Product Code Database
Example Keywords: wi-fi -tie $20-142
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Fritz Busch
Tag Wiki 'Fritz Busch'.
Tag

Fritz Busch (13 March 1890 – 14 September 1951) was a German .

Busch was born in to a musical family and studied at the Cologne Conservatory. After army service in the First World War, he was appointed to senior posts in two German opera houses. At the (1918 to 1922) he modernised the repertory, and at the (1922 to 1933) he presented world premieres of operas by , , and among others. He also conducted at the Bayreuth and Salzburg Festivals.

Being an ardent Anti-Nazi, Busch was dismissed from his post as director at Dresden in 1933 and made most of his later career outside Germany. He conducted in New York and London, but his main bases were Buenos Aires, where he was in charge at the Teatro Colón for several opera seasons in the 1930s and 1940s; Copenhagen and Stockholm, conducting the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Stockholm Philharmonic; and in England, where he was the founding musical director of Glyndebourne Festival Opera working together with the stage director .

Busch disliked showmanship and was known as a scrupulous musician who strove to do justice to the composers whose works he conducted. He died in London aged 61.


Life and career

Early years
Busch was born on 13 March 1890 in , Westphalia, the eldest of eight children of and his wife Henriette, née Schmidt. Wilhelm was a carpenter, violin-maker and music-shop keeper; his wife was an embroiderer. It was a musical family; Wilhelm and Henriette supplemented their incomes by performing dance music at weekends. Their other children were the violinist , the actor , the cellist , and the pianist and composer .

As a boy, Busch took music lessons with his father and others, and in 1906 he entered the Cologne Conservatory, studying harmony and with , piano with Karl Boettcher and later , and conducting with the principal, . His relations with Steinbach were edgy, but he acknowledged the older man's influence on him. Steinbach was highly regarded by conductors as different as and ; Busch thought him outstanding as an interpreter of Beethoven, Boult admired his Bach and all three put him at the top of conductors.

In 1909 Busch spent a season as conductor at the Deutsches Theater, Riga, and in 1911 and 1912 he toured as a pianist. He was then appointed director of music for the city of with responsibility for the and the city's celebrated choral society. Among those whose works he premiered there were , who became a close friend of Busch and his brothers. In 1911 Busch married Margarete Boettcher, a niece of his piano teacher; their first son, Hans, later a stage director, was born in 1914.

Busch remained at Aachen until the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, when he enlisted in the German army, rising from the ranks to become a junior officer."Dr Fritz Busch", The Times, 17 September 1951, p. 6


Stuttgart and Dresden
In 1918 Busch successfully applied for the vacant post of Württemberg Court – musical director of the – in succession to Max von Schillings. The conservative tradition of the house, until then the court opera of the Kingdom of Württemberg within the German Empire, was swept away in the November Revolution of 1918, and Busch took advantage of the freedom to widen the repertoire, introducing new works by composers including and , and presenting modern stagings such as 's for 's . In 1922, Busch was appointed musical director of the . In the words of The Musical Times:
This was success indeed: a musician in his early thirties raised to the post where Ernst von Schuch himself had conducted the premieres of ['s] Salome, Elektra and Der Rosenkavalier. No opera house in Germany held greater repute. Under Fritz Busch Dresden maintained its lead.
To Dresden's series of Strauss premieres Busch added Intermezzo (1924) and Die ägyptische Helena (1928)). He presented the world premieres of works by Ferruccio Busoni ( , 1925), Paul Hindemith ( , 1926) and ( , 1926), and others, and the German premiere of 's (1926). During his eleven-year tenure he kept the Dresden house at the highest level, mounting innovative, provocative stagings with the help of prominent costume and set designers.

In 1924 Busch conducted Die Meistersinger at the first post-war Bayreuth Festival. The production was not a success. The cast was second-rate and there were mixed reviews for the quality of the orchestral playing."Bayreuth Festival", The Times, 26 July 1924, p. 10; and Busch refused subsequent requests to conduct at the festival. In 1927, at the invitation of , he made his American debut, conducting the New York Symphony Orchestra: the climax of the programme was the nine-year-old 's first performance of the Beethoven Violin Concerto. Busch was so impressed that he arranged for Menuhin to come to Dresden, where he played the Beethoven concerto, the Bach E major and the Brahms. In 1932 Busch was invited to conduct Mozart's Die Entführung aus dem Serail at the Salzburg Festival. Having recently been much impressed by 's staging of that opera in Berlin, Busch accepted the invitation on condition that Ebert should be engaged as director. The success of the production led Ebert to invite Busch to Berlin to conduct a new staging of 's Un ballo in maschera, a celebrated and long-remembered production.

