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Arturo Toscanini

 

(born March 25, 1867, Parma, Italy — died Jan. 16, 1957, New York, N.Y., U.S.) Italian conductor. Toscanini entered a conservatory at age nine, studying cello, piano, and composition. He began his professional life as a cellist. After substituting for an indisposed conductor in Giuseppe Verdi's Aïda (Buenos Aires, 1886), he conducted in various Italian opera houses, giving the premieres of I Pagliacci (1892) and La Bohème (1896). He was appointed musical director of La Scala, Milan, in 1898, and of the Metropolitan Opera, New York City, in 1908. Principally known for his readings of Verdi's operas and Beethoven's symphonies, he also gave remarkable performances of the music of Richard Wagner. Toscanini conducted the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra from 1928 to 1936. In 1930 he became the first non-German to conduct at Bayreuth, but he stopped performing in Germany to protest Nazi policies. The NBC Orchestra was formed for him in 1937, and he conducted it until his retirement in 1954.

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Oxford Grove Music Encyclopedia:

Arturo Toscanini

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(b Parma, 25 March 1867; d New York, 16 Jan 1957). Italian conductor. After study at the Parma Conservatory his early career was as a cellist. His conducting début was in Rio de Janeiro, at the age of 19, with Aida. On his return to Italy he worked at Turin, where he gave the première of La bohème (1896) and championed Wagner. As music director at La Scala from 1898 he was concerned to present opera as an integrated dramatic art. He was artistic director of the Met, 1908-15, giving the première of La fanciulla del West (1910). During the 1920s his career was again centred on La Scala and he toured in Europe and North America with the house's orchestra. A successful career at Bayreuth and Salzburg was halted by the rise of the Nazis. In 1936 he conducted the inaugural concert of the Palestine SO in Tel-Aviv and he gave memorable concerts with the BBC SO in London, 1935-9. He was principal conductor of the combined Philharmonic and Symphony orchestras of New York, his performances being notable for their clarity, precision and intensity. In 1937 he conducted the newly formed orchestra of the NBC, with which he remained until his final concert in 1954, and made most of his recordings. He gave dynamic, superbly disciplined performances of Brahms, Verdi and Beethoven; respect for the composer's intentions was at the centre of his art.



Gale Encyclopedia of Biography:

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The Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini (1867-1957) was the most famous and influential conductor of the first half of the 20th century.

Arturo Toscanini was born on March 25, 1867, in Parma, Italy, the son of a tailor. When Arturo showed musical tendencies, he was sent to the local conservatory, where he spent the next 9 years, devoting himself entirely to music. He graduated in 1885 with a first prize in cello and was immediately engaged to play in the orchestra at the Reggia, Parma's famous opera house. During the following summer he joined an orchestra that went to Brazil to play a season of Italian opera. At one performance the regular conductor was unable to appear. The 19-year-old cellist took over and, without a rehearsal, conducted Aida from memory, thus beginning one of the musical world's most illustrious careers.

On returning to Italy, Toscanini was in great demand as an opera conductor. He conducted the first performances of Leoncavallo's I Pagliacci and Puccini's La Bohème. By the time he was 30, he was acknowledged to be the best opera conductor in Italy, and he was appointed principal conductor at La Scala in Milan, Italy's leading opera house. There, with his notorious temper and keen musicianship, he imposed a high performance standard on both singers and orchestra. He also disciplined the audience by refusing to allow the traditional encores that destroyed the musical continuity of the operas. He conducted at La Scala from 1898 to 1903 and again from 1906 to 1908, when he resigned to become a conductor with the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York City.

Toscanini returned to Italy in 1915 and to La Scala when it reopened after World War I. The growth of fascism and Mussolini's dictatorship made it impossible for Toscanini to remain; in 1928 he became conductor of the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, a post he held until 1936. His harsh discipline and uncompromising musical standards made the Philharmonic one of the world's greatest orchestras.

During these years Toscanini also conducted opera at the famous European music festivals at Salzburg and Bayreuth. In 1937 he became conductor of the National Broadcasting Company Orchestra. This orchestra's broadcast concerts and recordings brought his performances to millions of listeners. He died in New York City on Jan. 16, 1957.

At the time Toscanini started to conduct, late-19th-century performance ideals were prevalent and conductors and performers thought it was their right and duty to "express themselves" in the music they played. Great liberties in tempi and dynamics were taken, and the score indications were often ignored. Toscanini vigorously opposed this approach, believing that performers should meticulously follow the scores and play every note exactly as written at the precise degree of loudness called for by the composer. He expected his musicians to show as much devotion toward the score and energy in carrying out its directions as he did. If they failed, he was merciless in his criticism.

Toscanini was one of the first to conduct without a score. His visual memory was phenomenal, and he could make minute corrections, referring to exact measures, without looking at the score. This skill was developed partly as a matter of necessity, because he was so nearsighted that he could not read a score at normal distance. He also had a marvelously acute ear, and there are many instances of his hearing a false note in a single instrument, even with the full orchestra playing.

Further Reading

Among the best books on Toscanini are David Ewen, The Story of Arturo Toscanini (1951; rev. ed. 1966); Howard Taubman, The Maestro: The Life of Arturo Toscanini (1951); and Samuel Chotzinoff, Toscanini: An Intimate Portrait (1956). Two books that contain analyses of his interpretations and comparisons of his recordings are Robert C. Marsh, Toscanini and the Art of Orchestral Performance (1956), and Spike Hughes, The Toscanini Legacy (1959).

Columbia Encyclopedia:

Arturo Toscanini

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Toscanini, Arturo (ärtū'rō tōskänē'), 1867-1957, Italian conductor, internationally recognized as one of the world's great conductors. He studied cello at the Parma Conservatory, from which he graduated in 1885. After performing as a cellist with various minor orchestras in Italy, he went to Rio de Janeiro in 1886 to play in the opera orchestra there. Substituting as conductor, he demonstrated his ability to elicit an electrifying performance from the musicians, and he was engaged for the rest of the season.

Toscanini returned to Italy the next season (1886-87), and there subsequently conducted the premieres of Leoncavallo's Pagliacci (1892) and Puccini's La Bohème (1896) and the Italian premiere of Wagner's Götterdämmerung (1895). In 1898, Toscanini was appointed chief conductor and artistic director at La Scala, Milan, where he presented many new operas and the Italian premieres of many others, including Wagner's Die Meistersinger (1898) and Siegfried (1899).

From 1908 to 1914 he conducted at the Metropolitan Opera, New York City, where he gave American premieres of Puccini's Girl of the Golden West (1910), Wolf-Ferrari's Le donne curiose (1912), and other works. Toscanini returned to Italy during World War I. With the reorganized La Scala Orchestra he toured (1920-21) Europe and the United States and was artistic director of La Scala from 1921 to 1929. Upon his return to the United States, he conducted the New York Philharmonic from 1928 to 1936 and the NBC Symphony Orchestra, which was formed for him, from 1937. His other important engagements included the Bayreuth Festivals (1930, 1931), of which he was the first non-German conductor, the Salzburg Festivals (1934-36), and the Lucerne Festivals (1937-39). In 1936 he conducted the inaugural concert of the Palestine Symphony Orchestra in Tel Aviv. Consistently antifascist, he refused several times to appear in fascist countries. In 1954 he retired as conductor of the NBC Symphony Orchestra.

Toscanini commanded perfection from his orchestras and instilled them with remarkable energy. A tempestuous personality, he was nevertheless greatly respected by performers and was widely emulated by conductors. His artistry is preserved in recordings, notably of the symphonies of Beethoven and works by Brahms, Wagner, Verdi, and many others.

Bibliography

See B. H. Haggin, Conversations with Toscanini (1959); letters ed. by H. Sachs (2002); biographies by H. H. Taubman (1950), S. Chotzinoff (1956), D. Ewen (rev. ed. 1960), B. H. Haggin (1967), and H. Sachs (1978); studies by R. C. Marsh (1956) and P. C. Hughes (2d enl. ed. 1970), and H. Sachs (1991).

(tos-kuh-nee-nee)

A celebrated Italian conductor of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He spent much of his career in the United States. In his later years, he conducted the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) Symphony Orchestra, which was organized for him.

AMG AllMovie Guide:

Arturo Toscanini

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Biography

One of the greatest symphony conductors of his generation, Arturo Toscanini began lessons at the Parma Conservatory at the tender age of nine. By the time he was in his late teens, Toscanini was a professional cellist. In 1886, he was playing in the orchestra of a Rio de Janeiro staging of Aida when the official conductor was literally hissed off the stage. Toscanini was hurriedly rushed onto the podium and he successfully conducted the evening's performance; the rest, as they say, is history. From 1898 to 1903, he was principal conductor at the La Scala opera house, and beginning in 1908 he was associated with the Metropolitan Opera in New York. A volatile, frequently physically abusive man, Toscanini nonetheless commanded great loyalty and devotion from his staff, not only because of his musical brilliance but also because of his outspoken condemnation of Italian fascism. In 1937, he assumed the leadership of the NBC radio network's symphony orchestra, which had been organized especially for him. He remained with the NBC symphony until 1954, conducting his final performance just ten days before his 87th birthday. It was during his NBC years that Arturo Toscanini made his only formal film appearance, in the 28-minute musical short subject Hymn of the Nations (1946). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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Arturo Toscanini: Brahms - Double Concerto

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Gale Musician Profiles:

Arturo Toscanini

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Conductor

For more than half a century, Arturo Toscanini was one of the world’s most respected conductors, a musical powerhouse whose performances packed orchestra halls—and filled the radio waves—in every major city in the United States. Toscanini dominated the classical music world, leading the debut performances of numerous important operas and symphonies. In a time when the majority of Americans craved popular music and novel trends, Toscanini did more than any other artist to increase the audience for classical symphonies and operatic works. A New York Times reporter noted that the fiery conductor "represented absolute, uncompromising integrity. He strove earnestly to realize as exactly as possible the composer’s intentions as printed in the musical score. To achieve perfection he drove musicians relentlessly, himself hardest of all."

Toscanini conducted entirely from memory. Nearsighted from childhood, he memorized hundreds of intricate operas, symphonies, and concertos and then—in performance and often in rehearsals as well—led without ever consulting the score. The temperamental former cellist kept a full schedule of touring, recording, and performing until well into his eighties, finally retiring just three years before his death. The New York Times praised Toscanini for his "judgment, experience, vast musical knowledge, uncompromising standards and the touch of incandescent brilliance he infused into every performance he conducted."

