Sir Charles Mackerras: Energetic and perceptive conductor celebrated in particular for popularising the works of Janacek
Friday, 16 July 2010
Mackerras: Tireless attention to
detail allied to a forthright manner
Just under two years ago, Signum Classics
released a live recording of Schubert's Ninth Symphony, the "Great C
major", with Sir Charles Mackerras conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra
– a performance which discovered unsuspected depths of primal violence
in what had seemed an amiable classic. Mackerras' recordings with the
Scottish Chamber Orchestra of Mozart's last four symphonies, released by
Linn Records around the same time, likewise came with the force of
revelation; and a new Mozart set from Linn, including the Paris, Haffner
and Linz Symphonies, which he recorded with SCO in Glasgow last summer,
is currently pulling in reviews of astonished admiration. Mackerras'
music-making in old age was even more energetic and perceptive than
before.
Charles Mackerras was born in Schenectady, New York, but only because
his
father was doing post-graduate work there: the family returned to
Australia,
to Sydney, when Mackerras, the eldest of seven children, was two. He
retained his links with Australia all his life. After a Sydney
schooling, he
studied oboe, piano and composition at the New South Wales State
Conservatorium of Music.
In his later teens he was playing occasional concerts with the Sydney
Symphony
Orchestra, and in 1943 was appointed principal oboe. He was to retain
his
association with the orchestra for over 60 years, serving as its chief
conductor from 1982 to 1985 – the first Australian to hold the post.
In 1973
he conducted a gala concert to open the Sydney Opera House.
In 1946 he took a boat to Britain and the following year won a British
Council
scholarship to study conducting with Václav Talich in Prague. What
changed
his life in the Czech capital, and with it the history of music, was
his
discovery of the music of Leoš Janácek, then hardly known outside
Czechoslovakia but now – largely through Mackerras' pioneering efforts
–
recognised as one of the most original, creative voices of the 20th
century.
Back in London in 1948, Mackerras became a staff conductor at Sadler's
Wells,
making his London operatic debut there with Die Fledermaus
(symptomatic of a
fondness for operetta that would soon reveal its importance) and
remaining
on the staff until 1954. Janácek was soon in the repertoire: Mackerras
conducted the UK premiere of Káta Kabanová, the sixth of Janácek's
nine
operas, in 1951 – an engagement with the work which endured. He
published a
critical edition of the score 41 years later.
Another landmark event in 1951 was the premiere of Pineapple Poll, the
ballet
Mackerras arranged from Arthur Sullivan's music. He had sung Gilbert
and
Sullivan operettas as a schoolboy and took Manuel Rosenthal's Gaité
Parisienne, a ballet arranged in 1938 from Offenbach's tunes, as a
model,
producing a work that enjoyed similarly instant success. In 1954 he
rendered
Verdi the same service, with the ballet The Lady and the Fool.
Pineapple Poll opened doors for Mackerras as a conductor. He was
principal
conductor of the BBC Concert Orchestra from 1954 to 1966, first
conductor at
the Hamburg State Opera from 1966 to 1969 and musical director of
Sadler's
Well (rechristened the English National Opera) from 1970 to 1977 and
of the
Welsh National Opera from 1987 to 1992. His principal guest
conductorships
included the BBC Symphony Orchestra (1976–79), Royal Liverpool
Philharmonic
(1986–88), Scottish Chamber (1992–95), Royal Philharmonic (1993–96),
the San
Francisco Opera (1993–6), Czech Philharmonic (1997–2003), St Luke's,
New
York (1998–2001) and the Philharmonia (from 2002). He also held a
lengthy
chain of honorary positions and was a regular guest at the Royal Opera
House
and Metropolitan Opera.
