fbpx
Wikipedia

Rafael Kubelík

Rafael Jeroným Kubelík, KBE (29 June 1914 – 11 August 1996) was a Czech conductor and composer.

Rafael Kubelík

The son of a distinguished violinist, Jan Kubelík, he was trained in Prague and made his debut with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra at the age of 19. Having managed to maintain a career in Czechoslovakia under the Nazi occupation, he refused to work under what he considered a "second tyranny" after the Communist Czechoslovak coup d'état of 1948, and took refuge in Britain. He became a Swiss citizen in 1967.

Kubelík was music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (1950–53), musical director of The Royal Opera, Covent Garden (1955–58). In 1957, he conducted and recorded the World premiere Berlioz's Les Troyens. During (1961- 79), he was music director of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra (1961–79), and was a frequent guest conductor for leading orchestras in Europe and America.

As a composer, Kubelík wrote in a neo-romantic idiom. His works include five operas, three symphonies, chamber music, choral works, and songs.

Life and career

Early life

Kubelík was born in Býchory, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary, today's Czech Republic, the day after Archduke Ferdinand's assassination that triggered the First World War. He was the sixth child of the Bohemian violinist Jan Kubelík, whom the younger Kubelík described as "a kind of god to me". His mother was a Hungarian countess, Anna Julie Marie Széll von Bessenyö.[1] Kubelík studied the violin with his father, and entered the Prague Conservatory at the age of 14, studying violin, piano, composition, and conducting.[1] He graduated from the conservatory in 1933, at the age of 19; at his graduation concert he played a Paganini concerto and a composition of his own for violin and orchestra. Kubelík was also an accomplished pianist, and served as his father's accompanist on a tour of the United States in 1935.

Brno

In 1939, Kubelík became music director of the Brno Opera, a position he held until the Nazis shut the company down in November 1941.[1] The Nazis allowed the Czech Philharmonic to continue operating; Kubelík, who had first conducted the orchestra when he was 19, became its principal conductor.[1] In 1943 he married the Czech violinist Ludmilla Bertlová, with whom he had one son.[2]

In 1944, after various incidents, including one in which he declined to greet the Nazi Reichsprotektor Karl Hermann Frank with a Hitler salute, along with his refusal to conduct Wagner during the War, Kubelík "deemed it advisable to disappear from Prague and to spend a few months undercover in the countryside so as not to fall into the clutches of the SS or Gestapo".[3] Kubelík conducted the orchestra's first post-war concert in May 1945. In 1946, he helped found the Prague Spring Festival, and conducted its opening concert.[2]

Defection

After the Communist coup of February 1948, Kubelík left Czechoslovakia, vowing not to return until the country was liberated. "I had lived through one form of bestial tyranny, Nazism," he told an interviewer, "As a matter of principle I was not going to live through another." He defected during a trip to Britain, where he had flown to conduct Mozart's Don Giovanni with the Glyndebourne company at the Edinburgh Festival.[1] He had been engaged on the recommendation of Bruno Walter, whom Kubelík had assisted in this work at the 1937 Salzburg Festival. Kubelík told his wife of his decision to defect as their plane left Czechoslovakia.

In 1953, the Communist government convicted the couple in absentia of "taking illicit leave" abroad. In 1956, the regime invited him back "with promises of freedom to do anything I wanted," said Kubelík, but he refused the invitation. In a 1957 letter to The Times, Kubelík said he would seriously consider returning only when all the country's political prisoners were freed and all émigrés were given as much freedom as he would have possessed. He was invited back by the regime in 1966 but again refused; in 1968, after the Prague Spring had been ended by the Soviet invasion, he organised an international boycott, in which many of the major classical artists of the West participated.[4]

Chicago, Covent Garden and Munich

 
Rafael Kubelík (Amsterdam, 1950)

