The
Vienna Philharmonic (in German: die Wiener
Philharmoniker [pl]) is an orchestra in Austria
, regularly
considered one of the finest in the world.
Its home
base is the Musikverein
. The members of the orchestra are chosen from
the Orchestra of the Vienna State Opera
. This process is a long one, with each
musician having to prove his or her capability for a minimum of
three years' playing for the Opera and Ballet. Once this is
achieved the musician can then ask the Board of the Wiener
Philharmoniker to consider an application for a position in the
Vienna Philharmonic.
History
The orchestra can trace its origins to 1842, when
Otto Nicolai formed the
Philharmonische
Academie; which was a fully independent orchestra and which
took all its decisions by a democratic vote of all its members.
These are principles the orchestra still holds today.
With Nicolai's departure in 1847, the orchestra nearly folded, and
was not very active until 1860, when
Karl Anton Eckert joined as conductor. He
gave a series of four subscription concerts, and since then, the
orchestra has given concerts continuously.
From 1875 to 1898
Hans
Richter was principal conductor, except for the season
1882-1883 when he was in dispute with the orchestral committee.
During Richter's tenure, the orchestra gave the premieres of the
2nd and
3rd symphonies of
Johannes Brahms, and the
8th symphony of
Anton Bruckner.
Gustav Mahler held the post from 1898
to 1901, and under his baton the orchestra played abroad for the
first time at the 1900 Paris
World Exposition. Subsequent
conductors were
Felix Weingartner,
Wilhelm Furtwängler and
Clemens Krauss.
Since 1933, the orchestra has had no single principal conductor,
but instead has a number of guest conductors. These have included a
great many of the world's best known conductors, including
Richard Strauss,
Arturo Toscanini,
Hans Knappertsbusch,
Wilhelm Furtwängler,
Karl Böhm,
John
Barbirolli,
Herbert von
Karajan,
Carlo Maria
Giulini,
Georg Solti,
Erich Kleiber,
James
Levine,
Zubin Mehta,
Carlos Kleiber,
Leonard Bernstein,
Claudio Abbado,
Riccardo Muti,
Nikolaus Harnoncourt,
Pierre Boulez,
Lorin
Maazel,
Mariss Jansons,
Daniel Barenboim and
Valery Gergiev. Three conductors however were
particularly associated with the post-war era: Karajan and Böhm,
who were made honorary conductors, and Bernstein, who was made an
honorary member of the orchestra.
Each
New Year's Day since January 1,
1941, the VPO has sponsored the
Vienna New Year's Concerts,
dedicated to the music of the Strauss family composers, and
particularly that of
Johann Strauss
II.
Popularity
The Vienna Philharmonic was named as Europe's finest in a recent
survey by seven leading trade publications, two radio stations and
a daily newspaper.
Subscription ticket demand for the Vienna
Philharmonic at their home, Musikverein
, is currently listed on the orchestra's website as
being on a waiting list. The waiting list for weekday
concert subscriptions is six years and thirteen years for weekend
subscriptions. Casual tickets however, are available in small
numbers and can be bought via links from the VPO website, to
various ticket resellers. It is also possible to book package deals
which include transport, hotel accommodation and meals and tickets
to concerts.
The orchestra is so popular and famous, that it has been the motive
of one of the world's most famous bullion coins:
the Vienna Philharmonic coin. The coin is struck in pure gold,
999.9 fine (24 carats). It is issued every year, in four different
face values, sizes and weights. It is used as an investment
product, although it finishes almost always in the hands of
collectors. According to the World Gold Council, this coin was the
best selling gold coin in 1992, 1995 and 1996 world wide.
In 2006
Austrian Airlines was
outfitted with a livery featuring the gold coin and logo of the
Wiener Philharmoniker. The long-range
Airbus
A340-300 aircraft was flown primarily
between Vienna and Tokyo for approximately one year serving as
promotional tool for the orchestra and the Philharmoniker, 24 karat
gold coin issued by the
Austrian
Mint.
Sound and Instruments
The characteristic sound of the Vienna Philharmonic can be
attributed in part to the use of instruments and playing styles
that are fundamentally different from those used by other major
orchestras:
- The VPO uses the German-system clarinet. By comparison, the Boehm-system clarinet
is favored in non-German speaking countries.
