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Fritz Busch & Royal Danish Orchestra

Johannes Brahms, vol. 7

Fritz Busch & Royal Danish Orchestra

11 SONGS • 2 HOURS AND 1 MINUTE • JAN 16 2024

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 73: I. Allegro non troppo
13:29
2
Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 73: II. Allegro non troppo
08:46
3
Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 73: III. Allegretto grazioso (quasi andantino)
04:48
4
Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 73: IV. Allegro con spirito
08:03
5
Symphony No. 4 in E Minor, Op. 98: I. Allegro non troppo
09:43
6
Symphony No. 4 in E Minor, Op. 98: II. Andante moderato
10:54
7
Symphony No. 4 in E Minor, Op. 98: III. Allegro giocoso
06:15
8
Symphony No. 4 in E Minor, Op. 98: IV. Allegro energico e passionato
09:19
9
Tragic Overture in D Minor, Op. 81
12:42
10
Variations on a Theme by Haydn in B-Flat Major, Op. 56a
19:41
11
Variations on a Theme by Joseph Haydn in B-Flat Major, Op. 56a
17:26
℗© ArnebAudio

Artist bios

Fritz Busch was one the greatest German conductors of the first half of the twentieth century, noted for his illuminating performances and his ethical principles. His father was a former itinerant musician who became an instrument maker, and his brothers were violinist Adolf Busch and cellist Hermann Busch. Fritz Busch went to Cologne Conservatory in 1909, studying conducting with Steinbach.

The city of Aachen hired him as music director in 1912. He served there until the war began, enlisted, and returned at war's end to conducted the Municipal Opera. Six weeks later, he was appointed music director of the Stuttgart Opera. He quickly became famous for his performances and for the reforms he instituted to enlarge the repertory and discover new composers. He premiered two one-act operas of the young Paul Hindemith, operas by Pfitzner, and shook up the Wagnerian tradition by using Appia's modern approach to staging and sets for the Ring operas. Busch accepted a position with the Dresden State Opera, becoming music director in 1922. Among his premieres in the 11 years he remained there were Strauss' Intermezzo (1924) and Die Ägyptische Helena (1928), Hindemith's Cardillac (1926), Busoni's Doktor Faust (1925), and Weill's Der Protagonist (1926). He was credited with keeping Dresden at the highest level of German opera production with stagings that were often provocative, with some of the finest of modern artists designing sets and costumes. One of the most important was a production of Mozart's Die Entführung aus dem Serail, designed by Carl Ebert and including a meticulously chosen cast, at the 1932 Salzburg Festival.

Busch was openly contemptuous of the new Nazi government that was appointed to power in Germany in 1933 and was fired from his Dresden post. At the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, he conducted the first complete performance of Bach's St. Matthew Passion ever given in the Americas. He returned to Europe, appearing with the Danish Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Stockholm Philharmonic, beginning a long-standing relationship with them. Then John Christie asked Busch to become music director of a summer opera festival at Glyndebourne, England. Busch accepted, bringing Ebert as artistic director. Glyndebourne was soon among the most prestigious of summer festivals, famous for meticulous musical preparation and use of the best and most appropriate voices. Mozart has always been a mainstay of Glyndebourne, but under Busch it also staged larger-scale works, including Donizetti's Don Pasquale and Verdi's Macbetto.

With the outbreak of the war (which closed Glyndebourne for the duration and made travel to Scandinavia impossible), he withdrew mainly to South America, although he made appearances at the New York Philharmonic. His Metropolitan Opera debut was on November 26, 1945, in Wagner's Lohengrin. He remained on the Met's conducting roster until 1949, but asked to be allowed to concentrate on conducting the company's annual national tours. He frequently conducted the Chicago Symphony from 1948 to 1950, and resumed his association with the Scandinavian orchestras in 1949 and at Glyndebourne in 1950. He returned to lead a few concerts in Austria (Vienna Staatsoper, 1950) and in Germany (Cologne and Hamburg, 1951).

He died in London, leaving several important recordings. The Busch Brothers Society private label has released several of them as part of a program to document the legacy of Busch, his two brothers, and the piano trio they often formed.

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The Royal Danish Orchestra is one of the world's oldest musical ensembles, tracing its lineage back to the middle of the 15th century. More recently, the orchestra has recorded both Danish music and works from other countries. By the 21st century, the orchestra had about 100 musicians; it is especially notable for its string section, which plays instruments from a large collection of instruments from the Italian golden age.

The modern Royal Danish Orchestra dates back in an unbroken sequence of ensembles to a corps of trumpeters that was established at the court of Denmark's King Christian I in 1448. Composer Heinrich Schütz (1585-1672) was one early conductor; Christoph Willibald Gluck (1714-1787) was another. The orchestra's Danish name, Det Kongelige Kapel, means the Royal Kapelle or the Royal Chapel, and the group served as the Danish monarch's court orchestra for centuries. As opera spread across Europe, the orchestra became associated with the Royal Danish Theatre, and it remains the orchestra of the Royal Danish Opera today. The orchestra remained associated with the Danish royal family even after the abolition of monarchical rule in 1849, and even in the 20th century, King Frederik IX sometimes conducted the group. In the late 19th century, under conductor Johan Svendsen (from 1883 to 1908), the orchestra grew and took on an independent concert life apart from the opera, focusing on the European symphonic tradition. The group continues to perform symphonic concerts at the Royal Danish Opera, playing contemporary music on a smaller stage called Takkelloftet. The group has also toured internationally.

Among the modern conductors of the Royal Danish Orchestra was Paavo Berglund, who served from 1993 to 1998 and had already begun to record a cycle of Carl Nielsen's symphonies with the group in 1988 for the RCA Red Seal label. More recent conductors have included Michael Schønwandt (2000-2011), Michael Boder (2012-2016), and Alexander Vedernikov (2018-2020); the group's first female conductor, Marie Jacquot, is slated to take up the baton in 2024. The orchestra has recorded for Genuin, Naxos, and Dacapo, among other labels; Dacapo issued a collection of performances conducted by Frederik IX in 2020. In 2022, the orchestra released a live recording of Sibelius' The Tempest, Op. 109, led by conductor Okko Kamu. ~ James Manheim

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