In 1950, Kubelík became music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, choosing the position over an offer from the BBC to succeed Sir Adrian Boult as chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra.[5] He left the post in 1953. Some hold that he was "hounded out of the [Chicago] job" (to quote Time magazine) by the "savage attacks" (to quote the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians) of the Chicago Tribune music critic Claudia Cassidy.[6] But Chicago Sun-Times music critic Robert C. Marsh argued in 1972 that it was the Chicago Symphony trustees who were behind the departure. Their foremost complaint, and that of Cassidy as well, was that Kubelík introduced too many contemporary works (about 70) to the orchestra; there were also objections to his demanding exhaustive rehearsals and engaging several black artists.[1] Many recordings made by Kubelík in Chicago for Mercury Records are available on CD, and have received critical praise.[7] Kubeliki's landmark recording of Pictures at an Exhibition with the CSO on Mercury led New York Times music critic Howard Taubman to observe that listening to it was like "being in the living presence of the orchestra," and Mercury began releasing their classical recordings under the "Living Presence" series name.[8]

After leaving Chicago, Kubelík toured the US with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, and, in the words of Lionel Salter in the Grove Dictionary, "had a brilliant success with Janáček's Kát'a Kabanová at Sadler's Wells in London in 1954".[1] Kubelík became musical director of The Royal Opera, Covent Garden, from 1955 to 1958.[9] Among his achievements there was, in 1957, the first practically complete production in any opera house of Berlioz's Les Troyens.[10] Although Covent Garden sought to renew his contract, he chose to leave, partly because of a campaign by Sir Thomas Beecham against the engagement of foreign artists at Covent Garden.[1] In 1961 Kubelík accepted the position of music director of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra (BRSO) in Munich. He remained with the BRSO until 1979, when he retired. Salter considers this 18-year association the high point of Kubelík's career, both artistically and professionally.[1]

In 1961 Ludmilla Kubelík died after a car crash. Also in 1961, he premiered the concerto performance version of Schoenberg's Jakobsleiter-Fragment in Vienna, with the Cologne Radio Symphony Orchestra and choir.

In 1963 Kubelík married the Australian soprano Elsie Morison (1924–2016). In 1967 he became a Swiss citizen, and began an association with the Lucerne Festival, in addition to his work with the BRSO.[1]

In 1971, Göran Gentele, the new general manager of the Metropolitan Opera, New York, asked Kubelík to accept the position of music director.[11] Kubelík accepted partly because of his strong artistic relationship with Gentele. The first production he conducted as the Met's music director was Les Troyens.[12] The death of Gentele in a road accident in 1972 undermined Kubelík's reasons for working at the opera house. He had prior conducting commitments away from the Met in his first season there, which diverted his attention. He resigned from the Met in 1974, after only six months in the post.[13]

In his post-Czechoslovakian career, Kubelík worked with the Berlin Philharmonic, Boston Symphony, Chicago Symphony, Cleveland, Israel Philharmonic, London Symphony, New York Philharmonic, Vienna Philharmonic and Royal Concertgebouw orchestras, among others. His final concert was with the Czech Philharmonic.[2]

Last years

In 1985, ill-health (notably severe arthritis in his back) caused Kubelík to retire from full-time conducting, but the fall of Communism in his native land led him to accept an invitation to return in 1990 to conduct the Czech Philharmonic at the festival he had founded, the Prague Spring Festival.[1] He recorded Smetana's Má Vlast live with the Czech Philharmonic for Supraphon, his fifth recording of the piece. He also recorded the Mozart "Prague" Symphony and Dvořák's "New World" Symphony at the festival. During the rehearsal of the "New World," he told the Czech Philharmonic, "It is my joy to hear this. I always wanted it to sound like this but never really found it with any other orchestra in the world. That eighth [note] is great!"

On October 18, 1991, Kubelík shared the podium with Sir Georg Solti and Daniel Barenboim and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in a performance that re-created the orchestra's inaugural October 16 and 17, 1891, concerts. Kubelík led the final work on the program: Antonín Dvořák's Husitská Overture.[14]

Kubelík died in 1996, aged 82, in Kastanienbaum, in the Canton of Lucerne, Switzerland. His ashes are interred next to the grave of his father in Slavín, Vyšehrad cemetery in Prague.