- Likewise, while the Heckel (German) bassoon is now the norm for most orchestras around
the world, in the VPO the Heckel bassoon is played almost
completely without vibrato.
- The rotary-valve trumpet is used, but this is also popular in other
German and Austrian orchestras.
- Like its counterparts elsewhere in Austria, Germany and Russia,
the VPO favors the F bass and BB-flat contrabass rotary-valve
tuba, whereas the CC piston-valve tuba is
preferred in most American and some British orchestras.
- The trombone has a somewhat smaller
bore, but this is also true of the trombone used in many German
orchestras.
- The timpani use natural goat hide
instead of synthetic hide.
- The double-bass retains the
traditional theater-placement in a row behind the brass. The VPO
uses 4- as well as 5-string double basses, with the bow always
being held underhand.
- The Viennese oboe is, along with the Vienna
horn (see below), perhaps the most distinctive member of the VPO
instrumentarium. It has a special bore, reed and fingering-system
and is very different from the otherwise internationally used
Conservatoire (French) oboe.
- The Vienna horn in F uses a
Pumpenventil, roughly similar to a piston valve. Unlike
the rotary valves used on most other orchestral horns, the
Pumpenventil contributes to the liquid legato that is one of the
trademarks of the Viennese school. The bore of the Vienna horn is
also smaller than more modern horns—actually very close to that of
the valveless natural horn. The Vienna
horn has remained virtually unchanged since the mid-nineteenth
century—as a result it is arguably well-suited to the Classical and
Romantic repertoire at the core of the VPO's programming.
- The string section is unique in that the instruments belong to
the orchestra, unlike other orchestras in which each string player
uses their own instrument. Although not of a particular pedigree,
the Vienna strings have been carefully chosen over the centuries
and they are largely responsible for the orchestra's well-loved
string sound. They are meticulously cared for and, in case one is
worn beyond repair, the process of finding a replacement instrument
is equally painstaking. The Oesterreichische Nationalbank
currently loans four violins
made by Antonio Stradivari to the
VPO.
These
instruments and their characteristic tone-colors have been the
subject of extensive scientific studies by the Associate Professor
Magister Gregor Widholm of the
Institute for
Viennese Tone-Culture at the Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst
Wien
.
Acceptance of women
Although the orchestra is widely acknowledged as one of the world's
finest, in the 1990s it came in for some criticism by feminist
groups because until 1997 it did not allow women to become full
members of the orchestra (although some women performed with the
orchestra, they were not full members). In 1997 the first woman,
harpist
Anna Lelkes, became a member
after having performed with the orchestra as a "non-member" for
over twenty years. After Lelkes' retirement, another woman harpist
Charlotte Balzereit eventually
replaced her as the orchestra's only female member at the time.
Currently, the orchestra has three female members:
Ursula Plaichinger (viola), the first
non-harpist female member,
Isabelle Ballot Caillieret (first
violin), and Balzereit. Four other women,
Albena Danailova,
Daniela Ivanova,
Olesya Kurylak, and
Ursula Wex are confirmed members of the Vienna
State Opera orchestra, but do "not yet belong to the association of
the Vienna Philharmonic."
The first woman to conduct the orchestra was
Australian conductor
Simone Young in January 2005.
The traditional attitude of the orchestra was expressed by Paul
Fürst in the 1987 documentary
A Woman Is a
Risky Bet: Six Orchestra Conductors directed by Christina
Olofson:
- "There is no ban on women musicians playing here but the Vienna
Philharmonic is by tradition an all-male orchestra. Our profession
makes family life extremely difficult, so for a woman it’s almost
impossible. There are so many orchestras with women members so why
shouldn’t there be – for how long I don’t know – an orchestra with
no women in it … A woman shouldn’t play like a man but like a
woman, but an all-male orchestra is bound to have a special
tone."
In addition there were claims that the orchestra in the past had
not accepted members who were visibly members of ethnic minorities.
In 2001 a violinist who was half-Asian became a member.