Began Conducting at 19
Toscanini was born in 1867 and grew up in Parma, Italy. His father was a tailor, and as a youth Arturo, too, wanted to make clothes. His ambitions changed at the age of nine when he began cello lessons at the Parma Conservatory of Music. He was fascinated by the instrument and by classical music in general. Within two years he won a full scholarship to the conservatory, where he was known to sell his lunch in order to buy more sheet music.

After graduating from the conservatory in 1885, Toscanini immediately found work with travelling orchestras in Italy. In 1886 he joined a company that journeyed to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to stage some operas. On that particular trip the company conductor one day refused to lead a performance. The musicians persuaded Toscanini to step in as conductor—his penchant for memorizing whole scores had already marked him as extraordinary. Toscanini reluctantly accepted the assignment and, with no prior preparation, made his conducting debut on June 25, 1886. He was 19 at the time.

Word soon spread in Italy of the young cellist who

conducted whole operas from memory. Toscanini found himself invited to the podium on numerous occasions with local opera companies, and he conducted the world premieres of Ruggiero Leoncavallo’s Pagliacci in 1892 and Giacomo Puccini’s La Boheme in 1896. Both productions were highly successful, and the young musician was invited to conduct at La Scala in Milan—Italy’s most important opera house. By 1898 Toscanini was named chief conductor and artistic director at La Scala, and he became well known there for introducing new operas and symphonic works. He also gained a reputation for his unorthodox attitudes; he was dismissed in 1903 for refusing to permit encores.

Toscanini brought his talents to America in 1908 as conductor for the Metropolitan Opera. He proved quite popular in New York City—as a New York Times contributor put it, his "success was instantaneous … one triumph after another." After opening with Verdi’s Aida on November 16, 1908, Toscanini stayed with the Metropolitan Opera for seven seasons. He returned to Italy at the outbreak of World War I to conduct benefit performances for the country’s soldiers. At the end of the war, he received a decoration for bravery for leading an army band in the midst of a battle between the Italians and the Austrians.

After World War I Toscanini returned to America with an orchestra that he had engaged himself. It was with this orchestra that he made his first recordings on the Victor label in 1921. Some five years later he accepted the post of conductor with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. That group merged with the New York Symphony Society in 1928 as the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra. Toscanini was its principal conductor for ten years. He also found time to serve as a guest conductor at festivals and concerts in Germany, France, Austria, and London.

Spoke Out Against Fascism
Never one to shun politics, Toscanini was appalled by the fascist movement in Italy. He was an outspoken opponent of the fascists and was once badly beaten during a concert appearance when he refused to conduct the fascist anthem. He also severed ties with the Wagner festival at Bayreuth, Germany, and the Salzburg festival in Austria when Adolf Hitler took power. Toscanini spent the years of World War II in America, at the helm of the orchestra that he would lead for the rest of his life.

In 1937 Toscanini accepted a position as director of the newly formed National Broadcasting Company (NBC) Symphony Orchestra. The NBC Symphony was the first classical orchestra ever commissioned and subsidized by a broadcasting company. Toscanini was paid a then-fabulous salary of $40,000 as its conductor.

Some of the new symphony orchestra’s performances were held at Radio City Music Hall, and most were broadcast nationwide on radio. This exposure increased Toscanini’s popularity immensely. When he led the NBC Symphony Orchestra on a transcontinental trip in 1950, he was hailed by enthusiastic fans in major metropolitan areas and small towns alike. "Seldom in the history of America had a musician received such warm and widespread veneration," wrote a New York Times reporter.

"The Maestro"
Toscanini worked tirelessly until he was 87 years old. During his lastyears with the NBC Symphony Orchestra he engaged in a hectic schedule of recording, making some 30 albums with RCA Victor, including all nine of Beethoven’s symphonies and the four symphonies by Brahms. The energetic conductor formally retired on April 4, 1954, immediately following a concert at Carnegie Hall. He died three years later following a severe stroke, just months before his ninetieth birthday.

In his day Toscanini was treated with an awe and reverence reserved for a select few. More than once the New York police had to barricade his concerts to keep out throngs of fans. Musicians and singers endured his temperamental outbursts, and audiences respected his eccentric notions about applause and encores. Throughout his career Toscanini was affectionately known as "The Maestro." His passing was mourned by political leaders and classical musicians all over the world.

Responding to the conductor’s death on January 17, 1957, David M. Keiser, then president of the New York Philharmonic-Symphony, told the New York Times that Toscanini, "more than any other person in our time, has symbolized the supreme peak in musical perfection." New York Times correspondent Olin Downes offered a similar sentiment, writing of Toscanini: "There has never been a more gallant and intrepid champion of great music, or a spirit that flamed higher, or a nobler defender of the faith."

Selected discography
Toscanini and the NBC Symphony, Melogram, 1989.
Toscanini at La Scala, SRO, 1993.
Toscanini Conducts Music by His Contemporaries, dell’Arte, 1993.
The Toscanini Collection, 71 volumes, RCA, 1994.
Toscanini and the Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra: Great Recordings 1926-1936, 3 volumes, Pearl 3.

Sources
American Record Guide, September/October 1988; September/October 1990.
Musical America, November 1989; July 1990.
New York Times, April 5, 1954; January 15, 1957.
New York Times Magazine, November 8, 1953; December 27, 1953.
Arturo Toscanini

Biography

Few orchestral conductors have attained the public recognition accorded Arturo Toscanini, due in part to his many recordings and frequent broadcast performances, but also to his dedication to the art of music-making. In a career spanning 68 years, he did more than anyone to revive the popular image of the all-powerful maestro.

In 1885, at age 19, he graduated from the Parma Conservatory as a cellist, and joined an opera company for a tour of South America. When in Rio de Janeiro, the incompetence of the Brazilian conductor engaged for the tour so incensed the Italian singers and players that he was forced to resign, and the 20-year-old cellist was asked to take the baton for Verdi's Aida. By the end of the tour he had led 26 performances of 11 operas, all from memory.

Between 1887 and 1895, Toscanini conducted in many Italian opera houses, and in 1896 became the principal conductor of Turin's Regio Opera House, leading the first Italian performances of Wagner's Götterdämmerung, Tristan and Isolde and Die Walküre, and the première of Puccini's La Bohème, as well as a series of highly successful orchestral concerts. He was the principal conductor at La Scala, Milan, from 1900 to 1908, and first appeared at New York's Metropolitan Opera in 1915, where he conducted the première of Puccini's La fanciulla del West. In the same year he made his debut in the U.S. as a symphonic conductor.

Recalled to La Scala in 1919, he reformed the orchestra and took it on a triumphant tour of the U.S., conducting 67 concerts in 77 days, followed by an Italian tour in which he led 38 concerts in 56 days. From 1926-1927, he was a guest conductor with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, and in 1929 left La Scala to become its permanent conductor, a post he filled until 1939.

In 1937 Toscanini was invited by NBC to conduct broadcast concerts in America with a new symphony orchestra specifically created for the purpose. He then toured with that orchestra to South America in 1940 and throughout the United States in 1950. He also conducted a memorable series of concerts with the BBC Symphony Orchestra in London between 1935 and 1939.

Toscanini's opposition to Fascism and Nazism was implacable. In 1931, he was attacked for refusing to play the Giovanezza, a Fascist anthem. In the same year he was the first non-German conductor to appear at the Wagner Festspielhaus in Bayreuth, but refused to return in 1933 in protest of the Nazi's treatment of Jewish musicians. He also turned his back on the Salzburg Festival because the Jewish conductor Bruno Walter's performances there were not broadcast in Germany. In 1938-1939, he conducted without fee at a festival in Lucerne, Switzerland, where the orchestra was composed entirely of musicians who had fled German persecution.

Toscanini's conducting style featured a precise, vigorous beat and vivid body-language, which orchestras understood and responded to with dramatic results. By the end of his career he had memorized 250 symphonic works, and over 100 operas. Though he enthusiastically embraced post-Romantic, twentieth century music, he virtually ignored the Second Viennese School and the new breed of American composers that were making their mark by the 1950s. It was not false modesty, but genuine humility that led him to say in an interview "I am no genius. I have created nothing. I play the music of other men. I am just a musician." ~ Roy Brewer, Rovi

Discography

Falstaff

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Johannes Brahms: Symphony No. 1/Academic Festival Overture/Hungarian Dances

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Brahms: 4 Symphonies; Haydn Variations; Overtures; Double Concerto; Libeslieder-Walzer

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Johannes Brahms: Symphony No. 2/Variations On A Theme By Haydn/Tragic Overture

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Johannes Brahms: Symphony No. 3/Concerto For Violin & Cello

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Hector Berlioz: Harold en Italie/Romeo et Juliette

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Beethoven: Overtures

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 3 "Eroica" & 8

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Beethoven: Missa Solemnis; Cherubini: Requiem

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Berlioz: Roméo et Juliette; Bizet: Carmen & L'Arlésienne Suites

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 56: Giuseppe Verdi~Aida

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 57: Giuseppe Verdi~Falstaff

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 15: Franz Schubert

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 16: Robert Schumann/Carl Maria von Weber

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Beethoven: Violin Concerto; Piano Concerto No. 3

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 5; Septet; Egmont Overture

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 37: Claude Debussy

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 52: Richard Wagner

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 12: Joseph Haydn

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 39

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 10: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 69: Franz Schubert

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 22: Dmitri Shostakovich

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 31: Richard Strauss/Richard Wagner

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 62: Arrigo Boito/Giuseppe Verdi

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Felix Mendelssohn: Symphony No. 4/Symphony No. 5

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 30: Richard Strauss

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 66: Overtures & Preludes

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 71

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 58: Giuseppe Verdi~Otello

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 59: Giuseppe Verdi~Un Ballo In Maschera

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 51: Overtures

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 50: Music from Italian Opera

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 49: Richard Wagner

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volumes 67-70: The Philadelphia Orchestra Recordings

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 21: Jean Sibelius

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 35: Modest Mussorgsky/Edward Elgar

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Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 68: Peter IlyichTchaikovsky/Richard Strauss

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Christoph Gluck: Orfeo ed Euridice, Act II; Beethoven: Abscheulicher (Fidelio)

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Franz Schubert: Symphonies No.8 and No.9

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Mendelssohn: A Midsummer Night's Dream; Hector Berlioz: Scherzo "Queen Mab"

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Joseph Haydn: Symphony NO. 101/Symphony No. 99/Sinfonia Concertante, Op. 84