Compositions

Among Kubelík's compositions are five operas, three symphonies, three settings of the requiem, other choral works, many pieces of chamber music, and songs. Salter describes his musical style as "neo-romantic".[1]

Selected recordings

Kubelík recorded a large repertory, in many cases more than once per work. There are two complete recordings of his traversals of three major symphony cycles – those of Brahms, Schumann, and Beethoven. When Kubelík recorded his first complete Beethoven symphony cycle for Deutsche Grammophon, he employed nine different orchestras, one for each symphony.[15] His complete cycle of Mahler's symphonies (recorded from 1967 to 1971 with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra) is highly regarded.[1] Of his Mahler, Daniel Barenboim remarked, "I often thought I was missing something in Mahler until I listened to Kubelík. There is a lot more to be discovered in these pieces than just a generalized form of extrovert excitement. That is what Kubelík showed."[16] Kubelík also left much-admired recordings of operas by Verdi (his Rigoletto was recorded at La Scala with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau), Mozart, Janáček, Dvořák and others, including Wagner, whose music he had shunned during the war, but which he conducted in later years. His recordings of Die Meistersinger and Parsifal have been ranked the top choice by many critics, including BBC Radio 3's Building a Library programme.[17]

Kubelík's complete discography is enormous, with music ranging from Malcolm Arnold to Jan Dismas Zelenka, with recordings both in the studio and in concert. In addition to complete cycles of Beethoven, Brahms, Dvořák, and Mahler, Kubelík made recordings of orchestral and operatic works by Bach, Mozart, Haydn, Tchaikovsky, Berlioz, Wagner, Verdi and many others, including modern composers.

In May 2018, Deutsche Grammophon released a 66-disc box-set of his complete recordings for the label.

Composer Composition Date Orchestra Recording
Berlioz Les Troyens 1957 Coven Garden Opera Chorus, Coven Garden Orchestra Testament
Bartók Concerto for Orchestra 1974 Boston Symphony Orchestra Deutsche Grammophon
Beethoven Symphony No. 4 1975 Israel Philharmonic Orchestra
Symphony No. 5 1973 Boston Symphony Orchestra
Symphony No. 6 "Pastorale" Orchestre de Paris
Symphony No. 7 1974 Wiener Philharmoniker
Symphony No. 8 1975 The Cleveland Orchestra
Symphony No. 9 "Choral" Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
Berg Violin Concerto 1971
Brahms A German Requiem 1978 Audite
Bruckner Symphony No. 3 1954 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands
1985 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Sony Classical
Symphony No. 8 1963 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Orfeo
1977 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks BR Klassik
Symphony No. 9 1985 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Orfeo
Dresden Dansflitsen 1954 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands
Dvořák Symphonic Variations 1974 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Deutsche Grammophon
My Home, Overture 1973-4
Hussite Dramatic overture
In Nature's Realm Concert Overture
Carnival Concert Overture 1977
Othello Concert Overture
Scherzo capriccioso 1975
Symphony No. 1 1973 Berliner Philharmoniker
Symphony No. 2
Symphony No. 3
Symphony No. 4
Symphony No. 5
Symphony No. 6
Symphony No. 7 1950 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands
1971 Berliner Philharmoniker Deutsche Grammophon
Symphony No. 8 1966
Symphony No. 9 1973
The Noon Witch 1974 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
The Water Goblin
The Wild Dove
1976
Grieg Piano Concerto 1964 Berliner Philharmoniker
Hindemith Chamber Music No. 5 1966 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Bayerischer Rundfunk
Concerto Music, Op. 48 1963
Der Schwanendreher 1968
Janáček Concertino 1970 Deutsche Grammophon
The Diary of One Who Disappeared
Glagolitic Mass
Sinfonietta 1970
Taras Bulba 1951 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands
1970 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Deutsche Grammophon
Mahler Symphony No. 1 "Titan" 1967
1979 Bayerischer Rundfunk
Symphony No. 2 "Resurrection" 1969 Deutsche Grammophon
1982 Bayerischer Rundfunk
Symphony No. 3 1967 Deutsche Grammophon
Symphony No. 4 1968
Symphony No. 5 1971
1981 Bayerischer Rundfunk
Symphony No. 6 "Tragic" 1968 Deutsche Grammophon
Symphony No. 7 1970
Symphony No. 8 "Symphony of a Thousand"
Symphony No. 9 1967
Symphony No. 10 1968
Mendelssohn Violin Concerto 1951 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands
Mozart Eine kleine Nachtmusik 1962 Wiener Philharmoniker EMI
Mass No. 9 in B Flat major KV 275 (Missa brevis) 1973 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Deutsche Grammophon
Symphony No. 36 KV 425 "Linz" 1962 Wiener Philharmoniker EMI
Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2 1951 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands
Schoenberg Piano Concerto 1972 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Deutsche Grammophon
Violin Concerto
Schubert Symphony No. 9 1960 Royal Philharmonic Orchestra EMI
Schumann Symphonies 1979 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks CBS / Sony Classical
Piano Concerto 1964 Berliner Philharmoniker Deutsche Grammophon
Smetana Má vlast 1971 Boston Symphony Orchestra
Tansman Music for Orchestra 1950 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4 1961 Wiener Philharmoniker EMI
Verdi Rigoletto 1964 Orchester del Teatro alla Scala Deutsche Grammophon
Wagner Lohengrin 1971 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks
Weber Der Freischütz 1980 Decca
Oberon 1970 Deutsche Grammophon

