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London Symphony Orchestra

The London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) is a British symphony orchestra based in London. Founded in 1904, the LSO is the oldest of London's symphony orchestras. The LSO was created by a group of players who left Henry Wood's Queen's Hall Orchestra because of a new rule requiring players to give the orchestra their exclusive services. The LSO itself later introduced a similar rule for its members. From the outset the LSO was organised on co-operative lines, with all players sharing the profits at the end of each season. This practice continued for the orchestra's first four decades.

London Symphony Orchestra
Orchestra
Founded1904
Concert hallBarbican Centre
Royal Albert Hall
Music directorSir Antonio Pappano
Websitewww.lso.co.uk

The LSO underwent periods of eclipse in the 1930s and 1950s when it was regarded as inferior in quality to new London orchestras, to which it lost players and bookings: the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra in the 1930s and the Philharmonia and Royal Philharmonic after the Second World War. The profit-sharing principle was abandoned in the post-war era as a condition of receiving public subsidy for the first time. In the 1950s the orchestra debated whether to concentrate on film work at the expense of symphony concerts; many senior players left when the majority of players rejected the idea. By the 1960s the LSO had recovered its leading position, which it has retained subsequently. In 1966, to perform alongside it in choral works, the orchestra established the LSO Chorus, originally a mix of professional and amateur singers, later a wholly amateur ensemble.

As a self-governing body, the orchestra selects the conductors with whom it works. At some stages in its history it has dispensed with a principal conductor and worked only with guests. Among conductors with whom it is most associated are, in its early days, Hans Richter, Sir Edward Elgar, and Sir Thomas Beecham, and in more recent decades Pierre Monteux, André Previn, Claudio Abbado, Sir Colin Davis, and Valery Gergiev.

Since 1982, the LSO has been based in the Barbican Centre in the City of London. Among its programmes there have been large-scale festivals celebrating composers as diverse as Berlioz, Mahler and Leonard Bernstein. The LSO claims to be the world's most recorded orchestra; it has made gramophone recordings since 1912 and has played on more than 200 soundtrack recordings for the cinema, of which the best known include the Star Wars series. The LSO is consistently ranked as one of the world's leading orchestras.[1][2][3]

History edit

Background edit

 
Clockwise from top left: Adolf Borsdorf, Thomas Busby, John Solomon and Henri van der Meerschen, founding fathers of the LSO

At the turn of the twentieth century there were no permanent salaried orchestras in London. The main orchestras were those of Covent Garden, the Philharmonic Society and the Queen's Hall; their proprietors engaged players individually for each concert or for a season. As there were competing demands for the services of the finest players it was an accepted practice that, even though under contract to play for a concert, a player was at liberty to accept a better-paid engagement if it were offered. He would then engage another player to deputise for him at the original concert and the rehearsals for it. The treasurer of the Philharmonic Society described the system thus: "A, whom you want, signs to play at your concert. He sends B (whom you don't mind) to the first rehearsal. B, without your knowledge or consent, sends C to the second rehearsal. Not being able to play at the concert, C sends D, whom you would have paid five shillings to stay away."[4] There was much competition for good orchestral players, with well-paid engagements offered by more than fifty music halls, by pit bands in West End musical comedies, and by grand hotels and restaurants which maintained orchestras.[5]

In 1904, the manager of the Queen's Hall, Robert Newman and the conductor of his promenade concerts, Henry Wood, agreed that they could no longer tolerate the deputy system. After a rehearsal in which Wood was faced with dozens of unfamiliar faces in his own orchestra, Newman came to the platform and announced: "Gentlemen, in future there will be no deputies! Good morning!"[6] This caused a furore. Orchestral musicians were not highly paid, and removing their chances of better-paid engagements permitted by the deputy system was a serious financial blow to many of them.[7] While travelling by train to play under Wood at a music festival in the north of England in May 1904, soon after Newman's announcement, some of his leading players discussed the situation and agreed to try to form their own orchestra. The principal movers were three horn players (Adolf Borsdorf, Thomas Busby, and Henri van der Meerschen) and a trumpeter, John Solomon.[7]

Foundation edit

 
Hans Richter, first conductor of the LSO

Busby organised a meeting at St. Andrew's Hall, not far from the Queen's Hall. Invitations were sent to present and former members of the Queen's Hall Orchestra. About a hundred players attended.[7] Busby explained the scheme: a new ensemble, the London Symphony Orchestra,[n 1] to be run on co-operative lines, "something akin to a Musical Republic",[9] with a constitution that gave the organisation independence.[n 2] At concerts promoted by the LSO the members played without fee, their remuneration coming at the end of each season in a division of the orchestra's profits.[7] This worked well in good years, but any poorly-patronised series left members out of pocket, and reliant on the LSO's engagements to play for provincial choral societies and other managements.[10] The proposal was approved unanimously, and a management committee was elected, comprising the four original movers and Alfred Hobday (viola) and E F (Fred) James (bassoon).[7] Busby was appointed chief executive, a post variously titled "Secretary", "managing director", "general secretary" and "general manager" over the years.[11]

Borsdorf was a player of international reputation, and through his influence, the orchestra secured Hans Richter to conduct its first concert.[7] Newman held no grudge against the rebels and made the Queen's Hall available to them. He and Wood attended the LSO's first concert, on 9 June 1904.[12] The programme consisted of the prelude to Die Meistersinger, music by Bach, Mozart, Elgar and Liszt, and finally Beethoven's Fifth Symphony.[13] In a favourable review in The Times, J A Fuller Maitland noted that 49 members of the new orchestra were rebels against Newman's no-deputy rule, 32 had left the Queen's Hall Orchestra earlier, and the other 21 had no connection with Wood and Newman.[13]

In a profile of the orchestra in 1911, The Musical Times commented:

Thus encouraged, the committee ventured to arrange for a series of symphony concerts at Queen's Hall. They had no regular conductor, and to this day they have pursued this policy of freedom. Dr. (now Sir) Frederic Cowen conducted the first concert of the series on October 27, 1904, and the others were conducted by Herr Arthur Nikisch, Mr. Fritz Steinbach, Sir Charles Stanford, M. Edouard Colonne, Sir Edward Elgar, and Mr. Georg Henschel. At every one of these concerts brilliant performances were given, and the reputation of the organization as one of the finest of its kind in the world was made.[7]

Early years edit

The orchestra made its first British tour in 1905, conducted by Sir Edward Elgar.[14] Elgar's conducting was highly praised; as to the orchestra, Ernest Newman wrote in The Manchester Guardian, "Its brass and its wood-wind were seen to be of exceptional quality, but the strings, fine as they are, have not the substance nor the colour of the Hallé strings."[15] The following year the LSO played outside Britain for the first time, giving concerts in Paris, conducted by Edouard Colonne, Sir Charles Stanford and André Messager. Richard Morrison, in his centenary study of the LSO, writes of "stodgy programmes of insipid Cowen, worthy Stanford, dull Parry and mediocre Mackenzie";[n 3] they put the Parisian public off to a considerable degree, and the players ended up out of pocket.[18]

 
Elgar and the LSO, Queen's Hall, 1911

In its early years Richter was the LSO's most frequently-engaged conductor, with four or five concerts every season;[19] the orchestra's website and Morrison's 2004 book both count him as the orchestra's first chief conductor, though the 1911 Musical Times article indicates otherwise.[7][14] Richter retired from conducting in 1911, and Elgar was elected conductor-in-chief for the 1911–12 season. Elgar conducted six concerts, Arthur Nikisch three, and Willem Mengelberg, Fritz Steinbach and Gustave Doret one each.[7] As a conductor Elgar did not prove to be a big enough box-office draw, and after one season he was replaced by the charismatic Hungarian maestro Nikisch.[20]

Nikisch was invited to tour North America in 1912, and despite his long association with the Berlin Philharmonic and Leipzig Gewandhaus orchestras, he insisted that the LSO should be contracted for the tour.[21] The orchestra, 100-strong (all men except for the harpist),[22] was booked to sail on the Titanic, but the tour schedule was changed at the last minute, and the players sailed safely on the Baltic.[23] The tour was arduous, but a triumph. The New York Press said, "The great British band played with a vigor, force and temperamental impetuousness that almost lifted the listener out of his seat."[24] The New York Times praised all departments of the orchestra, though, like The Manchester Guardian, it found the strings "brilliant rather than mellow". The paper had a little fun at the LSO's expense: from the viewpoint of a country that had long enjoyed permanent, salaried orchestras such as the Boston Symphony, it gently mocked the LSO's "bold stand for the sacred right of sending substitutes"[25]

First World War and 1920s edit

Shortly after the beginning of the war the board of the orchestra received a petition from rank and file players protesting about Borsdorf's continued membership of the LSO. Although he had done as much as anyone to found the orchestra, had lived in Britain for 30 years and was married to an Englishwoman, Borsdorf was regarded by some colleagues as an enemy alien and was forced out of the orchestra.[26]

 
Sir Thomas Beecham

During the war the musical life of Britain was drastically curtailed. The LSO was helped to survive by large donations from Sir Thomas Beecham, who also subsidised the Hallé and the Royal Philharmonic Society. For a year he took the role, though not the title, of chief conductor of the LSO. In 1916 his millionaire father died and Beecham's financial affairs became too complicated for any further musical philanthropy on his part.[27] In 1917 the LSO's directors agreed unanimously that they would promote no more concerts until the end of the war.[28] The orchestra played for other managements, and managed to survive, although the hitherto remunerative work for regional choral societies dwindled to almost nothing.[29]

When peace resumed many of the former players were unavailable. A third of the orchestra's pre-war members were in the armed forces, and rebuilding was urgently needed.[30] The orchestra was willing to allow the ambitious conductor Albert Coates to put himself forward as chief conductor. Coates had three attractions for the orchestra: he was a pupil of Nikisch, he had rich and influential contacts, and he was willing to conduct without fee.[30] He and the orchestra got off to a disastrous start. Their first concert featured the premiere of Elgar's Cello Concerto. Apart from the concerto, which the composer conducted, the rest of the programme was conducted by Coates, who overran his rehearsal time at the expense of Elgar's. Lady Elgar wrote, "that brutal selfish ill-mannered bounder ... that brute Coates went on rehearsing."[31] In The Observer Newman wrote, "There have been rumours about during the week of inadequate rehearsal. Whatever the explanation, the sad fact remains that never, in all probability, has so great an orchestra made so lamentable an exhibition of itself."[32] Coates remained as chief conductor for two seasons, and after the initial debacle is credited by Morrison with "breathing life and energy into the orchestra".[33]

After Coates left, the orchestra reverted to its preferred practice of engaging numerous guest conductors rather than a single principal conductor.[33] Among the guests were Elgar, Beecham, Otto Klemperer, Bruno Walter, Wilhelm Furtwängler and Serge Koussevitzky; soloists in the 1920s included Sergei Rachmaninoff, Artur Schnabel and the young Yehudi Menuhin. Revenues were substantial, and the orchestra seemed to many to be entering into a golden age. In fact, for lack of any serious competition in the 1920s, the LSO allowed its standards of playing to slip. In 1927 the Berlin Philharmonic, under Furtwängler, gave two concerts at the Queen's Hall. These, and later concerts by the same orchestra in 1928 and 1929, made obvious the poor standards then prevailing in London.[34] Both the BBC and Beecham had ambitions to bring London's orchestral standards up to those of Berlin. After an early attempt at co-operation between the BBC and Beecham, they went their separate ways. In 1929 the BBC began recruiting for the new BBC Symphony Orchestra under Adrian Boult. The prospect of joining a permanent, salaried orchestra was attractive enough to induce some LSO players to defect.[35] The new orchestra immediately received enthusiastic reviews that contrasted starkly with the severe press criticisms of the LSO's playing.[36] According to the critic W J Turner the LSO's problem was not that its playing had deteriorated, but that it had failed to keep up with the considerable improvements in playing achieved over the past two decades by the best European and American orchestras.[37]

1930s edit

In 1931, Beecham was approached by the rising young conductor Malcolm Sargent with a proposal to set up a permanent, salaried orchestra with a subsidy guaranteed by Sargent's patrons, the Courtauld family.[38] Originally Sargent and Beecham had in mind a reorganised version of the LSO, but the orchestra baulked at weeding out and replacing underperforming players. In 1932 Beecham lost patience and agreed with Sargent to set up a new orchestra from scratch.[39] The London Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO), as it was named, consisted of 106 players including a few young musicians straight from music college, many established players from provincial orchestras, and 17 of the LSO's leading members.[40]