Mackerras held countless honours – CBE in 1974, knighted in 1979,
Companion of
the Order of Australia in 1998, Companion of Honour in 2003 – and his
collection of medals rivalled that of any war hero; he also had a
string of
honorary degrees and awards. He was made President of Trinity College
of
Music in 2000, but he also accepted less glamorous honorary positions,
knowing his name would benefit the organisations in question. He was,
for
example, a patron of Bampton Opera and the president of the Havergal
Brian
Society, having recorded Brian's Seventh and 32nd Symphonies for EMI
in 1987.
In spite of the astonishing breadth of his repertoire, it was for his
fidelity
to the music of a handful of composers – and to the letter of their
work –
that Mackerras was most influential, hosing away the accretions of
"performance
practice" to reveal the score as initially intended. As a teenager,
well ahead of the "early music" movement that later became
fashionable, Mackerras recalled, "I made a point of reading studies of
things like ornamentation and double-dotting rhythms in Baroque and
Classical music." His encounter with Handel was a revelation:
"With the Fireworks Music, I saw the original orchestration and I
thought
'My God, I wonder what this must sound like!' You know, the original
has 24
oboes, and all those bassoons and horns... The opportunity came up in
1959
at the bicentenary of Handel's death, when we got every wind player in
London to come for one session, in the middle of the night, and have a
go at
it."
His recordings of Handel oratorios and operas and of Janácek and Mozart
operas
were benchmarks, offering – usually for the first time – the music as
the
composer might have intended it in sharply defined, dramatically alert
performances of considerable power.
The Mackerras discography is enormous, of course, and included a number
of
symphonic cycles: the complete Beethoven (for EMI and again for
Hyperion,
recorded live at the 2006 Edinburgh Festival with the Scottish Chamber
Orchestra; "His tempi are wonderfully fleet," wrote one critic),
Brahms and Mozart (both Telarc). In 1986 he reconstructed the Sullivan
Cello
Concerto, lost in a fire, from his memory of conducting it in 1953,
and
recorded it for EMI; he also committed a number of the Gilbert and
Sullivan
operettas to disc. Other operatic recordings include Donizetti,
Dvorák,
Gluck and Purcell.
His tireless attention to detail revealed itself also in matters of
practical
musicianship: "I believe it's very important to edit orchestral parts explicitly and
as
thoroughly as possible, so that the musicians can play them without
too much
rehearsal. For instance, the other day I did all the Schumann
symphonies
with very little rehearsal at all. Because the parts were clearly
marked,
particularly with regard to dynamics, we were able to play them
without
needing to do that much preliminary work, focusing our attention on
the
interpretation rather than the technical business of who plays too
loud or
too soft."
Mackerras' Australianness extended to a forthright manner. His
connections
with Benjamin Britten, with whom he had worked since 1956, were
abruptly
severed when he joked about Britten's relationship with boys. Nor did
he
suffer fools gladly – this one once asked him if, given his long
association
with the music of Dvorák and Janacek, he had looked at any of the
intervening Czech late Romantics, composers like Ostrcil and Jeremiáš;
I was
dismissed with a casual "Nah".
In spite of a lengthy battle with cancer, Mackerras continued to record
and
give concerts up to the end, his energy somehow overcoming his
illness.
Honorary president of the Edinburgh Festival since 2008, he was due to
conduct Mozart's Idomeneo there on 20 August. Before that, he was
scheduled
to appear at the Proms on 25 July – a Viennese night – and a
late-night
concert of Mozart and Dvorák on 29 July. They would have been,
amazingly,
his 53rd and 54th appearances at the Proms. His first was in 1961 –
and in
1980 he became the first non-Briton to conduct the BBC Symphony
Orchestra on
the Last Night. The concert on Sunday week will now be dedicated to
his
memory.
Martin Anderson
Alan Charles MacLaurin Mackerras, conductor: born Schenectady, New
York 17
November 1925; married 1947 Helena Judith Wilkins (two daughters, one
deceased); kt 1979; Medal of Merit, Czech Republic 1996; Companion of
the
Order of Australia 1997; Companion of Honour 2003; died London 14 July
2010.
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