Though not generally concerned with national or international politics, Busch had watched the rise of the with dismay and disgust. Not himself Jewish, he counted many Jews among his friends, valued democracy and hated dictatorship. He made no secret of his contempt for the Nazis, and after came , Busch was dismissed by the Nazi-dominated Saxon . Among those outraged by the affair was Strauss, whose new opera , dedicated to Busch, was to have been premiered at the Dresden opera under its dedicatee. Busch was replaced by Karl Böhm, a more congenial figure to the régime.

Although Busch was forced out of Dresden by the local Nazis, the historian Michael Kater writes that senior party figures in Berlin, notably Hermann Göring, had a high regard for Busch and hoped to secure him as general director of the Staatsoper. According to Kater, Wilhelm Furtwängler, chief conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic, did not want so eminent a rival as Busch in the city; as Furtwängler had the backing of Hitler, the post went instead to . The last offer from the Nazis was a return to Bayreuth to replace Toscanini, who refused to work under the régime. Busch too refused.


Buenos Aires, Copenhagen, Stockholm and Glyndebourne
From 1933 Busch's career was mostly outside Germany. In May of that year he accepted the musical directorship of the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires for a season. Returning to Europe at the end of the year he began a long association with the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Stockholm Philharmonic. In the early 1930s an English landowner, John Christie, and his wife, the singer , conceived the idea of staging country house opera in a purpose-built opera house on the Christie estate at Glyndebourne in Sussex. In November 1933 Christie sounded Busch out about becoming his musical director; Busch was by then contractually committed in Buenos Aires, but a financial crisis in Argentina shortly afterwards enabled him to reconsider Christie's invitation. As at Salzburg, he arranged for Ebert to join him to direct productions.

Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians sums up the success of the Glyndebourne enterprise:

The level achieved by the carefully chosen and rehearsed ensemble at the summer festivals, 1934–1939, is part of operatic history. The repertory was based on Mozart but included Donizetti's and the first staging by a British company of Verdi's Macbeth. Ironically, it was at patrician Glyndebourne rather than at Dresden that the democratically minded Busch came nearest to his ideal of being able "to build up an opera production in the smallest detail and with ... complete respect for the work'".
Glyndebourne's productions were enthusiastically received by reviewers and public; Busch and his forces made pioneering recordings of Le nozze di Figaro, and Così fan tutte for and the Gramophone Company. Both at the time and later two musical idiosyncrasies were commented on: Busch's use of a piano rather than a harpsichord to accompany and the avoidance of – in both respects German musical practice being old-fashioned by international standards of the day.

Busch remained musical director at Glyndebourne until the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, when the festival was suspended.. "Glyndebourne", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001. Retrieved 24 May 2020 He made his London debut in 1938, conducting the London Symphony Orchestra at the Queen's Hall in a programme of Mozart, Beethoven and Brahms."London Symphony Orchestra", The Times, 29 November 1938, p. 12

Busch continued to conduct at the Teatro Colón (1934–1936 and 1940–1947). Until 1940 he worked in Scandinavia during the winter months. According to Grove he grew so attached to Copenhagen that he turned down the offer to become chief conductor of the New York Philharmonic. From June 1940 to 1945 he conducted mostly in South America, except for a not wholly successful experiment on Glyndebourne lines (the New Opera Company) and guest appearances with the New York Philharmonic, both in 1942. In 1945 he conducted at the Metropolitan Opera, making his debut there with Lohengrin, and toured with the company for four seasons. New York was not to his taste: one concert promoter observed, "he was not a showman".

From 1947-1950 Busch appeared numerous times with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, both at Orchestra Hall and at the .