 
Willem Mengelberg

To try to raise its own standards the LSO had engaged Mengelberg, a famous orchestral trainer, known as a perfectionist.[41] He made it a precondition that the deputy system must be abandoned, which occurred in 1929.[42] He conducted the orchestra for the 1930 season, and music critics commented on the improvement in the playing.[43] Nonetheless, as patently the third-best orchestra in London, the LSO lost work it had long been used to, including the Covent Garden seasons, the Royal Philharmonic Society concerts and the Courtauld-Sargent concerts.[44] The orchestra persuaded Sir Hamilton Harty, the popular conductor of the Hallé Orchestra, to move from Manchester to become the LSO's principal conductor. Harty brought with him eight of the Hallé's leading players to replenish the LSO's ranks, depleted by defections to the BBC and Beecham.[45] Critics including Neville Cardus recognised the continued improvement in the LSO's playing: "On this evening's hearing the London Symphony Orchestra is likely, after all, to give its two rivals a gallant run. Under Sir Hamilton it will certainly take on a style of sincere expression, distinguished from the virtuoso brilliance cultivated by the B.B.C. Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra under Beecham."[46] Among the milestones on the orchestra's path to recovery were the premieres of Walton's Belshazzar's Feast (1930) and First Symphony (1934), showing the orchestra "capable of rising to the challenge of the most demanding contemporary scores" (Morrison).[47]

The foundation of the Glyndebourne Festival in 1934 was another good thing for the LSO, as its players made up nearly the entirety of the festival orchestra.[48] An important additional source of income for the orchestra was the film industry. In March 1935 the LSO recorded Arthur Bliss's incidental music for Alexander Korda's film Things to Come. According to the LSO's website the recording took 14 full orchestral sessions and "started a veritable revolution in film production history. ... For the first time, music for the cinema, previously regarded as a lowly art form, captured the attention of classical music scholars and enthusiasts, music critics and the film and music public. The LSO had begun its long historic journey as the premier film orchestra."[49]

In London Harty did not prove to be a box-office draw, and according to Morrison, he was "brutally and hurtfully" dropped in 1934, as his LSO predecessor Elgar had been in 1912.[50] After this the orchestra did not appoint a chief conductor for nearly 20 years.[51] By 1939 the orchestra's board was planning an ambitious programme for 1940, with guests including Bruno Walter, Leopold Stokowski, Erich Kleiber and George Szell.[52]

1940s and 50s edit

When the Second World War broke out the orchestra's plans had to be almost completely changed. During the First World War the public's appetite for concert-going diminished drastically, but from the start of the Second it was clear that there was a huge demand for live music.[53] The LSO arranged a series of concerts conducted by Wood, with whom the orchestra was completely reconciled.[54] When the BBC evacuated its orchestra from London and abandoned the Proms, the LSO took over for Wood.[55] The Carnegie Trust, with the support of the British government, contracted the LSO to tour Britain, taking live music to towns where symphony concerts were hitherto unknown.[56]

The orchestra's loss of manpower was far worse in the Second World War than in the First. Between 1914 and 1918 there were 33 members of the LSO away on active service; between 1939 and 1945 there were more than 60, of whom seven were killed.[57] The orchestra found replacements wherever it could, including the bands of army regiments based in London, whose brass and woodwind players were unofficially recruited.[58]

During the war it had become clear that private patronage was no longer a practical means of sustaining Britain's musical life; a state body, the Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts – the forerunner of the Arts Council – was established, and given a modest budget for public subsidy.[59] The council made it a condition of sponsoring the LSO that the profit-sharing principle should be abandoned and the players made salaried employees. This renunciation of the principles for which the LSO had been founded was rejected by the players, and the offered subsidy was declined.[60]

 
The Royal Festival Hall: the LSO and LPO battled each other for residency in 1951

At the end of the war the LSO had to face new competition. The BBC Symphony Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra had survived the war intact, the latter, abandoned by Beecham, as a self-governing body. All three were quickly overshadowed by two new orchestras: Walter Legge's Philharmonia and Beecham's Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.[61] To survive, the LSO played in hundreds of concerts of popular classics under undistinguished conductors. By 1948 the orchestra was anxious to resume promoting its own concert series.[62] The players decided to accept the Arts Council's conditions for subsidy, and changed the LSO's constitution to replace profit-sharing with salaries.[63] With a view to raising its playing standards it engaged Josef Krips as conductor. His commitments in Vienna preventing him from becoming the LSO's chief conductor until 1950, but from his first concert with the orchestra in December 1948 he influenced the playing for the better.[62] His chosen repertoire was good for the box office: cycles of Beethoven symphonies and concertos (the latter featuring Wilhelm Kempff in one season and Claudio Arrau in another) helped restore the orchestra's finances as well as its musical standards.[64] With Krips and others the orchestra recorded extensively for the Decca Record Company during the early 1950s.[65] The orchestra's workload in these years was second only to the other self-governing London orchestra, the LPO: the LPO played 248 concerts in the 1949–50 season; the LSO 103; the BBC SO 55; the Philharmonia and RPO 32 each.[66] When the Royal Festival Hall opened in 1951 the LSO and LPO engaged in a mutually bruising campaign for sole residency there. Neither was successful, and the Festival Hall became the main London venue for both orchestras and for the RPO and Philharmonia.[67]

Krips left the LSO in 1954,[68] and the following year tensions between the orchestral principals and the rank-and-file players erupted into an irreconcilable dispute. The principals argued that the future of the LSO lay in profitable session work for film companies, rather than in the overcrowded field of London concerts. They also wished to be free to accept such engagements individually, absenting themselves from concerts if there were a clash of dates.[69] The LSO's board, which reflected the majority opinion of the players, refused to accommodate the principals, most of whom resigned en masse, to form the Sinfonia of London, a session ensemble that flourished from the mid-1950s to the early 1960s, and then faded away.[n 4] For fifteen years after the split the LSO did little film work, recording only six soundtracks between 1956 and 1971, compared with more than 70 films between 1940 and 1955.[71]

To replace the departing principals the LSO recruited rising young players including Hugh Maguire, Neville Marriner and Simon Streatfeild in the string sections, Gervase de Peyer and William Waterhouse in the woodwinds, and Barry Tuckwell and Denis Wick in the brass. With the new intake the orchestra rapidly advanced in standards and status.[72] The average age of the LSO players dropped to about 30.[63] In 1956 the orchestra visited South Africa to play at the Johannesburg Festival.[63] The players were impressed by the dynamic director of the festival, Ernest Fleischmann, and engaged him as general secretary of the orchestra when the post fell vacant in 1959.[73] He was the LSO's first professional manager; all his predecessors as secretary/managing director had been orchestral players combining the duties with their orchestral playing.[74]

1960s edit

To raise the profile and prestige of the orchestra, Fleischman strove to attract top soloists and conductors to work with the LSO. After Krips's resignation the orchestra had worked with a few leading conductors, including Klemperer, Stokowski, Jascha Horenstein and Pierre Monteux, but also with many less eminent ones. Fleischmann later said, "It wasn't difficult to change the list of conductors that the orchestra worked with, because one couldn't do much worse, really".[75][n 5] A rising conductor of a younger generation, Georg Solti, began working with the LSO; Fleischmann persuaded the management of the Vienna Festival to engage the LSO with Solti, Stokowski and Monteux for the 1961 Festwochen.[77]

 
Pierre Monteux

While in Vienna, Fleischmann persuaded Monteux to accept the chief conductorship of the orchestra. Though 86 years old, Monteux asked for, and received, a 25-year contract with a 25-year option of renewal. He lived for another three years, working with the LSO to within weeks of his death.[78] Members of the LSO believed that in those few years he had transformed the orchestra; Neville Marriner said that Monteux "made them feel like an international orchestra ... He gave them extended horizons and some of his achievements with the orchestra, both at home and abroad, gave them quite a different constitution."[79] Announcing Monteux's appointment, Fleischmann added that the LSO would also work frequently with Antal Doráti and the young Colin Davis.[80]

Together with Tuckwell, chairman of the orchestra, Fleischmann worked to create the LSO Trust, a fund to finance tours and provide sick and holiday pay for LSO players, thus ending, as Morrison says, "nearly sixty years of 'no play, no pay' ... this was a revolution."[81] They also pioneered formal sponsorship by commercial firms: the orchestra's "Peter Stuyvesant" concerts, underwritten by the tobacco company of that name, were given in London, Guildford, Bournemouth, Manchester and Swansea.[82] The company also sponsored LSO commissions of new works by British composers.[83]

In 1964, the LSO undertook its first world tour, taking in Israel, Turkey, Iran, India, Hong Kong, Korea, Japan and the United States. The following year István Kertész was appointed principal conductor.[84] Negotiations with the Corporation of the City of London with a view to establishing the LSO as the resident orchestra of the planned Barbican Centre began in the same year.[84] In 1966 Leonard Bernstein conducted the LSO for the first time, in Mahler's Symphony of a Thousand at the Royal Albert Hall. This was another coup for Fleischmann, who had to overcome Bernstein's scorn for the inadequate rehearsal facilities endured by London orchestras.[85] Bernstein remained associated with the LSO for the rest of his life, and was its president from 1987 to 1990.[74]

Mindful of the enormous success of the Philharmonia Chorus, founded in 1957 by Legge to work with his Philharmonia Orchestra, the LSO decided to establish its own chorus.[86] The LSO Chorus (later called the London Symphony Chorus) was formed in 1966 under John Alldis as chorus master.[84] Its early years were difficult; Kertész did not get on with Alldis, and there were difficulties within the chorus. Most of its members were amateurs, but at first, they were reinforced by a small number of professionals. This led to disputes over the balance between amateurs and professionals.[87] There was a brief crisis, after which the professional element was removed, and the LSO chorus became, and remains, an outstanding amateur chorus.[87]

By 1967 many in the LSO felt that Fleischmann was seeking to exert too much influence on the affairs of the orchestra, and he resigned.[88] Kertész, too, was dispensed with when he sought control of all artistic matters; his contract was not renewed when it expired in 1968.[89] His successor as principal conductor was André Previn, who held the post for 11 years – at 2013 the longest tenure of the post to date.[84]

By the Previn era the LSO was being described as the finest of the London orchestras.[90] A reviewer of an Elgar recording by one of the other orchestras remarked, "these symphonies really deserve the LSO at its peak."[91] The implication that the LSO was not always at its peak was illustrated when Sir Adrian Boult, who was recording Elgar and Vaughan Williams with the LSO, refused to continue when he discovered that five leading principals had absented themselves. EMI took Boult's side, and the orchestra apologised.[92]

1970s and 80s edit

In 1971, John Culshaw of BBC television commissioned "André Previn's Music Night", bringing classical music to a large new audience. Previn would talk informally direct to camera and then turn and conduct the LSO, whose members were dressed in casual sweaters or shirts rather than formal evening clothes.[93] The programme attracted unprecedented viewing figures for classical music;[94] Morrison writes, "More British people heard the LSO play in Music Night in one week than in sixty-five years of LSO concerts."[93] Several series of the programme were screened between 1971 and 1977.[95] Previn's popularity with the public enabled him and the LSO to programme works that under other conductors could have been box-office disasters, such as Messiaen's Turangalila Symphony.[96] In the early 1970s the LSO recorded two firsts for a British orchestra, appearing at the Salzburg Festival, conducted by Previn, Seiji Ozawa and Karl Böhm, in 1973, and playing at the Hollywood Bowl the following year.[84]

 
Henry Wood Hall, acquired and converted by the LSO and the LPO in the 1970s

The lack of good rehearsal facilities to which Bernstein had objected was addressed in the 1970s when, jointly with the LPO, the LSO acquired and restored a disused church in Southwark, converting it into the Henry Wood Hall, a convenient and acoustically excellent rehearsal space and recording studio, opened in 1975.[97]

In 1978, two aspects of the LSO's non-symphonic work were recognised. The orchestra shared in three Grammy awards for the score to Star Wars; and the LSO "Classic Rock" recordings, in the words of the orchestra's website, became hugely popular and provided handsome royalties.[84] The recordings led to "Classic Rock" tours by the orchestra, characterised by Morrison as "enormously lucrative but artistically demeaning."[98]

Claudio Abbado, principal guest conductor since 1971, succeeded Previn as chief conductor in the orchestra's diamond jubilee year, 1979.[99] In a 1988 study of the LSO in Gramophone magazine James Jolly wrote that Abbado was in many ways the antithesis of Previn in terms of style and repertoire, bringing to the orchestra a particular authority in the Austro-German classics as well as a commitment to the avant-garde.[100] From the orchestra's point of view there were disadvantages to his appointment. His relationship with the players was distant and he was unable to impose discipline on the orchestra in rehearsals. He insisted on conducting without a score, and many times this led to barely-avoided disaster in concerts.[101] Abbado had considerable international prestige, but this too had its downside for the LSO: he frequently made his major recordings with the Boston or Chicago Symphony Orchestras or the Vienna Philharmonic. One of the LSO's principals commented, "Although we were sweating our guts playing those vast Mahler symphonies for ... Abbado, he would go and record them with other orchestras, which made us feel like second, maybe even third choice".[102]