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Salter, Lionel. "Kubelík, Rafael", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, accessed 3 February 2013 (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c "Obituary: Rafael Kubelík". The Times. 12 August 1996. p. 19.
  3. ^ Scharf, p. 114
  4. ^ Kennedy, pp. 306–307
  5. ^ Kenyon, p. 228
  6. ^ . Time. 11 April 1969. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007.
  7. ^ Mermelstein, David (27 July 1997). "Gifted, Enigmatic and the Last of a Species". The New York Times.
  8. ^ Richard Freed, "Mercury 'Living Presence' Comes to Life Again," New York Times, September 30, 1990, Section 2, Page 28.
  9. ^ Haltrecht, p. 191
  10. ^ Rosenthal, p. 669
  11. ^ . Time. 21 June 1971. Archived from the original on October 1, 2007.
  12. ^ . Time. 25 March 1974. Archived from the original on March 4, 2008.
  13. ^ . Time. 25 February 1974. Archived from the original on March 4, 2008.
  14. ^ Villella, Frank (October 2015). "125 Moments: 005 Gala Centennial Finale". From the Archives. Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  15. ^ Achenbach, Andrew. "Rafael Kubelík", www.classicalsource.com, accessed 3 February 2013
  16. ^ Barenboim, p. 223
  17. ^ "Tristan und Isolde". The Times. 5 June 1958. p. 16. and Mann, William (13 November 1971). "Parsifal and Son: with Kubelik and Boulez". The Times. p. 9.

Bibliography

  • Barenboim, Daniel (2002). A Life in Music. London: Arcade Pub. ISBN 1-55970-674-0.
  • Freeman, John W. "Music First," Opera News, May 2007, pp. 42–45.
  • Haltrecht, Montague (1975). The Quiet Showman – Sir David Webster and the Royal Opera House. London: Collins. ISBN 0-00-211163-2.
  • Kennedy, Michael (1971). Barbirolli, Conductor Laureate: The Authorised Biography. London: MacGibbon and Key. ISBN 0-261-63336-8.
  • Kenyon, Nicholas (1981). The BBC Symphony Orchestra – The First Fifty Years, 1930–1980. London: British Broadcasting Corporation. ISBN 0563176172.
  • Rosenthal, Harold (1958). Two Centuries of Opera at Covent Garden. London: Putnam. OCLC 185327768.
  • Scharf, Albert (2006). "Rafael Kubelík: His Life and Achievement". "The golden era" of Rafael Kubelik: the Munich years 1961–1985. Kassel: Bärenreiter. ISBN 3761819129.

