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Date: | Mon, 19 May 2008 19:52:29 -0700 |
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http://www.newcitychicago.com/chicago/7746.html
*Orchestral Maneuvers *
How the CSO landed Riccardo Muti, the music director New York wanted
* Dennis Polkow*
It is 7am Chicago time Monday, May 5, and an extraordinary
event is going on near Salzburg, Austria (local time 2pm)
related to the future of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra:
Italian conductor Riccardo Muti is signing a contract to
become its tenth music director. Although it had long been
speculated that Muti was a strong candidate for the post,
CSO president and CEO Deborah R. Card was playing her cards
with deafening silence given the enormous stakes involved.
"I knew that until the ink was dry," says Card, "there was
no deal." Card is hesitant to admit, even now, the precise
moment that a deal had actually been struck.
Given that Muti had reportedly turned down the music
directorship of the New York Philharmonic at least twice
in recent years and had been dodgy about agreeing to the
specific terms of even the role of principal guest-conductor
there, Card had good reason to be concerned. New York
Philharmonic executive director and former Ravinia Festival
CEO Zarin Mehta publicly expressed his "disappointment" at
the news of Muti's acceptance of the Chicago Symphony music
directorship, given that Muti's Chicago appointment implicitly
nullifies his guest conductorship there, which had been a
key component in the Philharmonic decision to engage the
relatively unknown Alan Gilbert as its next music director.
New York is understandably miffed, and you have to wonder
if some kind of critical backlash might be in store when
Muti begins making annual Carnegie Hall trips to New York
with the CSO after his music directorship takes effect in
2010.
Perhaps this is why the first of two carefully chosen
interviews that Muti gave the day of the announcement itself
was to the New York Times---the Chicago Symphony's longtime
New York-based publicist apparently attempting some sort
of damage control within a spurned city and Muti insisting
that he did not so much prefer one orchestra over another
as that the timing of the Chicago deal was more opportune
than any New York offer had been. New York's classical-music
critics quickly began weighing in with bitter editorials
and commentaries, some even explicitly stating that New
York didn't really want---nor need---Muti in any case. ...
Janos Gereben
www.sfcv.org
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