• James Levine 1943-2021

    From janorfolk@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 17 09:04:38 2021
    JAMES LEVINE IS DEAD
    By Norman Lebrecht
    On March 17, 2021

    The longest-serving music director of the Metropolitan Opera has died of the effects of Parkinsons Disease. He was 77.

    Levine was the Met’s dominant personality for four decades, perhaps of all time. His tenure was ended by allegations of sexual abuse of young men on the Met payroll, a pattern of behaviour that was familiar to all at the upper levels of the company,
    but which they chose to ignore until the public climate changed. Levine would later claim that these were loving relationships.

    Levine was fired in 2016 and reached a $3.5 million settlement with the company three years later.

    His achievements will outweigh this seedy episode.

    Levine raised standards of orchestral playing at the Met to an historic high by a combination of extreme hard work and the best wages in the country. He had an intuitive understanding of singers and attracted the best to his casts. He extended the
    repertoire to include Janacek, Schoenberg and Adams and gave an assurance of high quality to all that the Met did under his aegis.

    His recordings are legion, many of them outstanding. As a conductor of concerts, however, he lacked stage charisma and intellectual penetration. His spells as music director at Ravinia and the Boston Symphony were comparativel unsuccessful, they latter
    dogged by increasing physical frailty.

    Unmarried, he was cared for by his late brother Tom and a close entourage led by his long-term flatmate, the oboist Sue Thompson.

    His death was recorded in Palm Springs on March 9.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter T. Daniels@21:1/5 to janorfolk on Wed Mar 17 10:53:39 2021
    On Wednesday, March 17, 2021 at 12:04:40 PM UTC-4, janorfolk wrote:
    JAMES LEVINE IS DEAD
    By Norman Lebrecht
    On March 17, 2021

    The longest-serving music director of the Metropolitan Opera has died of the effects of Parkinsons Disease. He was 77.

    Levine was the Met’s dominant personality for four decades, perhaps of all time. His tenure was ended by allegations of sexual abuse of young men on the Met payroll, a pattern of behaviour that was familiar to all at the upper levels of the company,
    but which they chose to ignore until the public climate changed. Levine would later claim that these were loving relationships.

    Levine was fired in 2016 and reached a $3.5 million settlement with the company three years later.

    His achievements will outweigh this seedy episode.

    Levine raised standards of orchestral playing at the Met to an historic high by a combination of extreme hard work and the best wages in the country. He had an intuitive understanding of singers and attracted the best to his casts. He extended the
    repertoire to include Janacek, Schoenberg and Adams and gave an assurance of high quality to all that the Met did under his aegis.

    His recordings are legion, many of them outstanding. As a conductor of concerts, however, he lacked stage charisma and intellectual penetration. His spells as music director at Ravinia and the Boston Symphony were comparativel unsuccessful, they latter
    dogged by increasing physical frailty.

    Unmarried, he was cared for by his late brother Tom and a close entourage led by his long-term flatmate, the oboist Sue Thompson.

    His death was recorded in Palm Springs on March 9.

    WNYC says the NYTimes says the cause of death has not been announced.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)