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I wanted to continue my ongoing look into Tchaikovsky's music on Once Upon the Internet this month, and to do so I will "cheat" a bit and recycle for the most part a post from my Blogspot blog dating May 17 2001.
The Italian conductor, Guido Cantelli (1920-1956), was both the youngest and shortest-lived of the world-class conductors born between 1908 and 1920, a remarkable group that includes Herbert von Karajan, Georg Solti, Erich Leinsdorf, Carlo Maria Giulini, and Leonard Bernstein.
You can read Cantelli's biography here.
Guido Cantelli had a stellar but brief career as a conductor, championed by Toscanini who had begun looking for a younger associate to keep the NBC Symphony Orchestra (created for him in 1938) on course during his absences. He arranged for the young conductor's immediate NBC debut on January 15, 1949. Afterwards, Time magazine featured a profile likening him physically to Frank Sinatra, but musically to Arturo Toscanini. Until NBC disbanded the orchestra in 1954, Cantelli conducted there annually, beginning with four but expanding to eight programs.
In 1951 he made the first of five annual appearances as a regular guest-conductor of the New York Philharmonic along with Bruno Walter and George Szell. Such was his reputation that he was set to take over the New York Philharmonic at the end of Dimitri Mitropoulos' tenure. La Scala formally named him music director in November 1956. One week later, a Lineo Aereo Italiano plane from Milan to New-York crashed following a stopover in Paris. Guido Cantelli was not among the survivors. His untimely death opened the door for another rising star, Leonard Bernstein, to take over the New York Philharmonic. Arturo Toscanini died two months later without being told of Cantelli's death.
YouTube proposes a good number of Cantelli recordings, and even this short clip of Cantelli in rehearsal:
Among the few surviving documents of his short career is a set of the Tchaikovsky symphonies recorded "in concert" at Carnegie Hall with the NBC Symphony, which I downloaded a few years ago from Public Domain Classic. I must say that I quite enjoy his readings of the Symphonies. Yes, the recording technology isn't the greatest, but we have here a genuine interpreter, who understands the darkness and pathos that Tchaikovsky brings to these works. In 2009, Keith Bennett writes this about Cantelli's recording of the Pathetique symphony:
Pyotr Ilich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
Symphony No. 4 in F Minor, op. 36
Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, op. 64
Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, op. 74 ('Pathétique')
NBC Symphony Orchestra
Guido Cantelli, conducting
Internet Archive URL - http://www.archive.org/details/PeterIlijcTchaikovskyTheLastThreeSymphonies
December 20, 2013, "I Think You Will Love This Music Too" will feature a new podcast "Shchelkunchik" at its Pod-O-Matic Channel . Read more December 20 on the ITYWLTMT Blogspot blog.
I wanted to continue my ongoing look into Tchaikovsky's music on Once Upon the Internet this month, and to do so I will "cheat" a bit and recycle for the most part a post from my Blogspot blog dating May 17 2001.
The Italian conductor, Guido Cantelli (1920-1956), was both the youngest and shortest-lived of the world-class conductors born between 1908 and 1920, a remarkable group that includes Herbert von Karajan, Georg Solti, Erich Leinsdorf, Carlo Maria Giulini, and Leonard Bernstein.
You can read Cantelli's biography here.
Guido Cantelli had a stellar but brief career as a conductor, championed by Toscanini who had begun looking for a younger associate to keep the NBC Symphony Orchestra (created for him in 1938) on course during his absences. He arranged for the young conductor's immediate NBC debut on January 15, 1949. Afterwards, Time magazine featured a profile likening him physically to Frank Sinatra, but musically to Arturo Toscanini. Until NBC disbanded the orchestra in 1954, Cantelli conducted there annually, beginning with four but expanding to eight programs.
In 1951 he made the first of five annual appearances as a regular guest-conductor of the New York Philharmonic along with Bruno Walter and George Szell. Such was his reputation that he was set to take over the New York Philharmonic at the end of Dimitri Mitropoulos' tenure. La Scala formally named him music director in November 1956. One week later, a Lineo Aereo Italiano plane from Milan to New-York crashed following a stopover in Paris. Guido Cantelli was not among the survivors. His untimely death opened the door for another rising star, Leonard Bernstein, to take over the New York Philharmonic. Arturo Toscanini died two months later without being told of Cantelli's death.
YouTube proposes a good number of Cantelli recordings, and even this short clip of Cantelli in rehearsal:
Among the few surviving documents of his short career is a set of the Tchaikovsky symphonies recorded "in concert" at Carnegie Hall with the NBC Symphony, which I downloaded a few years ago from Public Domain Classic. I must say that I quite enjoy his readings of the Symphonies. Yes, the recording technology isn't the greatest, but we have here a genuine interpreter, who understands the darkness and pathos that Tchaikovsky brings to these works. In 2009, Keith Bennett writes this about Cantelli's recording of the Pathetique symphony:
Call these an early Christmas present!
Pyotr Ilich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893)
Symphony No. 4 in F Minor, op. 36
Symphony No. 5 in E Minor, op. 64
Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, op. 74 ('Pathétique')
NBC Symphony Orchestra
Guido Cantelli, conducting
Internet Archive URL - http://www.archive.org/details/PeterIlijcTchaikovskyTheLastThreeSymphonies
December 20, 2013, "I Think You Will Love This Music Too" will feature a new podcast "Shchelkunchik" at its Pod-O-Matic Channel . Read more December 20 on the ITYWLTMT Blogspot blog.