorus orchestra with utmost consideration for their values as human beings Asked What has been your most thrilling musical experience Response First time when I heard Toscanini conduct with the Scala in 1928 Asked If you hadn t chosen your present career what would your second choice be Response would not have talent for anything else Asked Are most of your friends musicians Response all kinds of intellectuals 2 Many instrumentalists and singers insist on putting themselves into the foreground Yet though they may be strong personalities or have complete mastery of their medium still I would not call them real artists A real artist must be humble Vanity has been the core of many virtuoso careers but it also has been the end of genuine artistic growth Psychologically an accompanist and coach must try to search for and understand where the roots of his soloist s artistry lie These roots are as varied as the individual artists Faith religious metaphysical or materialistic is one of the strongest roots faith in oneself is part of it Some great artists Richard Wagner for instance were extremely self centered compensating for this fault by preaching altruism in their works This brings us to another root of artistry compensation for shortcomings in one s makeup atonement for real or imagined sins and errors A third very important root is rebellion against family upbringing or an adverse fate Among those who rebel are some of our greatest artists who have become what they are by surmounting seemingly overwhelming odds Complacency is not a good stimulus to artistry 10 In your world of rapidly changing values welcome changes when they are the results of technical and scientific progress spiritual ethical and artistic values tend likewise to change but much more slowly and not always for the better What the future will bring no one can say I should like to venture the opinion that the vistas opening for us will render us more humble more concerned with inner or spiritual values Our technological advances should give us more time we shall need culture and be able to afford it 11 Publications edit1943 Adler K Songs of many wars from the sixteenth to the twentieth century New York Howell Soskin 1943 221p Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler A collection of fighting songs which oppressed people of all times and nation have sung in their fight against tyranny 1953 1956 Adler K Operatic anthology celebrated arias selected from operas by old and modern composers in five volumes compiled by Kurt Adler New York G Schirmer c1953 1956 Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler 1955 Adler K Famous operatic choruses New York G Schirmer c1955 Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler 1956 Adler K The Prima donna s album 42 celebrated arias from famous operas New York G Schirmer c1956 Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler 1960 Adler K Songs From Light Operas for soprano New York G Schirmer 1960 Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler 1965 Adler K The art of accompanying and coaching Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1965 1967Adler K Phonetics and diction in singing Italian French Spanish German Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1967 1968 Adler K Duets from the great operas for soprano and baritone New York G Schirmer 1968 Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler 1968 Adler K Duets from the great operas for soprano and tenor New York G Schirmer Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler 1971 Adler K The art of accompanying and coaching New York Da Capo Press 1974 Adler K Phonetics and diction in singing Italian French Spanish German Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 2nd ed 1975 1977 Adler K Operatic anthology celebrated arias selected from operas by old and modern composers in five volumes Edited and arranged by Kurt Adler Rochester N Y National Braille Association 1975 1977 1976 Adler K The art of accompanying and coaching New York Da Capo Press 1980 Adler K The art of accompanying and coaching New York Da Capo Press 1985 Adler K The art of accompanying and coaching New York Da Capo PressPersonal life edit nbsp Daughter Eveline Adler late 1990s New York CityOn March 10 1948 Adler married Irene Hawthorne 