Wilhelm Furtwängler(1886-1954)
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Wilhelm Furtwängler was born on 25 January 1886 in Berlin, Germany. He is known for Ludwig - Requiem for a Virgin King (1972), A Dream, What Else? (1995) and Les passagers (1999). He was married to Elisabeth Ackermann and Zitla Lund. He died on 30 November 1954 in Baden-Baden, Baden-Württemberg, West Germany.
Music Department
- 2001
- 1955
- Botschafter der Musik
- conductor
- 1952
Soundtrack
- 2015
- 2014
- 2012
- 2009
- 2004
- 2003
- 1999
- 1999
- 1995
- Ludwig - Requiem for a Virgin King7.1
- performer: "Excerpts from 'Tristan und Isolde'", "Prelude from 'Lohengrin'"
- 1972
- 1969
- Alternative name
- Dr. Wilhelm Furtwangler
- Born
- Died
- SpousesElisabeth Ackermann1943 - November 30, 1954 (his death)
- Other worksCD: "Wilhelm Furtwangler, Volume 2: Maestro Classico"
- Publicity listings
- TriviaHis career took a tragic turn in the 1930s, when he chose to stay in Germany rather than emigrate to the US as so many other European conductors had done. He apparently considered himself an upholder and protector of German music against the Nazi influence, but he did accept the sponsorship of Joseph Goebbels, which branded him a collaborator in the eyes of many. Many musicians, including Arturo Toscanini, denounced him, and an uproar arose in the New York Philharmonic when it was learned he had been selected to conduct a concert there--an offer that was promptly withdrawn. But Furtwangler was not anti-Semitic, and he helped and protected many Jewish musicians at the same time that he accepted Nazi sponsorship. The sponsorship tarnished his reputation, although he was "de-Nazified" after the war. He died a broken man, but in spite of approaching deafness, he did conduct some notable performances toward the end of his life, such as his "Don Giovanni" at Salzburg. (It was filmed in color in 1955, recorded on LP, and released on compact disc in the 1980's. A DVD of the film version has also been released.)
Over the last twenty years or so, however, his reputation has enjoyed a resurgence - unfortunately (and unfairly) at the expense of his most famous rival, Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini. Most critics now consider Furtwangler the greatest German conductor of the 20th century.
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