External links

  • Rafael Kubelík at AllMusic
  • Extensive discography
  • František Sláma Archive – contains information on Kubelik under "Conductors – Part 2" in section "Czech Philharmonic Orchestra in Documents and Reminiscences"
  • Arnold Schoenberg: Jakobsleiter conducted by Kubelik (YouTube)
Cultural offices
Preceded by Music Director, Royal Opera House, Covent Garden
1955–1958
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief Conductor, Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra
1961–1979
Succeeded by
Preceded by
none
Music Director, Metropolitan Opera
1973–1974
Succeeded by

rafael, kubelík, rafael, jeroným, kubelík, june, 1914, august, 1996, czech, conductor, composer, distinguished, violinist, kubelík, trained, prague, made, debut, with, czech, philharmonic, orchestra, having, managed, maintain, career, czechoslovakia, under, na. Rafael Jeronym Kubelik KBE 29 June 1914 11 August 1996 was a Czech conductor and composer Rafael Kubelik The son of a distinguished violinist Jan Kubelik he was trained in Prague and made his debut with the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra at the age of 19 Having managed to maintain a career in Czechoslovakia under the Nazi occupation he refused to work under what he considered a second tyranny after the Communist Czechoslovak coup d etat of 1948 and took refuge in Britain He became a Swiss citizen in 1967 Kubelik was music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra 1950 53 musical director of The Royal Opera Covent Garden 1955 58 In 1957 he conducted and recorded the World premiere Berlioz s Les Troyens During 1961 79 he was music director of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra 1961 79 and was a frequent guest conductor for leading orchestras in Europe and America As a composer Kubelik wrote in a neo romantic idiom His works include five operas three symphonies chamber music choral works and songs Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Brno 1 3 Defection 1 4 Chicago Covent Garden and Munich 1 5 Last years 1 6 Compositions 2 Selected recordings 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 External linksLife and career EditEarly life Edit Kubelik was born in Bychory Bohemia Austria Hungary today s Czech Republic the day after Archduke Ferdinand s assassination that triggered the First World War He was the sixth child of the Bohemian violinist Jan Kubelik whom the younger Kubelik described as a kind of god to me His mother was a Hungarian countess Anna Julie Marie Szell von Bessenyo 1 Kubelik studied the violin with his father and entered the Prague Conservatory at the age of 14 studying violin piano composition and conducting 1 He graduated from the conservatory in 1933 at the age of 19 at his graduation concert he played a Paganini concerto and a composition of his own for violin and orchestra Kubelik was also an accomplished pianist and served as his father s accompanist on a tour of the United States in 1935 Brno Edit In 1939 Kubelik became music director of the Brno Opera a position he held until the Nazis shut the company down in November 1941 1 The Nazis allowed the Czech Philharmonic to continue operating Kubelik who had first conducted the orchestra when he was 19 became its principal conductor 1 In 1943 he married the Czech violinist Ludmilla Bertlova with whom he had one son 2 In 1944 after various incidents including one in which he declined to greet the Nazi Reichsprotektor Karl Hermann Frank with a Hitler salute along with his refusal to conduct Wagner during the War Kubelik deemed it advisable to disappear from Prague and to spend a few months undercover in the countryside so as not to fall into the clutches of the SS or Gestapo 3 Kubelik conducted the orchestra s first post war concert in May 1945 In 1946 he helped found the Prague Spring Festival and conducted its opening concert 2 Defection Edit After the Communist coup of February 1948 Kubelik left Czechoslovakia vowing not to return until the country was liberated I had lived through one form of bestial tyranny Nazism he told an interviewer As a matter of principle I was not going to live through another He defected during a trip to Britain where he had flown to conduct Mozart s Don Giovanni with the Glyndebourne company at the Edinburgh Festival 1 He had been engaged on the recommendation of Bruno Walter whom Kubelik had assisted in this work at the 1937 Salzburg Festival Kubelik told his wife of his decision to defect as their plane left Czechoslovakia In 1953 the Communist government convicted the couple in absentia of