Jim Tobin replies to Roger Hecht:
>>Overrated for sure [Levine], but that has not stopped the Boston press
>>from lionizing him, just as in a different way it covered for Ozawa.
>
>Covered for him? When? From 1980-1986 when I lived in Boston, and heard
>just about all of Ozawa's concert's, the Boston Globe reviewer lost no
>opportunity to sneer at Ozawa. The orchestra was on "autopilot," there
>were no true pianissimos, etc. (I was at an open rehearsal and heard
>him tell the players "softer!" on one occasion.
Hot damn! See my accompanying post. If you're right, and I believe you
are, but I can't remember specifically any more, someone *did* write
that column I am sure I saw advising Ozawa to leave when his contract
was up. And I think it was Dyer.
Anyway. When did he stop covering for Ozawa? I can't remember when it
started, but Dyer started heaping praise on Ozawa, or at least refraining
from criticizing him as she should, back in the 1990s, I'm pretty sure.
And I recall being surprised, because of what I stated above. And for a
while, I was fooled. Dyer would praise, I would go, and then say, never
again. Happened quite a bit before I stuck to my guns.
Roger Hecht
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