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指挥帝皇卡拉扬!! [复制链接]

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指挥帝皇卡拉扬!!
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本主题由 版主 eric 于 2009/1/18 23:45:50 执行 主题置顶/取消 操作
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音乐是使人生活得更有意义的方式之一。

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2#

(这是根据资料编写的一个帖子)。

赫伯特•冯•卡拉扬于1908年出生于奥地利的莫扎特故乡萨尔茨堡,可能大家都想不到:卡拉扬祖籍是希腊。卡拉扬父母都是爱乐者,更令人想不到的是:卡拉扬母亲是个瓦格纳迷。哈哈。

卡拉扬从小学钢琴,学了10几年,大家可能又会大跌眼镜。卡拉扬的钢琴弹得实在一般。不死心的卡拉扬就去维也纳求学,一位钢琴老师教了他一段时间,就向他摊牌:如果你觉得学钢琴辛苦,就去学指挥吧。没想到这位钢琴老师的话改变了卡拉扬的一生。卡拉扬终于醒悟了,于是他从18岁就开始担任乐队的指挥,他首先在德国的乌尔姆市立歌剧院担任常任指挥,后来又在亚琛市立歌剧院担任音乐指导。他在这两个小规模的歌剧院呆了16年,每年他都要背谱指挥演出5、6部歌剧。当时,他不仅要指挥乐队演奏,还要指挥歌手以及合唱队演唱。

1937年时任维也纳国家歌剧院艺术指导的布鲁诺•瓦尔特邀请卡拉扬去维也纳演出。1938年到1939年期间,意大利指挥家维克多•德•萨巴塔看了卡拉扬指挥的瓦格纳的歌剧《特里斯坦与伊索尔德》之后,立刻去找维也纳歌剧院经理蒂特廷。在当时,蒂特廷是德国和奥地利古典音乐的最高统治者。萨巴塔对蒂特廷说:“我发现了一个具有震撼力的指挥,他的音乐思想必将影响到后半个世纪。”果然,萨巴塔的话后来得到了验证。

卡拉扬不仅是一名优秀的指挥,而且是一个极富人格魅力的人。乐手们已经把他当做一种神话,他也意识到了这一点,所以在第一次排练时,他一直在给乐手们讲故事,使他们感到轻松,让乐手们充分领会他的指挥意图。许多年轻的乐手在卡拉扬的帮助下进入了专业演奏的行列,每个乐手都愿意和卡拉扬一起演奏。他善于和每一个人合作,并且为年轻人做了很多事情,他指挥演奏了许多古典音乐作品,还录制了大量的唱片。百代唱片公司的负责人瓦尔特•勒格非常了解卡拉扬,并能对他进行当面指点。卡拉扬欣然接受瓦尔特•勒格的邀请,来到伦敦与瓦尔特一起率领英国爱乐乐团进入了一个辉煌的时期。他们除了频繁的演出之外,还录制了大批优质、精美的古典音乐的唱片,这些唱片至今广为流传。瓦尔特•勒格也因此成为爱乐乐团的赞助人。

1954 年富特万格勒谢世。谁作为他的继任者成了热门话题。在所有候选人中,卡拉扬的位置最有利。汉斯•克纳佩茨布什、埃里希•克莱伯因等人都无意。切利比达凯是同卡拉扬竞争这个职位的强劲对手,也只有他才在才干和吸引卖座率两方面都足可以与卡拉扬匹敌。但他也太过轻率,竟在海德堡的富特万格勒墓前语出不敬,说富特万格勒死得及时,因为他实际上丧失了听力。富特万格勒遵医嘱曾服用麻醉药物,确实影响了听力,但在同行相妒的音乐圈,切利比达凯的言辞难免对他产生不利的影响。何况卡拉扬占国籍之利,又有维也纳、柏林、萨尔茨堡的三重政治根基,加上 1955 年访美演出美方主办者的支持,使他终于登上巅峰。指挥柏林爱乐,他才终于圆了自己的梦,找到了由汉斯•冯•彪罗、阿图尔•尼基什和富特万格勒等著名指挥家所创造的、比他梦想的水准还更高的乐音。

算起来,卡拉扬同柏林爱乐已联手度过了 将近30个辉煌的春秋。任何一位收集“世界之最前三名”的人,都会把它收入自己的记录。卡拉扬与柏林爱乐两者的名字已融为一体。伟大的小提琴家梅纽因在他的《未完的旅程》中写道:‘有些指挥家,他们自己的名字与乐团的名字已成为同义语,他们在创造作品的同时,也创造了这一珠联璧合的奇观……卡拉扬同他的柏林爱乐就是如此。’有人曾问小泽征尔他认为卡拉扬对音乐的最伟大的贡献是什么,小泽征尔不假思索地回答:“他和柏林爱乐的关系;如此水乳交融的结合令人惊叹——用了他整整 25 年。”