taking illicit leave abroad In 1956 the regime invited him back with promises of freedom to do anything I wanted said Kubelik but he refused the invitation In a 1957 letter to The Times Kubelik said he would seriously consider returning only when all the country s political prisoners were freed and all emigres were given as much freedom as he would have possessed He was invited back by the regime in 1966 but again refused in 1968 after the Prague Spring had been ended by the Soviet invasion he organised an international boycott in which many of the major classical artists of the West participated 4 Chicago Covent Garden and Munich Edit Rafael Kubelik Amsterdam 1950 In 1950 Kubelik became music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra choosing the position over an offer from the BBC to succeed Sir Adrian Boult as chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra 5 He left the post in 1953 Some hold that he was hounded out of the Chicago job to quote Time magazine by the savage attacks to quote the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians of the Chicago Tribune music critic Claudia Cassidy 6 But Chicago Sun Times music critic Robert C Marsh argued in 1972 that it was the Chicago Symphony trustees who were behind the departure Their foremost complaint and that of Cassidy as well was that Kubelik introduced too many contemporary works about 70 to the orchestra there were also objections to his demanding exhaustive rehearsals and engaging several black artists 1 Many recordings made by Kubelik in Chicago for Mercury Records are available on CD and have received critical praise 7 Kubeliki s landmark recording of Pictures at an Exhibition with the CSO on Mercury led New York Times music critic Howard Taubman to observe that listening to it was like being in the living presence of the orchestra and Mercury began releasing their classical recordings under the Living Presence series name 8 After leaving Chicago Kubelik toured the US with the Concertgebouw Orchestra and in the words of Lionel Salter in the Grove Dictionary had a brilliant success with Janacek s Kat a Kabanova at Sadler s Wells in London in 1954 1 Kubelik became musical director of The Royal Opera Covent Garden from 1955 to 1958 9 Among his achievements there was in 1957 the first practically complete production in any opera house of Berlioz s Les Troyens 10 Although Covent Garden sought to renew his contract he chose to leave partly because of a campaign by Sir Thomas Beecham against the engagement of foreign artists at Covent Garden 1 In 1961 Kubelik accepted the position of music director of the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra BRSO in Munich He remained with the BRSO until 1979 when he retired Salter considers this 18 year association the high point of Kubelik s career both artistically and professionally 1 In 1961 Ludmilla Kubelik died after a car crash Also in 1961 he premiered the concerto performance version of Schoenberg s Jakobsleiter Fragment in Vienna with the Cologne Radio Symphony Orchestra and choir In 1963 Kubelik married the Australian soprano Elsie Morison 1924 2016 In 1967 he became a Swiss citizen and began an association with the Lucerne Festival in addition to his work with the BRSO 1 In 1971 Goran Gentele the new general manager of the Metropolitan Opera New York asked Kubelik to accept the position of music director 11 Kubelik accepted partly because of his strong artistic relationship with Gentele The first production he conducted as the Met s music director was Les Troyens 12 The death of Gentele in a road accident in 1972 undermined Kubelik s reasons for working at the opera house He had prior conducting commitments away from the Met in his first season there which diverted his attention He resigned from the Met in 1974 after only six months in the post 13 In his post Czechoslovakian career Kubelik worked with the Berlin Philharmonic Boston Symphony Chicago Symphony Cleveland Israel Philharmonic London Symphony New York Philharmonic Vienna Philharmonic and Royal Concertgebouw orchestras among others His final concert was with the Czech Philharmonic 2 Last years Edit In 1985 ill health notably severe arthritis in his back caused Kubelik to retire from full time conducting but the fall of Communism in his native land led him to accept an invitation to return in 1990 to conduct the Czech Philharmonic at the festival he had founded the Prague Spring Festival 1 He recorded Smetana s Ma Vlast live with the Czech Philharmonic for Supraphon his fifth recording of the piece He also recorded