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Volume 26 Issue 1 - September 2020

Choral Scene: Uncharted territory: three choirs finding paths forward; Music Theatre: Loose Tea on the boil with Alaina Viau’s Dead Reckoning; In with the New: what happens to soundart when climate change meets COVID-19; Call to action: diversity, accountability, and reform in post-secondary jazz studies; 9th Annual TIFF Tips: a filmfest like no other; Remembering: Leon Fleisher; DISCoveries: a NY state of mind; 25th anniversary stroll-through; and more. Online in flip through here, and on stands commencing Tues SEP 1.

Choral Scene: Uncharted territory: three choirs finding paths forward; Music Theatre: Loose Tea on the boil with Alaina Viau’s Dead Reckoning; In with the New: what happens to soundart when climate change meets COVID-19; Call to action: diversity, accountability, and reform in post-secondary jazz studies; 9th Annual TIFF Tips: a filmfest like no other; Remembering: Leon Fleisher; DISCoveries: a NY state of mind; 25th anniversary stroll-through; and more.

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Many music lovers of a certain age may not remember the first time<br />

they heard Stern. Perhaps it was in a movie theatre in 1946 watching<br />

Humoresque as the driven violinist John Garfield and Joan Crawford<br />

play out their tragic love story. Audiences were treated to several<br />

repertory pieces woven into the plot. Stern recorded all the performances<br />

in addition to filming close-ups of the fingering and bowing<br />

from all angles which were edited into the film. Moving on… In 1960<br />

Stern was a leader in the successful drive to save Carnegie Hall when<br />

the famous NYC institution was threatened by demolition. He then<br />

served as president of the hall’s new governing body at that time.<br />

Isaac Stern: The Complete Columbia Analogue Recordings (Sony<br />

Classical 972425 isaacsternlegacy.org), comprise 75 CDs with each<br />

recording in a replica of its original jacket, in a sturdy box with a<br />

214-page hardcover book that includes a biography and details of each<br />

recording and an index by composer. A set to be treasured!<br />

Profil has issued a ten-CD set of notable<br />

performances conducted by Jascha<br />

Horenstein, Jascha Horenstein Reference<br />

Recordings (Profil Edition Hänssler<br />

PH19014 naxosdirect.com). Horenstein was<br />

born in Kiev in 1898 and died in London in<br />

1973. His family moved to Vienna in 1911<br />

and in 1916 he was studying at the Vienna<br />

Academy of Music, including composition<br />

with Franz Schreker. In 1920 he went to Berlin and became an<br />

assistant to Wilhelm Furtwängler. In the 1920s he conducted the<br />

Vienna Symphony and the Berlin Philharmonic. He became music<br />

director of the Düsseldorf Opera in 1929, getting out in 1933 ahead<br />

of the Nazis. He moved around, travelling as far as Australia before<br />

settling in New York in 1939. In 1947, he returned to Europe and<br />

conducted in Paris, Vienna, Bamberg and also Baden-Baden, the home<br />

of the Sudwestfunk Broadcasting Company whose SWF Symphony<br />

Orchestra was second to none. In his last years he was conductor<br />

of the LSO.<br />

Perhaps because he was not connected to any one orchestra, the<br />

major record companies effectively had no interest in preserving his<br />

performances or they would have done so. In the 1960s and 1970s<br />

many avid in-the-know music lovers and collectors relied upon<br />

smaller independent companies to deliver Horenstein recordings. Vox<br />

issued a few, as did Unicorn, Music and Arts, and Koch, and the BBC<br />

issued some of their own. For this edition, Profil has selected 22 firstclass<br />

