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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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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>