music
On the death of Claudio Abbado: 'Love of
music is what counts’
‘Succeeding Herbert von Karajan as principal conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic
Orchestra in 1989, the Italian star conductor died in Bologna after an extended illness.
Hee was considered one of the greatest. In 2011, music magazine Classic Voice named Claudio Abbado
the most important of the top 100 living conductors. One designation, however, he never sought was
maestro,” He once claimed to have never aspired to be a conductor. But the "magic of music making”
had fascinated him from the day he first heard Claude Debussy's "Nocturnes
seven.
in the Milan Scala at age
Listening to each other
Abbado was born into a family of musicians in
Milan on June 26, 1933. After studying
conducting, piano and composition at the
Giuseppe Verdi Conservatory in Milan, he
continued at the Vienna Music Academy
Claudio Abbado and Zubin Mehta were
considered the most promising students there in
the class of Hans Swarowsky, widely called "the
With pianist Martha Argerich in 1968 maker of conductors.”
In 1968 Abbado became chief conductor at the
Milan Scala. Unlike Arturo Toscanini, authoritarian and much-feared in Milan, he always sought to
enter a dialogue with the musicians. "The most important thing isto listen to each other,” he
explained. That was how a genuine communication could ensue among musicians in a full-scale
orchestra, each attending to the others’ instrumental voices,
Listening" was pethaps Claudio Abbado trademark term, the word he used most often in rehearsals.
No, the musicians shouldn't listen to him, but to the music, as he'd say repeatedly: "Many people learn
how to talk, but they don't learn how to ist
Listening to one another isan important thing in Wie.And music tells us how to do that.”
In the years to follow, Claudio Abbado could be seen on the world’s great concert halll stages, in Milan,
London and Chicago. Giving his debut at the Vienna State Opera in 1984, he was named the city's
general music director. In 1988 he founded the inter-disciplinary festival "Vienna Modern" for
contemporary music, visual arts, dance and film
Crossing borders
in October 1989, the members of the Berlin
Philharmonic elected him artistic director,
succeeding Herbert von Karajan. Reactions were
initially skeptical.
An anti-authoritarian Italian at Germany's
signature conductor's podium? "Some conductors
want to be dictators
ee ee ee Leading the Berlin Philharmonic in 2001
love of music and listening to each other," w
Abaddo's response. Introducing innovative programs and up-to-date musical renditions, he led the
Berlin Philharmonic into a new era. After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the end of divided
Europe, he searched for a way to cross the artistic divides between East and West, to bring the two
parts of the newly united city together and to convey the arts to all sectors of society.
"Theaters, libraries, museums and movie theaters are like little aqueducts,” he explained,
Music asa healer
In his Homeland, Abbado was an outspoken critic of Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berluscor
cane
he deemed politically ignorant. On Italian television he read a manifesto against the government's
cultural policies: "Culture overcomes social inequities, Culture frees tis from poverty.”He received respect - and generously gave it
In the same broadcast, he addressed his cancer diagnosis, which he'd first suffered from in 2000. The
illness marked a deep divide in Abbado's life. Resigning from the position with the Berlin
Philharmonic, he sought no responsibilities after his erstwhile recovery.
In 2003, the illness was considered cured. He began to conduct again but less frequently, preferring to
spend time with his family at his house in Sardinia. "Music was important in helping me to overcome
iy jllness. But even more important was my family - the love and support I experienced from friends
and relatives in my private surroundings."
When the cancer returned several months ago, Claudio Abbado cancelled all concert engagements. He
died in Bologna on January 20, age 80.
Ow.DE