In 1982, the LSO took up residence at the Barbican. In the first years of the residency, the orchestra came close to financial disaster, primarily because of over-ambitious programming and the poor ticket sales that resulted.[103] The Times commented that the LSO "were tempted by their own need for challenge (and a siren chorus of critics) to begin a series of more modern and adventurous music: six nights a week of Tippett, Berlioz, Webern, Stockhausen designed to draw in a new public. Instead it put an old audience to flight."[104] The LSO's difficulties were compounded by the satirical magazine Private Eye, which ran a series of defamatory articles about the orchestra. The articles were almost wholly untrue and the magazine was forced to pay substantial libel damages, but in the short term serious damage was done to the orchestra's reputation and morale.[104]

 
Leonard Bernstein

In August 1984, the orchestra's managing director, Peter Hemmings, resigned. For the first time since 1949, the orchestra appointed one of its players to the position.[n 6] Clive Gillinson, a cellist, took over at a bad time in the LSO's fortunes, and played a central role in turning them round. He negotiated what Morrison calls "a dazzling series of mega-projects, each built around the personal enthusiasm of a 'star' conductor or soloist", producing sell-out houses.[105] In 1985 the orchestra mounted "Mahler, Vienna and the Twentieth Century", planned by Abbado, followed the next year by an equally successful Bernstein festival.[106]

During 1988 the orchestra adopted an education policy which included the establishment of "LSO Discovery", offering "people of all ages, from babies through music students to adults, an opportunity to get involved in music-making".[107] The programme is still in place in 2022, benefiting more than 60,000 people every year.[107]

In September 1988, Michael Tilson Thomas succeeded Abbado as chief conductor.[108]

In 1989, the Royal Philharmonic Society established its Orchestra Award for "excellence in playing and playing standards"; the LSO was the first winner.[106]

1990s to the present edit

The LSO visited Japan in 1990 with Bernstein and Tilson Thomas. The conductors and players took part in the inaugural Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo, teaching and giving masterclasses for 123 young musicians from 18 countries.[109] Colin Matthews was appointed as the orchestra's associate composer in 1991, and the following year Richard McNicol became LSO Discovery's first music animateur.[106] Gillison secured increased funding from the Arts Council, the City of London Corporation and commercial sponsors, enabling the orchestra to set up a system of joint principals, attracting top musicians who could play in the LSO without having to give up their solo or chamber careers.[110]

In 1993, the LSO again featured in a British television series, playing in Concerto! with Tilson Thomas and Dudley Moore. Among those appearing were Alicia de Larrocha, James Galway, Steven Isserlis, Barry Douglas, Richard Stoltzman and Kyoko Takezawa.[111] The series received an Emmy Award.[106] In 1994 the orchestra and the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), resident at the Barbican Theatre, came under threat from a new managing director of the Barbican Centre, Baroness O'Cathain, an economist with no cultural background. O'Cathain, described by Morrison as "a Thatcherite free marketeer", dismissed the LSO and RSC as "arty-farty types", and opposed public subsidy.[112] Such was the press and public reaction that she was obliged to seek a vote of confidence from the LSO and RSC; failing to gain it, she resigned, and was succeeded by John Tusa, whom Morrison calls "steeped in culture." The danger that the concert hall would become a conference centre was averted.[112]

 
Sir Colin Davis

In 1995, Sir Colin Davis was appointed chief conductor. He had first conducted the LSO in 1959, and had been widely expected to succeed Monteux as principal conductor in 1964.[113] Among the most conspicuous of Davis's projects with the orchestra was the LSO's most ambitious festival thus far, the "Berlioz Odyssey", in which all Berlioz's major works were given.[106] The festival continued into 2000. Many of the performances, including Les Troyens, were recorded for the orchestra's new CD label, LSO Live, launched in 2000.[106][114] Les Troyens won two Grammy awards.[114]

In 2003, with backing from the banking firm UBS, the orchestra opened LSO St Luke's, its music education centre, in a former church near the Barbican. The following year the orchestra celebrated its centenary, with a gala concert attended by the LSO's Patron, the Queen. After serving as managing director for 21 years, Clive Gillinson left to become chief executive of Carnegie Hall, New York. His successor was Kathryn McDowell.[114]

In 2006, Daniel Harding joined Michael Tilson Thomas as principal guest conductor. At the end of 2006, Davis stood down as principal conductor and became president of the LSO in January 2007, its first since the death of Bernstein in 1990. Valery Gergiev became principal conductor of the LSO on 1 January 2007.[114] In Gergiev's first season in charge a complete cycle of Mahler Symphonies was given, with the Barbican Hall sold out for every concert.[114] In 2009 Davis and the LSO celebrated 50 years of working together. In the same year the LSO took over from the Berlin Philharmonic as the resident orchestra at the Aix-en-Provence Festival, adding to a roster of international residences at venues including the Lincoln Center in New York, the Salle Pleyel in Paris and the Daytona Beach International Festival in Florida.[115] In 2010 the LSO visited Poland and Abu Dhabi for the first time and made its first return to India since the 1964 world tour.[114] The orchestra played at the 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, conducted by Sir Simon Rattle.[116]

In March 2015, the LSO simultaneously announced the departure of Gergiev as principal conductor at the end of 2015, and the appointment of Sir Simon Rattle as its music director from September 2017, with an initial contract of five years.[117] In February 2016, the orchestra announced that beginning with the 2016–17 season Gianandrea Noseda would be titled "Principal Guest Conductor" (joining the orchestra's other Principal Guest Conductor, Daniel Harding, who held that post 2006-2017), and that Michael Tilson Thomas would be titled "Conductor Laureate" and Andre Previn would be titled "Conductor Emeritus."[118] In January 2021, the LSO announced an extension of Rattle's contract as music director until the end of the 2023 season, at which time he is scheduled to stand down from the LSO and subsequently to take the title of conductor emeritus for life.[119]

Sir Antonio Pappano first guest-conducted the LSO in 1996. In March 2021, the LSO announced the appointment of Pappano as its next chief conductor, effective in September 2024. Pappano is scheduled to hold the title of chief conductor-designate in the 2023-2024 season.[120]

In February 2022, Barbara Hannigan was announced as 'Associate Artist' for three years.[121]

Reputation edit

In a 1988 Gramophone article James Jolly said of the LSO:

Some would claim ... that it is the most American of our orchestras, thinking no doubt of the Previn legacy, Bernstein's Presidency and Tilson Thomas's appointment. Others, looking back further to Pierre Monteux's reign, think it our most French orchestra, a quality nurtured by Previn and latterly Claudio Abbado. But what of their essaying of the Slavonic repertoire under Istvan Kertész, or of Mahler, whose idiom has been finely honed by Abbado? No, the LSO remains enigmatic, unpredictable and supremely individual. Of all the London orchestras, the LSO seems to have more "personalities", more "individuals" and has given the solo world more than its fair share of "star" performers. As an orchestra the LSO has never been prepared to submit to one principal conductor for long (one thinks of Karajan in Berlin, Haitink in Amsterdam or Mravinsky in Leningrad)[n 7] but one of its greatest strengths remains its ability to attract fine conductors and dedicate itself wholeheartedly to creating a genuine performance.[100]

For many years, the LSO had a reputation as an almost exclusively male ensemble (female harpists excepted). Morrison describes the LSO of the 1960s and 1970s as "a rambunctious boys' club that swaggered round the globe."[123] Before the 1970s one of the few women to play in the orchestra was the oboist Evelyn Rothwell, who joined in the 1930s and found herself regarded as an outsider by her male colleagues.[124] She was not admitted to full membership of the orchestra: the first woman to be elected as a member of the LSO was Renata Scheffel-Stein in 1975.[125] By that time other British orchestras had left the LSO far behind in this regard.[n 8]

By 2004, about 20 per cent of the LSO's members were women. Some musicians, including Davis, judged that this improved the orchestra's playing as well as its behaviour.[127] Others, including Previn and the veteran principal trumpet Maurice Murphy, felt that although the technical standard of playing had improved, the diminution of the orchestra's machismo was a matter for regret.[127] Comparing the LSO of 2004 with the orchestra of the 1960s and 1970s, Murphy said, "Now the strings have improved so much, the playing is fantastic, but it has lost something of its gung-ho quality."[128] The orchestra of the 1960s had a reputation for tormenting conductors it disliked; even such notorious martinets as George Szell were given a hard time.[129] By the 21st century the orchestra had long abandoned such aggression; civilities were maintained even with conductors whom the orchestra took against: they were simply never re-engaged.[130]

Recordings edit

Audio edit

 
The LSO at the Barbican, 2011. Front, left to right, Roman Simović, Carmine Lauri (violins), Alastair Blayden, Tim Hugh (cellos), Bernard Haitink (conductor), Gillianne Haddow, Edward Vanderspar (violas), Tom Norris, Evgeny Grach (violins). Players to the rear include David Pyatt (horn), Andrew Marriner (clarinet), Rachel Gough (bassoon)
 
LSO concert of film music at the Barbican, 2003. Left to right: Gordan Nikolitch and Lennox Mackenzie (violins), Jerry Goldsmith (conductor), Paul Silverthorne (viola), Moray Welsh (cello)

The LSO has made recordings since the early days of recording, beginning with acoustic versions under Nikisch of Beethoven's Egmont Overture, Weber's Oberon Overture, and Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody in F minor, followed soon after by the overtures to Der Freischütz and The Marriage of Figaro. HMV's Fred Gaisberg, who supervised the sessions, wrote of "virtuoso playing which was unique at that time".[100] Since then, according to the orchestra's website, the LSO has made more recordings than any other orchestra,[131] a claim endorsed by Gramophone magazine.[100] In 1920 the LSO signed a three-year contract with the Columbia Graphophone Company and what Jolly calls "a magnificent series of recordings" followed. Under Felix Weingartner the orchestra recorded Mozart (Symphony No 39), Beethoven (the Fifth, Seventh and Eighth Symphonies) and Brahms's First.[100] Other recordings from this period included the premiere recording of Holst's The Planets, conducted by the composer, and Richard Strauss's Don Juan, Ein Heldenleben and Tod und Verklärung, likewise conducted by their composer.[100]

When Elgar recorded his major works for HMV in the late 1920s and early 1930s, the LSO was chosen for most of the recordings.[n 9] The LSO's pre-war recordings for Decca include Hamilton Harty's version of Walton's First Symphony, of which Gramophone magazine said, "There are one or two moments where the LSO are audibly hanging on by the skin of their teeth, but these moments simply add to the ferocious impact of the music".[133]

In the 1950s and early 1960s, EMI generally made its British recordings with the Royal Philharmonic and Philharmonia orchestras; the LSO's recordings were chiefly for Decca, including a Sibelius symphony cycle with Anthony Collins, French music under Monteux, early recordings by Solti, and a series of Britten's major works, conducted by the composer.[65] Of the later 1960s Jolly writes, "Istvan Kertész's three-year Principal Conductorship has left a treasure trove of memorable and extraordinarily resilient recordings – the Dvořák symphonies are still competitive ... and his classic disc of Bartók's Duke Bluebeard's Castle admirably demonstrates what a superb ensemble the LSO were under his baton."[100]

Since 2000, the LSO has published commercial CD recordings on its own label, LSO Live. Recordings are made live at the Barbican hall over several dates and are edited in post-production. Initially available on CD they have since been issued on Super Audio CD and also as downloads. LSO Live has published more than 70 recordings featuring conductors including Gergiev, Davis and Bernard Haitink. Gergiev's version of Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet was BBC Music Magazine's Disc of the Year in 2011,[134] and Davis's discs of Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique and Les Troyens and Dvořák's Eighth Symphony were BBC Radio 3's top recommendations in comparative reviews of all available versions.[135]

Film edit

Even in the era of silent films the LSO was associated with the cinema. During the 1920s the orchestra played scores arranged and conducted by Eugene Goossens to accompany screenings of The Three Musketeers (1922), The Nibelungs (1924), The Constant Nymph (1927) and The Life of Beethoven (1929).[136]

Since 1935 the LSO has recorded the musical scores of more than 200 films.[136] The orchestra owed its engagement for its first soundtrack sessions to Muir Mathieson, musical director of Korda Studios. On the LSO's website, the film specialist Robert Rider calls Mathieson "the most important single figure in the early history of British film music, who enlisted Bliss to write a score for Things to Come, and who was subsequently responsible for bringing the most eminent British 20th-century composers to work for cinema."[49] Mathieson described the LSO as "the perfect film orchestra". Among the composers commissioned by Mathieson for LSO soundtracks were Vaughan Williams, Walton, Britten and Malcolm Arnold and lighter composers including Eric Coates and Noël Coward.[137]

As a pinnacle of Mathieson's collaboration with the LSO, Rider cites the 1946 film Instruments of the Orchestra, a film record of the LSO at work. Sargent conducted the orchestra in a performance of Britten's The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, composed for the film. Rider adds, "Mathieson's documentary, with its close-ups of the musicians and their instruments, beautifully captures the vibrancy and texture of the Orchestra amidst the optimism of the post-Second World War era."[49]