这一奇观的又一反映是团员的收入,柏林爱乐团员们的报酬比全世界任何乐团都高。他们的工资本来就相当可观(比德国其他乐团的团员高出 10% 到 15% ),加上其他收入还要翻上一番:他们灌唱片、上电视、拍电影、参加特别演出(如复活节音乐节,报酬甚丰)、教课、演出独奏等不一而足;还参加各下属音乐组织,以他们响当当的名气为其增添份量。仅柏林爱乐内部就有 13 个组织:三重奏组、四重奏组、室内乐团、铜管乐队、“十二人大提琴组”,甚至还有低音提琴组。由于冠有“柏林爱乐”的头衔,这些组、团演出的票房情况都非常之好。其中许多还灌录了唱片。柏林爱乐十二人大提琴组还于 1983 年出了一张《披头士歌曲选》,这是他们发行的第五张唱片。他们跟别的演出小组一样,生意应接不暇。正是这些组织构成了卡拉扬与乐团之间存在的问题的实质性部分。不过也并不总是那么严重。 1977 年,梅纽因写道:“卡拉扬护着他的团员,确保他们有丰厚的报酬和高品质的乐器,鼓励他们各自组织室内乐演出,以各种各样的方式鼓励他们的士气。”

自从指挥艺术与上个世纪初诞生以来,发展到今天大约已有了二百年的历史了,尽管他仍然属于音乐艺术中的一个较为年轻的门类,但也已经产生出整整几代的指挥家了。然而,当今天人们有意识地对这项艺术的历史加以回顾时,却发现在整整几代的指挥家当中,真正能够以自己的指挥艺术来开辟一个时代的显赫人物,则显得是那样的寥寥无几,当然,尼基什和托斯卡尼尼应该被看作是这种人物,尼基什作为十九世纪中最伟大的指挥家,可以说是这项艺术再迈入新时代时的真正奠基人,而托斯卡尼尼则以自己那天才的技艺和严谨的风格,开创了二十世纪现代指挥艺术的新天地,至于彪罗、富尔特文格勒和瓦尔特等一批杰出的人物,虽然都是指挥艺术上最为伟大的名字,但他们却仍然是分属于各个时代之中的。走在托斯卡尼尼之后有谁是属于那种具有划时代意义的人物呢,如果用今天经过实践后的现实眼光来看,这个人物是非卡拉扬而莫属的。
音乐是使人生活得更有意义的方式之一。

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3#

啥也不说了!看封面就知道。
气派!!!帝皇才有的!
HOHO
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4#

卡拉扬的电脑桌面
别和我比懒,我懒的和你比。
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5#

chopin兄这张桌面无敌了。哈哈
以前我觉得有一位网友做的海菲兹桌面非常漂亮。
音乐是使人生活得更有意义的方式之一。

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6#

老卡晚年指挥时候,脸看上去象...龙,音乐造诣后世的指挥多少都得到了他作为基石标准的好处,但是从指挥家这个角度,恐怕后世很难有象他这样作为的.
在50年代就出现了一个带墨镜,穿甲克,开跑车飞机的古典音乐指挥家,到现在我都惊讶不已,老卡表面"花册册","过于严肃"其实内在是一个很正经,随和的人.........
当今乐团有名的指挥家,多多少少,都被他提携过,他对青年演奏家的态度和引导,也另人盛赞
还有点指挥皇帝不是我们中国人先提出的
瞧一瞧,看一看啊!61490600上海古典群,,想来的多发言++
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7#

CCTV播他指挥拉赫玛尼诺夫第二钢协,真是太。。。棒了!
我心中只有感恩,平凡而充满乐趣的人生。
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8#

Chopin的桌面,我收下了,哈哈
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9#

如果能好好听听这些唱片,再谈谈,不知有多好啊!正在听,争取谈几句:
111 038.jpg (, 下载次数:832)

jpg(2008/12/30 15:14:25 上传)

111 038.jpg

音乐是使人生活得更有意义的方式之一。

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10#

乐迷做的是多听,多了解,而不是无谓的用"B4'这样的字眼,表现无自己的无知,显示自己的无聊
引用
Ahead of the 100th anniversary of the birth of famous orchestra director and conductor Herbert von Karajan on April 5, DW-WORLD.DE talked about the maestro as a cultural icon with James Oestreich of The New York Times.

In 1955, von Karajan -- classical music's most prolific recording artist -- was named director of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, and was credited with creating its clean and distinctive sound during his 35-year tenure. He was also chief conductor of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra, and the guiding force behind the Salzburg Festival, where he conducted for 33 years. Karajan died July 16, 1989.



DW-WORLD.DE spoke with James Oestreich, music and dance editor at The New York Times, about von Karajan's significance in music history.



DW-WORLD.DE: These days you can't look anywhere in the German media without seeing a story or documentary or article about the life of Herbert von Karajan. What's all the fuss about?



James Oestreich: He was probably the most recorded conductor of his time. It was a time when long-playing records were really taking off, and then digital recording came in and the CD came in, and he was riding that technology through the whole thing.



He recorded everything, all the time, and he re-recorded things. He recorded the Brahms symphonies three times, I believe, and the Beethoven symphonies three times. So he was simply everywhere.



