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{{Short description|British music journalist (born 1948)}}
[[File:NormanLebrecht.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Norman Lebrecht]]
{{EngvarB|date=August 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2021}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Norman Lebrecht
| image = NormanLebrecht.jpg
| caption = Lebrecht in 2004
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1948|07|11}}
| birth_place = London, England
| alma_mater = {{plainlist|
* [[Kol Torah|Kol Torah Rabbinical College]]
* [[Bar-Ilan University]]}}
| occupation = {{hlist|[[Music journalist]]|author}}
| website = {{plainlist|
* {{URL|normanlebrecht.com}}
* {{URL|slippedisc.com}}}}
}}


'''Norman Lebrecht''' (born 11 July 1948) is a British [[music journalist]] and author who specializes in [[classical music]].<ref name="WQXR">{{cite news |last=Kaplan |first=Gilbert |author-link=Gilbert Kaplan |date=2 September 2007 |title=Norman Lebrecht – Mad About Music |work=[[WQXR-FM|WQXR]] |url=http://www.wqxr.org/story/47090-norman-lebrecht/ |access-date=28 October 2021}}</ref> He is best known as the owner of the [[classical music blog]] '''''Slipped Disc''''', in which he frequently publishes articles.<ref name=autogenerated30>{{cite news |last=Brown |first=Jeffrey Arlo |date=28 June 2018 |title=The Human Comedy: An Interview with Norman Lebrecht |work=[[VAN Magazine]] |url=https://van-us.atavist.com/the-human-comedy |access-date=28 October 2021}}</ref> Unlike other writers on music, Lebrecht rarely reviews concerts or recordings, preferring to report on the people and organizations who engage in classical music.<ref name="WQXR"/> Described by [[Gilbert Kaplan]] as "surely the most controversial and arguably the most influential journalist covering classical music",<ref name="WQXR"/> his writings have been praised as entertaining and revealing, while others have accused them of [[sensationalism]] and criticized their inaccuracies.
'''Norman Lebrecht''' (born [[11 July]], [[1948]]) is a British commentator on music and cultural affairs and also a novelist. He has been Assistant Editor of the ''[[Evening Standard]]'' since 2002 and has presented ''lebrecht.live'' on [[BBC]] Radio 3 from 2000. Before working for the ''Standard'', he wrote for the ''[[Daily Telegraph]]''.


He was a columnist for ''[[The Daily Telegraph]]'' from 1994 to 2002, and assistant editor of the ''[[London Evening Standard]]'' from 2002 to 2009. On [[BBC Radio 3]], Lebrecht presented ''lebrecht.live'' beginning in 2000, and ''The Lebrecht Interview'' from 2006 to 2016. He has written columns for the magazines ''[[Standpoint (magazine)|Standpoint]]'' and ''[[The Critic (modern magazine)|The Critic]]''.
==Writings==
''The Maestro Myth'' (1991) charts the history of conducting from its rise as an independent profession in the 1870s to its subsequent preoccupations with power, wealth and celebrity. ''When the Music Stops'' (US title: ''Who Killed Classical Music'', 1997) is the first documented history of the classical music business, examining its backstage workings and foretelling the collapse of the record industry. ''Maestros, Masterpieces and Madness: The Secret Life and Shameful Death of the Classical Record Industry'' (US title: ''The Life and Death of Classical Music'', 2007) is billed as an inside account of the rise and fall of recording, combined with a critical selection and analysis of 100 discs and 20 recording disasters.


In additions to writings on the classical music industry, Lebrecht has written 12 books on music<ref name="Cremona"/> and two novels ''The Song of Names'' (2001) and ''The Game of Opposites: A Novel'' (2009). The former won a [[2002 Whitbread Awards|2002 Whitbread Award]] and was adapted into a [[The Song of Names|film of the same name]] directed by [[François Girard]]. A work of social history, ''Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847–1947'', was published in 2019.
Lebrecht has written extensively about the composer [[Gustav Mahler]], in ''Mahler Remembered'' (1987) and elsewhere; and about contemporary music, in ''The Complete Companion to 20th Century Music'' (2000). He is the founder and editor of the [[Phaidon Press]] series of 20th century composer biographies.


==Early life and education==
His novel ''The Song of Names'', a tale of two boys growing up in wartime London, appeared in 2001 and went on to win the [[2002 Whitbread Awards|2002 Whitbread Award]] for First Novel.
Norman Lebrecht was born on 11 July 1948 in London<ref name="Who1998">{{cite book |editor-last=Cummings |editor-first=David M |year=1998 |title=[[International Who's Who in Music|International Who's Who in Music and Musicians' Directory]] |volume=1 Classical and Light Classical Fields |publisher=Melrose Press |location=Cambridge |isbn=978-0-948875-92-2 |page=328 }}</ref> to Soloman and Marguerite Lebrecht.<ref name="Whos">{{cite encyclopedia |encyclopedia=[[International Who's Who in Music|WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO]] |title=Lebrecht, Norman, (born 11 July 1948), writer and broadcaster |date=2007 |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |location=Oxford |doi=10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U2000090 |url-access=subscription |url=https://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.001.0001/ww-9780199540884-e-20000907 }} {{subscription required}}</ref> He attended [[Hasmonean High School|Hasmonean Grammar School]] in London,<ref name="Whos"/> citing [[Solomon Schonfeld]] as a childhood role model.<ref name="JPOST">{{cite news |last=Rogatchi |first=Inna |date=28 January 2020 |title=A conversation with novelist Norman Lebrecht |work=[[The Jerusalem Post]] |url=https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/a-conversation-with-novelist-norman-lebrecht-615673 |access-date=28 October 2021 }}</ref> From 1964 to 1965, Lebrecht attended [[Kol Torah|Kol Torah Rabbinical College]], a [[yeshiva]] school in Israel, and then [[Bar-Ilan University]] in [[Ramat Gan]] (1966–1968) and [[Hebrew University]] in Jerusalem.<ref name="JPOST"/>


In 1977 Lebrecht married the sculptor and writer Elbie Spivack; they have three daughters.<ref name="Who1998"/>
==Criticism==
Lebrecht's writing has often been attacked as provocative and misinformed.<ref name="wakin">{{cite news
|first=Daniel J.
|last=Wakin
|title=British Critic’s Book Is Withdrawn
|work=New York Times
|date=2007-10-20
|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/20/arts/music/20lebr.html?ref=music
}}</ref> For example, musicologist [[Richard Taruskin]] described Lebrecht as "a sloppy but entertaining British muckraker".<ref>
{{cite news
|first=Richard
|last=Taruskin
|title=Books: The Musical Mystique
|work=The New Republic
|date=2007-10-22
|url=http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=f3839c75-3724-4154-adc4-e0638e30448a
}}
</ref> An unnamed figure identified as "one of the world's leading conductors" told ''The Independent'' that Lebrecht had for years been getting away with "pompous, preposterous judgment" and "inept research".<ref name="johnson"/>