Some people associated with the organisation have been criticised
for saying that it is important to maintain the ethnic uniformity
of the orchestra (i.e., white Europeans) in order to maintain high
playing standards.
In 1970 Otto Strasser, the former chairman of the Vienna
Philharmonic, wrote in his memoirs:
- "I hold it incorrect that today the applicants play behind a
screen; an arrangement that was brought in after the Second World
War in order to assure objective judgments. I continuously fought
against it, especially after I became Chairman of the Philharmonic,
because I am convinced that to the artist also belongs the person,
that one must not only hear, but also see, in order to judge him in
his entire personality. [...] Even a grotesque situation that
played itself out after my retirement was not able to change the
situation. An applicant qualified himself as the best, and as the
screen was raised, there stood a Japanese before the stunned jury.
He was, however, not engaged, because his face did not fit with the
‘Pizzicato-Polka’ of the New Year's Concert."
The first flautist in the Vienna Philharmonic said in a radio
interview broadcast in 1996:
- "From the beginning we have spoken of the special Viennese
qualities, of the way music is made here. The way we make music
here is not only a technical ability, but also something that has a
lot to do with the soul. The soul does not let itself be separated
from the cultural roots that we have here in central Europe. And it
also doesn't allow itself to be separated from gender. So if one
thinks that the world should function by quota regulations, then it
is naturally irritating that we are a group of white skinned male
musicians, that perform exclusively the music of white skinned male
composers. It is a racist and sexist irritation. I believe one must
put it that way. If one establishes superficial egalitarianism, one
will lose something very significant. Therefore, I am convinced
that it is worthwhile to accept this racist and sexist irritation,
because something produced by a superficial understanding of human
rights would not have the same standards."
In 2003, an orchestra member said in a magazine interview:
- "Three women are already too many. By the time we have twenty
percent, the orchestra will be ruined. We have made a big mistake,
and will bitterly regret it."
The orchestra and the Holocaust
The
Holocaust affected the Orchestra, like
many others in Europe.
In May 1935, when the Orchestra visited
London and performed at the Queen's Hall
, the two concertmasters, lead violinists were Arnold Rosé and Julius Stwertka. Rose, a jew, left the
orchestra and escaped to London, whilst Julius Stwertka perished in the Theresienstadt
Concentration
Camp on 17 December 1942.
Conductors
Subscription Conductors (1842-1933)
The Vienna Philharmonic has never had principal conductors.
Each year
they chose an artist to conduct all concerts of the respective
season at Vienna's Musikverein
. These conductors were called
Abonnementdirigenten (
subscription conductors) as
they were to conduct all the concerts included in the
Philharmonic's subscription at the Musikverein. Some of these
annual hirings were renewed for many years, others lasted only for
a few years. At the same time the Vienna Philharmonic also worked
with other conductors, e. g. at the Salzburg Festival, for
recordings or special occasions. With the widening of the
Philharmonic's activities the orchestra decided to abandon this
system in 1933. From then on there were only guest conductors hired
for each concert, both in Vienna and elsewhere.
Guest Conductors (since 1933)
Selection of recordings
- Beethoven, Complete Piano
Concertos (this cycle was recorded with Vladimir Ashkenazy, Alfred Brendel, Maurizio Pollini and Krystian Zimerman.
- Beethoven, Symphony
No. 3 conducted by
Felix Weingartner, also conducted
by Erich Kleiber
- Beethoven, Symphony
No. 5, Symphony No. 7 conducted by Carlos Kleiber
- Beethoven, Complete Symphonies conducted by Karl Böhm; this cycle was also recorded with
Leonard Bernstein, Claudio Abbado and Simon Rattle
- Berlioz, Symphonie fantastique, conducted by
Sir Colin Davis, also conducted by
Valery Gergiev
- Borodin, Symphony No. 2 conducted by Rafael Kubelík
- Brahms, Symphony No. 2 conducted by Wilhelm Furtwängler
- Brahms, Symphony No.