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Brahms: Symphony No. 4; Liebeslieder-Walzer, Op. 52

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts Mozart, Brahms & Wagner

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Toscanni's Last Concert

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Toscanini in London (1935-1939) Vol. 1

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Toscanini Conducts Tchaikovsky

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Guiseppe Verdi: Messa Da Requiem/Te Deum

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The Arturo Toscanini Recordings Association: Historic Concert Performances From 1953

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Arturo Toscanini: French Music

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9; Choral Fantasy

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 7; Leonore Overture No. 1

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 7; Leonore Overture No. 1

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Giuseppe Verdi: Falstaff

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Die Zauberflöte

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Toscanini conducts Beethoven's Missa Solemnis

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Toscanini Conducts Martucci

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Toscanini conducts Beethoven

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Toscanini In London 1935-1939, Vol. 5

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Toscanini In London 1935-1939, Vol. 6

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Beethoven: Piano Concertos 1 & 4

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Beethoven: 9 Symphonies/Leonore Overture No. 3

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Barhms: Concerto No. 2/Tchaikovsky: Concerto No. 1

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Verdi: La Traviata

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Debussy: La Mer/Ibéria/Respighi: Feste Romane

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Mozart: Symphonies Nos. 39, 40, 41

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Wagner: Tannhäuser/Die Meistersinge Von Nürnbert/Die Götterdämmerung/Siegfried/Lohengrin

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9; Fantasia in C minor

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Arturo Toscanini conducts Gershwin & Grofé

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Respighi: Pini Di Roma; Fontane Di Roma; Feste Romane

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts Shostakovich, Prokofiev & Stravinsky

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Mendelssohn: Incidental Music To A Midsummer Night's Dream/Octet, Op.20

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Giuseppe Verdi: Aida; Falstaff; Requiem

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Arturo Toscanini: The New York Philharmonic Recordings

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Verdi: Te Deum/Messa Da Requiem/Nabucco/Luisa Miller/Hymn Of The Nations

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Franck: Symphony In D/Saint-Saëns: Symphony No.3

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The Toscanini Collection [Highlights]

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 3; Mozart: Symphony No. 40

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 "Choral"

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 7; Haydn: Symphony No. 10; Mendelssohn: A Midsummer Night's Dream

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Dvorák: Symhony No. 9; Kodály: Háry János Suite; Smetana: The Moldau

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 7

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Brahms: Symphony No.1/Serenade No.2

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 5 & 8; Leonore Overture No.3

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 6 "Pastorale"

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Beethoven: Fidelio

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Cherubini: Symphony In D/Cimarose: Il Matrimonio Segreto/Il Matrimonio Per Raggiro

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Plays: Opus One/American Classics/Gershwin

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Arturo Toscanini Memorial, Vol.11 From the Famous 1939-Beethoven Cycle

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Arturo Toscanini Memorial, Vol.3: Franz Joseph Haydn

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Verdi:La Traviata

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Verdi:La Traviata

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts the Blue Danube Waltz

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Wagner: Preludes

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Beethoven: Missa Solemnis; Choral Fantasy

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Tchaikovsky: Manfred Symphony/Romeo and Juliet

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts Beethoven

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Mussorgsky: 6 Pictures at an Exhibition/Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet/Rossini: La Scala Di Seta/Verdi: Otello, Ballet

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Toscanini and the New York Philharmonic, 1926-36

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 6; Mozart: Die Zauberflöte Overture; Brahms: Tragic Overture

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Toscanini Conducts Strauss

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Verdi: Falstaff

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Toscanini Conducts Sibelius

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Toscanini Conducts the BBC Symphony

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Toscanini: Ve Day-VJ Day

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Toscanini: Gli Anni Della Maturita

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Toscanini: Gli Anni Della Maturita

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 8

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 8

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Toscanini: The 1941 Legendary Ring Cycle

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Toscanini: The 1941 Legendary Ring Cycle

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Toscanini Rarities On Radio 1939-1943

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Wagner: Die Walkure/Gotterdammerung

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Toscanini & Mussolini: The Tables are Turned

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Toscanini & Mussolini: The Tables are Turned

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Verdi: Messa de Requiem

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Verdi: La Traviata

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Wagner: Die Meistersinger Von Nurnberg

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Toscanini Conducts Weber, Mendelssohn, Sibelius

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts Debussy

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Verdi: Falstaff

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Christmas Concert 1937

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1944 - The Red Cross Concert

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 3 "Eroica" & 5

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Toscanini Conducts Beethoven, Mozart, Brahms

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Toscanini and Benny Goodman Play Gershwin

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Toscanini in London 1935-1939, Vol.3

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Toscanini In London 1935-1939, Vol. 1-6

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Toscanini Rarities

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Toscanini Conducts Haydn/Respighi/Sibelius/Wagner/Weber

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Arturo Toscanini - The Salzburg Experience 1935-1937

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Arturo Toscanini Edition 2: Tchaikovsky

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Arturo Toscanini Edition I

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October-December 1939-Toscanini's First Cycle of Beethoven's Complete Symphonies, Vol. 5

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Debussy: Iberia, Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune; La Mer

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Arturo Toscanini conducts Elgar & Vaughan Williams

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Arturo Toscanini conducts Haydn, Mozart & Brahms

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Beethoven: Missa Solemnis

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Brahms: The Four Symphonies

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Toscanini in London 1935 - 1939, Vol. 2

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Mozart: Symphony No. 41 "Jupiter"; Brahms: Symphony No. 1

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 5 & 3

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The General Motors Concert, March 1936

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Toscanini Conducts Strauss Favorites

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Toscanini Conducts Beethoven

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Arturo Toscanini: First Recordings, 1920-1926

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La Bohème

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Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 4

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Toscanini, Vol. 6

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Cesar Franck: Symphony in D minor; Hector Berlioz: Roméo et Juliette

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Arturo Toscanini: Milano, Teatro alla Scala September 16, 1948 (The Radio Years)

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 5-8

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 5-8

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Beethoven: Missa Solemnis; Symphony No. 5; Mozart: Symphony No. 35

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Arturo Toscanini & NBC Symphony Orchestra Vol. 7

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Orchestral Showpieces

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Arturo Toscanini & NBC Orchestra Vol. 9

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9; Missa Solemnis

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9; Missa Solemnis

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 4; Leonore Overture No. 1

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts the Orchestra of La Scala, Milan

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Legendary Recordings with the Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra...(Toscanini Edition)

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Verdi, Cherubini: Choral Works

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Italian Orchestral Music

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Verdi: Falstaff

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Toscanini conducts Martucci

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Toscanini Conducts Strauss

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2; Fidelio & Leonore Overtures

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 3 "Eroica" & 8

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 5

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 6 "Pastorale" & 7

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9; Choral Fantasy

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Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue; An American in Paris; Piano Concerto in Fa Maggiore

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Brahms: The Four Symphonies

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Schubert: Symphonies Nos. 5, 8, 9; Mendelssohn: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 5

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L'Héritage d'Arturo Toscanini

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Toscanini's First Concert with the NBC Symphony Orchestra

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Tchaikovsky: Symphony 6 / Nutcracker Suite

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Verdi: Otello

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 3 "Eroica"

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 7

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Puccini: La Bohème

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Toscanini Conducts Strauss Favorites

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Arturo Toscanini: Great Symphonies, Vol. 6

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Arturo Toscanini: Great Symphonies, Vol. 6

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 8

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Toscanini Conducts Tchaikovsky

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Beethoven: Missa Solemnis

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Debussy: Nocturnes/Iberia

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Arturo Toscanini: Roussel; Roger-Ducasse...

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Toscanini in Luzern, 1946

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11 Maggio 1946: La riapertura del Teatro alla Scala

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11 Maggio 1946: La riapertura del Teatro alla Scala

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 4; Leonore Overture No. 1

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 (The "Choral" Symphony)

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Giuseppe Verdi: Messa da Requiem

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Verdi: Otello

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Schumann: Sinfonia No. 2; Liszt: Orpheus; Von der Weiege bis zum Grabe; Rapsodia Ungherese No. 2

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Arturo Toscanini Edition 3

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Edward Elgar: Enigma Variations; Claude Debussy: La Mer; Gioachino Rossini, Mozart: Overtures

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Pucini: La Bohème

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 6 "Pastorale"; Leonore Overture No. 1

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Toscanini in America 1929-46

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Boito: Mefistofele / Nerone [Excerpts]

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Arturo Toscanini: His Romantic Rarities

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Verdi: Messa di Requiem; Te Deum; Preludes & Overtures

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Arturo Toscanini: Orchestra of La Scala, Milan

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Toscanini Conducts Brahms

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Arturo Toscanini: The Immortal (Sampler)

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Toscanini Conducts the Music of France, Rare Concert Performances, 1936-52

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Arturo Toscanini: Rare Recordings (1938-1947)

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Mozart: Die Zauberflöte

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Gala Concert for the Benefit of the Pension Fund

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Gala Concert for the Benefit of the Pension Fund

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Beethoven: Leonore Overture No. 1 / Symphonies Nos. 4 & 5

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Lauritz Melchior and Helen Traubel sing Wagner

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Verdi: La Traviata

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Toscanini Interpreta Brahms & Rossini

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Toscanini Interpreta Brahms & Rossini

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La Scala Reconstruction Inaguration Concert (May 1946)

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts Giuseppe Verdi

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Arturo Toscanini: Baroque & Classical Repertoire

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Arturo Toscanini: Conducts Rossini Overtures

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Arturo Toscanini Rarities (1936-1943)

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Mozart: Symphonies Nos. 29 & 38/Bassoon Concerto

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Disc 2

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Disc 3

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Disc 5

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Disc 1

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Disc 4

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Toscanini conducts Beethoven

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 2, Disc 5

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 2, Disc 4

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 2, Disc 2

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 2, Disc 1

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 2, Disc 3

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Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 "From the New World"; Symphonic Variations

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Debussy: La Mer; Elgar: Enigma Variations

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My First Record

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Toscanini e l'Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala

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Beethoven: Missa Solemnis

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Toscanini Conducts Sibelius & Atterberg

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 2 (Box Set)

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso (Box Set)

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Beethoven: The 9 Symphonies (Box Set)

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Verdi: Falstaff

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Gluck: Orfeo ed Euridice (Atto II)

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Verdi: Otello

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 3 (Box Set)

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 3, Disc 1

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 3, Disc 2

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 3, Disc 3

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 3, Disc 4

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Toscanini: Maestro Furioso, Vol. 3, Disc 5