Horenstein recordings.<br />

Outstanding performances include Liszt’s A Faust Symphony<br />

with the choral ending; also Wagner’s A Faust Overture both from<br />

the SWF orchestra and chorus. Other highlights include the Eroica<br />

with the Vienna Pro Musica and an extraordinarily powerful Death<br />

and Transfiguration with the Bamberg SO. No less impressive are the<br />

Mahler First and Third Symphonies and Kindertotenlieder (Heinrich<br />

Rehkemper) and the Bruckner Eighth. A list of the works would be<br />

too long but here are the composers: Bruckner, Mahler, Hindemith,<br />

Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Ravel, Bartók, Janáček, Wagner, Brahms, Liszt,<br />

Beethoven and Richard Strauss. Orchestras are the LSO; Pro Musica,<br />

Wein; SWR Symphony, Baden-Baden; Colonne Concerts Orchestra,<br />

Paris; Orchestre Radio Symphonique, Paris; the Berlin State Opera<br />

Orchestra; the ORTF and the Bamberg Symphony. Soloists are Claudio<br />

Arrau, David Oistrakh, Vlado Perlmutter and Ivry Gitlis.<br />

Horenstein conducted every work as if it were the most interesting<br />

and important composition ever before him. He demonstrated<br />

a concentration and focus that breathed new life and dimension into<br />

the most familiar works. The tuttis are organic. His commanding<br />

performances are persuasive and consistently engaging.<br />

REMEMBERING<br />

LEON<br />

FLEISHER<br />

(July 23, 1928 - August 2, <strong>2020</strong>)<br />

The Music is the Star<br />

PAUL ENNIS<br />

Leon Fleisher devoted his life to the piano, first as<br />

the foremost American pianist of his generation.<br />

The much-lauded collection of LPs he recorded<br />

in the 1950s and 60s was capped by a matchless<br />

collaboration with George Szell and the Cleveland<br />

Orchestra. Then, in 1965, he found it difficult to use the<br />

fingers of his right hand, a condition diagnosed as focal<br />

dystonia, restricting his repertoire to pieces written for<br />

the left hand. But his musical reach grew in other ways –<br />

conducting and teaching.<br />

Based in Baltimore at the Peabody Institute from 1959 on, he also<br />

taught at the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia (1986-2011) and in<br />

Toronto, where he was one of the cornerstones of the Glenn Gould<br />

School, occupying the Ihnatowycz Chair in Piano. In his late 60s,<br />

Fleisher regained the use of his right hand with botox and rolfing<br />

treatments and resumed limited concertizing and recording (as<br />

detailed in the 2006 Oscar-nominated short film, Two Hands, available<br />

on YouTube).<br />

One measure of the man can be gleaned by the memorable masterclasses<br />

he gave during his frequent visits to Toronto (of which I was<br />

fortunate to audit 27, between November 2014 and April 2019). They<br />

were inspirational and memorable, strewn with anecdotes and<br />

words of wisdom. All in the service of bringing the notes on the page,<br />

the composer’s intentions, to the fore. “In our celebrity-based culture<br />

we are not the stars. We are indispensable, [we’re] needed to bring the<br />

music to life,” he said. “[But] the music is the star.”<br />

Fleisher always sat in the front row of Mazzoleni Hall, aisle seat on<br />

the left side, with the score on a music stand in front of him. When<br />

a student finished their presentation Fleisher stayed seated, silent for<br />

a long moment. He then asked the student if they had any concerns<br />

about what they had just played – anything that Fleisher might help<br />

with. I remember one student voicing concern about his nerves<br />

prompting Fleisher to illustrate a case of nerves by one of the greatest<br />

composer/pianists of the 20th century.<br />

Fleisher was five years old at the time and had been taking piano<br />

lessons for six months. His mother took him to hear Rachmaninoff<br />

at the War Memorial Concert Hall in San Francisco. After the concert,<br />

his mother dragged him backstage to meet the great musician, who<br />

suffered from nervous tension whenever he was onstage. Fleisher’s<br />

56 | <strong>September</strong> <strong>2020</strong> thewholenote.com<br />

56 | <strong>September</strong> <strong>2020</strong> thewholenote.com

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