James Lawrence Levine (born
June 23, 1943) is an American
conductor and pianist. He is currently the music director of
the
Metropolitan Opera and of the
Boston Symphony Orchestra.
Levine's first performance conducting the Metropolitan Opera was on
June 5, 1971, and as of July 2009 he has conducted more than 2,456
Met performances.
Biography
Early years
Levine was
born in Cincinnati,
Ohio
to a musical family: his maternal grandfather was a
cantor in a synagogue, his father was a violinist, who led a dance band, and his mother was
an actress. He began to play the piano as a small child. At
the age of 10, he made his concert debut as soloist in
Felix Mendelssohn's
Piano Concerto
No. 2 at a youth concert of the
Cincinnati Symphony
Orchestra.
Levine subsequently studied music with
Walter Levin, first violinist in the
LaSalle Quartet.
In 1956 he took piano
lessons with Rudolf Serkin at the
Marlboro Music School,
Vermont
. In the following year he began studies with
Rosina Lhévinne at the
Aspen Music School.
After
graduating from Walnut Hills
High School, the acclaimed magnet school in Cincinnati, he
entered the Juilliard School of Music
in New York
City
in 1961, and took courses in conducting with
Jean Morel. He graduated from the
Juilliard School in 1964 and joined the American Conductors project
connected with the
Baltimore Symphony
Orchestra.
From 1964 to 1965, Levine served as an apprentice to
George Szell with the
Cleveland Orchestra and then served as
assistant conductor until 1970. That year, he also made his debut
as guest conductor with the
Philadelphia Orchestra at its summer
home at Robin Hood Dell. He made his debut in that same year with
the
Welsh National Opera and
the
San Francisco Opera. Levine
had a long association with the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra and
served from 1973 to 1993 as
music
director of the Ravinia Festival. In 1990, at the request of
Roy E. Disney, he arranged the music and conducted
the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in the soundtrack of
Fantasia 2000, released by
Walt Disney Pictures. He also served as
music director with the
Cincinnati May Festival
(1974–1978).
Metropolitan Opera career
Levine made his
Metropolitan
Opera debut in June 1971 in a festival performance of
Tosca. His success led to further
appearances and to his appointment as its principal conductor in
1973. He then became music director in 1976. In 1983, he served as
conductor and musical director for the
Franco Zeffirelli screen adaptation of
La Traviata, which
featured the Met orchestra and chorus members. He became the
company's first artistic director in 1986, and relinquished the
title in 2004.
Under his
leadership, the Metropolitan
Opera orchestra and chorus has become one of the finest
operatic ensembles in the world, punctuated by the regular concert
series for the orchestra and chamber ensembles he began at Carnegie Hall
. On his recent appointment as General
Manager of the Met,
Peter Gelb emphasized
that James Levine would be welcome to remain as long as he wanted
to direct music there. His present contract runs through the
2010/2011 season.
At the Met, Levine has led numerous new productions of works of
Mozart,
Verdi,
Richard
Wagner,
Richard Strauss,
Gioachino Rossini,
Arnold Schoenberg,
Igor Stravinsky,
Kurt
Weill,
Claude Debussy,
Alban Berg, and
George
Gershwin. For the 25th anniversary of his Met debut, Levine
conducted the world premiere of
John
Harbison's
The Great Gatsby, commissioned especially
to mark the occasion.
Levine has led the Metropolitan Opera on many domestic and
international tours. The company broadcasts several live television
and simulcast film productions yearly, and live
Metropolitan Opera radio
broadcasts every Saturday afternoons around the world each
season from December to April.
Boston Symphony Orchestra
Levine first conducted the Boston Symphony Orchestra (BSO) in April
1972. In October 2001, Levine was named music director of the BSO,
effective with the 2004–2005 season, with an initial contract of
five years, becoming the first American-born conductor to head the
BSO.
He
now divides his time between New York
and Boston
.
Thus, for the first time in living memory, the same conductor was
in charge of the country's leading opera house and a major
orchestra.
In Europe, Herbert von Karajan performed a similar
feat in the 1950s as chief conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic and director of the
Vienna
Staatsoper
.