Another milestone in the LSO's history in film music was in 1977 with the recording of John Williams's score for the first of the Star Wars films. Rider comments that this film and its sequels "attracted a new group of admirers and consolidated the period of film music activity for the Orchestra, which continues unabated to this day".[49] The LSO also recorded other Williams film scores, including Superman: The Movie (1978) and Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) and six of the eight films from the Harry Potter film series.[71]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

Notes

  1. ^ The orchestra was not the first to appear under this title: in the 1890s a group of about 41 players performed in London, Ontario, Canada, as the London Symphony Orchestra.[8]
  2. ^ The orchestra was incorporated under the Limited Liability Act with a capital of £1,000 in £1 shares. Every member was required to hold £10 in shares.[10]
  3. ^ Frederic Hymen Cowen was better known as a conductor than as a composer.[16] Charles Villiers Stanford, Hubert Parry and Alexander Mackenzie were British composers of the "English musical renaissance". Some of their works, notably choral music by Stanford and Parry, have retained a place in the repertoire, but little of their purely orchestral music is regularly played. At the time, they held considerable sway in British musical life.[17]
  4. ^ Morrison comments that the LSO would probably also have faded away if it had gone down the same route. The Sinfonia of London was no longer extant at the time of the Peacock Committee's report on orchestral resources in Great Britain in 1970, where it is not mentioned in the lists of chamber or symphony orchestras. The Sinfonia's director, the flautist and former LSO chairman, Gordon Walker, died in 1965. The title "Sinfonia of London" was purchased from his heirs in 1982 for use by a new ensemble.[70]
  5. ^ Among those under whom the LSO played during the middle and late 1950s were lesser-known conductors such as Leighton Lucas, Alan J Kirby, Gaston Poulet, John Russell, Eugen Szenkar, Thornton Lofthouse, Foster Clark, Royalton Kisch, Thomas Scherman and Samuel Rosenheim.[76]
  6. ^ The last internal appointee to the post had been the woodwind player John Cruft who held it from 1949 to 1959. Since then the post had been held by Fleischmann, Harold Lawrence (1968–73), John Boyden (1974–75), Michael Kaye (1975–79) and Hemmings (1980–84), whose backgrounds were in administration and management.[74]
  7. ^ Herbert von Karajan was chief conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic from 1954 to 1989; Bernard Haitink was chief conductor of the Concertgebouw Orchestra, Amsterdam from 1961 to 1988; Evgeny Mravinsky was chief conductor of the Leningrad Philharmonic from 1938 to 1988.[122]
  8. ^ In 1971 the BBC SO had 16 women players, the LPO and Philharmonia (by then known as the New Philharmonia) 12 each. The proportion of female players was considerably higher in the main regional orchestras.[126]
  9. ^ The LSO plays on the recordings of both Symphonies, the Violin Concerto (with Menuhin), the Cello Concerto (with Beatrice Harrison), Falstaff, In the South, and many of the lighter pieces including the Wand of Youth and Nursery suites.[132]

References

  1. ^ "The best orchestras in the world".
  2. ^ "The World's Greatest Orchestras".
  3. ^ "Top 10 Best Orchestras in the World". 9 February 2021.
  4. ^ Levien, John Mewburn, quoted in Reid, p. 50
  5. ^ Morrison, p. 12
  6. ^ Wood, p. 212
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The London Symphony Orchestra", The Musical Times, Vol. 52, No. 825 (November 1911), pp. 705–707 (subscription required)
  8. ^ London Symphony Orchestra programme, 11 February 1890, Open Library. Retrieved 16 July 2012
  9. ^ Morrison, p. 19
  10. ^ a b Morrison, pp. 36–37
  11. ^ Morrison, p. 258
  12. ^ Jacobs, p. 100
  13. ^ a b "Concerts", The Times, 10 June 1904, p. 7
  14. ^ a b "1900s and 1910s", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 7 July 2012; Morrison, p. 26
  15. ^ Newman, Ernest. "The Harrison Concert", The Manchester Guardian, 16 November 1905, p. 12
  16. ^ Dibble, Jeremy and Jennifer Spencer. "Cowen, Sir Frederic Hymen", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press. Retrieved 3 April 2013 (subscription required)
  17. ^ Stradling and Hughes, p. 52
  18. ^ Morrison pp. 35–36
  19. ^ Morrison, p. 28
  20. ^ Morrison, p. 42
  21. ^ Morrison, pp. 44–45
  22. ^ "100 years of the Titanic", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 16 July 2012
  23. ^ Morrison, p. 45
  24. ^ Quoted in Morrison, p. 46
  25. ^ "Arthur Nikisch Welcomed Here – Gives His First Concert with London Symphony Orchestra in Carnegie Hall", The New York Times, 9 April 1912
  26. ^ Morrison, p. 21
  27. ^ Lucas, pp. 45–147
  28. ^ Morrison, p. 54
  29. ^ Morrison, p. 55
  30. ^ a b Morrison, p. 56
  31. ^ Lloyd-Webber, Julian, "How I fell in love with E E's darling", The Daily Telegraph, 17 May 2007; and Anderson, Keith, Liner notes to Naxos CD 8.550503, Dvořák and Elgar Cello Concertos (1992), p. 4
  32. ^ Newman, Ernest, "Music of the Week", The Observer, 2 November 1919, p. 11
  33. ^ a b Morrison, p. 57
  34. ^ Kennedy, p. 138
  35. ^ Morrison, pp. 72–74
  36. ^ Morrison, pp. 73–74
  37. ^ Morrison, p. 64
  38. ^ Aldous, p. 68
  39. ^ Reid, p. 202
  40. ^ Morrison, p. 79
  41. ^ Shore, pp. 111–113
  42. ^ "1920s and 1930s", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 16 July 2012
  43. ^ Morrison, p. 66
  44. ^ Morrison, pp. 66 and 82
  45. ^ Morrison, p. 84
  46. ^ Cardus, Neville. "London Symphony Orchestra", The Manchester Guardian, 8 November 1932, p. 5
  47. ^ Morrison, p. 86
  48. ^ Morrison, p. 83
  49. ^ a b c d "LSO and Film Music" 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine, London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 16 July 2012
  50. ^ Morrison, p. 34
  51. ^ Morrison, p. 174
  52. ^ Morrison, p. 89
  53. ^ Morrison, pp. 53 and 89
  54. ^ Morrison, p. 90
  55. ^ Jacobs, p. 348
  56. ^ Morrison, p. 91
  57. ^ Morrison, pp. 53 and 92–93
  58. ^ Morrison pp. 92–93
  59. ^ Morrison, p. 96
  60. ^ Morrison, p. 97
  61. ^ Morrison, pp. 98–100
  62. ^ a b Morrison, p. 100
  63. ^ a b c "1940s and 1950s", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 8 July 2012
  64. ^ Morrison, pp. 101–102
  65. ^ a b Stuart, Philip. Decca Classical, 1929–2009. Retrieved 7 July 2012
  66. ^ Hill, pp. 49–50
  67. ^ Morrison, pp. 106–107
  68. ^ "Mr. Krips's Resignation from L.S.O.", The Times, 24 June 1954, p. 6
  69. ^ Morrison, p. 109
  70. ^ Morrison, p. 109; Peacock, pp. 4–12; and "Mr. Gordon Walker", The Times, 21 August 1965, p. 8
  71. ^ a b Morrison, p. 280
  72. ^ Morrison, p. 110
  73. ^ Morrison, pp. 32 and 258
  74. ^ a b c "LSO Principal Conductors and Title Holders", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 16 July 2012
  75. ^ Quoted in Morrison, p. 133
  76. ^ "Opera And Ballet", The Times, 13 March 1954, p. 2 (Lucas); "Croydon Philharmonic Society", The Times, 13 May 1954, p. 9 (Kirby); "London Symphony Orchestra", The Times, 28 June 1954, p. 3 (Poulet); "Opera And Ballet", The Times, 3 July 1954, p. 2 (Russell ); "Opera And Ballet", The Times, 19 March 1955, p. 2 (Szenkar); "Opera And Ballet", The Times, 18 June 1955, p. 2 (Lofthouse); "Opera And Ballet", The Times, 9 February 1957, p. 2 (Clark); "Concerts", The Times, 9 March 1957, p. 2 (Kisch); "Opera And Ballet", The Times, 8 June 1957, p. 2 (Scherman); and "Opera And Ballet", The Times, 5 September 1959, p. 2 (Rosenheim)
  77. ^ Morrison, p. 136
  78. ^ "1960s and 1970s", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 15 July 2012; and "Opera Ballet and Concerts", The Times, 4 April 1964, p. 2
  79. ^ Tolansky, John. "Monteux in London", Classical Recordings Quarterly, Autumn 2003, Number 34, pp. 16–19
  80. ^ "Monteux for the L.S.O.", The Times, 16 August 1961, p. 11
  81. ^ Morrison, p. 140
  82. ^ "L.S.O. To Visit Manchester", The Times, 28 February 1964, p. 16
  83. ^ "Four To Write For L.S.O.", The Times, 10 September 1964, p. 8
  84. ^ a b c d e f "1960s and 1970s", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 15 July 2012
  85. ^ Morrison, p. 145
  86. ^ Morrison, p. 181
  87. ^ a b Morrison, p. 182
  88. ^ Morrison, pp. 159–161
  89. ^ Morrison, pp. 164–165.
  90. ^ Coleman, Terry. "Orchestral life and hard times", The Guardian, 21 July 1969, p. 6
  91. ^ Fiske, Roger. "Elgar Symphonies", Gramophone, October 1968, p. 52
  92. ^ "A protest by Sir Adrian", The Guardian, 6 August 1970, p. 1
  93. ^ a b Morrison, p. 180
  94. ^ "Mr John Culshaw", The Times, 29 April 1980, p. 16
  95. ^ "Broadcasting," The Times, 25 May 1977, p. 31
  96. ^ Camden, Anthony, quoted in Previn, p. 215
  97. ^ Mann, William. "The making of a rehearsal hall", The Times, 17 June 1975, p. 11
  98. ^ Morrison, p. 184
  99. ^ Huckerby, Martin "Claudio Abbado to be LSO conductor", The Times, 20 October 1977, p. 19
  100. ^ a b c d e f g Jolly, James. "London Symphony Orchestra – A Profile"], Gramophone, October 1988, p. 40
  101. ^ Morrison, p. 122
  102. ^ Murphy, Maurice, The Sunday Times magazine, 17 July 1988, quoted by Jolly.
  103. ^ Shakespeare, Nicholas. "The maze ends at the box office", The Times, 2 March 1985, p. 7
  104. ^ a b James, Brian. "The orchestra that opened up", The Times, 28 February 1987, p. 37
  105. ^ Morrison, p. 210
  106. ^ a b c d e f "1980s and 1990s", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 16 July 2012
  107. ^ a b "London Symphony Orchestra - About LSO Discovery". lso.co.uk. Retrieved 28 September 2020.
  108. ^ Bowen, Meirion. "Licensed to discover: Michael Tilson Thomas's fresh approach could liven up the LSO", The Guardian, 19 June 1987, p. 16; and Griffiths, Paul. "Brave start", The Times, 16 September 1988, p. 18
  109. ^ "History and photos" Archived 19 December 2012 at archive.today, Pacific Music Festival. Retrieved 17 July 2012
  110. ^ Morrison, p. 211.
  111. ^ Greenfield, Edward. "Concert season", The Guardian, 14 August 1993, p. 22
  112. ^ a b Morrison, pp. 219–220.
  113. ^ Morrison, pp. 146–147
  114. ^ a b c d e f "2000s and 2010s", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 26 January 2016
  115. ^ "Residencies", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 22 July 2012
  116. ^ Rayner Gordon. "Parachuting in, the Queen and 007", The Daily Telegraph, 28 2012
  117. ^ "Sir Simon Rattle appointed Music Director" (Press release). London Symphony Orchestra. 3 March 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  118. ^ Midgette, Anne. "Incoming NSO music director Noseda gets new assignment", The Washington Post, 24 February 2016
  119. ^ "Sir Simon Rattle announces an extension of his contract as Music Director until 2023 and accepts lifetime position of Conductor Emeritus thereafter" (Press release). London Symphony Orchestra. 11 January 2021. Retrieved 11 January 2021.
  120. ^ "London Symphony Orchestra appoints Sir Antonio Pappano as Chief Conductor" (Press release). London Symphony Orchestra. 30 March 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  121. ^ "London Symphony Orchestra - London Symphony Orchestra names Barbara Hannigan as Associate Artist". lso.co.uk. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  122. ^ Brunner, Gerhard. "Karajan, Herbert von"; Goodwin, Noël. "Haitink, Bernard"; and Bowen, José. "Mravinsky, Evgeny"; all in Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online. Retrieved 17 July 2012 (subscription required)
  123. ^ Morrison, p. 251
  124. ^ Morrison, pp. 186–187
  125. ^ Greenfield, Edward. "Orchestra strives", The Guardian, 8 August 1975, p. 8
  126. ^ Ford, Christopher. "The eternal triangle: Men, women, and the orchestras", The Guardian, 28 May 1971, p. 9
  127. ^ a b Morrison, p. 187
  128. ^ Quoted in Morrison, p. 187
  129. ^ Morrison, p. 123
  130. ^ Morrison, p. 124
  131. ^ "Recordings", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 7 July 2012
  132. ^ "The Elgar Edition: The Complete Electrical Recordings of Sir Edward Elgar", EMI Records, Catalogue number 5099909569423.
  133. ^ Gramophone December 1985, p. 76
  134. ^ "Prokofiev Romeo and Juliet Disc of the Year 2011", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 7 July 2012
  135. ^ "Building a Library", BBC Radio 3. Retrieved 7 July 2012
  136. ^ a b Morrison, pp. 277–283
  137. ^ Morrison, pp. 277–279