==Journalism==
In October 2007 the founder of [[Naxos Records]], [[Klaus Heymann]], sued Lebrecht's publisher, Penguin Books, for [[defamation]] in London's [[High Court of Justice]]. <ref name="johnson">{{cite news
Following his graduation, from 1970 to 1972 Lebrecht worked at the [[Kol Yisrael]] news department, part of the [[Israel Broadcasting Authority]].<ref name="JPOST"/> He returned to London in 1972,<ref name="JPOST"/> where he was a news executive at [[Visnews]] Ltd from 1973 to 1978.<ref name="Who1998"/>
|first=Andrew
|last=Johnson
|title= Music critic's book is pulped as Penguin loses defamation case
|work=The Independent
|date=2007-10-28
|url= http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/legal/article3104667.ece
}}</ref> Heymann claimed that Lebrecht had wrongly accused him of "serious business malpractices" in his book ''Maestros, Masterpieces & Madness'', and identified at least 15 statements he claimed were inaccurate.<ref name="wakin"/> The case was settled out of court. As a result of the settlement, Penguin issued a statement apologizing for "the hurt and damage which [Heymann] has suffered". The publisher also agreed to pay an undisclosed sum in legal fees to Heymann, to make a donation to charity, to refrain from repeating the disputed allegations and to seek the return of all unsold copies of Lebrecht's book.<ref name="wakin"/> Commenting on the affair, Heymann said that "For me it’s beyond belief how any journalist in five pages can make so many factual mistakes. It’s shocking. Also, he [Lebrecht] really doesn’t understand the record business."<ref name="wakin"/> The settlement did not extend to the US edition of Lebrecht's book, but Heymann vowed to seek its withdrawal in the United States, saying "The book made me look like a shit, so something had to be done. When Lebrecht talks to people he doesn't take notes so he confuses and confounds what people say."<ref name="johnson"/>


Beginning in 1982, he was a special contributor to ''[[The Sunday Times]]'' until 1991.<ref name="Whos"/>
Lebrecht is on record as attacking the accuracy of music reporting in the [[blogosphere]]. In his ''Evening Standard'' column he wrote that "Until bloggers deliver hard facts … paid for newspapers will continue to set the standard as the only show in town".<ref>{{cite news

|first=Norman
In 1993 he became a music columnist for ''[[The Daily Telegraph]]'' in Britain, holding the post until 2002.
|last=Lebrecht

|title=Music writing on the internet is getting better, but online blogs won't be required reading until they start focusing on the facts
In 2002 he was an arts columnist and assistant editor of the ''[[Evening Standard]]'', writing a weekly column until 2015.<ref>[http://www.rhinegold.co.uk/classical_music/archive-168/ "Norman Lebrecht quits ''Evening Standard''" – Rhinegold<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> [[Gilbert Kaplan]] wrote that "From his perch in London he has covered and uncovered the classical music world in his full-page weekly column in the ''Evening Standard'' which through the internet is must-reading around the world ... concentrating on reporting on the organizations and the people managing – or as he often sees it, mismanaging – the classical music world as well as the stars who dominate this culture. All this with a sensibility normally associated with a political reporter or even a police reporter. He was the first to predict the demise of the major classical record companies – now documented in his recently released book ''The Life and Death of Classical Music''."<ref name="WQXR"/>
|work=The Evening Standard

|date=2006-11-08
Lebrecht wrote a monthly column for the culture magazine ''[[Standpoint (magazine)|Standpoint]]'', which ceased publication in 2021.<ref name="Cremona"/> Some months before its demise, Lebrecht transferred his monthly essay to a new magazine, ''[[The Critic (modern magazine)|The Critic]]''.
}}</ref> Some bloggers used this statement to charge Lebrecht with hypocrisy in light of the Heymann settlement.<ref>{{cite web
|title=Norman Lebrecht and Unchecked Trivia
|url=http://theovergrownpath.blogspot.com/2007/10/norman-lebrecht-and-unchecked-trivia.html
|accessdate=2007-10-28
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
|title=Maestros, Masterpieces and Unchecked Facts
|url=http://collaborativepiano.blogspot.com/2007/10/secret-life-and-shameful-death-of.html
|accessdate=2007-10-20
}}</ref> (Despite his criticism of [[Classical Music Blogs|classical music blogs]], Lebrecht launched his own blog, ''Slipped Disc'', in March 2007).<ref>[http://www.artsjournal.com/slippeddisc/2007/03/dropping_the_needle.html ''Slipped Disc''], March 15, 2007</ref>


==Books==
==Books==
The 1980s saw the publication of various books on music by Lebrecht: ''Discord: Conflict and the Making of Music'' (1982),{{sfn|Lebrecht|1982}} ''The Book of Musical Anecdotes'' (1985),{{sfn|Lebrecht|1985}} ''Mahler Remembered'' (1987),{{sfn|Lebrecht|1987a}} and ''A Musical Book of Days'' (1987).{{sfn|Lebrecht|1987b}} Following his leave from ''The Sunday Times'', Lebrecht released ''The Maestro Myth: Great Conductors in Pursuit of Power'' (1991),{{sfn|Lebrecht|1991}} which charts the history of conducting, from its rise as an independent profession in the 1870s to its subsequent and purposed preoccupations with power, wealth, and celebrity. The following year he released two books: ''Music in London'' (1992),{{sfn|Lebrecht|1992a}} as well as ''The Companion to 20th-Century Music'' (1992).{{sfn|Lebrecht|1992b}}
*{{cite book

|first=Norman
In 1996 he published ''When the Music Stops: Managers, Maestros and the Corporate Murder of Classical Music'',{{sfn|Lebrecht|1996}} a history of the classical music business, presenting an exposé of its backstage workings and predicting the collapse of the record industry. Herman Trotter of ''[[The Buffalo News]]'' wrote that Lebrecht's "widely discussed 1992 book "The Maestro Myth" seems to have been a warm-up for his current magnum opus."<ref>Herman Trotter (8 June 1997). [https://web.archive.org/web/20171216201308/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-22918557.html "How Managers and Marketing Created a Symphony of Greed,"<!-- Bot generated title -->] ''[[The Buffalo News]]''.</ref> He also published ''Covent Garden: The Untold Story: Dispatches from the English Culture War, 1945–2000'' (2000),{{sfn|Lebrecht|2000}} covering the history of the [[Royal Opera House]].
|last=Lebrecht