In 1950 Busch returned to Glyndebourne when the main festival resumed there after the war. Early in 1951 he revisited Germany, conducting in Cologne and Hamburg. He returned to Glyndebourne later in the year for an all-Mozart festival – Così fan tutte, Figaro and Don Giovanni, and the first professional production in England of . of The New York Times praised Ebert's "unflaggingly imaginative and alive" staging and Busch's "loving hand, fusing the orchestra with the singers on the stage into a laughing, glowing entity".. "3rd Mozart Opera at Glyndebourne", The New York Times, 28 June 1951, p. 36 In the early post-war years the Glyndebourne company appeared regularly at the Edinburgh Festival, and in August 1951 Busch was in Edinburgh to conduct his first post-war Verdi opera for the company, La forza del destino. Critics praised his "percipient direction" and "inspired" conducting."Glyndebourne Opera", The Times, 22 August 1951, p. 2; and "Edinburgh Festival", The Stage, 30 August 1951, p. 10 On 14 September, five days after the last Edinburgh performance, Busch died suddenly of a heart attack in London at the age of 61.


Reputation
In the opinion of Grove, Busch was "the soundest type of German musician: not markedly original or spectacular, but thorough, strong-minded, decisive in intention and execution, with idealism and practical sense nicely balanced". The Times called him "a virile, faithful and extremely skilful interpreter of Mozart" and continued, "His beat like his bearing was one of quiet authority; his interpretations were fully alive without fuss or idiosyncrasy but devoted wholly to the projection of the music as he conceived the composer to have intended it".

In 2008, Hänssler Profil issued a three-CD set of Busch's complete Dresden recordings, mainly short works and operatic excerpts (including the first recorded extracts from ), but with a complete Brahms Second Symphony and a black and white film of him conducting the Tannhäuser overture captured sometime between 1930-33. The bonus DVD also had a 2008 documentary film by Stefan Braunshausen about Fritz Busch and his Dresden career as well as the voices of , who played for him, and . A 192-page illustrated book in German and English was included.Matthew-Walker, Robert. Fritz Busch: The Complete Dresden Recordings (review). Classic Record Collector, Spring 2009, No.56, p.74-76.


Recordings
Busch's recordings include: Fritz Busch discography (in German)
  • 1923: Smetana: Overture to The Bartered Bride, with the Kapelle der Dresdener Staatsoper (recorded Dresden, June 1923 by Deutsche Grammophon)
  • 1934–1935: Mozart, The Marriage of Figaro, with the Glyndebourne Festival Opera, , Luise Helletsgruber, , Roy Henderson, , Willi Domgraf-Fassbänder, Constance WillisBooklet accompanying Warner Classics 0190295801748, 2017.
  • 1935: Mozart, Così fan tutte, with the Glyndebourne Festival Opera, Ina Souez, Luise Helletsgruber, Irene Eisinger, , John Brownlee, Willi Domgraf-Fassbaender
  • 1936: Mozart, , with the Glyndebourne Festival Opera, John Brownlee, Salvatore Baccaloni, , Roy Henderson, Luise Helletsgruber, Koloman von Pataky, Salvatore Baccaloni, David Franklin, Audrey Mildmay
  • 1936: Strauss, Don Juan, op. 20, conducting the London Philharmonic Orchestra (recorded 6 & 8 July 1936 by His Master’s Voice)
  • 1942: Beethoven Violin Concerto op. 61, with and the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra (recorded February 1942 , New York by )
  • 1947: Brahms Symphony No. 2, conducting the Danish State Radio Symphony Orchestra (HMV)
  • 1950: Mozart, Cosi fan tutte with Glyndebourne Opera, , , Richard Lewis, , Mario Borriello (recorded June 1950, Gyndebourne by HMV)
  • 1951: Mozart, excerpts, with the Glyndebourne Festival Opera, Sena Jurinac, Dorothy McNeil, Richard Lewis, Alexander Young (recorded Abbey Road July 1951, HMV)
  • 1951: Verdi, Un ballo in maschera, in German, Ein Maskenball, with the Cologne Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Cologne Radio Choir, Lorenz Fehenberger, Martha Mödl, , Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, and
  • 1951: Verdi, La forza del destino, with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the Glyndebourne Festival Choir, Walburga Wegner, David Poleri, Marko Rothmüller, Bruce Dargavel, and


Notes, references and sources

Notes

Sources


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
2s Time