#karajan
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aircooled911 · 4 months ago
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bl00dyghoul2 · 6 months ago
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Verdi- Dies Irae Requiem (Karajan)
Dies iræ, dies illa, Solvet sæclum in favilla: Teste David cum Sibylla.
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senfonikankara · 6 months ago
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Mascagni | Cavalleria Rusticana, Intermezzo sinfonico
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pav-anne · 3 months ago
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operatic-music · 1 year ago
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Tchaikovsky + Karajan = Symphony at its finest 🎶✨
What does this “formula” mean?
Herbert von Karajan (1908-1989) was an influential and renowned Austrian conductor and music director, seen conducting the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra (@berlinphil), one of the most renown orchestras in the world. Karajan’s leadership transformed the world of conducting, known for his technical precision and artistic excellence.
On the other hand, the music of Tchaikovsky is incredibly profound and emotional, as opposed to more “structured” forms from the previous eras (Haydn or Mozart). This allows for much more expression from the conductor and the orchestra, which is one of the things that set Karajan apart as a conductor.
We invite you to go listen to a recording of Karajan with this orchestra, close your eyes and let your mind float away.
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blackswaneuroparedux · 2 years ago
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Those who have achieved all their aims probably set them too low.
- Herbert von Karajan
The Soprano Christa Ludwig described him as ‘Le bon Dieu’, while scores of musicians, reviewers and listeners have long regarded him as simply untouchable in the art of conducting. There was, however, much about Herbert von Karajan that was distinctly ungodlike. Ruthlessly ambitious as a young man and grimly autocratic in his later years, his life story is marked by bitter rivalries, feuds and, most notoriously, membership of the Nazi party.
But then, just listen to the results. It’s fascinating to look at the career, the controversy and the achievements of a conductor who still intrigues fans and detractors like no other musician long after his death.
The early career of Herbert von Karajan continues to be swathed in controversy.
Was he an ardent Nazi or an ambitious opportunist? If he was a zealous party member, should we revere his recordings as much as we do? To what extent should any moral accountability weigh against Karajan’s musical achievement? And how much latitude can we extend to people who have artistically given so generously?
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Karajan is not alone in occupying this uncomfortable situation during this era. Similar debate surrounds Richard Strauss, Carl Orff and Karl Böhm. Indeed, Wagner also evokes hostility in certain quarters with regard to his racial sentiments.
When Adolf Hitler swept to power in January 1933, the 24-year-old Austrian Herbert von Karajan had already notched up nearly four seasons as an up-and-coming opera conductor in the South German city of Ulm.
Born in Salzburg in 1908 into a prosperous family, he had demonstrated gifts as a pianist and conductor while studying in Vienna. After graduation, his debut orchestral concert with the Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra in January 1929, featuring works by R Strauss, Mozart and Tchaikovsky, caused a local sensation and helped to secure him the contract in Ulm.
Karajan seized on the opportunity to learn his trade in Ulm and cut his teeth on much of the operatic repertory from Mozart and Beethoven to Puccini and R . Strauss, including the opera Schwanda der Dudelsacker by the Czech Jewish composer Jaromir Weinberger.
Yet, after the Nazi take-over, Karajan’s future wasn’t assured.
In early 1933, German operatic life was thrown into turmoil as the regime hounded out musicians that were deemed politically and racially unacceptable, and also pursued a protectionist policy to limit employment for non-Germans.
Against this context, Karajan’s decision to join the Nazi Party in Salzburg in April 1933 should be understood as an opportunistic move which was probably designed to safeguard his position at Ulm. Whether it also signalled enthusiasm for Nazi policy is open to speculation, though he no doubt hoped that the strong-arm methods of the Nazis would bring cultural stability to Germany.
Karajan retained his Ulm job for a further season, during which he expanded his repertory to include a praised account of Strauss’s opera Arabella. But in March 1934 he was fired for professional intrigue involving a potential Jewish rival.
He did not have to wait long for a new post. Three months later he was made general music director in Aachen.
Working in a larger theatre enabled Karajan to tackle more ambitious repertory, such as Wagner’s Ring cycle, Verdi’s Otello and Strauss’s Elektra. He also consolidated his reputation in the concert hall, taking charge of Aachen’s annual season of orchestral and choral concerts. One pre-condition for accepting was that he should re-apply for membership of the Nazi Party, his earlier membership in Salzburg having lapsed. This was confirmed in March 1935.
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Although in his denazification trial in March 1946 Karajan argued that he had joined the Party to further his career, he could not escape his obligation as Aachen’s general music director to provide the musical background for political occasions.