|title=Discord: conflict and the making of music
His career as a novelist began in 2002 with ''The Song of Names'' (2002),{{sfn|Lebrecht|2002}} a tale of two boys growing up in wartime London and the impact of the [[Holocaust]].<ref>Daniel Walden and Evelyn Gross Avery (2006). [https://books.google.com/books?id=mmUrAQAAIAAJ&q=Norman+Lebrecht+%22kol+torah%22 ''Studies in American Jewish Literature,''<!-- Bot generated title -->] State University of New York Press.</ref> It was published in 2001, and went on to win the [[2002 Whitbread Awards|2002 Whitbread Award]] for First Novel. Lebrecht won the award at the age of 54.<ref>Emma Brockes (8 January 2003). [https://www.theguardian.com/books/2003/jan/08/artsfeatures.whitbreadbookawards2002 "Late starter; Norman Lebrecht has just won the Whitbread first book award – at the age of 54. He tells Emma Brockes why it took him so long,"<!-- Bot generated title -->] ''[[The Guardian]]''.</ref>
|location=London
A feature film based on the 2002 novel, ''[[The Song of Names]]'', was released in 2019. Directed by [[François Girard]], it stars [[Tim Roth]] and [[Clive Owen]].<ref>[https://www.theloop.ca/clive-owen-wwii-film-the-song-of-names-getting-tiff-gala-presentation/ "Clive Owen WWII film ''The Song of Names'' getting TIFF Gala Presentation"]. ''[[Bell Internet|The Loop]]'', 23 July 2019.</ref>
|publisher=A. Deutsch

|year=1982
His second book on [[Mahler]], ''Why Mahler?: How One Man and Ten Symphonies Changed Our World'' was published in 2010.{{sfn|Lebrecht|2010}} In 2014, Lebrecht received the [[Cremona]] Music Award from Mondomusica and Cremona Pianoforte in the Communication category, citing that book, and his other books and articles, and recognizing his "commitment ... to the diffusion of the music culture at a global level."<ref name="Cremona"/>
|isbn=0233974423

}}
Another novel, ''The Game of Opposites: A Novel'' (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group), was published in 2009 in the US.
*{{cite book

|first=Norman
Lebrecht published a work of social history titled ''Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847–1947'' by Oneworld (UK) in October 2019 and by Simon & Schuster (USA) in December 2019. David Crane in ''[[The Spectator]]'' called it "Norman Lebrecht's urgent and moving history."<ref>[https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/is-there-no-field-in-which-the-jewish-mindset-doesn-t-excel- Crane, David, "Is there no field in which the Jewish mindset doesn’t excel?," ''The Spectator'' (26 October 2019)]</ref> Rebecca Abrams in the ''[[Financial Times]]'' described the book as "[i]mpressively wide-ranging in scope and unflaggingly fascinating in detail".<ref>[https://bookmarks.reviews/reviews/all/genius-anxiety-how-jews-changed-the-world-1847-1947/ ''Literary Hub'']</ref> Tanjil Rashid wrote in ''[[The Times]]'': "Claims to have 'changed the world' tend to be exaggerations, but Lebrecht's subtitle, How Jews Changed the World 1847–1947, seems understated. The world wasn't changed, it was remade."<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/genius-and-anxiety-how-jews-changed-the-world-by-norman-lebrecht-review-rdmfhm290|title = Genius & Anxiety by Norman Lebrecht review — Jewish makers of the modern world|last1 = Rashid|first1 = Tanjil}}</ref> [[Mark Glanville]] wrote in ''[[The Times Literary Supplement]]'': "Lebrecht's book is an extended meditation on the question of what it is about Jews that has enabled them to change the world in so many different ways. He guides us through his chosen period (1847–1947) in a breathless present continuous, with an enthusiasm that holds the reader's attention. Besides major, familiar figures, such as Einstein, Freud, Marx, Proust and Schoenberg, his kaleidoscope of characters includes Rosalind Franklin, whose important work on the double helix has still not been fully recognized; Leo Szilard, who split the atom; and Albert Ballin, to whom Lebrecht attributes the invention of the hamburger."<ref>[https://www.the-tls.co.uk/articles/genius-and-anxiety-norman-lebrecht-book-review/ "Bottled energies"] by [[Mark Glanville]], ''[[The Times Literary Supplement]]'', 28 February 2020</ref>
|last=Lebrecht

|title=The Book of Musical Anecdotes
Lebrecht's next book, in 2023, was Why Beethoven: A Phenomenon in 100 Pieces. The distinguished Beethoven biographer Jan Swafford called it 'a connoisseur's guide to Beethoven recordings'. BBC Music magazine designated it 'one heck of an enjoyable read.' The author Gina Dalfonzo wrote on Substack: 'At all times, though, his descriptions are unforgettable. I was startled, amused, sometimes delighted by such critiques as “Paul Badura-Skoda, recording on a Beethoven-era Erard, clunks about like bad plumbing”; or “The space between each note is separated like chess pieces on a world championship board”; or “A 1990 Brussels recording by the Russian exile Mischa Maisky with the Argentine wanderer Martha Argerich sounds like a morning-after hotel breakfast, desultory but deeply affectionate.” One moment he’s vulgar, the next moment he’s classy, but always, unfailingly, he’s interesting.'
|location=London

|publisher=Deutsch
===Defamation case===
|year=1985

|isbn=0233977309
His 2007 book ''Maestros, Masterpieces and Madness: The Secret Life and Shameful Death of the Classical Record Industry'' (US title: ''The Life and Death of Classical Music'') was billed as an inside account of the rise and fall of recording, combined with a critical selection and analysis of 100 albums and 20 recording disasters. The book, however, was withdrawn from the market after its publisher discovered that it contained numerous libelous claims.<ref>{{cite news |first=Andrew |last=Johnson |title=Music Critic's Book Is Pulped as Penguin Loses Defamation Case | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/music-critics-book-is-pulped-as-penguin-loses-defamation-case-398144.html |work=[[The Independent]] |date=2007-10-28 | access-date=2020-08-01}}</ref> In 2007 the founder of [[Naxos Records]], [[Klaus Heymann]], sued Lebrecht's publisher, [[Penguin Books]], for [[defamation]] in London's [[High Court of Justice]].<ref name="johnson">{{cite news | first=Andrew | last=Johnson | title=Music critic's book is pulped as Penguin loses defamation case |work=[[The Independent]]| date=28 October 2007 |url= https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/music-critics-book-is-pulped-as-penguin-loses-defamation-case-398144.html }}</ref> Heymann claimed that Lebrecht had wrongly accused him of "serious business malpractices" in his book ''Maestros, Masterpieces and Madness'', and identified at least 15 statements he claimed were inaccurate.<ref name="wakin">{{cite news |first=Daniel J. | last=Wakin |title=British Critic's Book Is Withdrawn |work=[[The New York Times]]|date=20 October 2007 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/20/arts/music/20lebr.html}}</ref> The case was settled out of court. As a result of the settlement, Penguin issued a statement acknowledging the baselessness of Lebrecht's accusations and apologising for "the hurt and damage which [Heymann] has suffered". The publisher also agreed to pay an undisclosed sum in legal fees to Heymann, to make a donation to charity, to refrain from repeating the disputed allegations and to seek the return of all unsold copies of Lebrecht's book.<ref name="wakin" /> Commenting on the affair, Heymann said: "For me it's beyond belief how any journalist in five pages can make so many factual mistakes. It's shocking. Also, he [Lebrecht] really doesn't understand the record business.<ref name="wakin" />" The settlement did not extend to the US edition of Lebrecht's book.<ref name="johnson"/>
}} Also published as ''Hush! Handel's in a Passion: tales of Bach, Handel, and their contemporaries''.

