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Showing posts with label Conductors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conductors. Show all posts

Thursday, January 9, 2020

Eight of the world’s 100 top conductors are now women ...

... compared to just one in 2013

7 January 2020, 11:30 | Updated: 7 January 2020, 12:31

Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla, Marin Alsop, Simone Young, Susanna Mälkki and JoAnn Falletta
Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla, Marin Alsop, Simone Young, Susanna Mälkki and JoAnn Falletta. Picture: Getty

By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM
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New research into classical music in 2019 shows progress for female composers and conductors, as more women take up space on the concert stage than ever before.
Female conductors, including Simone Young and CBSO’s Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla, now make up eight per cent of the world’s top 100 maestros.
The figures, which come from classical music website Bachtrackreveal that in 2013 there was just one woman – the great American maestro, Marin Alsop – in the top 100.
There’s also progress for female composers, as the study finds 24 of the top 100 contemporary composers are now women – that’s double the figure of 2017.
London-born Cecilia McDowall, known for her great choral works including Now May We Singen and O Oriens, was 2019’s most performed female contemporary composer – followed by Judith Weir, Anna Meredith and Jennifer Higdon.
“There is much interest in choral music nowadays which is so encouraging,” McDowall says. “It seems in good health.”
Elsewhere in the study, Latvian maestro Andris Nelsons was found to be last year’s busiest performer, conducting a total of 132 concert and opera performances (that’s more than one every three days).
As the classical music world prepares to celebrate the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth, the research revealed over 13 per cent of all classical concerts featured a work by Beethoven.
Beethoven was the top concert composer – closely followed by Mozart and J.S. Bach – while his Symphony No. 3 ‘Eroica’ was the year’s most performed concert piece.
Mozart was also popular in the world of opera – he was the third most performed composer, beaten only by Verdi and Puccini.
Bachtrack’s research also reveals a surge in appreciation for Clara Schumann’s work. In 2019, a year that celebrated the 200th anniversary of the great 19th-century pianist and composer’s birth, Schumann was the 44th most performed composer – after being ranked at No. 94 the year before.

Monday, July 28, 2014

The Best Conductor Insults

Conductor insults

Arturo Toscanini

(C) ClassicFM 2014

Saturday, July 19, 2014

What were the daily routines of the great composers?

Night owls or early birds - how did Mozart, Tchaikovsky and Richard Strauss structure their day? Their habits in composing, breakfast, socialising and exercise are plotted against those of other great minds in this look at the daily routines of famous creative people. 

In this infographic, the website podio.com has condensed the daily routines of some of history's great creative minds. The hourly habits of Darwin, Freud, Voltaire, Beethoven and others are broken down and plotted against each other in the ultimate diary of genius. 

Beethoven shows how he can power through a long morning's composition on some strong coffee. It's clear that Mozart's compositional muse often visited late at night, after he had been out drinking wine with friends. 


Richard Strauss had a tightly scheduled and disciplined day. No composer listed here comes close to the disciplined early-riser novelist and playwright Honoré de Balzac, who set his alarm clock for 1am. A big fan of Nick Bailey's show, possibly. 
Click on the image for a closer, interactive view...
Want to develop a better work routine? Discover how some of the world's greatest minds organized their days.
Click image to see the interactive version (via Podio).

Discover Music




(C) ClassicFM, London 2014