FURTWNGLER, (GUSTAV HEINRICH ERNST MARTIN) WILHELM


Meaning of FURTWNGLER, (GUSTAV HEINRICH ERNST MARTIN) WILHELM in English

born Jan. 25, 1886, Berlin died Nov. 30, 1954, near Baden-Baden, W. Ger. German conductor, one of the great exponents of Romantic music. Known for his passionate, romantic style, he excelled in the works of Beethoven and Wagner. The son of archaeologist Adolf Furtwngler, he studied in Munich, where he was assistant to the conductor Felix Mottl (190709). He became director of the Mannheim Opera in 1915 and in 1920 succeeded Richard Strauss as conductor of the Berlin Opera concerts. In 1922 he followed Arthur Nikisch as conductor of the Gewandhaus Concerts in Leipzig. Other appointments included the directorships of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra (1922), the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (1930), the Bayreuth Festivals (193132), and the Berlin State Opera (1933). He subsequently toured Europe and England with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. Furtwngler conducted in Germany during most of the Nazi regime. Although he was offered and accepted the post as conductor of the New York Philharmonic in 1936, public hostility to his alleged Nazi associations caused him to resign. Public sentiment again caused the cancellation of a 1949 appointment as conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, although he had been formally exonerated of accusations of Nazi complicity.

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