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#907650 - 04/25/03 11:33 AM
Ashkenazy & Czech Philharmonic...
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 2506
Loc: Denver, Colorado
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Maestro Ashkenazy sounds off
Czech Philharmonic conductor blasts 'lack of motivation'
By Alan Levy The Prague Post (April 24, 2003)
This interview almost didn't happen. A late January get-together for a mellow look back at his five years as chief conductor and music director of the Czech Philharmonic was canceled by Vladimir Ashkenazy's management in London because the maestro didn't have much good to say about the orchestra he leaves in June.
Since I'm known to some as "The Travel Agent of the Guilt Trip," I e-mailed Ashkenazy about moral obligation, inconvenience, etc. and he phoned me an hour later. Together, we hammered out one sentence that was all he'd have to say about the Czech Philharmonic in an interview we rescheduled for April: "In five years I gave them all my heart, but by and large I had no response."
For our April interview, when he was passing through Prague for the final concert of a seven-city tour with the European Union Youth Orchestra, the celebrated pianist-turned-conductor was wearing his trademark white turtleneck (his performance uniform, too) when he welcomed me at the Prague Marriott hotel. Compact, trim and all business at 65, he was pleased when I pulled out the agreed-upon quote and asked if he wanted to make any modifications or additions.
As I read it back to him, his cheerful, blond Icelandic wife objected that the phrase "by and large" didn't do justice to a handful or more of musicians who shared her husband's ambitions. So we rephrased the ending to read "... but I have a very strong feeling that I got very little response."
"Having said that," he went on, "I could add that there are some wonderful players with whom I've had very rich contact that I'll never forget. Musically, there have been some wonderful concerts and for this I'll always be grateful. ... But I was told by many members of the orchestra that they lack motivation. When I asked why, they said they are paid very little [on average, 17,000 Kc/$600 a month].
"I can only guess that having been the elite orchestra of communist Czechoslovakia, now they find themselves competing with world-class orchestras out in the open -- even here. I may be wrong, but I feel a lot of resentment coming from them. Yes, their jobs are safe, but they see they're paid very little and not much appreciated for being a great orchestra -- at least when it started. If you lack motivation, it's bound to affect the performance. Motivation is important everywhere. It's why smaller armies sometimes win wars."
"Should anybody's job be safe in the arts?" I wondered.
"That's a very interesting question. You know, I conduct a lot in Germany, where musicians also are civil servants with lifetime job security. But they never, never lack motivation. They give their hearts to every note of music. ... You can't relate your life to how much you're paid. It's a great pity that this is the case here. You see, I'm worried for the future of the orchestra, because to compete with the greatest orchestras in the world you have to give your best every time. It's scary -- but I wish them only well. I'd hope they think about what I'm saying to you and take themselves in hand -- their own hands."
"Did you try to take them in hand?" I asked.
"I tried to explain to them what the West is like. Money isn't just lying in the street waiting for you to pick it up. You have to earn it. Nobody owes you another recording or concert gig. You have to deserve it. But misunderstanding of the West is tremendous in all the ex-communist countries: ignorance and lack of readiness to understand and adapt to the New World."
Mahler 7, Tchaikovsky 5
Now the dam burst -- with example following example:
"You know that the recording business is trailing off nowadays. But I collaborate with a small label in Japan, Octavia Records, that's happy to record the Czech Philharmonic, too. They've issued 10 CDs of the orchestra. Well, they wanted to record Mahler 7 [Symphony], which isn't a hot ticket like Tchaikovsky 5. Octavia could pay the orchestra only $20,000 [now 580,000 Kc]. The orchestra wanted $25,000, so they dug in their heels and stonewalled it.
"We held a meeting. One musician stood up and said: 'So you want us to record for nothing!'
"All I could do after that was write a personal check myself for $5,000 to save the recording. But not one person in the orchestra said 'thank you' to me -- or even mentioned it.
"Another time was on a Japanese tour. The orchestra had a free day before traveling to the next concert. But there was a typhoon warning. So the management asked them if they could possibly fly to the next destination a day early, because if they couldn't fly the next day, then they'd lose the concert. They insisted on being compensated for losing the free day -- even though the flight was just an hour and a half and they had the same amount of free time remaining, in any case, but at the other end. The Japanese never forgot this. Our negotiations with them are tougher now."
Babi Yar in Babylon
The absolute summit of Ashkenazy's five years with the Czech Philharmonic was scaled early this year with a cycle of Soviet compositions called "Music and Dictatorship: Russia Under Stalin," featuring works mostly by Dmitri Shostakovich and Sergei Prokofiev. They were written to glorify, yet undercut, a system that threatened their careers and their lives. Its high point was Shostakovich's monumental 13th Symphony, with its setting of Yevgeni Yevtushenko's epic poem protesting anti-Semitism, Babi Yar. Sung in Russian in Prague's Rudolfinum and New York's Carnegie Hall, Babi Yar was preceded in New York by Yevtushenko himself reading in Russian and English.
"With the concerts in New York and London," said Ashkenazy, "I also conducted a symposium explaining that era and I'll do so in Vienna in June. But not in Prague. The orchestra management refused to schedule a symposium here. What a pity! Czechoslovakia and my country went through this difficult period together. Why couldn't we talk about it?"
Blaming general director Vaclav Riedlbauch for the veto, Ashkenazy went on to lambaste him:
"We had a very successful tour in the United States. Three consecutive nights in Carnegie Hall sold out. But Riedlbauch didn't even come; he had 'other commitments.' Nobody ever heard of a major orchestra coming to New York without its manager."
("I'll answer the second accusation first," Riedlbauch replied in a telephone interview. "That's a very stupid sentence by Mr. Ashkenazy, because he knows we had such problems financing the U.S. tour that we had to cut down the number of musicians. So it would have been presumptuous for me to come along.
"As for the symposium, the reasons he gives for having it are also reasons for not having it here. People here know about it.")
The afternoon after his EU Youth Orchestra concert, Ashkenazy phoned me from Ruzyne Airport: "I'm really sorry you couldn't come, but here's what you missed: Those kids played Rachmaninov's Second Symphony, the exact same piece I conducted with the Philharmonic a year ago in the same hall. And I'm sad to say that last night it sounded 10 times better. Why? Because they were motivated."
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