Sources edit

  • Aldous, Richard (2001). Tunes of Glory: The Life of Malcolm Sargent. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09-180131-1.
  • Hill, Ralph (1951). Music 1951. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. OCLC 26147349.
  • Jacobs, Arthur (1994). Henry J. Wood: Maker of the Proms. London: Methuen. ISBN 0-413-69340-6.
  • Kennedy, Michael (1987). Adrian Boult. London: Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 0-333-48752-4.
  • Morrison, Richard (2004). Orchestra: The LSO: A Century of Triumph and Turbulence. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-21584-X.
  • Peacock, Alan (1970). A Report on Orchestral Resources in Great Britain. London: Arts Council of Great Britain. OCLC 150610520.
  • Previn, André, ed. (1979). Orchestra. London: Macdonald and Jane's. ISBN 0-354-04420-6.
  • Reid, Charles (1961). Thomas Beecham – An Independent Biography. London: Victor Gollancz. OCLC 500565141.
  • Shore, Bernard (1938). The Orchestra Speaks. London: Longmans. OCLC 499119110.
  • Wood, Henry J (1938). My Life of Music. London: Victor Gollancz. OCLC 30533927.
  • Stradling, Robert; Meirion Hughes (2001). The English musical renaissance, 1840–1940: constructing a national music. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-5829-5.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • London Symphony Orchestra at AllMusic
  • London Symphony Orchestra on IMDB

