Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- PART ONE The Conductor's Mind
- PART TWO The Conductor's Skills
- PART THREE The Conductor's Hands
- PART FOUR The Conductor and the Musicians
- PART FIVE The Conductor and the Instruments
- PART SIX The Conductor, the Composer, and the Score
- PART SEVEN The Conductor and the Audience
- PART EIGHT The Conductor and “the Business”
- PART NINE Inside the Conductor
- 46 Concentration
- 47 Control and Power
- 48 Ego
- 49 Languages
- 50 Nervousness
- 51 Our Heritage: Some Ancestors and My Links with Them
- Suggested Reading
- Musical Example Credits
- A Note on the Illustrations
- Index of Conductors
49 - Languages
from PART NINE - Inside the Conductor
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- PART ONE The Conductor's Mind
- PART TWO The Conductor's Skills
- PART THREE The Conductor's Hands
- PART FOUR The Conductor and the Musicians
- PART FIVE The Conductor and the Instruments
- PART SIX The Conductor, the Composer, and the Score
- PART SEVEN The Conductor and the Audience
- PART EIGHT The Conductor and “the Business”
- PART NINE Inside the Conductor
- 46 Concentration
- 47 Control and Power
- 48 Ego
- 49 Languages
- 50 Nervousness
- 51 Our Heritage: Some Ancestors and My Links with Them
- Suggested Reading
- Musical Example Credits
- A Note on the Illustrations
- Index of Conductors
Summary
I once got very angry with an undisciplined Italian orchestra who sorely tried my patience. I scolded them in English, which none of them understood except one American viola player who agreed with every word I said. After the final rehearsal, I told them that whenever I'd been angry I'd said terrible things in English, which had made me feel a lot better. The first flute stood up and said, “Don't worry, maestro, we've been doing the same to you in Italian!”
All opera conductors know Italian and German, possibly French, Russian, and Czech, although many libretti (such as Wagner's) aren't in the modern version of the language. When guest conducting away from your homeland, it's courteous if you make the effort to say something in the local language, even if it's only “good morning.” This was all the Russian conductor Evgeny Svetlanov could manage when he first came to London, so he employed a charming interpreter called Nina. She often needed to tone down his earthy vocabulary, but the color of her face as she translated usually showed the color of his language.
Even if you don't speak fluent Italian, rehearsing in Italy is made simpler by musical terms such as crescendo and sostenuto. Rehearsing in Germany is easier if you've studied Mahler's symphonies, because he used German rather than Italian for his instructions (lebhaft for allegro, schleppen for ritenuto, etc.).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Inside Conducting , pp. 243 - 244Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013