the Mozart Prague Symphony and Dvorak s New World Symphony at the festival During the rehearsal of the New World he told the Czech Philharmonic It is my joy to hear this I always wanted it to sound like this but never really found it with any other orchestra in the world That eighth note is great On October 18 1991 Kubelik shared the podium with Sir Georg Solti and Daniel Barenboim and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in a performance that re created the orchestra s inaugural October 16 and 17 1891 concerts Kubelik led the final work on the program Antonin Dvorak s Husitska Overture 14 Kubelik died in 1996 aged 82 in Kastanienbaum in the Canton of Lucerne Switzerland His ashes are interred next to the grave of his father in Slavin Vysehrad cemetery in Prague Compositions Edit Among Kubelik s compositions are five operas three symphonies three settings of the requiem other choral works many pieces of chamber music and songs Salter describes his musical style as neo romantic 1 Selected recordings EditKubelik recorded a large repertory in many cases more than once per work There are two complete recordings of his traversals of three major symphony cycles those of Brahms Schumann and Beethoven When Kubelik recorded his first complete Beethoven symphony cycle for Deutsche Grammophon he employed nine different orchestras one for each symphony 15 His complete cycle of Mahler s symphonies recorded from 1967 to 1971 with the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra is highly regarded 1 Of his Mahler Daniel Barenboim remarked I often thought I was missing something in Mahler until I listened to Kubelik There is a lot more to be discovered in these pieces than just a generalized form of extrovert excitement That is what Kubelik showed 16 Kubelik also left much admired recordings of operas by Verdi his Rigoletto was recorded at La Scala with Dietrich Fischer Dieskau Mozart Janacek Dvorak and others including Wagner whose music he had shunned during the war but which he conducted in later years His recordings of Die Meistersinger and Parsifal have been ranked the top choice by many critics including BBC Radio 3 s Building a Library programme 17 Kubelik s complete discography is enormous with music ranging from Malcolm Arnold to Jan Dismas Zelenka with recordings both in the studio and in concert In addition to complete cycles of Beethoven Brahms Dvorak and Mahler Kubelik made recordings of orchestral and operatic works by Bach Mozart Haydn Tchaikovsky Berlioz Wagner Verdi and many others including modern composers In May 2018 Deutsche Grammophon released a 66 disc box set of his complete recordings for the label Composer Composition Date Orchestra RecordingBerlioz Les Troyens 1957 Coven Garden Opera Chorus Coven Garden Orchestra TestamentBartok Concerto for Orchestra 1974 Boston Symphony Orchestra Deutsche GrammophonBeethoven Symphony No 4 1975 Israel Philharmonic OrchestraSymphony No 5 1973 Boston Symphony OrchestraSymphony No 6 Pastorale Orchestre de ParisSymphony No 7 1974 Wiener PhilharmonikerSymphony No 8 1975 The Cleveland OrchestraSymphony No 9 Choral Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen RundfunksBerg Violin Concerto 1971Brahms A German Requiem 1978 AuditeBruckner Symphony No 3 1954 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands1985 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Sony ClassicalSymphony No 8 1963 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Orfeo1977 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks BR KlassikSymphony No 9 1985 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks OrfeoDresden Dansflitsen 1954 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio NetherlandsDvorak Symphonic Variations 1974 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Deutsche GrammophonMy Home Overture 1973 4Hussite Dramatic overtureIn Nature s Realm Concert OvertureCarnival Concert Overture 1977Othello Concert OvertureScherzo capriccioso 1975Symphony No 1 1973 Berliner PhilharmonikerSymphony No 2Symphony No 3Symphony No 4Symphony No 5Symphony No 6Symphony No 7 1950 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands1971 Berliner Philharmoniker Deutsche GrammophonSymphony No 8 1966Symphony No 9 1973The Noon Witch 1974 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen RundfunksThe Water GoblinThe Wild Dove1976Grieg Piano Concerto 1964 Berliner PhilharmonikerHindemith Chamber Music No 5 1966 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Bayerischer RundfunkConcerto Music Op 48 1963Der Schwanendreher 1968Janacek Concertino 