Dimitri Mitropoulos
October 30, 2010 in Great Greeks by Wondering Greek
Dimitri Mitropoulos (Greek: Δημήτρης Μητρόπουλος) (1 March [O.S. 18 February] 1896[1] – 2 November 1960), was a Greek conductor, pianist, and composer. Also known as Dimitris Mitropoulos.
Life and career
In addition to his orchestral career, Mitropoulos was an equally important force in the operatic repertoire. He conducted opera extensively in Italy and from 1954 until his death in 1960 was the principal conductor of the Metropolitan Opera in New York, although the Met did not officially use that title at the time. His musically incisive and dramatically vivid performances of Puccini, Verdi, Richard Strauss and others remain models of the opera conductor’s art. The Met’s extensive archive of recorded broadcasts preserves many of these fine performances.
Mitropoulos’s series of recordings for Columbia Records with the New York Philharmonic included a rare complete performance of Alban Berg’s Wozzeck. Many of these have been reissued by Sony Classics on CD, including most recently his stereo recordings of excerpts from Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet. For RCA he recorded with the Minneapolis Symphony during the 78-rpm era. He was also represented on the Cetra label, most notably with an early recording of Richard Strauss’s Elektra.
He was noted for having a photographic memory (which enabled him to conduct without a score, even during rehearsals) and for his monk-like life style due to his deeply religious, Greek Orthodox beliefs.
Mitropoulos never married. He was “quietly known to be homosexual” and “felt no need for a cosmetic marriage”.[2] Among his relationships reportedly was one with Leonard Bernstein.[3]
He died in Milan, Italy at the age of 64 of heart failure, while rehearsing Gustav Mahler’s 3rd Symphony. One of his very last recorded performances was Verdi’s La forza del destino with Giuseppe Di Stefano, Antonietta Stella and Ettore Bastianini at Vienna on 23 September 1960. A recording exists of the performance of Mahler’s 3rd Symphony given by Mitropoulos with the Cologne Radio Symphony on 31 October 1960, just two days before his death.
Impact on the music profession
Mitropoulos was noted as a champion of modern music, such as that by the members of the Second Viennese School. He wrote a number of pieces for orchestra and solo works for piano, and also arranged some of Johann Sebastian Bach’s organ works for orchestra. In addition he was very influential in encouraging Leonard Bernstein’s interest in conducting performances of Mahler’s symphonic works. He also premiered and recorded a piano concerto of Ernst Krenek as soloist (available on CD), and works by composers in the U.S. such as Roger Sessions and Peter Mennin. In 1952 he commissioned American composer Philip Bezanson to write a piano concerto, which he premiered the following year.
His compositions include a piano sonata and other works.
Source: Wikipedia
http://itsallgreek2me.net/2010/10/30/dimitri-mitropoulos/
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