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- <text id=90TT1036>
- <title>
- Apr. 23, 1990: New York Gets A Revolutionary
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 23, 1990 Dan Quayle:No Joke
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 100
- New York Gets a Revolutionary
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In a surprise, the Philharmonic picks Leipzig's Kurt Masur
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Walsh
- </p>
- <p> Back before 1978, when he was appointed music director of
- the New York Philharmonic, Zubin Mehta made an infamous remark
- about America's most fractious ensemble: "A lot of us think, Why
- not send our worst enemy there and finish him off once and for
- all?" For the past 1 1/2 years, ever since Mehta announced he
- would leave his post in 1991, it has sometimes seemed doubtful
- whether any conductor could be found to take over the
- Philharmonic, either worst enemy or best friend. Various
- high-powered names were floated, among them Leonard Bernstein,
- who has already served one tour of duty as the orchestra's head,
- and Claudio Abbado, who last year disappointed his supporters by
- taking the Berlin Philharmonic post instead.
- </p>
- <p> Last week, in a stunning surprise, the Philharmonic's quest
- finally came to an end with the selection of a relative unknown:
- East German maestro Kurt Masur, currently the conductor of the
- Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra. Masur, 62, is a Kapellmeister in
- the best Central European tradition, and it was exactly this
- quality that appealed to the Philharmonic's search committee,
- which for the first time also included some of the orchestra's
- musicians. "He had an institutional commitment to the Gewandhaus
- that he was prepared to bring to New York," said orchestra
- chairman Stephen Stamas. Translation: Masur, whose five-year
- contract begins with the 1992-93 season--the Philharmonic's
- 150th anniversary--is no glamorous international jet-setter
- but a solid and sober musician who will give the Philharmonic
- some badly needed attention and stability.
- </p>
- <p> "The Philharmonic has some fantastic musicians," says Masur,
- who has guest-conducted the New Yorkers nearly two dozen times
- since 1981. "But this idea of a musical family that we have at
- the Gewandhaus I miss somehow. I want the musicians to have the
- feeling that they are at home, that they are playing together,
- that they are at the musical center of that big city." After
- seeing the Leipzig orchestra through its 250th birthday in
- 1993-94, Masur is expected to make New York his principal base.
- </p>
- <p> What kind of conductor is New York getting? As he showed
- last week in leading the Gewandhaus Orchestra though
- performances of Beethoven's Fidelio and Bach's St. Matthew
- Passion at the Salzburg Easter Festival in Austria, Masur is
- capable of drawing passionate, powerful playing from his
- musicians. Neither a disciplinarian nor one of the boys, Masur
- favors a let-us-reason-together approach that prizes loyalty
- and enthusiasm over virtuosity. Not surprisingly, his repertoire
- is centered on the classics from Mozart to Mahler, which he
- conducts with short punchy gestures, usually without a baton.
- In Leipzig he led as many as 90 performances a year, including
- a healthy dollop of new music, mostly commissioned from East
- German composers. Says Masur: "I always told our audiences, `You
- read not only Goethe and Schiller but contemporary writers as
- well, so you should expect the same in music.' "
- </p>
- <p> Masur has spent his whole career in East Germany, studying
- at the Leipzig Conservatory, playing a bit of jazz piano in his
- youth and working his way up the ladder with stops in Dresden,
- Mecklenburg and East Berlin's famed Komische Oper. In person,
- he cuts a stern, uncompromising figure, like something out of
- the Reformation: tall, burly, bluff, bearded, with deep-set,
- dark-blue eyes that coolly appraise the world from beneath a
- heavy brow and a high forehead. In appearance, he could be
- Martin Luther's cousin, bravely battling a corrupt and sinful
- establishment. In fact, last fall Masur unexpectedly found
- himself helping to conduct the peaceful revolution that brought
- down his country's Communist government, fortissimo.
- </p>
- <p> Like Luther's, Masur's conversion was unexpected. For years
- the conductor had been a dutiful, some say enthusiastic,
- supporter of Erich Honecker's regime. That all changed on a warm
- July day last year when the State Security police arrested a
- Leipzig street busker for disturbing the peace. "A doctor I knew
- wrote to me and said that if the police were now arresting
- musicians, where would they stop?" recalls Masur, who as the
- leader of the oldest orchestra in Germany has a high public
- profile in his city. Masur protested to the Leipzig cultural
- minister and later opened the doors of the Gewandhaus concert
- hall for a public meeting with the authorities in August.
- </p>
- <p> When police cracked down hard on a Leipzig demonstration,
- Masur could no longer hide his sympathies. Together with some
- of the city authorities and a priest, he drafted an appeal for
- nonviolence that was read aloud in the four main Leipzig
- churches in October. "We said that we six spoke with the voice
- of the people, and we asked that no force be used," recalls
- Masur. "The tension was incredible. At any moment, anyone could
- have thrown a rock and then..." No rock was thrown. The march
- went on. The police backed down. The protests spread. One month
- later, the Berlin Wall crumbled.
- </p>
- <p> For a time there was talk that Masur might follow the path
- blazed by other artists--Vaclav Havel in Czechoslovakia the
- most prominent--and stand for office. But the conductor's
- political career was over. "I am a musician, not a politician,"
- says Masur. "I make my statements in music." Now American
- audiences will have a chance to hear what he has to say.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-