MUSIC DIRECTORS

Daniel Barenboim

Born November 15, 1942, , .

MUSIC DIRECTOR (1991-2006)

Daniel Barenboim, ninth of the Chicago , established himself as one the finest , conductors, and chamber musicians in the world. Barenboim first conducted the CSO in 1970 and over the course of his more than thirty-year with the Orchestra, he appeared frequently in Chicago as conductor, orchestra soloist, and recitalist.

Daniel Barenboim was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1942. When he was five years old, he began his first lessons with his mother, continuing with his father, who remained his only other teacher. In August 1950, when the young artist was just seven, he gave his first official concert in Buenos Aires.

Barenboim received his general education in , where his family moved in 1952. Artur Rubinstein and Adolf Busch, who had already made great impressions on him in Argentina, as well as and Wilhelm Furtwängler, whom he met in , became important influences in his development as a musician. He also attended ’s classes in Salzburg and studied harmony and composition with in .

Barenboim made his debut as a in and Rome in 1952, in Paris in 1955, in in 1956, in New York in 1957 with , and in Chicago in 1958. From then on, he made annual concert tours of the and Europe. He toured Australia in 1958 and soon became known as one of the most versatile pianists of his generation. His recording activities as a pianist began in 1954 and, during the 1960s, he recorded the Beethoven piano with Klemperer, the Brahms concertos with Barbirolli, and all the Mozart concertos in the dual role of soloist and conductor with the English Chamber Orchestra.

During the same period, Barenboim started to devote more time to conducting and, in 1965, he established a close relationship with the English Chamber Orchestra that was to last for more than a decade. Together they played innumerable in , the United States, and Japan. Barenboim made his conducting debut in London with the New in 1967, in 1969, and in New York soon after that.

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Daniel Barenboim has always been active as a chamber musician, with his late wife, cellist Jacqueline du Pré, and with , , and , among others. As a lieder accompanist, he has performed extensively with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau.

Between 1968 and 1970, Barenboim served as artistic director of South Bank Music in London and, until 1973, also was director of the Israel Festival. From 1975 to 1989, Barenboim was music director of the placing special emphasis on contemporary music, giving performances of works by Lutosławski, Berio, Boulez, Henze, and Dutilleux. He also founded the chorus of the Orchestre de Paris.

Daniel Barenboim first conducted at the Edinburgh Festival in 1972. He has been associated with the Festival since 1981, leading performances of Tristan and Isolde, , and the complete Ring cycle. In 1982, Barenboim created a Mozart festival with the Orchestre de Paris, leading performances of , , and Così fan tutte as well as concerts of the ’s orchestral works. In 1987, he led a new production of that inaugurated the season of the newly restored Théâtre des Champs-Elysées.

Daniel Barenboim was appointed as music director designate of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 1989 and began his tenure as music director in 1991. His music directorship has been distinguished by the opening of Chicago’s new Symphony Center in 1997, highly praised operatic productions at Orchestra Hall, numerous virtuoso appearances with the Orchestra in the dual role of pianist and conductor, twenty-one international tours, and an ongoing series of composer perspectives woven into the Orchestra’s subscription series. In his seventeen years in Chicago, he ensured high quality orchestral playing by the CSO,

Barenboim and the Orchestra onstage at Orchestra Hall overseeing the appointment of forty musicians to the ranks of the in 1995. Orchestra, including nine in principal positions. In 1995, he named to the position of Principal Guest Conductor. A champion of music of our time, Barenboim led world premiere performances of more than twenty new works during his time in Chicago. His tenure has also been marked by a dedication to the next generation of orchestral musicians through his continued advocacy of the Civic Orchestra program.

Barenboim is General Music Director of the Deutsche Staatsoper Berlin for life. In recent years, he has established close relationships with the and , with whom he often tours, and has maintained a busy schedule of performances, appearing in recitals and with worldwide.

Barenboim’s extensive discography with the CSO on the Teldec label includes ’s wind concertos; an all- Falla disc with Jennifer Larmore and Plácido Domingo; Tchaikovsky’s nos. 4, 5, and 6; Mahler’s Symphony No. 5; and piano concertos by Tchaikovsky and Mendelssohn with pianist , released by . In addition, he has numerous video credits, including the last eight Mozart concertos with the Berlin Philharmonic and the complete Ring cycle at Bayreuth, as well as Parsifal with the Berlin Philharmonic and with Page 2 of 3 the Deutsche Staatsoper Berlin.

In 1999, Barenboim and the late established the annual West-Eastern Divan Workshop for young Israeli and Arab musicians, which has been held in Weimar, Germany and Chicago, and now makes its home in , Spain. In 2002, he and Mr. Said were awarded Spain’s Prince of Asturias Concord Prize for their joint efforts in promoting cross- cultural dialogue through the Workshop. That same year, Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society, a book consisting of conversations between Said and Barenboim was published by Pantheon Books. In December 2003, Barenboim received Israel’s prestigious Wolf Prize, honoring his dedication to human rights causes and commitment to bringing people together through music. An updated version of Barenboim’s book A Life in Music was released by Arcade Publishing, also in 2003.

Barenboim was appointed the 2006 Charles Eliot Norton Professor at , joining a long list of distinguished artists, arts scholars, and professionals who have received the Norton honor since its establishment in 1925.

Visit the official Web site for Daniel Barenboim.

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