london, symphony, orchestra, orchestra, london, ontario, orchestra, london, canada, british, symphony, orchestra, based, london, founded, 1904, oldest, london, symphony, orchestras, created, group, players, left, henry, wood, queen, hall, orchestra, because, r. For the orchestra in London Ontario see Orchestra London Canada The London Symphony Orchestra LSO is a British symphony orchestra based in London Founded in 1904 the LSO is the oldest of London s symphony orchestras The LSO was created by a group of players who left Henry Wood s Queen s Hall Orchestra because of a new rule requiring players to give the orchestra their exclusive services The LSO itself later introduced a similar rule for its members From the outset the LSO was organised on co operative lines with all players sharing the profits at the end of each season This practice continued for the orchestra s first four decades London Symphony OrchestraOrchestraFounded1904Concert hallBarbican CentreRoyal Albert HallMusic directorSir Antonio PappanoWebsitewww wbr lso wbr co wbr ukThe LSO underwent periods of eclipse in the 1930s and 1950s when it was regarded as inferior in quality to new London orchestras to which it lost players and bookings the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra in the 1930s and the Philharmonia and Royal Philharmonic after the Second World War The profit sharing principle was abandoned in the post war era as a condition of receiving public subsidy for the first time In the 1950s the orchestra debated whether to concentrate on film work at the expense of symphony concerts many senior players left when the majority of players rejected the idea By the 1960s the LSO had recovered its leading position which it has retained subsequently In 1966 to perform alongside it in choral works the orchestra established the LSO Chorus originally a mix of professional and amateur singers later a wholly amateur ensemble As a self governing body the orchestra selects the conductors with whom it works At some stages in its history it has dispensed with a principal conductor and worked only with guests Among conductors with whom it is most associated are in its early days Hans Richter Sir Edward Elgar and Sir Thomas Beecham and in more recent decades Pierre Monteux Andre Previn Claudio Abbado Sir Colin Davis and Valery Gergiev Since 1982 the LSO has been based in the Barbican Centre in the City of London Among its programmes there have been large scale festivals celebrating composers as diverse as Berlioz Mahler and Leonard Bernstein The LSO claims to be the world s most recorded orchestra it has made gramophone recordings since 1912 and has played on more than 200 soundtrack recordings for the cinema of which the best known include the Star Wars series The LSO is consistently ranked as one of the world s leading orchestras 1 2 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Foundation 1 3 Early years 1 4 First World War and 1920s 1 5 1930s 1 6 1940s and 50s 1 7 1960s 1 8 1970s and 80s 1 9 1990s to the present 2 Reputation 3 Recordings 3 1 Audio 3 2 Film 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory editBackground edit nbsp Clockwise from top left Adolf Borsdorf Thomas Busby John Solomon and Henri van der Meerschen founding fathers of the LSOAt the turn of the twentieth century there were no permanent salaried orchestras in London The main orchestras were those of Covent Garden the Philharmonic Society and the Queen s Hall their proprietors engaged players individually for each concert or for a season As there were competing demands for the services of the finest players it was an accepted practice that even though under contract to play for a concert a player was at liberty to accept a better paid engagement if it were offered He would then engage another player to deputise for him at the original concert and the rehearsals for it The treasurer of the Philharmonic Society described the system thus A whom you want signs to play at your concert He sends B whom you don t mind to the first rehearsal B without your knowledge or consent sends C to the second rehearsal Not being able to play at the concert C sends D whom you would have paid five shillings to stay away 4 There was much competition for good orchestral players with well paid engagements offered by more than fifty music halls by pit bands in West End musical comedies and by grand hotels and restaurants which maintained orchestras 5 In 1904 the manager of the Queen s Hall Robert Newman and the conductor of his promenade concerts Henry Wood agreed that they could no longer tolerate the deputy system After a rehearsal in which Wood was faced with dozens of unfamiliar faces in his own orchestra Newman came to the platform and announced Gentlemen in future there will be no deputies Good morning 6 This caused a furore Orchestral musicians were not highly paid and removing their chances of better paid engagements permitted by the deputy system was a serious financial blow to many of them 7 While travelling by train to play under Wood at a music festival in the north of England in May 1904 soon after Newman s announcement some of his leading players discussed the situation and agreed to try to form their own orchestra The principal movers were three horn players Adolf Borsdorf Thomas Busby and Henri van der Meerschen and a trumpeter John Solomon 7 Foundation edit nbsp Hans Richter first conductor of the LSOBusby organised a meeting at St Andrew s Hall not far from the Queen s Hall Invitations were sent to present and former members of the Queen s Hall Orchestra About a hundred players attended 7 Busby explained the scheme a new ensemble the London Symphony Orchestra n 1 to be run on co operative lines something akin to a Musical Republic 9 with a constitution that gave the organisation independence n 2 At concerts promoted by the LSO the members played without fee their remuneration coming at the end of each season in a division of the orchestra s profits 7 This worked well in good years but any poorly patronised series left members out of pocket and reliant on the LSO s engagements to play for provincial choral societies and other managements 10 The proposal was approved unanimously and a management committee was elected comprising the four original movers and Alfred Hobday viola and E F Fred James bassoon 7 Busby was appointed chief executive a post variously titled Secretary managing director general secretary and general manager over the years 11 Borsdorf was a player of international reputation and through his influence the orchestra secured Hans Richter to conduct its first concert 7 Newman held no grudge against the rebels and made the Queen s Hall available to them He and Wood attended the LSO s first concert on 9 June 1904 12 The programme consisted of the prelude to Die Meistersinger music by Bach Mozart Elgar and Liszt and finally Beethoven s Fifth Symphony 13 In a favourable review in The Times J A Fuller Maitland noted that 49 members of the new orchestra were rebels against Newman s no deputy rule 32 had left the Queen s Hall Orchestra earlier and the other 21 had no connection with Wood and Newman 13 In a profile of the orchestra in 1911 The Musical Times commented Thus encouraged the committee ventured to arrange for a series of symphony concerts at Queen s Hall They had no regular conductor and to this day they have pursued this policy of freedom Dr now Sir Frederic Cowen conducted the first concert of the series on October 27 1904 and the others were conducted by Herr Arthur Nikisch Mr Fritz Steinbach Sir Charles Stanford M Edouard Colonne Sir Edward Elgar and Mr Georg Henschel At every one of these concerts brilliant performances were given and the reputation of the organization as one of the finest of its kind in the world was made 7 Early years edit The orchestra made its first British tour in 1905 conducted by Sir Edward Elgar 14 Elgar s conducting was highly praised as to the orchestra Ernest Newman wrote in The Manchester Guardian Its brass and its wood wind were seen to be of exceptional quality but the strings fine as they are have not the substance nor the colour of the Halle strings 15 The following year the LSO played outside Britain for the first time giving concerts in Paris conducted by Edouard Colonne Sir Charles Stanford and Andre Messager Richard Morrison in his centenary study of the LSO writes of stodgy programmes of insipid Cowen worthy Stanford dull Parry and mediocre Mackenzie n 3 they put the Parisian public off to a considerable degree and the players ended up out of pocket 18 nbsp Elgar and the LSO Queen s Hall 1911In its early years Richter was the LSO s most frequently engaged conductor with four or five concerts every season 19 the orchestra s website and Morrison s 2004 book both count him as the orchestra s first chief conductor though the 1911 Musical Times article indicates otherwise 7 14 Richter retired from conducting in 1911 and Elgar was elected conductor in chief for the 1911 12 season Elgar conducted six concerts Arthur Nikisch three and Willem Mengelberg Fritz Steinbach and Gustave Doret one each 7 As a conductor Elgar did not prove to be a big enough box office draw and after one season he was replaced by the charismatic Hungarian maestro Nikisch 20 Nikisch was invited to tour North America in 1912 and despite his long association with the Berlin Philharmonic and Leipzig Gewandhaus orchestras he insisted that the LSO should be contracted for the tour 21 The orchestra 100 strong all men except for the harpist 22 was booked to sail on the Titanic but the tour schedule was changed at the last minute and the players sailed safely on the Baltic 23 The tour was arduous but a triumph The New York Press said The great British band played with a vigor force and temperamental impetuousness that almost lifted the listener out of his seat 24 The New York Times praised all departments of the orchestra though like The Manchester Guardian it found the strings brilliant rather than mellow The paper had a little fun at the LSO s expense from the viewpoint of a country that had long enjoyed permanent salaried orchestras such as the Boston Symphony it gently mocked the LSO s bold stand for the sacred right of sending substitutes 25 First World War and 1920s edit Shortly after the beginning of the war the board of the orchestra received a petition from rank and file players protesting about Borsdorf s continued membership of the LSO Although he had done as much as anyone to found the orchestra had lived in Britain for 30 years and was married to an Englishwoman Borsdorf was regarded by some colleagues as an enemy alien and was forced out of the orchestra 26 nbsp Sir Thomas BeechamDuring the war the musical life of Britain was drastically curtailed The LSO was helped to survive by large donations from Sir Thomas Beecham who also subsidised the Halle and the Royal Philharmonic Society For a year he took the role though not the title of chief conductor of the LSO In 1916 his millionaire father died and Beecham s financial affairs became too complicated for any further musical philanthropy on his part 27 In 1917 the LSO s directors agreed unanimously that they would promote no more concerts until the end of the war 28 The orchestra played for other managements and managed to survive although the hitherto remunerative work for regional choral societies dwindled to almost nothing 29 When peace resumed many of the former players were unavailable A third of the orchestra s pre war members were in the armed forces and rebuilding was urgently needed 30 The orchestra was willing to allow the ambitious conductor Albert Coates to put himself forward as chief conductor Coates had three attractions for the orchestra he was a pupil of Nikisch he had rich and influential contacts and he was willing to conduct without fee 30 He and the orchestra got off to a disastrous start Their first concert featured the premiere of Elgar s Cello Concerto Apart from the concerto which the composer conducted the rest of the programme was conducted by Coates who overran his rehearsal time at the expense of Elgar s Lady Elgar wrote that brutal selfish ill mannered bounder that brute Coates went on rehearsing 31 In The Observer Newman wrote There have been rumours about during the week of inadequate rehearsal Whatever the explanation the sad fact remains that never in all probability has so great an orchestra made so lamentable an exhibition of itself 32 Coates remained as chief conductor for two seasons and after the initial debacle is credited by Morrison with breathing life and energy into the orchestra 33 After Coates left the orchestra reverted to its preferred practice of engaging numerous guest conductors rather than a single principal conductor 33 Among the guests were Elgar Beecham Otto Klemperer Bruno Walter Wilhelm Furtwangler and Serge Koussevitzky soloists in the 1920s included Sergei Rachmaninoff Artur Schnabel and the young Yehudi Menuhin Revenues were substantial and the orchestra seemed to many to be entering into a golden age In fact for lack of any serious competition in the 1920s the LSO allowed its standards of playing to slip In 1927 the Berlin Philharmonic under Furtwangler gave two concerts at the Queen s Hall These and later concerts by the same orchestra in 1928 and 1929 made obvious the poor standards then prevailing in London 34 Both the BBC and Beecham had ambitions to bring London s orchestral standards up to those of Berlin After an early attempt at co operation between the BBC and Beecham they went their separate ways In 1929 the BBC began recruiting for the new BBC Symphony Orchestra under Adrian Boult The prospect of joining a permanent salaried orchestra was attractive enough to induce some LSO players to defect 35 The new orchestra immediately received enthusiastic reviews that contrasted starkly with the severe press criticisms of the LSO s playing 36 According to the critic W J Turner the LSO s problem was not that its playing had deteriorated but that it had failed to keep up with the considerable improvements in playing achieved over the past two decades by the best European and American orchestras 37 1930s edit In 1931 Beecham was approached by the rising young conductor Malcolm Sargent with a proposal to set up a permanent salaried orchestra with a subsidy guaranteed by Sargent s patrons the Courtauld family 38 Originally Sargent and Beecham had in mind a reorganised version of the LSO but the orchestra baulked at weeding out and replacing underperforming players In 1932 Beecham lost patience and agreed with Sargent to set up a new orchestra from scratch 39 The London Philharmonic Orchestra LPO as it was named consisted of 106 players including a few young musicians straight from music college many established players from provincial orchestras and 17 of the LSO s leading members 40 nbsp Willem MengelbergTo try to raise its own standards the LSO had engaged Mengelberg a famous orchestral trainer known as a perfectionist 41 He made it a precondition that the deputy system must be abandoned which occurred in 1929 42 He conducted the orchestra for the 1930 season and music critics commented on the improvement in the playing 43 Nonetheless as patently the third best orchestra in London the LSO lost work it had long been used to including the Covent Garden seasons the Royal Philharmonic Society concerts and the Courtauld Sargent concerts 44 The orchestra persuaded Sir Hamilton Harty the popular conductor of the Halle Orchestra to move from Manchester to become the LSO s principal conductor Harty brought with him eight of the Halle s leading players to replenish the LSO s ranks depleted by defections to the BBC and Beecham 45 Critics including Neville Cardus recognised the continued improvement in the LSO s playing On this evening s hearing the London Symphony Orchestra is likely after all to give its two rivals a gallant run Under Sir Hamilton it will certainly take on a style of sincere expression distinguished from the virtuoso brilliance cultivated by the B B C Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra under Beecham 46 Among the milestones on the orchestra s path to recovery were the premieres of Walton s Belshazzar s Feast 1930 and First Symphony 1934 showing the orchestra capable of rising to the challenge of the most demanding contemporary scores Morrison 47 The foundation of the Glyndebourne Festival in 1934 was another good thing for the LSO as its players made up nearly the entirety of the festival orchestra 48 An important additional source of income for the orchestra was the film industry In March 1935 the LSO recorded Arthur Bliss s incidental music for Alexander Korda s film Things to Come According to the LSO s website the recording took 14 full orchestral sessions and started a veritable revolution in film production history For the first time music for the cinema previously regarded as a lowly art form captured the attention of classical music scholars and enthusiasts music critics and the film and music public The LSO had begun its long historic journey as the premier film orchestra 49 In London Harty did not prove to be a box office draw and according to Morrison he was brutally and hurtfully dropped in 1934 as his LSO predecessor Elgar had been in 1912 50 After this the orchestra did not appoint a chief conductor for nearly 20 years 51 By 1939 the orchestra s board was planning an ambitious programme for 1940 with guests including Bruno Walter Leopold Stokowski Erich Kleiber and George Szell 52 1940s and 50s edit When the Second World War broke out the orchestra s plans had to be almost completely changed During the First World War the public s appetite for concert going diminished drastically but from the start of the Second it was clear that there was a huge demand for live music 53 The LSO arranged a series of concerts conducted by Wood with whom the orchestra was completely reconciled 54 When the BBC evacuated its orchestra from London and abandoned the Proms the LSO took over for Wood 55 The Carnegie Trust with the support of the British government contracted the LSO to tour Britain taking live music to towns where symphony concerts were hitherto unknown 56 The orchestra s loss of manpower was far worse in the Second World War than in the First Between 1914 and 1918 there were 33 members of the LSO away on active service between 1939 and 1945 there were more than 60 of whom seven were killed 57 The orchestra found replacements wherever it could including the bands of army regiments based in London whose brass and woodwind players were unofficially recruited 58 During the war it had become clear that private patronage was no longer a practical means of sustaining Britain s musical life a state body the Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts the forerunner