1917 1986 birth name Irene McNutt former prima ballerina soloist of the Metropolitan Opera On September 16 1965 Adler married Christiane Tocco One daughter Eveline 12 On September 21 1977 Adler died at home in his sleep in Butler New Jersey of uremia chronic glomerulonephritis 12 His hobbies included stamp and book collecting His athletics included soccer field hockey All Austrian 1926 Track and Field swimming tennis and ping pong His instruments were piano organ harmonica harpsichord and celeste 2 Bibliography edit2009 Vaclav Urban Kurt Adler Ein leben fur die Musik Aus dem Tschechischen ubertragen herausgegeben und mit Erganzungen versehen von Hana Pfalzova ConBrio Verlagsgesellschaft Regensburg 2009 104 p ISBN 978 3 940768 13 1 2007 Vaclav Urban Kurt Adler 1907 Neuhaus 1977 New York 1 vyd Jindrichuv Hradec Kostelni Radoun 2007 140 p ISBN 978 80 87107 00 3 2000 Baker s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians Centennial Edition New York Schirmer Reference 2000 p 21 ISBN 0 02 865525 7 set ISBN 0 02 865526 5 vol 1 1997 Rudolf M Wlaschek Biographia Judaica Bohemiae 2 vol Dortmund Forschungsstelle Ostmitteleuropa 1997 75 S ISBN 978 3 923293 57 5 1995 Walter Pass Gerhard Scheit Wilhelm Svoboda Orpheus im Exil Die Vertreibung der osterreichischen Musik von 1938 bis 1945 Wien Verlag fur Gesellschaftskritik 1995 409 p ISBN 978 3 85115 200 5 1989 Alain Paris Dictionnaire des interpretes et de l interpretation musicale au XXe siecle Paris Editions Robert Laffont 1989 906 p ISBN 2 221 50323 6 1982 John L Holmes Conductors on record London Victor Gollancz 1982 734 p ISBN 0 575 02781 9 1979 Index to music necrology supplement to the 1977 necrology Notes Music Library Association 1979 p 855 1978 Kurt Adler obituary in Opera News Feb 4 1978 p 30 1976 Paul Frank Burchard Bulling Florian Noetzel Helmut Rosner Kurzgefasstes Tonkunstler Lexikon Zweiter Teil Erganzungen und Erweiterungen seit 1937 15 Aufl Wilhelmshaven Heinrichshofen volume 1 A K 1974 ISBN 3 7959 0083 2 Bvolume 2 L Z 1976 ISBN 3 7959 0087 5 1969 One of the props in Opera News Jan 25 1969 p 26 27 1951 J T H Mize The international who is who in music Fifth Mid Century Edition Chicago Who is Who in Music 1951 References edit Baker s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians Centennial Edition New York Schirmer Reference 2000 p 21 a b c d e From the Metropolitan Opera Association Inc New York Press Bureau Artist s Questionnaire Nov 13 1945 United States Holocaust Museum Archive Washington DC a b Vaclav Urban Kurt Adler 1907 Neuhaus 1977 New York 1 vydani Jindrichuv Hradec Kostelni Radoun 2007 pp 11 13 ISBN 978 80 87107 00 3 United States of America Declaration of Intention and Petition for Naturalization National Archives and Records Administration Northeastern Region New York New York One of the Props Opera News January 25 1969 s 27 Vaclav Urban Kurt Adler Ein leben fur die Musik ConBrio Verlagsgesellschaft Regensburg 2009 p 27 ISBN 978 3 940768 13 1 Vaclav Urban Kurt Adler 1907 Neuhaus 1977 New York 1 vyd Jindrichuv Hradec Kostelni Radoun 2007 p 36 39 ISBN 978 80 87107 00 3 From the Metropolitan Opera Association Press Announcement New York New York Nov 13 1945 Adler K The art of accompanying and coaching Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1965 p 182 Adler K The art of accompanying and coaching Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1965 p 3 a b Staff Kurt Adler 70 Conductor Of 20 Different Operas At Met During 22 Years The New York Times September 22 1977 Accessed July 2 2011 Kurt Adler opera conductor and chorusmaster of the Metropolitan Opera from 1945 through 1973 died yesterday after a long illness He was 70 years old and lived in Butler N J External links editCzech home page of Kurt Adler E book about Kurt Adler in Czech PDF 29 MB Place a picture of Adler s grandparents tomb stone in Neuhaus Czech Republic METOPERA DATABASE The Metropolitan Opera Archives Multi field search Adler Kurt www yadvashem org Search Adler Siegfried and Adler Olga Dokumentationsarchiv des osterreichischen Widerstandes Archived March 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Search Adler Siegfried and Adler Olga Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kurt Adler amp oldid 1179915223, 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