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Toscanini Conducts Music from Russia

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Toscanini conducts BBC Symphony

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9

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Toscanini Conducts the BBC Symphony Orchestra, Vol. 2

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Beethoven: 9 Symphonies; Missa Solemnis (Box Set)

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Verdi: Otello

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Puccini: La Bohème

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Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg

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Popular Orchestra Favourites

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Verdi: Aida

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Beethoven: Missa Solemnis; Choral Fantasy

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Toscanini Conducts Berlioz

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Beethoven: The 9 Symphonies [Box Set]

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Toscanini e l'Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala (1948-1952)

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Toscanini e l'Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala (1946-1948)

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Schubert: Symphony No. 8; R. Strauss: Don Juan; Haydn: Symphony Concertante

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Die Zauberflöte (Il Flauto Magico) (Selezione)

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Toscanini Conducts Vaughan Williams, Brahms, Martucci, Tchaikovsky

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 5; Haydn: Symphony No. 88

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Bellini: Norma; Verdi: Te Deum; Boito: Mefistofele

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Beethoven: Fidelio

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Tchaikovsky: Manfred; Romeo and Juliet

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Verdi: La Traviata

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Berlioz: Romeo & Juliet; Damnation of Faust, Scene 7

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Beethoven: The Nine Symphonies [Box Set]

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts Tchaikovsky

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Verdi: Requiem; Te Deum

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Rossini: Cenerentola Overture; Beethoven: Symphony No. 5

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All Mozart

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Great Conductors of the 20th Century, Vol. 35: Arturo Toscanini

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 3; Leonore Overture No. 3; Coriolan Overture

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Verdi: Falstaff (Rehearsals 1950)

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Great American Orchestras: NBC Symphony Orchestra

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All-American

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Verdi: Otello

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Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2

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Verdi: Messa da Requiem

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All Beethoven

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Beethoven: Missa Solemnis

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts Beethoven Symphony No. 9

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Beethoven: Quartet, Op. 135; Symphony No. 9 in D, Op. 125

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 7

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All-Debussy

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 3 "Eroica" & 5

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All Wagner

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Arturo Toscanini Conducts Grieg, Sibelius, Franck, Ravel

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Brahms: Requiem

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Verdi: Un Ballo in Maschera

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Arturo Toscanini: Boito Memorial

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Toscanini Conducts Light Classics

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Arturo Toscanini Rehearses Die Walküre Act 1, Scene 3

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Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 6 "Pathétique"; Piano Concerto No. 1

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Brahms: The Four Symphonies

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 "Choral"; Choral Fantasy

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Arturo Toscanini Rehearses Wagner: Die Walküre

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Brahms: A German Requiem

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Beethoven: Violin Concerto: Symphony No. 7

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The Verdi Recordings [Box Set]

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Arturo Toscanini: Il Mito [Box Set]

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Arturo Toscanini: Il Mito [Box Set]

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Toscanini Conducts Wagner

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New York Philharmonic & Arturo Toscanini

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Schubert: Symphony No. 2; Grand Duo

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Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture; Symphony No. 3; Schumann: Symphony No. 2

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Wagner: Orchestral Excerpts

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Arturo Toscanini: Unpublished HMW recordings

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Arturo Toscanini: The Complete Philadelphia Orchestra Recordings 1941-42

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Arturo Toscanini Stereo

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Toscanini's Complete Concert of March 21, 1954

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Toscanini conducts Bizet, Mozart, Copland, etc.

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Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy: Violin Concerto Op. 64

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Beethoven: Complete Symphonies & Selected Overtures [Box Set]

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Arturo Tostanini: The Farewell Concert at La Scala

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Mozart: Symphonies Nos. 40 & 41 "Jupiter"; Vaughan Williams: Tallis Fantasia

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Complete Puccini Recordings

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Rossini: Overtures; Sonata for Strings No. 3; Vivaldi: Concerto Grosso, Op. 3/11

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R. Strauss: Don Quixote; Haydn: Symphony No. 32 'Oxford'

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Saint-Saëns: Symphony No. 3 'Organ'; Elgar: Enigma Variations

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Verdi: Otello

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Verdi: Otello

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Arturo Toscanini Plays Brahms

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Verdi: Requiem

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Verdi: Requiem; Te Deum

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 4; Egmont Overture

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 "Choral"

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Toscanini: Live Recordings from the 1940s

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Musically Speaking: Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No 2, Concerto for Violins & Violin Orchestral Suite No. 3

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 "Eroica"; Overture "Egmont"; Overture "Leonore No. 3"

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Giuseppe Verdi: La Traviata

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Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue; An American In Paris; Piano Concerto in F

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Atterberg: Symphony No. 6; Barber: Adagio for Strings; Fernandez: Reisado do Pastoreio Batuque & Others

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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Die Zauberflöte

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Arturo Toscanini: Anthology 1

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Anthology 2: NBC SO (1950-53)

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Shostakovich: Symphony No. 7 'Leningrad'; Barber: Adagio

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Haydn: Symphony No. 88; Mozart: Symphony No. 40; Rossini: William Tell Overture

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Haydn: Symphony No. 88; Mozart: Symphony No. 40; Rossini: William Tell Overture

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Shostakovich: Symphony No. 7

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Toscanini: Rare & Unreleased Recordings

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Brahms: Symphony No. 1

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Mendelssohn 200th Anniversary Tribute

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The XX Century

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Arturo Toscanini conducts Schumann & Ravel

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Verdi: Flastaff

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Robert Schumann: 200th Anniversary Tribute

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Verdi: Otello

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Arturo Toscanini: Gala Concert, 1945

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Toscanini: Christmas Day 1937 & Farewell Concert 1954

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 7

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 5 & 8; Leonore Overture No.3

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Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 6 "Pastorale"

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Beethoven: Symphony No. 4 & 5

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Memorial Tribute to Toscanini

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Puccini: La Boheme

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Arturo Toscanini

Top
Toscanini in 1908.

Arturo Toscanini (Italian pronunciation: [arˈtuːro toskaˈniːni]; March 25, 1867 – January 16, 1957) was an Italian conductor. One of the most acclaimed musicians of the late 19th and 20th century, he was renowned for his intensity, his perfectionism, his ear for orchestral detail and sonority, and his photographic memory.[1] As music director of the NBC Symphony Orchestra he became a household name (especially in the U.S.) through his radio and television broadcasts and many recordings of the operatic and symphonic repertoire.

Contents

Biography

Early years

Caricature of Toscanini by Enrico Caruso

Toscanini was born in Parma, Emilia-Romagna, and won a scholarship to the local music conservatory, where he studied the cello. He joined the orchestra of an opera company, with which he toured South America in 1886. While presenting Aida in Rio de Janeiro, Leopoldo Miguez, the locally hired conductor, reached the summit of a two-month escalating conflict with the performers due to his rather poor command of the work, to the point that the singers went on strike and forced the company's general manager to seek a substitute conductor. Carlo Superti and Aristide Venturi tried unsuccessfully to finish the work. In desperation, the singers suggested the name of their assistant Chorus Master, who knew the whole opera from memory. Although he had no conducting experience, Toscanini was eventually convinced by the musicians to take up the baton at 9:15 P.M., and led a performance of the two-and-a-half hour opera. The public was taken by surprise, at first by the youth and sheer aplomb of this unknown conductor, then by his solid mastery. The result was astounding acclaim. For the rest of that season Toscanini conducted eighteen operas, all with absolute success. Thus began his career as a conductor, at age 19.[2][3]

Upon returning to Italy, Toscanini set out on a dual path for some time. He continued to conduct, his first appearance in Italy being at the Teatro Carignano in Turin, on November 4, 1886,[4] in the world premiere of the revised version of Alfredo Catalani's Edmea (it had had its premiere in its original form at La Scala, Milan, on 27 February of that year). This was the beginning of Toscanini's life-long friendship and championing of Catalani; he even named his first daughter Wally after the heroine of Catalani's opera La Wally.[5] However, he also returned to his chair in the cello section, and participated as cellist in the world premiere of Verdi's Otello (La Scala, Milan, 1887) under the composer's supervision. Verdi, who habitually complained that conductors never seemed interested in directing his scores the way he had written them, was impressed by reports from Arrigo Boito about Toscanini's ability to interpret his scores. The composer was also impressed when Toscanini consulted him personally about the Te Deum, suggesting an allargando where it was not set out in the score. Verdi said that he had left it out for fear that "certain interpreters would have exaggerated the marking".[6][7]

National and international fame

Gradually the young musician's reputation as an operatic conductor of unusual authority and skill supplanted his cello career. In the following decade he consolidated his career in Italy, entrusted with the world premieres of Puccini's La bohème and Leoncavallo's Pagliacci. In 1896, Toscanini conducted his first symphonic concert (in Turin, with works by Schubert, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, and Wagner). He exhibited a considerable capacity for hard work: in 1898 he conducted 43 concerts in Turin.[8] By 1898 he was principal conductor at La Scala, where he remained until 1908, returning as Music Director, 1921-1929. He took the Scala Orchestra to the United States on a concert tour in 1920/21; it was during that tour that Toscanini made his first recordings (for the Victor Talking Machine Company).

Outside of Europe, he conducted at the Metropolitan Opera in New York (1908–1915) as well as the New York Philharmonic Orchestra (1926–1936). He toured Europe with the New York Philharmonic in 1930; he and the musicians were acclaimed by critics and audiences wherever they went. Toscanini was the first non-German conductor to appear at Bayreuth (1930–1931), and the New York Philharmonic was the first non-German orchestra to play there. In the 1930s he conducted at the Salzburg Festival (1934–1937) and at the inaugural concert in 1936 of the Palestine Orchestra (later renamed the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra) in Tel Aviv, and later performed with them in Jerusalem, Haifa, Cairo and Alexandria.

During his career, Toscanini worked with such legendary artists as Enrico Caruso, Feodor Chaliapin, Ezio Pinza, Jussi Björling, and Geraldine Farrar. Although he also worked with Wagnerian heldentenor Lauritz Melchior, he would not work with Melchior's frequent partner Kirsten Flagstad after her political sympathies became suspect during World War II; it was Helen Traubel who sang with Melchior instead of Flagstad at the Toscanini concerts.