*{{cite book
==Broadcasting==
|first=Norman
Beginning in 2000, he presented ''lebrecht.live'' (a cultural debate forum where "issues in the arts are debated and hotly disputed by makers and consumers of culture") on [[BBC Radio 3]], whose output centres on classical music and opera.<ref>[http://www.musicweb-international.com/lebrechtlive.html Lebrecht.live at the BBC<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
|last=Lebrecht

|title=Mahler Remembered
From 2006 until 2016 he hosted ''The Lebrecht Interview'' ("Classical music critic Norman Lebrecht talks to major figures in the field"), also on BBC Radio 3.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007tbt3 BBC Radio 3 – The Lebrecht Interview<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
|location=London

|publisher=Faber
==Slipped Disc==
|year=1987

|isbn=0571150098
Lebrecht launched a [[classical music blog]], ''Slipped Disc'', in March 2007, originally as part of ArtsJournal.com. It attracts over one million readers per month.<ref name="Cremona">{{cite web |title=Cremona Music Award, "Communication" category – Prize winner: Norman Lebrecht |website=Cremona Musica |url=http://www.cremonamusica.com/en/2014/09/28/cremona-music-award-communication-category-prize-winner-norman-lebrecht/ |access-date=28 October 2021 }}</ref> In 2014, his blog became a standalone commercial website, supported by advertising and promotions. The blog primarily focuses on classical music industry gossip.
}}

*{{cite book
When asked by one interviewer whether he found such gossip interesting personally or whether he covered it for the sake of viewership, Lebrecht confirmed that the gossip
|first=Norman
{{blockquote|1=is the human comedy, that's what I like. I came into music because nobody was writing about it in a way that interested me. . . . What is important to someone who's just got out of bed, had a shower, got dressed, and is having their morning coffee? It's not Sibelius Four. It might be, "What happened to this conductor last night?"<ref name=autogenerated30/>}}
|last=Lebrecht

|title=A Musical Book of Days
==Critical reception==
|location=London
Lebrecht's polemical writings have drawn strong and diverse responses; [[Gilbert Kaplan]] described him in 2007 as "surely the most controversial and arguably the most influential journalist covering classical music."<ref name="WQXR"/> [[Robert Craft]] praised ''The Maestro Myth'' as an "exposé of the business practices of orchestral conducting [that] is likely to be the most widely read classical music book of the year".<ref>{{cite news | author=Robert Craft | author-link=Robert Craft | title=Masters of the Pit and the Podium | url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/entertainment/books/1992/04/26/masters-of-the-pit-and-the-podium/58c134d0-f940-47e7-b1be-8b84a4fa3b5b/ |newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]| date=1992-04-26 | access-date=2017-07-11}}</ref> The American composer [[Gunther Schuller]], in his 1998 book ''The Compleat Conductor'', described ''The Maestro Myth'' in these terms: "A remarkably knowledgeable and courageous, no-holds-barred exposé of the serious degradation and venality in the conducting business, the wheeling and dealing of the power-broking managements that control most of the music business."<ref>{{cite book |last=Schuller |first=Gunther |author-link=Gunther Schuller |title=The Compleat Conductor |year=1998 |publisher=Oxford University Press|chapter=1. A Philosophy of Conducting|page=4|isbn=9780199840588}}</ref> Schuller went on to say: "It is sobering reading, to say the least, and is highly recommended to anyone concerned about the integrity of the art and profession of music." On the other hand, music critic Michael White described the book as merely "a compendium of gossip about who earns what and slept with whom to get it".<ref name=wrong>{{cite news |last=White |first=Michael |title=Where Norman Lebrecht Went Wrong |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/where-norman-lebrecht-went-wrong-1309198.html |work=[[The Independent]] |date=11 August 1996 |access-date=28 October 2021}}</ref> Lebrecht himself was described by [[musicologist]] [[Richard Taruskin]] as "a sloppy but entertaining British [[muckraker]]".<ref>{{cite magazine|first=Richard|last=Taruskin|author-link=Richard Taruskin|title=Books: The Musical Mystique|magazine=[[The New Republic]]|date=22 October 2007|url=http://www.tnr.com/article/books-and-arts/books-the-musical-mystique}}</ref> Several journalists have noted multiple misstatements of fact by Lebrecht:
|publisher=Collins

|year=1987
: John von Rhein, ''Chicago Tribune'':
|isbn=0002177153
{{blockquote|1=Lebrecht writes entertainingly and has a wicked ear for backstage gossip. When he is on – as in his portraits of Karajan and Ronald Wilford, the Machiavellian power broker of Columbia Artists Management – his lance can be deadly. And his contention that our desperate need for cultural icons has made us pump up even limited talents into mythical figures gives sobering pause.<p>But he fails to tell the whole story and cannot back up his odd melange of history, gossip, fact and bitchy iconoclasm with anything that might give his book lasting value. Nearly every page contains some careless blunder or spelling mistake. Too much of ''The Maestro Myth'' in fact betrays the sensibility of a tabloid columnist who cannot distinguish between tattle and truth – and worse, doesn't seem to care.</p><p>A generally skeptical sketch of Daniel Barenboim and his career ends with the unlikely image of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra conductor standing alone "between the shoreline and the stinking slaughterhouses" – razed more than 30 years ago.<ref>{{cite news | author=John von Rhein | title=''Maestro Myth'' Seldom Lets Facts Spoil Its Story | url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/1992/08/14/maestro-myth-seldom-lets-facts-spoil-its-story/ | work=The Chicago Tribune | date=1992-08-14 | access-date=2017-07-11}}</ref></p>}}
}}