One unique condition that Levine negotiated was increased
flexibility of the time allotted for rehearsal, allowing the
orchestra additional time to prepare more challenging works. Since
the start of his tenure, the orchestra has also established an
"Artistic Initiative Fund" of about
US$40 million to fund the more
expensive of Levine's projects.
One criticism of Levine during his BSO tenure is that he has not
attended many orchestra auditions. A 2005 article reported that
Levine had attended two out of 16 auditions during his tenure up to
that time. Levine himself has responded that he has the ability to
provide input on musician tenure decisions after the initial
probationary period, and that it is difficult to know how well a
given player will fit the given position until that person has had
a chance to work with the orchestra: "My message is the audition
isn't everything."
Another 2005 report stated that during Levine's first season as
music director, the greater workload from the demands of playing
more unfamiliar and contemporary music has increased physical
stress with some of the BSO musicians. Levine and the players met
to discuss this, and he agreed to program changes to lessen these
demands. Levine has received general critical praise for
revitalizing the quality and repertoire since the beginning of his
tenure.
Levine has had to deal with health issues in recent years,
including
sciatica and what he has called
"intermittent tremors". On March 1, 2006, Levine fell onstage
during a standing ovation after a performance with the Boston
Symphony Orchestra and tore the rotator cuff in his right shoulder.
Later that month, he underwent surgery to repair the injury.
He
returned to the podium on July 7, 2006, leading the BSO at Tanglewood
. In July 2008, the orchestra announced
Levine's withdrawal from the majority of the 2008 Tanglewood
season, because of the need for surgery to remove a kidney with a
malignant
cyst.
He returned to the podium in Boston on
September 24, 2008, leading the BSO's season opening concert at
Symphony
Hall
. On September 29, 2009, it was announced that
Levine would undergo emergency back surgery for a herniated disk and would miss at
least three weeks of engagements, including a season opening
performance at Carnegie
Hall
with the BSO, performances of Tosca with the Met, and regular BSO subscription
concerts.
Levine's current BSO contract is through 2012.
Conducting in Europe
Levine's Boston Symphony contract limits his guest appearances with
American orchestras.
However, Levine has conducted regularly in
Europe, with the Vienna
Philharmonic, Berlin Philharmonic, and at the Bayreuth
Festival
. Levine has also been a regular guest with
the
Philharmonia of London and the
Dresden Staatskapelle. Since
1975, he has also conducted regularly at the
Salzburg Festival and the annual July
Verbier Festival. From 1999 to
2004, Levine was chief conductor of the
Munich Philharmonic orchestra, and was
credited with improving the quality of instrumental ensemble during
his tenure.
Levine also performs regularly in
chamber
music ensembles and as an accompanist in
Lieder recitals.
Levine is
Conductor Laureate of the Verbier
Festival Orchestra, the resident orchestra of the annual music
festival based in Verbier
, Switzerland
, and has led that orchestra since it was organized
in 2000. The Festival website describes Levine as “not only
an esteemed conductor and an inexhaustible source of inspiration to
the orchestra, but also a passionate teacher.” Levine himself has
said in a 2004 interview:
"At my age, you are naturally inclined towards
teaching.
You want to teach what you have learned to the next
generation so that they don't have to spend time reinventing the
wheel.
I was lucky that I met the right mentors and teachers
at the right moment."
Since 2005 Levine has also served as Music Director of the
Tanglewood Music Center, a summer
academy of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Conductors he has helped
and influenced through his musical mentoring include Marco
Armiliato,
James Conlon, John Keenan
and, most currently, Jens Georg Bachmann.
Recordings
James Levine can be seen and heard in many audio and video
recordings. Levine has recorded extensively with many orchestras
and especially often with the Metropolitan Opera. His performance
of
Aïda with
Leontyne Price, her last in opera, was
preserved on video and may be seen at the Met's own online archive
of performances. Of particular note are his performances of
Wagner's complete
Der Ring
des Nibelungen. A studio recording made for
Deutsche Grammophon in 1987–1989 can be
found on compact disc and a 1989 live performance of the
Ring is available on DVD.
References
External links