Departure from Italy to the United States

In 1919, Toscanini ran unsuccessfully as a Fascist parliamentary candidate in Milan. He had been called "the greatest conductor in the world" by Fascist leader Benito Mussolini. However, he became disillusioned with fascism and repeatedly defied the Italian dictator after the latter's ascent to power in 1922. He refused to display Mussolini's photograph or conduct the Fascist anthem Giovinezza at La Scala.[9] He raged to a friend, "If I were capable of killing a man, I would kill Mussolini."[10]

At a memorial concert for Italian composer Giuseppe Martucci on May 14, 1931 at the Teatro Comunale in Bologna, he was ordered to begin by playing Giovinezza but he refused even though the fascist foreign minister Galeazzo Ciano was present in the audience. Afterwards he was, in his own words, "attacked, injured and repeatedly hit in the face" by a group of blackshirts.[11] Mussolini, incensed by the conductor's refusal, had his phone tapped, placed him under constant surveillance and took away his passport. The passport was returned only after a world outcry over Toscanini's treatment.[9] On the outbreak of the Second World War, Toscanini left Italy. He would return seven years later to conduct a concert at the restored La Scala Opera House, which was destroyed by bombs during the war.[12]

NBC Symphony

Toscanini returned to the United States where the NBC Symphony Orchestra was created for him in 1937. He conducted his first NBC broadcast concert on December 25, 1937, in NBC Studio 8-H in New York City's Rockefeller Center. The acoustics of the specially built studio were very dry; some remodeling in 1939 added a bit more reverberation. (In 1950, the studio was further remodeled for television productions; today it is used by NBC for Saturday Night Live. In 1980, it was used by Zubin Mehta and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra in a series of special televised NBC concerts called "Live From Studio 8H", the first one being a tribute to Toscanini, punctuated by clips from his television concerts.)

The NBC broadcasts were preserved on large transcription discs, recorded at both 78-rpm and 33-1/3 rpm, until NBC began using magnetic tape in 1947. NBC used special RCA high fidelity microphones both for the broadcasts and for recording them; these microphones can be seen in some photographs of Toscanini and the orchestra. Some of Toscanini's recording sessions for RCA Victor were mastered on sound film in a process developed about 1941, as detailed by RCA producer Charles O'Connell in his memoirs, On and Off The Record. In addition, hundreds of hours of Toscanini's rehearsals with the NBC were preserved and are now housed in the Toscanini Legacy archive at The New York Public Library.

Toscanini was often criticized for neglecting American music; however, on November 5, 1938, he conducted the world premieres of two orchestral works by Samuel Barber, Adagio for Strings and Essay for Orchestra. In 1945, he led the orchestra in recording sessions of the Grand Canyon Suite by Ferde Grofé in Carnegie Hall (supervised by Grofé) and An American in Paris by George Gershwin in NBC's Studio 8-H. Both works had earlier been performed in broadcast concerts. He also conducted broadcast performances of Copland's El Salón México; Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue with soloists Earl Wild and Benny Goodman and Piano Concerto in F with pianist Oscar Levant; and music by other American composers, including marches of John Philip Sousa. He even wrote his own orchestral arrangement of The Star-Spangled Banner, which was incorporated into the NBC Symphony's performances of Verdi's Hymn of the Nations. (Earlier, while music director of the New York Philharmonic, he conducted music by Abram Chasins, Bernard Wagenaar, and Howard Hanson.)

In 1940, Toscanini took the orchestra on a "goodwill" tour of South America. Later that year, Toscanini had a disagreement with NBC management over their use of his musicians in other NBC broadcasts. This, among other reasons, resulted in a letter which Toscanini wrote on March 10, 1941 to RCA's David Sarnoff. He stated that he now wished "to withdraw from the militant scene of Art" and thus declined to sign a new contract for the up-coming winter season, but left the door open for an eventual return "if my state of mind, health and rest will be improved enough". So Leopold Stokowski was engaged on a three-year contract instead and served as the NBC Symphony's music director from 1941 until 1944. Toscanini's state of mind soon underwent a change and he returned as Stokowski's co-conductor for the latter's second and third seasons resuming full control in 1944.

One of the more remarkable broadcasts was in July 1942, when Toscanini conducted the American premiere of Dmitri Shostakovich's Symphony No. 7. Due to World War II, the score was microfilmed in the Soviet Union and brought by courier to the United States. Stokowski had previously given the US premieres of Shostakovich's 1st, 3rd and 6th Symphonies in Philadelphia, and in December 1941 urged NBC to obtain the score of the 7th as he wanted to conduct its premiere as well. But Toscanini coveted this for himself and there were a number of remarkable letters between the two conductors (reproduced by Harvey Sachs in his biography) before Stokowski agreed to let Toscanini have the privilege of conducting the first performance. Unfortunately for New York listeners, a major thunderstorm virtually obliterated the NBC radio signals there, but the performance was heard elsewhere and preserved on transcription discs.[13] It was later issued by RCA Victor in the 1967 centennial boxed set tribute to Toscanini, which included a number of NBC broadcasts never released on discs.[14] In Testimony Shostakovich himself expressed a dislike for the performance, after he heard a recording of the broadcast. In Toscanini's later years the conductor expressed dislike for the work and amazement that he had actually conducted it.[15]

In the summer of 1950, Toscanini led the orchestra on an extensive transcontinental tour. It was during that tour that the well-known photograph of Toscanini riding the ski lift at Sun Valley, Idaho was taken. Toscanini and the musicians traveled on a special train chartered by NBC.

The NBC concerts continued in Studio 8-H until the fall of 1950. They were then held in Carnegie Hall, where many of the orchestra's recording sessions had been held, due to the dry acoustics of Studio 8-H. The final broadcast performance, an all-Wagner program, took place on April 4, 1954, in Carnegie Hall. During this concert Toscanini suffered a memory lapse reportedly caused by a transient ischemic attack, although some have attributed the lapse to having been secretly informed that NBC intended to end the broadcasts and disband the NBC orchestra.[citation needed] He never conducted live in public again. That June, he participated in his final recording sessions, remaking portions of two Verdi operas so they could be commercially released. Toscanini was 87 years old when he retired. After his retirement, the NBC Symphony was reorganized as the Symphony of the Air, making regular performances and recordings, until it was disbanded in 1963.

On radio, he conducted seven complete operas, including La bohème, La traviata, and Otello, all of which were eventually released on records and CD, thus enabling the modern listening public to have at least some idea of what an opera conducted by Toscanini sounded like.

Last years

With the help of his son Walter, Toscanini spent his remaining years editing tapes and transcriptions of his performances with the NBC Symphony. The "approved" recordings were issued by RCA Victor, which also has issued his recordings with the La Scala Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, and the Philadelphia Orchestra. His recordings with the BBC Symphony Orchestra (1937–39) and the Philharmonia Orchestra (1952) were issued by EMI. Various companies have issued recordings on compact discs of a number of broadcasts and concerts that he did not officially approve. Among these are stereophonic recordings of his last two NBC broadcast concerts.

Sachs and other biographers have documented the numerous conductors, singers, and musicians who visited Toscanini during his retirement. He was a big fan of early television, especially boxing and wrestling telecasts, as well as comedy programs.

Toscanini died on January 16, 1957 at the age of 89 at his home in the Riverdale section of the Bronx in New York City. His body was returned to Italy and was buried in the Cimitero Monumentale in Milan. His epitaph is taken from one account of his remarks concluding the 1926 premiere of Puccini's unfinished Turandot: "Qui finisce l'opera, perché a questo punto il maestro è morto" ("Here the opera ends, because at this point the maestro died").[16] During his funeral service, Leyla Gencer sang an aria from Verdi's Requiem.

In his will, he left his baton to his protégée Herva Nelli, who sang in the broadcasts of Otello, Aïda, Falstaff, the Verdi Requiem, and Un ballo in maschera.

Toscanini was posthumously awarded the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 1987.

Personal life

Toscanini married Carla De Martini on June 21, 1897, when she was not yet 20 years old. Their first child, Walter, was born on March 19, 1898. A daughter, Wally, was born on January 16, 1900. Carla gave birth to another boy, Giorgio, in September 1901, but he died of diphtheria on June 10, 1906. Then, that same year, Carla gave birth to their second daughter, Wanda.

Toscanini worked with many great singers and musicians throughout his career, but few impressed him as much as Vladimir Horowitz. They worked together a number of times and even recorded Brahms' second piano concerto and Tchaikovsky's first piano concerto with the NBC Symphony for RCA. Horowitz also became close to Toscanini and his family. In 1933, Wanda Toscanini married Horowitz, with the conductor's blessings and warnings. It was Wanda's daughter, Sonia, who was once photographed by Life playing with the conductor.

During World War II, Toscanini lived in Wave Hill, a historic home in Riverdale.[17]

Despite the reported infidelities revealed in Toscanini's letters documented by Harvey Sachs, he remained married to Carla until she died on June 23, 1951.[18][19]

Gallery

Innovations

At La Scala, which had what was then the most modern stage lighting system installed in 1901 and an orchestral pit installed in 1907, Toscanini pushed through reforms in the performance of opera. He insisted on dimming the house-lights during performances. As his biographer Harvey Sachs wrote: "He believed that a performance could not be artistically successful unless unity of intention was first established among all the components: singers, orchestra, chorus, staging, sets, and costumes."

Toscanini favored the traditional orchestral seating plan with the first violins and cellos on the left, the violas on the near right, and the second violins on the far right.

Premieres

Toscanini conducted the world premieres of many operas, four of which have become part of the standard operatic repertoire: Pagliacci, La bohème, La fanciulla del West and Turandot; he took an active role in Alfano's completion of Puccini's Turandot.[20] He also conducted the first Italian performances of Siegfried, Götterdämmerung, Salome, Pelléas et Mélisande, and Euryanthe, as well as the South American premieres of Tristan und Isolde and Madama Butterfly and the North American premiere of Boris Godunov. He also conducted the world premiere of Samuel Barber's most famous work, the Adagio for Strings.