*{{cite book
: Roger Dettmer, ''The Baltimore Sun'':
|first=Norman
{{blockquote|1=The book [''The Maestro Myth''] is a syntactic miasma of received gossip, recycled anecdotes, rickety extrapolations and cultural penis-envy, with a gaffe-account in the hundreds. The sheer size and weight of careless mistakes, carelessly written, make the reader wary about anything in the book that hasn't been experienced firsthand.<p>Factually, for example, we find Cincinnati "the state capital" of Ohio. Philadelphia is a "dreary industrial city" whose orchestra was "founded" by Stokowski on Page 3, but (correctly) by Fritz Scheel on Page 133. In the same breath, though, Scheel is misidentified as the founder of the San Francisco Symphony.</p><p>In Chicago (where Claudio Abbado was not "Solti's candidate" to succeed him), Daniel Barenboim (who was) "stands alone between the shoreline and the stinking slaughterhouses," razed more than 30 years ago. The author doesn't bring Toscanini or Sir Thomas Beecham to the New York Philharmonic until 1930 (try 1926 and '28, respectively), and wrongly assigns Tom Wolfe's "Radical Chic" sendup of Leonard Bernstein to the ''New York Times'' (it was ''New York'' magazine).</p><p>There are even mistakes about Mahler, even though Mr. Lebrecht's last book was ''Mahler Remembered,'' an anthology. About his native heath, he writes that "Georg Solti never wanted the job" of music director of London's Covent Garden Opera. But Solti did want it; his dilemma in 1959 was whether to take the Deutsche Oper in Berlin plus the Hamburg Philharmonic, or Covent Garden plus the Los Angeles Phil.<ref>{{cite news |last=Dettmer |first=Roger |title=Author's account of conductors is 'Maestro Myth' |url=https://www.baltimoresun.com/1992/08/23/authors-account-of-conductors-is-maestro-myth/ |work=[[The Baltimore Sun]] |date=1992-08-23 |access-date=2017-07-11}}</ref></p>}}
|last=Lebrecht

|title=The Maestro Myth: great conductors in pursuit of power
: [[Martin Bernheimer]], ''Los Angeles Times'':
|location=London
{{blockquote|1=One may want to forgive Lebrecht's passing errors, along with his hyperbole. Still, the little slips make one all the more leery of big gaffes.<p>Contrary to what one reads, [[Fritz Kreisler|Kreisler]] and [[Joseph Joachim|Joachim]] were {{em|not}} the only composers who wrote cadenzas for the [[Beethoven violin concerto]]. [[Otto Klemperer]] did {{em|not}} enjoy much of a U.S. career after World War II. [[Antonia Brico]] did {{em|not}} conduct at the [[Metropolitan Opera|Met]]. [[Rudolf Bing]] did {{em|not}} ban [[Elisabeth Schwarzkopf]] from that house. [[James Levine]]'s favored artists at the Met are {{em|not}} "little-leaguers". [[Klaus Tennstedt]] {{em|never}} was "the most sought-after conductor on earth". When [[Zubin Mehta]] came to Los Angeles, he did {{em|not}} inherit a "world-class, well-run [[Los Angeles Philharmonic|Philharmonic]]". [[Leonard Bernstein]] could {{em|not}} claim the longest tenure of any music director of the [[New York Philharmonic]] – that was Mehta. [[Irmgard Seefried]], [[Sena Jurinac]] and [[Hilde Gueden|Hilde Guden]] did {{em|not}} "{{em|trill}} secondary roles" in [[Vienna State Opera|Vienna]] – they didn't really trill anything, but they did {{em|sing}} primary roles.<ref>{{cite news |last=Bernheimer |first=Martin |author-link=Martin Bernheimer |title=Conduct Unbecoming |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1992-04-12-bk-4-story.html |work=[[Los Angeles Times]] |date=1992-04-12 |access-date=2017-07-11}}</ref></p>}}
|publisher=Simon & Schuster

|year=1991
: An anonymous informant identified as "one of the world's leading conductors" told ''[[The Independent]]'' that Lebrecht had for years been getting away with "pompous, preposterous judgment" and "inept research".<ref name="johnson"/> Upon being awarded the 2015 Cremona Music Award, pianist [[Grigory Sokolov]] refused to accept the honour, making this statement on his website: "According to my ideas about elementary decency, it is shame to be in the same award-winners list with Lebrecht".<ref>{{cite news |last=Bernheimer |first=Martin |title=Grigory Sokolov refuses award because it has previously been won by Norman Lebrecht |url=http://www.gramophone.co.uk/classical-music-news/grigory-sokolov-refuses-award-previously-been-won-by-norman-lebrecht |work=Los Angeles Times |date=2015-09-28 |access-date=2017-09-13}}</ref>
|isbn=0671710184}} Updated editions published 1997, 2001

*{{cite book
: [[David Hurwitz (music critic)|Music critic David Hurwitz]] published a satirical article titled, "Journalist Norman Lebrecht Dead at 61". After reporting Lebrecht's death from spontaneous combustion in the first paragraph, Hurwitz begins the second paragraph, "Truth be told, and in case you haven’t already guessed, Lebrecht is still with us as far as I know. That said, the above paragraph hardly contains more fiction than a typical Lebrecht article".<ref>[https://www.classicstoday.com/journalist-norman-lebrecht-dead-at-61/ ''Classics Today.com'']</ref>
|first=Norman