4 conducted by Carlos Kleiber
- Brahms, Complete Symphonies conducted by Leonard Bernstein; this cycle was also
recorded with Carlo Maria
Giulini and Karl Böhm
- Brahms, Complete Concertos, with Krystian Zimerman, piano, Gidon Kremer, violin and Mischa Maisky, cello, conducted by Leonard Bernstein. The Orchestra has also
recorded the Brahms piano concertos with Maurizio Pollini, with Karl Böhm conducting in No. 1 and Claudio Abbado conducting in No. 2
- Bruckner, Symphony No. 4 conducted by Karl Böhm
- Bruckner, Symphonies Nos. 7, 8 and 9 conducted by Carlo Maria Giulini
- Dvořák, Symphonies
Nos. 7, 8 and 9, conducted by Lorin
Maazel, recordings of nos. 8 & 9 were also made
under Herbert von Karajan and
Seiji Ozawa. The Orchestra has also
recorded Nos. 7
& 9 with
Rafael Kubelík
- Elgar, Enigma Variations conducted by Sir
Georg Solti, also conducted by Sir
John Eliot Gardiner
- Holst, The Planets, conducted by
Herbert von Karajan
- Khachaturian, excerpts from
Spartacus and
Gayane conducted by Aram Khachaturian
- Mahler, The Song of the
Earth (Das Lied von der
Erde) with Kathleen
Ferrier (contralto), conducted by
Bruno Walter, also conducted by
Leonard Bernstein with James King and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
- Mahler, Complete Symphonies (1-9
plus the Adagio of Symphony
No. 10) conducted by
Lorin Maazel
- Mahler, Symphony No.
2 conducted by Pierre Boulez
- Mahler, Symphony No.
3 conducted by Pierre
Boulez
- Mahler, Symphony No.
5 conducted by Pierre
Boulez, also recorded with Leonard
Bernstein
- Mahler, Symphony No.
6 conducted by Pierre
Boulez
- Mendelssohn: Symphonies and
Overtures conducted by Christoph von Dohnányi
- Mozart, Symphonies Nos.
38, 39, 40, 41 conducted by Karl
Böhm, also recorded with Leonard
Bernstein & James Levine
- Mozart, The Marriage of
Figaro conducted by Erich
Kleiber
- Mozart, Don Giovanni
conducted by Josef Krips
- Mozart, Die
Zauberflöte, conducted by Sir Georg
Solti; the orchestra has also recorded the opera under Karl Böhm, Herbert von Karajan and James Levine
- Mussorgsky, Pictures at an Exhibition,
conducted by Valery Gergiev
- Orff: Carmina Burana, conducted by André Previn
- Prokofiev, Peter and the Wolf, with Hermione Gingold, conducted by Karl Böhm
- Rimsky-Korsakov,
Scheherazade,
conducted by Seiji Ozawa, also conducted
by André Previn
- Schubert, Symphony No. 8 conducted by Carl Schuricht
- Schubert, Symphony No.
9 conducted by Josef Krips, also conducted by Sir Georg Solti
- Schubert, Complete Symphonies conducted by István Kertész
- Schumann: Complete Symphonies,
Cello & Piano Concertos conducted by Leonard Bernstein with Mischa Maisky & Justus Frantz
- Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 5
and 7, conducted by Leonard
Bernstein
- Smetana: Má vlast conducted by James Levine, also conducted by Rafael Kubelík
- Johann Strauss II and Strauss
family, works recorded at the traditional New
Year's Day concert conducted by Herbert von Karajan, Claudio Abbado, Carlos Kleiber, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Riccardo Muti etc. (See also: The New Year Concert of the Vienna
Philharmonic Orchestra)
- Stravinsky: The Firebird,
conducted by Christoph von
Dohnányi
- Tchaikovsky: Ballet
Suites conducted by James Levine, also
recorded with Herbert von
Karajan
- Tchaikovsky: Symphonies Nos. 4-6 conducted by Valery Gergiev, also recorded with Herbert von Karajan
- Wagner, The Valkyrie,
first act, conducted by Bruno
Walter
- Wagner, The Valkyrie (complete), conducted by Wilhelm Furtwängler
- Wagner, Der Ring des Nibelungen, conducted by Georg Solti, voted by Gramophone Magazine as the century's
finest classical record.
Besides traditional recordings, the orchestra has also recorded
samples for the
Vienna
Symphonic Library.
References
External links