Arturo Toscanini

Operatic premieres

  • Edmea (revised version) by Alfredo CatalaniTurin, November 4, 1886
  • Pagliacci by Ruggiero LeoncavalloMilan, May 21, 1892
  • Guglielmo Swarten by Gnaga – Rome, November 15, 1892
  • Savitri by Natale Canti – Bologna, December 1, 1894
  • Emma Liona by Antonio Lozzi – Venice, May 24, 1895
  • La bohème by Giacomo PucciniTurin, February 1, 1896
  • Forza d'Amore by Arturo Buzzi-Peccia – Turin, March 6, 1897
  • La Camargo by Enrico De Leva – Turin, March 2, 1898
  • Anton by Cesare Galeotii – Milan, December 17, 1900
  • Zaza by Leoncavallo – Milan, November 10, 1900
  • Le Maschere by Pietro Mascagni – Milan, January 17, 1901
  • Mosè by Don Lorenzo Perosi – Milan, November 16, 1901
  • Germania by Alberto Franchetti – Milan, March 11, 1902
  • Oceana by Antonio Smareglia – Milan, January 22, 1903
  • Cassandra by Vittorio Gnecchi – Bologna, December 5, 1905
  • Gloria by Francesco Cilea – Milan, April 15, 1907
  • La fanciulla del West by Puccini – New York, December 10, 1910
  • Madame Sans-Gène by Umberto Giordano – New York, January 25, 1915
  • Debora e Jaele by Ildebrando Pizzetti – Milan, December 16, 1922
  • Nerone by Arrigo Boito (completed by Toscanini and Vincenzo Tommasini) – Milan, May 1, 1924
  • La Cena delle Beffe by Giordano – Milan, December 20, 1924
  • I Cavalieri di Ekebu by Riccardo Zandonai – Milan, March 7, 1925
  • Turandot by Puccini – Milan, April 25, 1926
  • Fra Gherado by Pizzetti – Milan, May 16, 1928
  • Il Re by Giordano – Milan, January 12, 1929

Orchestral premieres

Recorded legacy

Overview

Toscanini made his first recordings in December 1920 with the La Scala Orchestra in the Trinity Church studio of the Victor Talking Machine Company in Camden, New Jersey and his last with the NBC Symphony Orchestra in June 1954 in Carnegie Hall. His entire catalog of commercial recordings was issued by RCA Victor, save for two single-sided recordings for Brunswick in 1926 with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra and a series of excellent recordings with the BBC Symphony Orchestra from 1937 to 1939 for EMI's HMV label (some issued in the USA by RCA, others released only recently by EMI and Testament). Besides the 1926 recordings with the New York Philharmonic (his first with the electrical process), Toscanini made a series of recordings with them for Victor, in Carnegie Hall, in 1929 and 1936. He also recorded with the Philadelphia Orchestra for RCA Victor in Philadelphia's Academy of Music in 1941 and 1942. All of the RCA Victor recordings have been digitally re-mastered and released on CD. There are also recorded concerts with various European orchestras, especially with La Scala Orchestra and the Philharmonia Orchestra. In March 2012, Sony Masterworks will release an 84 CD boxed set of Toscanini's complete RCA Victor recordings and original HMV recordings with the BBC Symphony.

Hearing Toscanini

In some of his recordings, Toscanini can be heard singing or humming. This is especially true in RCA's recording of La bohème, recorded during broadcast concerts in NBC Studio 8-H in 1946. Tenor Jan Peerce later said that Toscanini's deep involvement in the performances helped him to achieve the necessary emotions, especially in the final moments of the opera when the beloved Mimi (played by Licia Albanese) is dying. During the "Tuba mirum" section of the January 1951 live recording of Verdi's Requiem, Toscanini can be heard on the disc shouting as the brass blares. In his recording of Richard Strauss' Death and Transfiguration, Toscanini sighed loudly near the end of the music; RCA Victor left this in the released recording.

Specialties

He was especially famous for his performances of Beethoven, Brahms, Wagner, Richard Strauss, Debussy and his own compatriots Rossini, Verdi, Boito and Puccini. He made many recordings, especially towards the end of his career, which are still in print. In addition, there are many recordings available of his broadcast performances, as well as his remarkable rehearsals with the NBC Symphony.

Charles O'Connell on Toscanini

Charles O'Connell, who produced many of Toscanini's RCA Victor recordings in the 1930s and early 1940s, said that RCA quickly decided to record the NBC Symphony Orchestra in Carnegie Hall, whenever possible, after being disappointed with the dull-sounding early recordings in Studio 8-H in 1938 and 1939. (Nevertheless, there were a few recording sessions in Studio 8-H as late as June 1950, probably because of improvements to the acoustics in 1939, including installation of an acoustical shell.) O'Connell, and others, often complained that Toscanini was little interested in recording and, as Harvey Sachs wrote, Toscanini was frequently disappointed that the microphones failed to pick up everything he heard during the recording sessions. O'Connell even complained of Toscanini's failure to cooperate with RCA during the sessions. Toscanini himself was often disappointed that the 78-rpm discs failed to fully capture all of the instruments in the orchestra; those fortunate to attend Toscanini's concerts later said the NBC string section was especially outstanding.[21]

Philadelphia Orchestra recordings

O'Connell also extensively documented RCA's technical problems with the Philadelphia Orchestra recordings of 1941/42, which required extensive electronic editing before they could be released (well after Toscanini's death, beginning in 1963, with the rest following in the 1970s). Harvey Sachs also recounts that the masters were damaged, possibly due to the use of somewhat inferior materials imposed by wartime restrictions. Unfortunately, a Musicians Union recording ban from 1942 to 1944 prevented immediate retakes; by the time the ban ended, the Philadelphia Orchestra had left RCA Victor for Columbia Records and RCA apparently was hesitant to promote the orchestra any further. Eventually, Toscanini recorded all of the same music with the NBC Symphony. In 1968, the Philadelphia Orchestra returned to RCA and the company was more favorable toward issuing all of the discs. As for the historic recordings, even on the CD versions, first released in 1991, some of the sides have considerable surface noise and some distortion, especially during the louder passages. The best sounding of the recordings is the Schubert Symphony No. 9 (The "Great"), which had been restored by RCA first (in 1963) and released on LP. The rest of the recordings were not issued until 1977 and, as Sachs noted, by that time some of the masters may have deteriorated further. Nevertheless, despite the occasional problems, the entire set is an impressive document of Toscanini's collaboration with the Philadelphia musicians. A 2006 RCA reissue, makes more use of digital processing in an attempt to produce better sound. Longtime Philadelphia director Eugene Ormandy expressed his appreciation for what Toscanini achieved with the orchestra.

High fidelity and stereo

In the late 1940s when magnetic tape replaced direct wax disc recording and high fidelity long playing records were introduced, the conductor said he was much happier making recordings. Sachs wrote that an Italian journalist, Raffaele Calzini, said Toscanini told him, "My son Walter sent me the test pressing of the [Beethoven] Ninth from America; I want to hear and check how it came out, and possibly to correct it. These long-playing records often make me happy."[22]

NBC had recorded all of Toscanini's broadcast performances on transcription discs from the start of the broadcasts in 1937. The use of high fidelity sound film was common for recording sessions, as early as 1941. By 1948, when RCA began using magnetic tape on a regular basis, high fidelity became the norm for Toscanini's, and all other commercial recordings. With RCA's experiments in stereo in early 1954, stereo tapes were made of Toscanini's final two broadcast concerts, as well as the rehearsals, as documented by Samuel Antek in This Was Toscanini. The microphones were placed relatively close to the orchestra and with limited separation, so the stereo effects were not as dramatic as the commercial "Living Stereo" recordings which RCA Victor began to make about the same time with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. The two Toscanini concerts recorded in stereo have been issued on LP and CD and have also been offered for download in digitally enhanced sound by Pristine Classical, a company which produces digitally enhanced versions of older classical recordings.

One more example of Toscanini and the NBC Symphony in stereo now also exists. It is of the January 27, 1951 concert devoted to the Verdi Requiem, previously recorded and released in high-fidelity monophonic sound by RCA Victor. Recently a separate recording of the same performance, using a different microphone in a different location, was acquired by Pristine Audio. Using modern digital technology the company constructed a stereophonic version of the performance from the two recordings which it made available in 2009. The company calls this an example of "accidental stereo".

Notable recordings

Among his most critically acclaimed recordings are the following (with the NBC Symphony unless otherwise shown):

(Many of these were never released officially during Toscanini's lifetime)

Rarities

There are many pieces which Toscanini never recorded in the studio; among these, some of the most interesting surviving recordings (off-the-air) include:

Rehearsals and broadcasts

A few of the hundreds of hours of rehearsal tapes featuring Toscanini, residing in the Rodgers and Hammerstein Archive of Recorded Sound, a division of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

Many hundreds of hours of Toscanini's rehearsals were recorded. Some of these have circulated in limited edition recordings. Many broadcast recordings with orchestras other than the NBC have also survived, including: The New York Philharmonic from 1933–36, 1942, and 1945; The BBC Symphony Orchestra from 1935–1939; The Lucerne Festival Orchestra; and broadcasts from the Salzburg Festival in the late 1930s. Documents of Toscanini's guest appearances with the La Scala Orchestra from 1946 until 1952 include a live recording of Verdi's Requiem with the young Renata Tebaldi. Toscanini's ten NBC Symphony telecasts from 1948 until 1952 were preserved in kinescope films of the live broadcasts. These films, issued by RCA on VHS tape and laser disc and on DVD by Testament, provide unique video documentation of the passionate yet restrained podium technique for which he was well known.

Recording guide

A guide to Toscanini's recording career can be found in Mortimer H. Frank's "From the Pit to the Podium: Toscanini in America" in International Classical Record Collector (1998, 15 8-21) and Christopher Dyment's "Toscanini's European Inheritance" in International Classical Record Collector (1998, 15 22-8). Frank and Dyment also discuss Maestro Toscanini's performance history in the 50th anniversary issue of Classic Record Collector (2006, 47) Frank with 'Toscanini – Myth and Reality' (10–14) and Dyment 'A Whirlwind in London' (15–21) This issue also contains interviews with people who performed with Toscanini – Jon Tolansky 'Licia Albanese – Maestro and Me' (22-6) and 'A Mesmerising Beat: John Tolansky talks to some of those who worked with Arturo Toscanini, to discover some of the secrets of his hold over singers, orchestras and audiences.' (34-7). There is also a feature article on Toscanini's interpretation of Brahms's First Symphony – Norman C. Nelson, 'First Among Equals [...] Toscanini's interpretation of Brahms's First Symphony in the context of others' (28–33)

The Arturo Toscanini Society

In 1969, Clyde J. Key acted on a dream he had of meeting Toscanini by starting the Arturo Toscanini Society to release a number of "unapproved" live performances by Toscanini. As Time Magazine reported, Key scoured the U.S. and Europe for off-the-air transcriptions of Toscanini broadcasts, acquiring almost 5,000 transcriptions (all transferred to tape) of previously unreleased material—a complete catalogue of broadcasts by the Maestro between 1933 and 1954. It included about 50 concerts that were never broadcast, but which were recorded surreptitiously by engineers supposedly testing their equipment.