|last=Lebrecht
==Selected bibliography==
|title=Music in London: a history and handbook
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=1982 |title=Discord: Conflict and The Making of Music |publisher=[[André Deutsch|A. Deutsch]] |location=London}}
|location=London
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=1985 |title=The Book of Musical Anecdotes |publisher=[[Free Press (publisher)|Free Press]] |location=New York |author-mask=2}} Also published as ''Hush! Handel's in a Passion: tales of Bach, Handel, and their contemporaries''
|publisher=Aurum
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=1987 |title=Mahler Remembered |publisher=[[Faber and Faber]] |location=London |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/mahlerremembered0000lebr |author-mask=2 |ref={{sfnRef|Lebrecht|1987a}}}}
|year=1992
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=1987 |title=A Musical Book of Days |publisher=[[HarperCollins]] |location=London |author-mask=2 |ref={{sfnRef|Lebrecht|1987b}}}}
|isbn=1854102230
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=1991 |title=The Maestro Myth: Great Conductors in Pursuit of Power |publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]] |location=London |author-mask=2}}
}}
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=1992 |title=Music in London: A History and Handbook |publisher=Aurum Press |location=London |author-mask=2 |ref={{sfnRef|Lebrecht|1992a}}}}
*{{cite book
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=1992 |title=The Companion to 20th-Century Music |publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]] |location=London |isbn=978-0-671-66654-5 |url=https://archive.org/details/companionto20thc00lebr |url-access=registration |author-mask=2 |ref={{sfnRef|Lebrecht|1992b}}}}
|first=Norman
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=1996 |title=When The Music Stops: Managers, Maestros and the Corporate Murder of Classical Music |publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]] |location=London |author-mask=2}} Also published as ''Who Killed Classical Music?: Maestros, Managers, and Corporate Politics''
|last=Lebrecht
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=2000 |title=Covent Garden: The Untold Story: Dispatches from the English Culture War, 1945–2000 |publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]] |location=London |author-mask=2}}
|title=The Companion to 20th-Century Music
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=2002 |title=The Song of Names: A Novel |publisher=[[Headline Review]] |location=London |author-mask=2}}
|location=London
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=2007 |title=Maestros, Masterpieces and Madness: The Secret Life and Shameful Death of the Classical Record Industry |publisher=[[Allen Lane]] |location=London |author-mask=2}} Also published as ''The Life and Death of Classical Music: Featuring The 100 Best and 20 Worst Recordings Ever Made''
|publisher=Simon & Schuster
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=2009 |title=The Game of Opposites: A Novel |publisher=[[Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group]] |location=New York |author-mask=2}}
|year=1992
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=2010 |title=Why Mahler?: How One Man and Ten Symphonies Changed Our World |publisher=[[Faber and Faber]] |location=London |author-mask=2}}
|isbn=0671710192
* {{cite book |last=Lebrecht |first=Norman |year=2019 |title=Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847–1947 |publisher=[[Oneworld Publications]] |location=London |author-mask=2}}
}} Revised edition published 2000 as ''The Complete Companion to 20th-Century Music''.

*{{cite book
==References==
|first=Norman
{{reflist}}
|last=Lebrecht

|title=When the Music Stops: managers, maestros and the corporate murder of classical music
==Further reading==
|location=London
* ''[[The Economist]]'' (8 July 2010). [http://www.economist.com/node/16536978 "Gustav Mahler: The agony and the ecstasy"]. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
|publisher=Simon & Schuster
* [[Leon Botstein|Botstein, Leon]] (9 October 2010). [https://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052748703735804575536281956029508 "Bookshelf: A Fierce Enthusiasm"]. ''[[The Wall Street Journal]]''. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
|year=1996
|isbn=0684816814
}} Also published as ''Who Killed Classical Music?: maestros, managers, and corporate politics''.
*{{cite book
|first=Norman
|last=Lebrecht
|title=Covent Garden: the Untold Story: dispatches from the English culture war, 1945-2000
|location=London
|publisher=Simon & Schuster
|year=2000
|isbn=0684851431
}}
*{{cite book
|first=Norman
|last=Lebrecht
|title=The Song of Names: a novel
|location=London
|publisher=Review
|year=2002
|isbn= 0755300947
}}
*{{cite book
|first=Norman
|last=Lebrecht
|title=Maestros, Masterpieces and Madness: the secret life and shameful death of the classical record industry
|location=London
|publisher=Allen Lane
|year=2007
|isbn=9780713999570
}} Also published as ''The Life and Death of Classical Music: featuring the 100 best and 20 worst recordings ever made''.


==Notes==
{{reflist}}
== External links ==
== External links ==
*[http://www.normanlebrecht.com/ Norman Lebrecht Official site]
* {{Official website|http://www.normanlebrecht.com/}}
* [http://slippedisc.com/ ''Slipped Disc''], Lebrecht's blog
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/lebrechtlive/ BBC Radio 3 - lebrecht.live]
*[http://www.scena.org/columns/lebrechtindex.htm "The Lebrecht Weekly"], ''[[La Scena Musicale]]''
* [http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007tbt3 BBC Radio 3 Lebrecht Interview series]

{{Authority control|state=collapsed}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Lebrecht, Norman}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lebrecht, Norman}}
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[[de:Norman Lebrecht]]
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[[fr:Norman Lebrecht]]
[[Category:Costa Book Award winners]]
[[ru:Лебрехт, Норман]]
[[Category:English male journalists]]
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[[Category:English music critics]]
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[[Category:21st-century British Jews]]
[[Category:Jewish journalists]]
[[Category:Jewish novelists]]

Latest revision as of 22:06, 23 December 2024

Norman Lebrecht
Lebrecht in 2004
Born (1948-07-11) 11 July 1948 (age 76)
London, England
Alma mater
Occupations
Website

Norman Lebrecht (born 11 July 1948) is a British music journalist and author who specializes in classical music.[1] He is best known as the owner of the classical music blog Slipped Disc, in which he frequently publishes articles.[2] Unlike other writers on music, Lebrecht rarely reviews concerts or recordings, preferring to report on the people and organizations who engage in classical music.[1] Described by Gilbert Kaplan as "surely the most controversial and arguably the most influential journalist covering classical music",[1] his writings have been praised as entertaining and revealing, while others have accused them of sensationalism and criticized their inaccuracies.

He was a columnist for The Daily Telegraph from 1994 to 2002, and assistant editor of the London Evening Standard from 2002 to 2009. On BBC Radio 3, Lebrecht presented lebrecht.live beginning in 2000, and The Lebrecht Interview from 2006 to 2016. He has written columns for the magazines Standpoint and The Critic.

In additions to writings on the classical music industry, Lebrecht has written 12 books on music[3] and two novels The Song of Names (2001) and The Game of Opposites: A Novel (2009). The former won a 2002 Whitbread Award and was adapted into a film of the same name directed by François Girard. A work of social history, Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847–1947, was published in 2019.

Early life and education

[edit]

Norman Lebrecht was born on 11 July 1948 in London[4] to Soloman and Marguerite Lebrecht.[5] He attended Hasmonean Grammar School in London,[5] citing Solomon Schonfeld as a childhood role model.[6] From 1964 to 1965, Lebrecht attended Kol Torah Rabbinical College, a yeshiva school in Israel, and then Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan (1966–1968) and Hebrew University in Jerusalem.[6]

In 1977 Lebrecht married the sculptor and writer Elbie Spivack; they have three daughters.[4]

Journalism

[edit]

Following his graduation, from 1970 to 1972 Lebrecht worked at the Kol Yisrael news department, part of the Israel Broadcasting Authority.[6] He returned to London in 1972,[6] where he was a news executive at Visnews Ltd from 1973 to 1978.[4]

Beginning in 1982, he was a special contributor to The Sunday Times until 1991.[5]

In 1993 he became a music columnist for The Daily Telegraph in Britain, holding the post until 2002.