To boot, he was in many ways a fantastic conductor. He had his shortcomings, as many people do. But what he did well, he did extremely well. And he had at that time one of the world's greatest orchestras, if not the world's greatest orchestra, performing for him.




Bildunterschrift: Karajan conducts the Berlin Philharmonic in 1987


Can you name a highlight?



His 1960s recordings of the Beethoven symphonies were classic. They were the way I, among many others, got to know the Beethoven symphonies. So they were kind of my standard, and many people's standard for those works.



What effect does a superstar conductor have on an orchestra? Is it purely good news -- more revenue and publicity -- or can it also be damaging?



Well it can be either. In this case, he and the orchestra were so closely identified after so many years, and it was the coming together of two superstar names: Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic. ... A music director isn't just a conductor. He is someone who builds the orchestra in addition to conducting it. In this case, Karajan had built up this orchestra over a number of years, and made it into a sensational machine. They played beautifully for him.



To what do you attribute the ongoing interest in Karajan?



Well, there is the factor of permanence, for one thing. It helps Karajan and hurts people today. It used to be that people's vinyl LPs would wear down and become unplayable. Now, digital recordings are permanent. So there are these recordings that were the standard of their time, and they remain with us, and become standards of this time, too.



It makes it difficult for people to come up with recording projects today, because all these standards are still readily available.



In Karajan's case, there was also this international renown that he had. When Japan was warming to classical music -- to put it mildly -- 20 or 30 years ago, Karajan was almost synonymous with classical music there. So there is a built-in audience all around the world for his recordings.



Karajan had an international career, but was still very much a German and Austrian conductor. Now an Englishman, Sir Simon Rattle, leads the Berlin Philharmonic.  Does nationality have a role in orchestras today?



It has become less relevant. It used to be that orchestras from different countries had different sounds -- the Russians had very piercing brass instruments, the Germans had tremendous warmth in their string sound. As conductors travel around the world, and players go from orchestra to orchestra, and sometimes from country to country, those things have greatly diminished, in the last 30 or 40 years.



That's the way of the world. But some of us yearn, to some extent, for the old days, when there were those characteristic sounds of orchestras. When nobody could play German music like the Germans and nobody could play French music like the French.



One of the most frequently debated aspects of Karajan's life is the fact that he joined the Nazi party in 1933. Modern biographers have argued it was a political career move, rather than an ideological one. Still, he conducted for Hitler and other top Nazis, who revered him. How important is this aspect of his biography?




Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  German composer and conductor Richard Strauss
Well, it is a very important aspect. And he is far from alone in any of this. [German conductor Wilhelm] Furtwaengler, of course, had many of the same problems ... and [German composer] Richard Strauss was the head of the Nazi music chamber. So Karajan was far from alone.



It's a very unfortunate aspect of his biography, but it doesn't mitigate his music making in any way, I don't think. There were a lot of bad things happening in those days, and he was part of it.



If you read about Karajan in the press, it is hard to find anyone neutral. The musicians who played for him adored him, as did a large public. Yet many writers today criticize his sound as being too "cold" and technical, and take his perfectionism to task. What's your take?



Well, I don't find his music making cold. It was certainly very lush, and that was problematic in some ways. I remember a recording came out of Bach and Stravinsky, and for me the funny thing about that record is that Karajan was out of his depth on both ends. His big, lush Bach sound is totally out of date today, now that the early music movement has brought back the smallness of sound from the Baroque era. And in the case of Stravinsky -- a very angular, modern sound -- again, Karajan's sound is very lush and rich. It missed the angles and it missed a lot of the music as a result.



So, it was a style that didn't suit all types of music, but the music it suited, it suited very well. There is a recording late in his life of Mahler's 9th Symphony that is the opposite of cold. Its one of the great recordings ever made. So I'm not sure what people have in mind when they use a blanket term like cold to describe his music making.



Karajan was also known for leading an extravagant lifestyle, flying jets and driving race cars. He was also criticized by some for ostensibly forcing concert ticket prices so high that only the wealthy could attend. How did this affect the public's view of him?




Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  Karajan steps off the jet with his wife, Eliette (left) and daughter Isabella
Well, I don't think Karajan set concert prices. Karajan certainly made a lot of money and demanded a lot of money, but he wasn't alone in that. Concerts were very expensive, especially at Salzburg. But it is far from just Karajan. Yo Yo Ma, Itzhak Perlman -- all sorts of people were demanding huge amounts of money. And that's what sent ticket prices soaring.



So did his luxury lifestyle image act in his favor, or against him?



I think it humanized him. Toscanini was put on a pedestal by music lovers for a long time. In this case it brought Karajan in to a real world that people could identify with, or wished they had ... I'm sure the image was certainly part of the package.



How do you suppose Karajan will be remembered?



I think there are a lot of generalizations going around this year, and I think generalizations are always risky. I don't want to see him swamped, and go down in history with words like "cold" attached and "luxury" attached. He was many things. He was a very complex figure, and he was a great musician.
瞧一瞧,看一看啊!61490600上海古典群,,想来的多发言++
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