A private, nonprofit club based in Dumas, Texas, it offered members five or six LPs annually for a $25-a-year membership fee. Key's first package offering included Brahms' German Requiem, Haydn's Symphonies Nos. 88 and 104, and Richard Strauss' Ein Heldenleben, all NBC Symphony broadcasts dating from the late 1930s or early 1940s. In 1970, the Society releases included Sibelius' Symphony No. 4, Mendelssohn's "Scottish" Symphony, dating from the same NBC period; and a Rossini-Verdi-Puccini LP emanating from the post-War reopening of La Scala on May 11, 1946 with the Maestro conducting. That same year it released a Beethoven bicentennial set that included the 1935 Missa Solemnis with the Philharmonic and LPs of the 1948 televised concert of the ninth symphony taken from an FM radio transcription, complete with Ben Grauer's comments. (In the early 1990s, the kinescopes of these and the other televised concerts were released by RCA with soundtracks dubbed in from the NBC radio transcriptions; in 2006, they were re-released by Testament on DVD.)

Additional releases included a number of Beethoven symphonies recorded with the New York Philharmonic during the 1930s, a performance of Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 27 on February 20, 1936, at which Rudolf Serkin made his New York debut, and one of the most celebrated underground Toscanini recordings of all, the legendary 1940 version of Beethoven's Missa Solemnis, which has better soloists (Zinka Milanov, Jussi Bjoerling, both in their prime) and a more powerful style than the 1953 recording now available on RCA/BMG, although the microphone placement was kinder to the soloists in 1953.

Because the Arturo Toscanini Society was nonprofit, Key said he believed he had successfully bypassed both copyright restrictions and the maze of contractual ties between RCA and the Maestro's family. However, RCA's attorneys were soon looking into the matter to see if they agreed. As long as it stayed small, the Society appeared to offer little real competition to RCA. But classical-LP profits were low enough even in 1970, and piracy by fly-by-night firms so prevalent within the industry (an estimated $100 million in tape sales for 1969 alone), that even a benevolent buccaneer outfit like the Arturo Toscanini Society had to be looked at twice before it could be tolerated.[24]

Magazine and newspaper reports subsequently detailed legal action taken against Key and the Society, presumably after some of the LPs began to appear in retail stores. Toscanini fans and record collectors were dismayed because, although Toscanini had not approved the release of these performances in every case, many of them were found to be further proof of the greatness of the Maestro's musical talents. One outstanding example of a remarkable performance not approved by the Maestro was his December 1948 NBC broadcast of Dvořák's Symphonic Variations, released on an LP by the Society. (A kinescope of the same performance, from the television simulcast, has been released on VHS and laser disc by RCA/BMG and on DVD by Testament.) There was speculation that, the Toscanini family itself, prodded by his daughter Wanda, sought to defend the Maestro's original decisions, made mostly during his last years, on what should be released. Walter Toscanini later admitted that his father probably rejected performances that were okay. Whatever the real reasons, the Arturo Toscanini Society was forced to disband and cease releasing any further recordings.

Television

Arturo Toscanini was one of the first conductors to make extended appearances on live television. Between 1948 and 1952, he conducted ten concerts telecast on NBC, including a two-part concert performance of Verdi's complete opera Aida starring Herva Nelli and Richard Tucker, and the first complete telecast of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. All of these were simulcast on radio. These concerts were all shown only once during that four-year span, but they were preserved on kinescopes.[25]

The telecasts began on March 20, 1948, with an all-Wagner program, including the Prelude to Act III of Lohengrin; the overture and bacchanale from Tannhäuser; "Forest Murmurs" from Siegfried; "Dawn and Siegfried's Rhine Journey" from Götterdämmerung; and "The Ride of the Valkyries" from Die Walküre. Beethoven's Ninth Symphony was telecast on April 3, 1948. On November 13, 1948, there was an all-Brahms program, including the Concerto for Violin, Cello, and Orchestra in A minor (Mischa Mischakoff, violin; Frank Miller, cello); Liebeslieder-Walzer, Op. 52 (with two pianists and a small chorus); and Hungarian Dance No. 1 in G minor. On December 3, 1948, Toscanini conducted Mozart's Symphony No. 40 in G minor; Dvořák's Symphonic Variations; and Wagner's original overture to Tannhäuser.

There were two telecasts in 1949, both devoted to the performance of Verdi's Aida from studio 8H. Acts I and II were telecast on March 26 and III and IV on April 2. Portions of the audio were rerecorded in June 1954 for the commercial release on LP records. As the video shows, the soloists were placed close to Toscanini, in front of the orchestra, while the robed members of the Robert Shaw Chorale were on risers behind the orchestra.

There were no telecasts in 1950, but they resumed from Carnegie Hall on November 3, 1951, with Weber's overture to Euryanthe and Brahms' Symphony No. 1. On December 29, 1951, there was another all-Wagner program that included the two excerpts from Siegfried and Die Walküre featured on the March 1948 telecast, plus the Prelude to Act II of Lohengrin; the Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde; and "Siegfried's Death and Funeral Music" from Götterdämmerung.

On March 15, 1952, Toscanini conducted the Symphonic Interlude from Franck's Rédemption; Sibelius's En Saga; Debussy's "Nuages" and "Fetes" from Nocturnes; and the overture of Rossini's William Tell. The final telecast, on March 22, 1952, included Beethoven's Symphony No. 5, and Respighi's The Pines of Rome.

The NBC cameras were often left on Toscanini for extended periods, documenting not only his baton techniques but his deep involvement in the music. At the end of a piece, Toscanini generally nodded rather than bowed and exited the stage quickly. Although NBC continued to broadcast the orchestra on radio until April 1954, telecasts were abandoned after March 1952.

As part of a restoration project initiated by the Toscanini family in the late 1980s, the kinescopes were fully restored and issued by RCA on VHS and laser disc beginning in 1989. The audio portion of the sound was taken, not from the noisy kinescopes, but from 33-1/3 rpm 16-inch transcription disc and high fidelity audio tape recordings made simultaneously by RCA technicians during the televised concerts. The hi-fi audio was synchronized with the kinescope video for the home video release. Original introductions by NBC's longtime announcer Ben Grauer were replaced with new commentary by Martin Bookspan. The entire group of Toscanini videos has since been reissued by Testament on DVD, with further improvements to the sound.

Film

In 1943, Toscanini made a 31-minute film for the United States Office of War Information called Hymn of the Nations, directed by Alexander Hammid. It was mostly filmed in NBC's Studio 8-H and consists of Toscanini conducting the NBC Symphony in a performance of Verdi's Overture to La Forza del Destino and Verdi's "Hymn of the Nations" (Inno delle nazioni), which contains national anthems of England, France, and Italy (the World War I allied nations), to which Toscanini added the Soviet "Internationale" and "The Star Spangled Banner". Tenor Jan Peerce and the Westminster Choir performed in the latter work and the film was narrated by Burgess Meredith.[26]

The film was released by RCA/BMG on DVD in 2004. By this time the "Internationale" had been cut from the 1943 film, but the complete "Hymn of the Nations" can still be heard in the audio recording which accompanied the DVD on a CD.[27] Hymn of the Nations was nominated for a 1944 Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.[28]

Toscanini: The Maestro is a 1985 documentary made for cable television. The film features archival footage of the conductor and interviews with musicians who worked with him. This film was released on VHS and in 2004 on the same DVD with Hymn of the Nations.

Toscanini is the subject of the 1988 fictionalized biography Il giovane Toscanini (Young Toscanini), starring C. Thomas Howell and Dame Elizabeth Taylor, and directed by Franco Zeffirelli.[29] It received scathing reviews and was never officially released in the United States. The film is a fictional recounting of the events that led up to Toscanini making his conducting debut in Rio de Janeiro in 1886. Although nearly all of the plot is embellished, the events surrounding the sudden and unexpected conducting debut are based on fact.

Acclaim and criticism

Throughout his career, Toscanini was virtually idolized by the critics (a notable exception being Virgil Thomson), as well as by most fellow musicians and the public alike. He enjoyed the kind of consistent critical acclaim during his life that few other musicians have had. He was featured three times on the cover of Time magazine, in 1926, 1934, and again in 1948. In the magazine's history, he is the only conductor to have been so honored.[30][31][32] On March 25, 1989, the United States Postal Service issued a 25 cent postage stamp in his honor.[33] While online critics such as Peter Gutmann have dismissed much of what was written about Toscanini during his lifetime as "adoring puffery", [34] it neverthleless remains a fact that composers and others who worked with the Maestro readily acknowledged what they felt was his greatness, and audio interviews containing the praise of such luminaries as Aaron Copland still exist. [35]

Over the past thirty years or so, however, as a new generation has appeared, there has been an increasing amount of revisionist criticism directed at Toscanini. These critics contend that Toscanini was ultimately a detriment to American music rather than an asset because of the tremendous marketing of him by RCA as the greatest conductor of all time and his preference to perform mostly older European music. According to Harvey Sachs, Mortimer Frank, and B. H. Haggin, this criticism can be traced to the lack of focus on Toscanini as a conductor rather than his legacy. Frank, in his recent book Toscanini: The NBC Years, rejects this revisionism quite strongly,[36] and cites the author Joseph Horowitz (author of Understanding Toscanini) as perhaps the most extreme of these critics. Frank writes that this revisionism has unfairly influenced younger listeners and critics, who may have not heard as many of Toscanini's performances as older listeners, and as a result, Toscanini's reputation, extraordinarily high in the years that he was active, has suffered a decline. Conversely, Joseph Horowitz contends that those who keep the Toscanini legend alive are members of a "Toscanini cult", an idea not altogether refuted by Frank, but not embraced by him, either.

Some contemporary critics, particularly Virgil Thomson, also took Toscanini to task for not paying enough attention to the "modern repertoire" (i.e., 20th-century composers, of which Thomson was one). It may be speculated, knowing Toscanini's antipathy toward much 20th-century music, that perhaps Thomson had a feeling that the conductor would never have played any of his (Thomson's) music, and that perhaps because of this, Thomson bore a resentment against him. During Toscanini's middle years, however, such now widely accepted composers as Claude Debussy, whose music the conductor held in very high regard, were considered to be radical and modern.