In 2002 he was an arts columnist and assistant editor of the Evening Standard, writing a weekly column until 2015.[7] Gilbert Kaplan wrote that "From his perch in London he has covered and uncovered the classical music world in his full-page weekly column in the Evening Standard which through the internet is must-reading around the world ... concentrating on reporting on the organizations and the people managing – or as he often sees it, mismanaging – the classical music world as well as the stars who dominate this culture. All this with a sensibility normally associated with a political reporter or even a police reporter. He was the first to predict the demise of the major classical record companies – now documented in his recently released book The Life and Death of Classical Music."[1]

Lebrecht wrote a monthly column for the culture magazine Standpoint, which ceased publication in 2021.[3] Some months before its demise, Lebrecht transferred his monthly essay to a new magazine, The Critic.

Books

[edit]

The 1980s saw the publication of various books on music by Lebrecht: Discord: Conflict and the Making of Music (1982),[8] The Book of Musical Anecdotes (1985),[9] Mahler Remembered (1987),[10] and A Musical Book of Days (1987).[11] Following his leave from The Sunday Times, Lebrecht released The Maestro Myth: Great Conductors in Pursuit of Power (1991),[12] which charts the history of conducting, from its rise as an independent profession in the 1870s to its subsequent and purposed preoccupations with power, wealth, and celebrity. The following year he released two books: Music in London (1992),[13] as well as The Companion to 20th-Century Music (1992).[14]

In 1996 he published When the Music Stops: Managers, Maestros and the Corporate Murder of Classical Music,[15] a history of the classical music business, presenting an exposé of its backstage workings and predicting the collapse of the record industry. Herman Trotter of The Buffalo News wrote that Lebrecht's "widely discussed 1992 book "The Maestro Myth" seems to have been a warm-up for his current magnum opus."[16] He also published Covent Garden: The Untold Story: Dispatches from the English Culture War, 1945–2000 (2000),[17] covering the history of the Royal Opera House.

His career as a novelist began in 2002 with The Song of Names (2002),[18] a tale of two boys growing up in wartime London and the impact of the Holocaust.[19] It was published in 2001, and went on to win the 2002 Whitbread Award for First Novel. Lebrecht won the award at the age of 54.[20] A feature film based on the 2002 novel, The Song of Names, was released in 2019. Directed by François Girard, it stars Tim Roth and Clive Owen.[21]

His second book on Mahler, Why Mahler?: How One Man and Ten Symphonies Changed Our World was published in 2010.[22] In 2014, Lebrecht received the Cremona Music Award from Mondomusica and Cremona Pianoforte in the Communication category, citing that book, and his other books and articles, and recognizing his "commitment ... to the diffusion of the music culture at a global level."[3]

Another novel, The Game of Opposites: A Novel (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group), was published in 2009 in the US.

Lebrecht published a work of social history titled Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847–1947 by Oneworld (UK) in October 2019 and by Simon & Schuster (USA) in December 2019. David Crane in The Spectator called it "Norman Lebrecht's urgent and moving history."[23] Rebecca Abrams in the Financial Times described the book as "[i]mpressively wide-ranging in scope and unflaggingly fascinating in detail".[24] Tanjil Rashid wrote in The Times: "Claims to have 'changed the world' tend to be exaggerations, but Lebrecht's subtitle, How Jews Changed the World 1847–1947, seems understated. The world wasn't changed, it was remade."[25] Mark Glanville wrote in The Times Literary Supplement: "Lebrecht's book is an extended meditation on the question of what it is about Jews that has enabled them to change the world in so many different ways. He guides us through his chosen period (1847–1947) in a breathless present continuous, with an enthusiasm that holds the reader's attention. Besides major, familiar figures, such as Einstein, Freud, Marx, Proust and Schoenberg, his kaleidoscope of characters includes Rosalind Franklin, whose important work on the double helix has still not been fully recognized; Leo Szilard, who split the atom; and Albert Ballin, to whom Lebrecht attributes the invention of the hamburger."[26]

Lebrecht's next book, in 2023, was Why Beethoven: A Phenomenon in 100 Pieces. The distinguished Beethoven biographer Jan Swafford called it 'a connoisseur's guide to Beethoven recordings'. BBC Music magazine designated it 'one heck of an enjoyable read.' The author Gina Dalfonzo wrote on Substack: 'At all times, though, his descriptions are unforgettable. I was startled, amused, sometimes delighted by such critiques as “Paul Badura-Skoda, recording on a Beethoven-era Erard, clunks about like bad plumbing”; or “The space between each note is separated like chess pieces on a world championship board”; or “A 1990 Brussels recording by the Russian exile Mischa Maisky with the Argentine wanderer Martha Argerich sounds like a morning-after hotel breakfast, desultory but deeply affectionate.” One moment he’s vulgar, the next moment he’s classy, but always, unfailingly, he’s interesting.'

Defamation case

[edit]

His 2007 book Maestros, Masterpieces and Madness: The Secret Life and Shameful Death of the Classical Record Industry (US title: The Life and Death of Classical Music) was billed as an inside account of the rise and fall of recording, combined with a critical selection and analysis of 100 albums and 20 recording disasters. The book, however, was withdrawn from the market after its publisher discovered that it contained numerous libelous claims.[27] In 2007 the founder of Naxos Records, Klaus Heymann, sued Lebrecht's publisher, Penguin Books, for defamation in London's High Court of Justice.[28] Heymann claimed that Lebrecht had wrongly accused him of "serious business malpractices" in his book Maestros, Masterpieces and Madness, and identified at least 15 statements he claimed were inaccurate.[29] The case was settled out of court. As a result of the settlement, Penguin issued a statement acknowledging the baselessness of Lebrecht's accusations and apologising for "the hurt and damage which [Heymann] has suffered". The publisher also agreed to pay an undisclosed sum in legal fees to Heymann, to make a donation to charity, to refrain from repeating the disputed allegations and to seek the return of all unsold copies of Lebrecht's book.[29] Commenting on the affair, Heymann said: "For me it's beyond belief how any journalist in five pages can make so many factual mistakes. It's shocking. Also, he [Lebrecht] really doesn't understand the record business.[29]" The settlement did not extend to the US edition of Lebrecht's book.[28]

Broadcasting

[edit]

Beginning in 2000, he presented lebrecht.live (a cultural debate forum where "issues in the arts are debated and hotly disputed by makers and consumers of culture") on BBC Radio 3, whose output centres on classical music and opera.[30]

From 2006 until 2016 he hosted The Lebrecht Interview ("Classical music critic Norman Lebrecht talks to major figures in the field"), also on BBC Radio 3.[31]

Slipped Disc

[edit]

Lebrecht launched a classical music blog, Slipped Disc, in March 2007, originally as part of ArtsJournal.com. It attracts over one million readers per month.[3] In 2014, his blog became a standalone commercial website, supported by advertising and promotions. The blog primarily focuses on classical music industry gossip.