1970 Deutsche GrammophonThe Diary of One Who DisappearedGlagolitic MassSinfonietta 1970Taras Bulba 1951 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio Netherlands1970 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Deutsche GrammophonMahler Symphony No 1 Titan 19671979 Bayerischer RundfunkSymphony No 2 Resurrection 1969 Deutsche Grammophon1982 Bayerischer RundfunkSymphony No 3 1967 Deutsche GrammophonSymphony No 4 1968Symphony No 5 19711981 Bayerischer RundfunkSymphony No 6 Tragic 1968 Deutsche GrammophonSymphony No 7 1970Symphony No 8 Symphony of a Thousand Symphony No 9 1967Symphony No 10 1968Mendelssohn Violin Concerto 1951 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio NetherlandsMozart Eine kleine Nachtmusik 1962 Wiener Philharmoniker EMIMass No 9 in B Flat major KV 275 Missa brevis 1973 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Deutsche GrammophonSymphony No 36 KV 425 Linz 1962 Wiener Philharmoniker EMIRachmaninoff Piano Concerto No 2 1951 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio NetherlandsSchoenberg Piano Concerto 1972 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks Deutsche GrammophonViolin ConcertoSchubert Symphony No 9 1960 Royal Philharmonic Orchestra EMISchumann Symphonies 1979 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks CBS Sony ClassicalPiano Concerto 1964 Berliner Philharmoniker Deutsche GrammophonSmetana Ma vlast 1971 Boston Symphony OrchestraTansman Music for Orchestra 1950 Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Radio NetherlandsTchaikovsky Symphony No 4 1961 Wiener Philharmoniker EMIVerdi Rigoletto 1964 Orchester del Teatro alla Scala Deutsche GrammophonWagner Lohengrin 1971 Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen RundfunksWeber Der Freischutz 1980 DeccaOberon 1970 Deutsche GrammophonReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Salter Lionel Kubelik Rafael Grove Music Online Oxford University Press accessed 3 February 2013 subscription required a b c Obituary Rafael Kubelik The Times 12 August 1996 p 19 Scharf p 114 Kennedy pp 306 307 Kenyon p 228 Into the Fray Time 11 April 1969 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Mermelstein David 27 July 1997 Gifted Enigmatic and the Last of a Species The New York Times Richard Freed Mercury Living Presence Comes to Life Again New York Times September 30 1990 Section 2 Page 28 Haltrecht p 191 Rosenthal p 669 Music Man for the Met Time 21 June 1971 Archived from the original on October 1 2007 A Win for the Trojans Time 25 March 1974 Archived from the original on March 4 2008 Wanted Full Time Help Time 25 February 1974 Archived from the original on March 4 2008 Villella Frank October 2015 125 Moments 005 Gala Centennial Finale From the Archives Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association Retrieved 5 June 2019 Achenbach Andrew Rafael Kubelik www classicalsource com accessed 3 February 2013 Barenboim p 223 Tristan und Isolde The Times 5 June 1958 p 16 and Mann William 13 November 1971 Parsifal and Son with Kubelik and Boulez The Times p 9 Bibliography EditBarenboim Daniel 2002 A Life in Music London Arcade Pub ISBN 1 55970 674 0 Freeman John W Music First Opera News May 2007 pp 42 45 Haltrecht Montague 1975 The Quiet Showman Sir David Webster and the Royal Opera House London Collins ISBN 0 00 211163 2 Kennedy Michael 1971 Barbirolli Conductor Laureate The Authorised Biography London MacGibbon and Key ISBN 0 261 63336 8 Kenyon Nicholas 1981 The BBC Symphony Orchestra The First Fifty Years 1930 1980 London British Broadcasting Corporation ISBN 0563176172 Rosenthal Harold 1958 Two Centuries of Opera at Covent Garden London Putnam OCLC 185327768 Scharf Albert 2006 Rafael Kubelik His Life and Achievement The golden era of Rafael Kubelik the Munich years 1961 1985 Kassel Barenreiter ISBN 3761819129 External links EditRafael Kubelik at AllMusic Extensive discography Frantisek Slama Archive contains information on Kubelik under Conductors Part 2 in section Czech Philharmonic Orchestra in Documents and Reminiscences Arnold Schoenberg Jakobsleiter conducted by Kubelik YouTube Cultural officesPreceded byKarl Rankl Music Director Royal Opera House Covent Garden1955 1958 Succeeded byGeorg SoltiPreceded byEugen Jochum Chief Conductor Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra1961 1979 Succeeded bySir Colin DavisPreceded bynone Music Director Metropolitan Opera1973 1974 Succeeded byJames Levine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rafael Kubelik amp oldid 1142558451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.