Another criticism leveled at Toscanini stems from the constricted sound quality that comes from many of his recordings, notably those made in NBC's Studio 8-H. Studio 8-H was foremost a radio and later a television studio, not a true concert hall. Its dry acoustics lacking in much reverberation, while ideal for broadcasting, were unsuited for symphonic concerts and opera. However, it is widely believed that Toscanini favored it because its close miking enabled listeners to hear every instrumental strand in the orchestra clearly, something that the conductor strongly believed in.[37]

Toscanini has also been criticized for lack of nuance and metronomic (rhythmically too rigid) performances:

"Others attacked the conductor on the ground that he was a slave to the metronome. They said that his beat was inexorable, that his rhythms were rigid, that he was an enemy of Italian song and a wrecker of the art of bel canto."[38]
"When he was young as a conductor, it was complained of Toscanini that he held the tempo and rhythm of the music firmly to its course and that it had the mechanical exactitude of a metronome. [...]"[39]
—The Maestro: The Life Of Arturo Toscanini (1951) by Howard Taubman

Others state (and there is some evidence from the recordings) that Toscanini's tempos, quite flowing in his earlier recordings, became stricter as he got older, although this is not to be taken as a literally true statement. His 1953 recording of Pictures at an Exhibition, for instance, and his 1950 La Mer, are considered masterpieces by many.

The Toscanini Legacy

Beginning in 1963, NBC Radio broadcast a weekly series of programs entitled Toscanini: The Man Behind The Legend, commemorating Toscanini's years with the NBC Symphony Orchestra. The show, hosted by NBC announcer Ben Grauer, who had also hosted many of the original Toscanini broadcasts, featured interviews with members of the conductor's family, as well as musicians of the NBC Symphony, David Sarnoff, and noted classical musicians who had worked with the conductor, such as Giovanni Martinelli. It spotlighted partial or complete rebroadcasts of many of Toscanini's recordings. The program ran for at least three years, and did not feature any of the revisionist commentary about the conductor one finds so often today in magazines such as American Record Guide.[40]

In 1986, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts purchased the bulk of Toscanini's papers, scores and sound recordings from his heirs. Named The Toscanini Legacy, this vast collection contains thousands of letters, programs and various documents, over 1,800 scores and more than 400 hours of sound recordings. A finding aids for the scores and sound recordings is available on the library's website. In house finding aids are available for other parts of the collection.

The Library also has many other collections that have Toscanini materials in them, such as the Bruno Walter papers, the Fiorello H. La Guardia papers, and a collection of material from Rose Bampton.

Quotations

  • Of German composer Richard Strauss, whose political behavior during World War II was arguably very questionable: "To Strauss the composer I take off my hat; to Strauss the man I put it back on again."
  • "The conduct of my life has been, is, and will always be the echo and reflection of my conscience."
  • "Gentlemen, be democrats in life but aristocrats in art."
  • Referring to the first movement of the Eroica: "To some it is Napoleon, to some it is a philosophical struggle. To me it is allegro con brio."
  • At the point where Puccini left off writing the finale of his unfinished opera, Turandot: "Here Death triumphed over art". (Toscanini then left the opera pit, the lights went up and the audience left in silence.).[41]
  • Toscanini was invited in the year 1940 to visit a movie set at the Metro Goldwyn Mayer Studios. There he said with tears in his eyes, "I will remember three things in my life: the sunset, the Grand Canyon and Eleanor Powell's dancing."

See also

References

  1. ^ Sachs, Harvey (1978). Toscanini. Da Capo Press. ISBN 030680137X. 
  2. ^ Tarozzi, Giuseppe (1977). Non muore la musica – La vita e l'opera di Arturo Toscanini (p.36). SUGARco Edizioni. )
  3. ^ Nicotra, Tobia (2005). Arturo Toscanini. Kessinger Publ. Co.. ISBN 9781417901265. 
  4. ^ Mortimer H. Frank, Arturo Toscanini: The NBC Years, p. 149
  5. ^ David Mason Greene, Greene’s Biographical Encyclopedia of Composers, p. 819
  6. ^ Conati et al., Marcello (1986). Encounters with Verdi. Cornell University Press. pp. 303. ISBN 0801494303. 
  7. ^ Verdi, however, was quick to criticise Toscanini when appropriate, as in a rehearsal of Otello where he was unhappy with the playing of the solo for four muted cellos that ushers in the final duet of the first act of Otello: "Gia nella notte densa". cf. Conati et al., p.304
  8. ^ Opera. June 1954, p334
  9. ^ a b Plaskin, 195.
  10. ^ Sachs, Toscanini, 154.
  11. ^ Sachs, Toscanini, 211.
  12. ^ Farrell, Nicholas (2005). Mussolini: a New Life. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc.. pp. 238. ISBN 1842121235. 
  13. ^ MOG.com
  14. ^ RCA Victor liner notes
  15. ^ Taubman in 1951 (at page 289) quotes him (without citation) as saying "I asked myself, did I conduct that? Did I work two weeks memorizing that symphony? Impossible! I was stupid!" The violist William Carboni, when interviewed by Haggin in 1967 (at pages 54–55 of The Toscanini Musicians Knew) quotes him (without citation) as saying "Did I play this? I must have been crazy." Marek in 1975 (at page 234) quotes him (without citation) as saying "Did I really learn and conduct such junk?"
  16. ^ William Ashbrook (1984). "Turandot and Its Posthumous Prima". Opera Quarterly 2 (3): 126–132. doi:10.1093/oq/2.3.126. ISSN 0736-0053 / Online ISSN 1476-2870. http://oq.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/2/3/126. 
  17. ^ Frank, Mortimer H. "A Toscanini Odyssey", The Juilliard Journal Online, April 2002. Accessed February 26, 2008. "That archive was housed at Wave Hill, Toscanini's Riverdale residence during World War II."
  18. ^ Michael Kennedy (12 May 2002). "Conductor con brio". London: Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2002/05/12/botos12.xml. Retrieved 28 April 2007. 
  19. ^ Catherine Milner (20 April 2002). "Letters detail Toscanini's affairs". Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=MQQUQXCVEW2Z3QFIQMFSFGGAVCBQ0IV0?xml=/news/2002/04/21/wtosc21.xml. Retrieved 18 April 2007. 
  20. ^ However, he refused to conduct the section that Alfano composed at the opera's world premiere.
  21. ^ Eyewitness accounts by William Knorp and others
  22. ^ Harvey Sachs, Toscanini, pp. 302–303
  23. ^ Amazon.com
  24. ^ Time, March 2, 1970
  25. ^ Harvey Sachs, Toscanini
  26. ^ "Toscanini: Hymn of the Nations". Time magazine, April 29, 1946.
  27. ^ "Toscanini: The Maestro" Amazon.com 2004
  28. ^ Hymn of the Nations at the Internet Movie Database
  29. ^ "Movies: About Il Giovane Toscanini". The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/130532/Young-Toscanini/overview. 
  30. ^ Cover story: "The Perfectionist". Time magazine, April 26, 1948
  31. ^ Cover story: "Birthday of a Conductor". Time magazine, April 2, 1934.
  32. ^ Cover story: "Toscanini". Time magazine, January 25, 1926.
  33. ^ Scott catalog # 2411.
  34. ^ http://www.classicalnotes.net/features/toscaweb.html#legacy
  35. ^ http://digital.library.unt.edu/explore/collections/TNMBL/browse/
  36. ^ Klassi.net
  37. ^ Amazon.com
  38. ^ Howard Taubman. "The Maestro: The Life Of Arturo Toscanini". http://www.archive.org/stream/maestrothelifeof000862mbp#page/n109/mode/1up. 
  39. ^ Howard Taubman. "The Maestro: The Life Of Arturo Toscanini". http://www.archive.org/stream/maestrothelifeof000862mbp#page/n280/mode/1up. 
  40. ^ Explore Toscanini: The Man Behind the Legend: List View UNT Digital Library
  41. ^ Mosco Carner, Puccini, 1974; Howard Taubman, Toscanini, 1951; quoted in Norman Lebrecht, The Book of Musical Anecdotes
Notes
  • Seraphim recordings/liner notes
  • Arturo Toscanini Society recordings
  • RCA home videos

Further reading

  • Antek, Samuel (author) and Hupka, Robert (photographs), This Was Toscanini, New York: Vanguard Press, 1963 (consists of a series of essays by one of the NBC Symphony musicians who played under Toscanini, combined with remarkable rehearsal photographs from the latter part of Toscanini's career).
  • Frank, Mortimer H., Arturo Toscanini: The NBC Years, New York: Amadeus Press, 2002. (Re-evaluates favorably several of Toscanini's most strongly criticized performances. Complete list and analysis of NBC symphony performances under Toscanini as well as other conductors.)
  • Haggin, B. H., Arturo Toscanini: Contemporary Recollections of the Maestro, New York: Da Capo Press, 1989 (reprint of Conversations with Toscanini and The Toscanini Musicians Knew).
  • Horowitz, Joseph, Understanding Toscanini, New York: Knopf, 1987 (a revisionist treatment, attacking Toscanini's legacy; contains factual errors corrected by Sachs in Reflections on Toscanini).
  • Marek, George R., Toscanini, New York: Atheneum, 1975. ISBN 0-689-10655-6 (Contains some factual errors corrected by Sachs.)
  • Marsh, R. C. Toscanini on Records – Part I: High Fidelity Magazine vol 4,1954, pp. 55–58
  • Marsh Part II: vol 4,1955, pp. 75–81
  • Marsh Part III: vol 4,1955, pp. 83–91
  • Matthews, Denis, Arturo Toscanini. New York: Hippocrene, 1982. ISBN 0-88254-657-0 (includes discography)
  • Meyer, Donald Carl, The NBC Symphony Orchestra. UMI Dissertation Services, 1994.
  • O'Connell, Charles, The Other Side of the Record. New York: A. A. Knopf, 1947. (Inside view of Toscanini's recordings)
  • Sachs, Harvey, Toscanini, New York: Prima Publishing, 1995. (Reprint of standard and best biography originally published 1978.)
  • Harvey Sachs, Reflections on Toscanini, New York: Prima Publishing, 1993. (Series of essays on various aspects of Toscanini's life and impact.)
  • Harvey Sachs|, ed., The Letters of Arturo Toscanini, New York: Knopf, 2003.
  • Howard Taubman, The Maestro: The Life of Arturo Toscanini, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1951 (contains factual errors corrected by Haggin and Sachs).
  • Teachout, Terry, Toscanini Lives, Commentary Magazine, July/August 2002

External links

Preceded by
Franco Faccio
Music Director, La Scala
1898–1908
Succeeded by
Tullio Serafin
Preceded by
Tullio Serafin
Music Director, La Scala
1921–1929
Succeeded by
Victor de Sabata


 
 

 

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