of the Arts Council was established and given a modest budget for public subsidy 59 The council made it a condition of sponsoring the LSO that the profit sharing principle should be abandoned and the players made salaried employees This renunciation of the principles for which the LSO had been founded was rejected by the players and the offered subsidy was declined 60 nbsp The Royal Festival Hall the LSO and LPO battled each other for residency in 1951At the end of the war the LSO had to face new competition The BBC Symphony Orchestra and the London Philharmonic Orchestra had survived the war intact the latter abandoned by Beecham as a self governing body All three were quickly overshadowed by two new orchestras Walter Legge s Philharmonia and Beecham s Royal Philharmonic Orchestra 61 To survive the LSO played in hundreds of concerts of popular classics under undistinguished conductors By 1948 the orchestra was anxious to resume promoting its own concert series 62 The players decided to accept the Arts Council s conditions for subsidy and changed the LSO s constitution to replace profit sharing with salaries 63 With a view to raising its playing standards it engaged Josef Krips as conductor His commitments in Vienna preventing him from becoming the LSO s chief conductor until 1950 but from his first concert with the orchestra in December 1948 he influenced the playing for the better 62 His chosen repertoire was good for the box office cycles of Beethoven symphonies and concertos the latter featuring Wilhelm Kempff in one season and Claudio Arrau in another helped restore the orchestra s finances as well as its musical standards 64 With Krips and others the orchestra recorded extensively for the Decca Record Company during the early 1950s 65 The orchestra s workload in these years was second only to the other self governing London orchestra the LPO the LPO played 248 concerts in the 1949 50 season the LSO 103 the BBC SO 55 the Philharmonia and RPO 32 each 66 When the Royal Festival Hall opened in 1951 the LSO and LPO engaged in a mutually bruising campaign for sole residency there Neither was successful and the Festival Hall became the main London venue for both orchestras and for the RPO and Philharmonia 67 Krips left the LSO in 1954 68 and the following year tensions between the orchestral principals and the rank and file players erupted into an irreconcilable dispute The principals argued that the future of the LSO lay in profitable session work for film companies rather than in the overcrowded field of London concerts They also wished to be free to accept such engagements individually absenting themselves from concerts if there were a clash of dates 69 The LSO s board which reflected the majority opinion of the players refused to accommodate the principals most of whom resigned en masse to form the Sinfonia of London a session ensemble that flourished from the mid 1950s to the early 1960s and then faded away n 4 For fifteen years after the split the LSO did little film work recording only six soundtracks between 1956 and 1971 compared with more than 70 films between 1940 and 1955 71 To replace the departing principals the LSO recruited rising young players including Hugh Maguire Neville Marriner and Simon Streatfeild in the string sections Gervase de Peyer and William Waterhouse in the woodwinds and Barry Tuckwell and Denis Wick in the brass With the new intake the orchestra rapidly advanced in standards and status 72 The average age of the LSO players dropped to about 30 63 In 1956 the orchestra visited South Africa to play at the Johannesburg Festival 63 The players were impressed by the dynamic director of the festival Ernest Fleischmann and engaged him as general secretary of the orchestra when the post fell vacant in 1959 73 He was the LSO s first professional manager all his predecessors as secretary managing director had been orchestral players combining the duties with their orchestral playing 74 1960s edit To raise the profile and prestige of the orchestra Fleischman strove to attract top soloists and conductors to work with the LSO After Krips s resignation the orchestra had worked with a few leading conductors including Klemperer Stokowski Jascha Horenstein and Pierre Monteux but also with many less eminent ones Fleischmann later said It wasn t difficult to change the list of conductors that the orchestra worked with because one couldn t do much worse really 75 n 5 A rising conductor of a younger generation Georg Solti began working with the LSO Fleischmann persuaded the management of the Vienna Festival to engage the LSO with Solti Stokowski and Monteux for the 1961 Festwochen 77 nbsp Pierre MonteuxWhile in Vienna Fleischmann persuaded Monteux to accept the chief conductorship of the orchestra Though 86 years old Monteux asked for and received a 25 year contract with a 25 year option of renewal He lived for another three years working with the LSO to within weeks of his death 78 Members of the LSO believed that in those few years he had transformed the orchestra Neville Marriner said that Monteux made them feel like an international orchestra He gave them extended horizons and some of his achievements with the orchestra both at home and abroad gave them quite a different constitution 79 Announcing Monteux s appointment Fleischmann added that the LSO would also work frequently with Antal Dorati and the young Colin Davis 80 Together with Tuckwell chairman of the orchestra Fleischmann worked to create the LSO Trust a fund to finance tours and provide sick and holiday pay for LSO players thus ending as Morrison says nearly sixty years of no play no pay this was a revolution 81 They also pioneered formal sponsorship by commercial firms the orchestra s Peter Stuyvesant concerts underwritten by the tobacco company of that name were given in London Guildford Bournemouth Manchester and Swansea 82 The company also sponsored LSO commissions of new works by British composers 83 In 1964 the LSO undertook its first world tour taking in Israel Turkey Iran India Hong Kong Korea Japan and the United States The following year Istvan Kertesz was appointed principal conductor 84 Negotiations with the Corporation of the City of London with a view to establishing the LSO as the resident orchestra of the planned Barbican Centre began in the same year 84 In 1966 Leonard Bernstein conducted the LSO for the first time in Mahler s Symphony of a Thousand at the Royal Albert Hall This was another coup for Fleischmann who had to overcome Bernstein s scorn for the inadequate rehearsal facilities endured by London orchestras 85 Bernstein remained associated with the LSO for the rest of his life and was its president from 1987 to 1990 74 Mindful of the enormous success of the Philharmonia Chorus founded in 1957 by Legge to work with his Philharmonia Orchestra the LSO decided to establish its own chorus 86 The LSO Chorus later called the London Symphony Chorus was formed in 1966 under John Alldis as chorus master 84 Its early years were difficult Kertesz did not get on with Alldis and there were difficulties within the chorus Most of its members were amateurs but at first they were reinforced by a small number of professionals This led to disputes over the balance between amateurs and professionals 87 There was a brief crisis after which the professional element was removed and the LSO chorus became and remains an outstanding amateur chorus 87 By 1967 many in the LSO felt that Fleischmann was seeking to exert too much influence on the affairs of the orchestra and he resigned 88 Kertesz too was dispensed with when he sought control of all artistic matters his contract was not renewed when it expired in 1968 89 His successor as principal conductor was Andre Previn who held the post for 11 years at 2013 the longest tenure of the post to date 84 By the Previn era the LSO was being described as the finest of the London orchestras 90 A reviewer of an Elgar recording by one of the other orchestras remarked these symphonies really deserve the LSO at its peak 91 The implication that the LSO was not always at its peak was illustrated when Sir Adrian Boult who was recording Elgar and Vaughan Williams with the LSO refused to continue when he discovered that five leading principals had absented themselves EMI took Boult s side and the orchestra apologised 92 1970s and 80s edit In 1971 John Culshaw of BBC television commissioned Andre Previn s Music Night bringing classical music to a large new audience Previn would talk informally direct to camera and then turn and conduct the LSO whose members were dressed in casual sweaters or shirts rather than formal evening clothes 93 The programme attracted unprecedented viewing figures for classical music 94 Morrison writes More British people heard the LSO play in Music Night in one week than in sixty five years of LSO concerts 93 Several series of the programme were screened between 1971 and 1977 95 Previn s popularity with the public enabled him and the LSO to programme works that under other conductors could have been box office disasters such as Messiaen s Turangalila Symphony 96 In the early 1970s the LSO recorded two firsts for a British orchestra appearing at the Salzburg Festival conducted by Previn Seiji Ozawa and Karl Bohm in 1973 and playing at the Hollywood Bowl the following year 84 nbsp Henry Wood Hall acquired and converted by the LSO and the LPO in the 1970sThe lack of good rehearsal facilities to which Bernstein had objected was addressed in the 1970s when jointly with the LPO the LSO acquired and restored a disused church in Southwark converting it into the Henry Wood Hall a convenient and acoustically excellent rehearsal space and recording studio opened in 1975 97 In 1978 two aspects of the LSO s non symphonic work were recognised The orchestra shared in three Grammy awards for the score to Star Wars and the LSO Classic Rock recordings in the words of the orchestra s website became hugely popular and provided handsome royalties 84 The recordings led to Classic Rock tours by the orchestra characterised by Morrison as enormously lucrative but artistically demeaning 98 Claudio Abbado principal guest conductor since 1971 succeeded Previn as chief conductor in the orchestra s diamond jubilee year 1979 99 In a 1988 study of the LSO in Gramophone magazine James Jolly wrote that Abbado was in many ways the antithesis of Previn in terms of style and repertoire bringing to the orchestra a particular authority in the Austro German classics as well as a commitment to the avant garde 100 From the orchestra s point of view there were disadvantages to his appointment His relationship with the players was distant and he was unable to impose discipline on the orchestra in rehearsals He insisted on conducting without a score and many times this led to barely avoided disaster in concerts 101 Abbado had considerable international prestige but this too had its downside for the LSO he frequently made his major recordings with the Boston or Chicago Symphony Orchestras or the Vienna Philharmonic One of the LSO s principals commented Although we were sweating our guts playing those vast Mahler symphonies for Abbado he would go and record them with other orchestras which made us feel like second maybe even third choice 102 In 1982 the LSO took up residence at the Barbican In the first years of the residency the orchestra came close to financial disaster primarily because of over ambitious programming and the poor ticket sales that resulted 103 The Times commented that the LSO were tempted by their own need for challenge and a siren chorus of critics to begin a series of more modern and adventurous music six nights a week of Tippett Berlioz Webern Stockhausen designed to draw in a new public Instead it put an old audience to flight 104 The LSO s difficulties were compounded by the satirical magazine Private Eye which ran a series of defamatory articles about the orchestra The articles were almost wholly untrue and the magazine was forced to pay substantial libel damages but in the short term serious damage was done to the orchestra s reputation and morale 104 nbsp Leonard BernsteinIn August 1984 the orchestra s managing director Peter Hemmings resigned For the first time since 1949 the orchestra appointed one of its players to the position n 6 Clive Gillinson a cellist took over at a bad time in the LSO s fortunes and played a central role in turning them round He negotiated what Morrison calls a dazzling series of mega projects each built around the personal enthusiasm of a star conductor or soloist producing sell out houses 105 In 1985 the orchestra mounted Mahler Vienna and the Twentieth Century planned by Abbado followed the next year by an equally successful Bernstein festival 106 During 1988 the orchestra adopted an education policy which included the establishment of LSO Discovery offering people of all ages from babies through music students to adults an opportunity to get involved in music making 107 The programme is still in place in 2022 benefiting more than 60 000 people every year 107 In September 1988 Michael Tilson Thomas succeeded Abbado as chief conductor 108 In 1989 the Royal Philharmonic Society established its Orchestra Award for excellence in playing and playing standards the LSO was the first winner 106 1990s to the present edit The LSO visited Japan in 1990 with Bernstein and Tilson Thomas The conductors and players took part in the inaugural Pacific Music Festival in Sapporo teaching and giving masterclasses for 123 young musicians from 18 countries 109 Colin Matthews was appointed as the orchestra s associate composer in 1991 and the following year Richard McNicol became LSO Discovery s first music animateur 106 Gillison secured increased funding from the Arts Council the City of London Corporation and commercial sponsors enabling the orchestra to set up a system of joint principals attracting top musicians who could play in the LSO without having to give up their solo or chamber careers 110 In 1993 the LSO again featured in a British television series playing in Concerto with Tilson Thomas and Dudley Moore Among those appearing were Alicia de Larrocha James Galway Steven Isserlis Barry Douglas Richard Stoltzman and Kyoko Takezawa 111 The series received an Emmy Award 106 In 1994 the orchestra and the Royal Shakespeare Company RSC resident at the Barbican Theatre came under threat from a new managing director of the Barbican Centre Baroness O Cathain an economist with no cultural background O Cathain described by Morrison as a Thatcherite free marketeer dismissed the LSO and RSC as arty farty types and opposed public subsidy 112 Such was the press and public reaction that she was obliged to seek a vote of confidence from the LSO and RSC failing to gain it she resigned and was succeeded by John Tusa whom Morrison calls steeped in culture The danger that the concert hall would become a conference centre was averted 112 nbsp Sir Colin DavisIn 1995 Sir Colin Davis was appointed chief conductor He had first conducted the LSO in 1959 and had been widely expected to succeed Monteux as principal conductor in 1964 113 Among the most conspicuous of Davis s projects with the orchestra was the LSO s most ambitious festival thus far the Berlioz Odyssey in which all Berlioz s major works were given 106 The festival continued into 2000 Many of the performances including Les Troyens were recorded for the orchestra s new CD label LSO Live launched in 2000 106 114 Les Troyens won two Grammy awards 114 In 2003 with backing from the banking firm UBS the orchestra opened LSO St Luke s its music education centre in a former church near the Barbican The following year the orchestra celebrated its centenary with a gala concert attended by the LSO s Patron the Queen After serving as managing director for 21 years Clive Gillinson left to become chief executive of Carnegie Hall New York His successor was Kathryn McDowell 114 In 2006 Daniel Harding joined Michael Tilson Thomas as principal guest conductor At the end of 2006 Davis stood down as principal conductor and became president of the LSO in January 2007 its first since the death of Bernstein in 1990 Valery Gergiev became principal conductor of the LSO on 1 January 2007 114 In Gergiev s first season in charge a complete cycle of Mahler Symphonies was given with the Barbican Hall sold out for every concert 114 In 2009 Davis and the LSO celebrated 50 years of working together In the same year the LSO took over from the Berlin Philharmonic as the resident orchestra at the Aix en Provence Festival adding to a roster of international residences at venues including the Lincoln Center in New York the Salle Pleyel in Paris and the Daytona Beach International Festival in Florida 115 In 2010 the LSO visited Poland and Abu Dhabi for the first time and made its first return to India since the 1964 world tour 114 The orchestra played at the 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony conducted by Sir Simon Rattle 116 In March 2015 the LSO simultaneously announced the departure of Gergiev as principal conductor at the end of 2015 and the appointment of Sir Simon Rattle as its music director from September 2017 with an initial contract of five years 117 In February 2016 the orchestra announced that beginning with the 2016 17 season Gianandrea Noseda would be titled Principal Guest Conductor joining the orchestra s other Principal Guest Conductor Daniel Harding who held that post 2006 2017 and that Michael Tilson Thomas would be titled Conductor Laureate and Andre Previn would be titled Conductor Emeritus 118 In January 2021 the LSO announced an extension of Rattle s contract as music director until the end of the 2023 season at which time he is scheduled to stand down from the LSO and subsequently to take the title of conductor emeritus for life 119 Sir Antonio Pappano first guest conducted the LSO in 1996 In March 2021 the LSO announced the appointment of Pappano as its next chief conductor effective in September 2024 Pappano is scheduled to hold the title of chief conductor designate in the 2023 2024 season 120 In February 2022 Barbara Hannigan was announced as Associate Artist for three years 121 Reputation editIn a 1988 Gramophone article James Jolly said of the LSO Some would claim that it is the most American of our orchestras thinking no doubt of the Previn legacy Bernstein s Presidency and Tilson Thomas s appointment Others looking back further to Pierre Monteux s reign think it our most French orchestra a quality nurtured by Previn and latterly Claudio Abbado But what of their essaying of the Slavonic repertoire under Istvan Kertesz or of Mahler whose idiom has been finely honed by Abbado No the LSO remains enigmatic unpredictable and supremely individual Of all the London orchestras the LSO seems to have more personalities