On 29 June 1935 he took part in a huge open-air orchestral and choral concert that celebrated the NSDAP Party Day and at a similar ceremony four years later he conducted the close from Wagner’s Meistersinger. But his concert programmes seemed untainted by political interference – works by Debussy, Ravel, Kodály and Stravinsky rubbed shoulders with German ones. In 1938 he flouted the law by programming Dukas’s Sorcerer’s Apprentice. Party authorities must have overlooked that Dukas was of Jewish descent.
Karajan conducts Dvořák’s “New World” Symphony No. 9, performed by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
By 1937 Karajan’s achievements in Aachen were attracting national interest.
In a special edition devoted to Germany’s conducting legacy, the journal Die Musik singled him out as a man who ‘can lead the new organisation of our cultural life in the spirit and direction which National Socialism demands’. Concert engagements in Gothenburg, Vienna, Amsterdam, Brussels and Stockholm helped to spread his name beyond Germany.
Yet for all this, Karajan set his sights even higher by hoping to make an impact in Berlin. This ambition was realised in 1938 with a ‘Strength through Joy’ concert with the Berlin Philharmonic and engagement as conductor at the Berlin State Opera in Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde in October of the same year.
Karajan may not have anticipated that with his move to Berlin he was stepping into a political cauldron over which he would have little control.
It began with a review of his Tristan which appeared in the Berliner Zeitung. Under the title ‘Karajan the Miracle’, the critic Edwin von der Nüll lavished praise on the performance suggesting that in conducting Wagner’s score from memory the 30-year-old conductor had achieved ‘something our great men in their fifties might envy’.
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This was calculated to offend the conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler who had previously ruled the roost in the same theatre. Karajan was set up as a pawn in the struggle for control of Berlin’s cultural institutions between Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, a Furtwängler supporter, and Minister of Interior Hermann Goering, the patron of the Berlin State Opera.
In June 1939 Karajan conducted Wagner’s Die Meistersinger at the State Opera without a score. The performance collapsed when the baritone, a drunk Rudolf Bockelmann, made a serious error. Alas Hitler, in the audience, was furious, blaming instead Karajan’s insufficiently Germanic approach to Wagner by conducting from memory.
Further problems arose over his marriage in 1942 to the quarter Jewish Anita Gütermann, technically against the law.
Yet, despite this and the continuing hostility and suspicion of Goebbels and Hitler and Furtwängler’s jealousy, his career prospered during the war. He conducted Bach’s B Minor Mass in Paris for the occupying German soldiers in 1940 and returned to the French capital in 1941 to present his performance of Tristan with the Berlin State Opera.
From 1940 he appeared in Italy and gave concerts in Romania and Hungary. A major achievement was to secure popularity for Orff’s Carmina Burana, a score that had aroused some hostility from the Nazi hierarchy at its first performance in 1937 before Karajan’s performances in Aachen and Berlin during the early 1940s.
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Driven by a fanatical love of music and a desire to advance his career, there’s little doubt that Karajan’s involvement with the Nazi regime was opportunistic.
Doubtless though there were also areas of Nazi policy that may well have chimed in with his own views. At the same time falling foul of the regime on occasions, his personal ideology can be best described as a montage of greys; nothing is ever clear-cut and nor perhaps should be our assessment of his work.
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rivieiraa · 8 months ago
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lahija-del-molinero · 8 months ago
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victorlaby · 2 years ago
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pascalkirchmair · 2 years ago
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"Herbert von Karajan", ink on paper, 21 x 29,7 cm ヘルベルト・フォン・カラヤン
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silveragebr · 1 year ago
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joansutherlandfan · 2 years ago
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On this day, back in 1908, the legendary maestro Herbert von Karajan was born in Salzburgo, Austria (5 April 1908 - 16 July 1989). He didn't worked with Joan (as far I have any concern), but with Birgit it was many times in productions of Tristan und Isolde, Die Walküre, Siegfried and Fidelio from 1957 to 1967. He referred to Birgit as "the great shining Wagner voice", but they were a difficult combination. • In the picture, a rehearsal of Tristan und Isolde in 1960. Birgit told what happened that moment in interview: "Now let's take the whole thing one more time, but this time with heart. The heart, Miss Nilsson, is located in here where you have your cashbox." "Why? Then we have something in common, Mr. von Karajan!"
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thatnerdyqueer · 2 years ago
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ok, no matter the results, please don't hurt me. *deep breath*
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reitsportportal · 6 months ago
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Mit 0,93 Sekunden Vorsprung zum Erfolg - Christian Kukuk siegt im Longines Global Champions Tour Grand Prix von Madrid
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pav-anne · 3 months ago
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Herbert Von Karajan
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operatic-music · 1 year ago
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