more individuals and has given the solo world more than its fair share of star performers As an orchestra the LSO has never been prepared to submit to one principal conductor for long one thinks of Karajan in Berlin Haitink in Amsterdam or Mravinsky in Leningrad n 7 but one of its greatest strengths remains its ability to attract fine conductors and dedicate itself wholeheartedly to creating a genuine performance 100 For many years the LSO had a reputation as an almost exclusively male ensemble female harpists excepted Morrison describes the LSO of the 1960s and 1970s as a rambunctious boys club that swaggered round the globe 123 Before the 1970s one of the few women to play in the orchestra was the oboist Evelyn Rothwell who joined in the 1930s and found herself regarded as an outsider by her male colleagues 124 She was not admitted to full membership of the orchestra the first woman to be elected as a member of the LSO was Renata Scheffel Stein in 1975 125 By that time other British orchestras had left the LSO far behind in this regard n 8 By 2004 about 20 per cent of the LSO s members were women Some musicians including Davis judged that this improved the orchestra s playing as well as its behaviour 127 Others including Previn and the veteran principal trumpet Maurice Murphy felt that although the technical standard of playing had improved the diminution of the orchestra s machismo was a matter for regret 127 Comparing the LSO of 2004 with the orchestra of the 1960s and 1970s Murphy said Now the strings have improved so much the playing is fantastic but it has lost something of its gung ho quality 128 The orchestra of the 1960s had a reputation for tormenting conductors it disliked even such notorious martinets as George Szell were given a hard time 129 By the 21st century the orchestra had long abandoned such aggression civilities were maintained even with conductors whom the orchestra took against they were simply never re engaged 130 Recordings editAudio edit nbsp The LSO at the Barbican 2011 Front left to right Roman Simovic Carmine Lauri violins Alastair Blayden Tim Hugh cellos Bernard Haitink conductor Gillianne Haddow Edward Vanderspar violas Tom Norris Evgeny Grach violins Players to the rear include David Pyatt horn Andrew Marriner clarinet Rachel Gough bassoon nbsp LSO concert of film music at the Barbican 2003 Left to right Gordan Nikolitch and Lennox Mackenzie violins Jerry Goldsmith conductor Paul Silverthorne viola Moray Welsh cello The LSO has made recordings since the early days of recording beginning with acoustic versions under Nikisch of Beethoven s Egmont Overture Weber s Oberon Overture and Liszt s Hungarian Rhapsody in F minor followed soon after by the overtures to Der Freischutz and The Marriage of Figaro HMV s Fred Gaisberg who supervised the sessions wrote of virtuoso playing which was unique at that time 100 Since then according to the orchestra s website the LSO has made more recordings than any other orchestra 131 a claim endorsed by Gramophone magazine 100 In 1920 the LSO signed a three year contract with the Columbia Graphophone Company and what Jolly calls a magnificent series of recordings followed Under Felix Weingartner the orchestra recorded Mozart Symphony No 39 Beethoven the Fifth Seventh and Eighth Symphonies and Brahms s First 100 Other recordings from this period included the premiere recording of Holst s The Planets conducted by the composer and Richard Strauss s Don Juan Ein Heldenleben and Tod und Verklarung likewise conducted by their composer 100 When Elgar recorded his major works for HMV in the late 1920s and early 1930s the LSO was chosen for most of the recordings n 9 The LSO s pre war recordings for Decca include Hamilton Harty s version of Walton s First Symphony of which Gramophone magazine said There are one or two moments where the LSO are audibly hanging on by the skin of their teeth but these moments simply add to the ferocious impact of the music 133 In the 1950s and early 1960s EMI generally made its British recordings with the Royal Philharmonic and Philharmonia orchestras the LSO s recordings were chiefly for Decca including a Sibelius symphony cycle with Anthony Collins French music under Monteux early recordings by Solti and a series of Britten s major works conducted by the composer 65 Of the later 1960s Jolly writes Istvan Kertesz s three year Principal Conductorship has left a treasure trove of memorable and extraordinarily resilient recordings the Dvorak symphonies are still competitive and his classic disc of Bartok s Duke Bluebeard s Castle admirably demonstrates what a superb ensemble the LSO were under his baton 100 Since 2000 the LSO has published commercial CD recordings on its own label LSO Live Recordings are made live at the Barbican hall over several dates and are edited in post production Initially available on CD they have since been issued on Super Audio CD and also as downloads LSO Live has published more than 70 recordings featuring conductors including Gergiev Davis and Bernard Haitink Gergiev s version of Prokofiev s Romeo and Juliet was BBC Music Magazine s Disc of the Year in 2011 134 and Davis s discs of Berlioz s Symphonie Fantastique and Les Troyens and Dvorak s Eighth Symphony were BBC Radio 3 s top recommendations in comparative reviews of all available versions 135 Film edit Main article London Symphony Orchestra filmography Even in the era of silent films the LSO was associated with the cinema During the 1920s the orchestra played scores arranged and conducted by Eugene Goossens to accompany screenings of The Three Musketeers 1922 The Nibelungs 1924 The Constant Nymph 1927 and The Life of Beethoven 1929 136 Since 1935 the LSO has recorded the musical scores of more than 200 films 136 The orchestra owed its engagement for its first soundtrack sessions to Muir Mathieson musical director of Korda Studios On the LSO s website the film specialist Robert Rider calls Mathieson the most important single figure in the early history of British film music who enlisted Bliss to write a score for Things to Come and who was subsequently responsible for bringing the most eminent British 20th century composers to work for cinema 49 Mathieson described the LSO as the perfect film orchestra Among the composers commissioned by Mathieson for LSO soundtracks were Vaughan Williams Walton Britten and Malcolm Arnold and lighter composers including Eric Coates and Noel Coward 137 As a pinnacle of Mathieson s collaboration with the LSO Rider cites the 1946 film Instruments of the Orchestra a film record of the LSO at work Sargent conducted the orchestra in a performance of Britten s The Young Person s Guide to the Orchestra composed for the film Rider adds Mathieson s documentary with its close ups of the musicians and their instruments beautifully captures the vibrancy and texture of the Orchestra amidst the optimism of the post Second World War era 49 Another milestone in the LSO s history in film music was in 1977 with the recording of John Williams s score for the first of the Star Wars films Rider comments that this film and its sequels attracted a new group of admirers and consolidated the period of film music activity for the Orchestra which continues unabated to this day 49 The LSO also recorded other Williams film scores including Superman The Movie 1978 and Raiders of the Lost Ark 1981 and six of the eight films from the Harry Potter film series 71 See also editLSO St Luke s Culture of London A Classic CaseNotes and references editNotes The orchestra was not the first to appear under this title in the 1890s a group of about 41 players performed in London Ontario Canada as the London Symphony Orchestra 8 The orchestra was incorporated under the Limited Liability Act with a capital of 1 000 in 1 shares Every member was required to hold 10 in shares 10 Frederic Hymen Cowen was better known as a conductor than as a composer 16 Charles Villiers Stanford Hubert Parry and Alexander Mackenzie were British composers of the English musical renaissance Some of their works notably choral music by Stanford and Parry have retained a place in the repertoire but little of their purely orchestral music is regularly played At the time they held considerable sway in British musical life 17 Morrison comments that the LSO would probably also have faded away if it had gone down the same route The Sinfonia of London was no longer extant at the time of the Peacock Committee s report on orchestral resources in Great Britain in 1970 where it is not mentioned in the lists of chamber or symphony orchestras The Sinfonia s director the flautist and former LSO chairman Gordon Walker died in 1965 The title Sinfonia of London was purchased from his heirs in 1982 for use by a new ensemble 70 Among those under whom the LSO played during the middle and late 1950s were lesser known conductors such as Leighton Lucas Alan J Kirby Gaston Poulet John Russell Eugen Szenkar Thornton Lofthouse Foster Clark Royalton Kisch Thomas Scherman and Samuel Rosenheim 76 The last internal appointee to the post had been the woodwind player John Cruft who held it from 1949 to 1959 Since then the post had been held by Fleischmann Harold Lawrence 1968 73 John Boyden 1974 75 Michael Kaye 1975 79 and Hemmings 1980 84 whose backgrounds were in administration and management 74 Herbert von Karajan was chief conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic from 1954 to 1989 Bernard Haitink was chief conductor of the Concertgebouw Orchestra Amsterdam from 1961 to 1988 Evgeny Mravinsky was chief conductor of the Leningrad Philharmonic from 1938 to 1988 122 In 1971 the BBC SO had 16 women players the LPO and Philharmonia by then known as the New Philharmonia 12 each The proportion of female players was considerably higher in the main regional orchestras 126 The LSO plays on the recordings of both Symphonies the Violin Concerto with Menuhin the Cello Concerto with Beatrice Harrison Falstaff In the South and many of the lighter pieces including the Wand of Youth and Nursery suites 132 References The best orchestras in the world The World s Greatest Orchestras Top 10 Best Orchestras in the World 9 February 2021 Levien John Mewburn quoted in Reid p 50 Morrison p 12 Wood p 212 a b c d e f g h i The London Symphony Orchestra The Musical Times Vol 52 No 825 November 1911 pp 705 707 subscription required London Symphony Orchestra programme 11 February 1890 Open Library Retrieved 16 July 2012 Morrison p 19 a b Morrison pp 36 37 Morrison p 258 Jacobs p 100 a b Concerts The Times 10 June 1904 p 7 a b 1900s and 1910s London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 7 July 2012 Morrison p 26 Newman Ernest The Harrison Concert The Manchester Guardian 16 November 1905 p 12 Dibble Jeremy and Jennifer Spencer Cowen Sir Frederic Hymen Grove Music Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 3 April 2013 subscription required Stradling and Hughes p 52 Morrison pp 35 36 Morrison p 28 Morrison p 42 Morrison pp 44 45 100 years of the Titanic London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 16 July 2012 Morrison p 45 Quoted in Morrison p 46 Arthur Nikisch Welcomed Here Gives His First Concert with London Symphony Orchestra in Carnegie Hall The New York Times 9 April 1912 Morrison p 21 Lucas pp 45 147 Morrison p 54 Morrison p 55 a b Morrison p 56 Lloyd Webber Julian How I fell in love with E E s darling The Daily Telegraph 17 May 2007 and Anderson Keith Liner notes to Naxos CD 8 550503 Dvorak and Elgar Cello Concertos 1992 p 4 Newman Ernest Music of the Week The Observer 2 November 1919 p 11 a b Morrison p 57 Kennedy p 138 Morrison pp 72 74 Morrison pp 73 74 Morrison p 64 Aldous p 68 Reid p 202 Morrison p 79 Shore pp 111 113 1920s and 1930s London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 16 July 2012 Morrison p 66 Morrison pp 66 and 82 Morrison p 84 Cardus Neville London Symphony Orchestra The Manchester Guardian 8 November 1932 p 5 Morrison p 86 Morrison p 83 a b c d LSO and Film Music Archived 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 16 July 2012 Morrison p 34 Morrison p 174 Morrison p 89 Morrison pp 53 and 89 Morrison p 90 Jacobs p 348 Morrison p 91 Morrison pp 53 and 92 93 Morrison pp 92 93 Morrison p 96 Morrison p 97 Morrison pp 98 100 a b Morrison p 100 a b c 1940s and 1950s London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 8 July 2012 Morrison pp 101 102 a b Stuart Philip Decca Classical 1929 2009 Retrieved 7 July 2012 Hill pp 49 50 Morrison pp 106 107 Mr Krips s Resignation from L S O The Times 24 June 1954 p 6 Morrison p 109 Morrison p 109 Peacock pp 4 12 and Mr Gordon Walker The Times 21 August 1965 p 8 a b Morrison p 280 Morrison p 110 Morrison pp 32 and 258 a b c LSO Principal Conductors and Title Holders London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 16 July 2012 Quoted in Morrison p 133 Opera And Ballet The Times 13 March 1954 p 2 Lucas Croydon Philharmonic Society The Times 13 May 1954 p 9 Kirby London Symphony Orchestra The Times 28 June 1954 p 3 Poulet Opera And Ballet The Times 3 July 1954 p 2 Russell Opera And Ballet The Times 19 March 1955 p 2 Szenkar Opera And Ballet The Times 18 June 1955 p 2 Lofthouse Opera And Ballet The Times 9 February 1957 p 2 Clark Concerts The Times 9 March 1957 p 2 Kisch Opera And Ballet The Times 8 June 1957 p 2 Scherman and Opera And Ballet The Times 5 September 1959 p 2 Rosenheim Morrison p 136 1960s and 1970s London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 15 July 2012 and Opera Ballet and Concerts The Times 4 April 1964 p 2 Tolansky John Monteux in London Classical Recordings Quarterly Autumn 2003 Number 34 pp 16 19 Monteux for the L S O The Times 16 August 1961 p 11 Morrison p 140 L S O To Visit Manchester The Times 28 February 1964 p 16 Four To Write For L S O The Times 10 September 1964 p 8 a b c d e f 1960s and 1970s London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 15 July 2012 Morrison p 145 Morrison p 181 a b Morrison p 182 Morrison pp 159 161 Morrison pp 164 165 Coleman Terry Orchestral life and hard times The Guardian 21 July 1969 p 6 Fiske Roger Elgar Symphonies Gramophone October 1968 p 52 A protest by Sir Adrian The Guardian 6 August 1970 p 1 a b Morrison p 180 Mr John Culshaw The Times 29 April 1980 p 16 Broadcasting The Times 25 May 1977 p 31 Camden Anthony quoted in Previn p 215 Mann William The making of a rehearsal hall The Times 17 June 1975 p 11 Morrison p 184 Huckerby Martin Claudio Abbado to be LSO conductor The Times 20 October 1977 p 19 a b c d e f g Jolly James London Symphony Orchestra A Profile Gramophone October 1988 p 40 Morrison p 122 Murphy Maurice The Sunday Times magazine 17 July 1988 quoted by Jolly Shakespeare Nicholas The maze ends at the box office The Times 2 March 1985 p 7 a b James Brian The orchestra that opened up The Times 28 February 1987 p 37 Morrison p 210 a b c d e f 1980s and 1990s London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 16 July 2012 a b London Symphony Orchestra About LSO Discovery lso co uk Retrieved 28 September 2020 Bowen Meirion Licensed to discover Michael Tilson Thomas s fresh approach could liven up the LSO The Guardian 19 June 1987 p 16 and Griffiths Paul Brave start The Times 16 September 1988 p 18 History and photos Archived 19 December 2012 at archive today Pacific Music Festival Retrieved 17 July 2012 Morrison p 211 Greenfield Edward Concert season The Guardian 14 August 1993 p 22 a b Morrison pp 219 220 Morrison pp 146 147 a b c d e f 2000s and 2010s London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 26 January 2016 Residencies London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 22 July 2012 Rayner Gordon Parachuting in the Queen and 007 The Daily Telegraph 28 2012 Sir Simon Rattle appointed Music Director Press release London Symphony Orchestra 3 March 2015 Retrieved 11 January 2021 Midgette Anne Incoming NSO music director Noseda gets new assignment The Washington Post 24 February 2016 Sir Simon Rattle announces an extension of his contract as Music Director until 2023 and accepts lifetime position of Conductor Emeritus thereafter Press release London Symphony Orchestra 11 January 2021 Retrieved 11 January 2021 London Symphony Orchestra appoints Sir Antonio Pappano as Chief Conductor Press release London Symphony Orchestra 30 March 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 London Symphony Orchestra London Symphony Orchestra names Barbara Hannigan as Associate Artist lso co uk Retrieved 25 February 2022 Brunner Gerhard Karajan Herbert von Goodwin Noel Haitink Bernard and Bowen Jose Mravinsky Evgeny all in Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online Retrieved 17 July 2012 subscription required Morrison p 251 Morrison pp 186 187 Greenfield Edward Orchestra strives The Guardian 8 August 1975 p 8 Ford Christopher The eternal triangle Men women and the orchestras The Guardian 28 May 1971 p 9 a b Morrison p 187 Quoted in Morrison p 187 Morrison p 123 Morrison p 124 Recordings London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 7 July 2012 The Elgar Edition The Complete Electrical Recordings of Sir Edward Elgar EMI Records Catalogue number 5099909569423 Gramophone December 1985 p 76 Prokofiev Romeo and Juliet Disc of the Year 2011 London Symphony Orchestra Retrieved 7 July 2012 Building a Library BBC Radio 3 Retrieved 7 July 2012 a b Morrison pp 277 283 Morrison pp 277 279Sources editAldous Richard 2001 Tunes of Glory The Life of Malcolm Sargent London Hutchinson ISBN 0 09 180131 1 Hill Ralph 1951 Music 1951 Harmondsworth Penguin Books OCLC 26147349 Jacobs Arthur 1994 Henry J Wood Maker of the Proms London Methuen ISBN 0 413 69340 6 Kennedy Michael 1987 Adrian Boult London Hamish Hamilton ISBN 0 333 48752 4 Morrison Richard 2004 Orchestra The LSO A Century of Triumph and Turbulence London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 21584 X Peacock Alan 1970 A Report on Orchestral Resources in Great Britain London Arts Council of Great Britain OCLC 150610520 Previn Andre ed 1979 Orchestra London Macdonald and Jane s ISBN 0 354 04420 6 Reid Charles 1961 Thomas Beecham An Independent Biography London Victor Gollancz OCLC 500565141 Shore Bernard 1938 The Orchestra Speaks London Longmans OCLC 499119110 Wood Henry J 1938 My Life of Music London Victor Gollancz OCLC 30533927 Stradling Robert Meirion Hughes 2001 The English musical renaissance 1840 1940 constructing a national music Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 5829 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to London Symphony Orchestra Official website London Symphony Orchestra at AllMusic London Symphony Orchestra on IMDB Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title London Symphony Orchestra amp oldid 1182920534, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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