When asked by one interviewer whether he found such gossip interesting personally or whether he covered it for the sake of viewership, Lebrecht confirmed that the gossip

is the human comedy, that's what I like. I came into music because nobody was writing about it in a way that interested me. . . . What is important to someone who's just got out of bed, had a shower, got dressed, and is having their morning coffee? It's not Sibelius Four. It might be, "What happened to this conductor last night?"[2]

Critical reception

[edit]

Lebrecht's polemical writings have drawn strong and diverse responses; Gilbert Kaplan described him in 2007 as "surely the most controversial and arguably the most influential journalist covering classical music."[1] Robert Craft praised The Maestro Myth as an "exposé of the business practices of orchestral conducting [that] is likely to be the most widely read classical music book of the year".[32] The American composer Gunther Schuller, in his 1998 book The Compleat Conductor, described The Maestro Myth in these terms: "A remarkably knowledgeable and courageous, no-holds-barred exposé of the serious degradation and venality in the conducting business, the wheeling and dealing of the power-broking managements that control most of the music business."[33] Schuller went on to say: "It is sobering reading, to say the least, and is highly recommended to anyone concerned about the integrity of the art and profession of music." On the other hand, music critic Michael White described the book as merely "a compendium of gossip about who earns what and slept with whom to get it".[34] Lebrecht himself was described by musicologist Richard Taruskin as "a sloppy but entertaining British muckraker".[35] Several journalists have noted multiple misstatements of fact by Lebrecht:

John von Rhein, Chicago Tribune:

Lebrecht writes entertainingly and has a wicked ear for backstage gossip. When he is on – as in his portraits of Karajan and Ronald Wilford, the Machiavellian power broker of Columbia Artists Management – his lance can be deadly. And his contention that our desperate need for cultural icons has made us pump up even limited talents into mythical figures gives sobering pause.

But he fails to tell the whole story and cannot back up his odd melange of history, gossip, fact and bitchy iconoclasm with anything that might give his book lasting value. Nearly every page contains some careless blunder or spelling mistake. Too much of The Maestro Myth in fact betrays the sensibility of a tabloid columnist who cannot distinguish between tattle and truth – and worse, doesn't seem to care.

A generally skeptical sketch of Daniel Barenboim and his career ends with the unlikely image of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra conductor standing alone "between the shoreline and the stinking slaughterhouses" – razed more than 30 years ago.[36]

Roger Dettmer, The Baltimore Sun:

The book [The Maestro Myth] is a syntactic miasma of received gossip, recycled anecdotes, rickety extrapolations and cultural penis-envy, with a gaffe-account in the hundreds. The sheer size and weight of careless mistakes, carelessly written, make the reader wary about anything in the book that hasn't been experienced firsthand.

Factually, for example, we find Cincinnati "the state capital" of Ohio. Philadelphia is a "dreary industrial city" whose orchestra was "founded" by Stokowski on Page 3, but (correctly) by Fritz Scheel on Page 133. In the same breath, though, Scheel is misidentified as the founder of the San Francisco Symphony.

In Chicago (where Claudio Abbado was not "Solti's candidate" to succeed him), Daniel Barenboim (who was) "stands alone between the shoreline and the stinking slaughterhouses," razed more than 30 years ago. The author doesn't bring Toscanini or Sir Thomas Beecham to the New York Philharmonic until 1930 (try 1926 and '28, respectively), and wrongly assigns Tom Wolfe's "Radical Chic" sendup of Leonard Bernstein to the New York Times (it was New York magazine).

There are even mistakes about Mahler, even though Mr. Lebrecht's last book was Mahler Remembered, an anthology. About his native heath, he writes that "Georg Solti never wanted the job" of music director of London's Covent Garden Opera. But Solti did want it; his dilemma in 1959 was whether to take the Deutsche Oper in Berlin plus the Hamburg Philharmonic, or Covent Garden plus the Los Angeles Phil.[37]

Martin Bernheimer, Los Angeles Times:

One may want to forgive Lebrecht's passing errors, along with his hyperbole. Still, the little slips make one all the more leery of big gaffes.

Contrary to what one reads, Kreisler and Joachim were not the only composers who wrote cadenzas for the Beethoven violin concerto. Otto Klemperer did not enjoy much of a U.S. career after World War II. Antonia Brico did not conduct at the Met. Rudolf Bing did not ban Elisabeth Schwarzkopf from that house. James Levine's favored artists at the Met are not "little-leaguers". Klaus Tennstedt never was "the most sought-after conductor on earth". When Zubin Mehta came to Los Angeles, he did not inherit a "world-class, well-run Philharmonic". Leonard Bernstein could not claim the longest tenure of any music director of the New York Philharmonic – that was Mehta. Irmgard Seefried, Sena Jurinac and Hilde Guden did not "trill secondary roles" in Vienna – they didn't really trill anything, but they did sing primary roles.[38]

An anonymous informant identified as "one of the world's leading conductors" told The Independent that Lebrecht had for years been getting away with "pompous, preposterous judgment" and "inept research".[28] Upon being awarded the 2015 Cremona Music Award, pianist Grigory Sokolov refused to accept the honour, making this statement on his website: "According to my ideas about elementary decency, it is shame to be in the same award-winners list with Lebrecht".[39]
Music critic David Hurwitz published a satirical article titled, "Journalist Norman Lebrecht Dead at 61". After reporting Lebrecht's death from spontaneous combustion in the first paragraph, Hurwitz begins the second paragraph, "Truth be told, and in case you haven’t already guessed, Lebrecht is still with us as far as I know. That said, the above paragraph hardly contains more fiction than a typical Lebrecht article".[40]

Selected bibliography

[edit]
  • Lebrecht, Norman (1982). Discord: Conflict and The Making of Music. London: A. Deutsch.
  • —— (1985). The Book of Musical Anecdotes. New York: Free Press. Also published as Hush! Handel's in a Passion: tales of Bach, Handel, and their contemporaries
  • —— (1987). Mahler Remembered. London: Faber and Faber.
  • —— (1987). A Musical Book of Days. London: HarperCollins.
  • —— (1991). The Maestro Myth: Great Conductors in Pursuit of Power. London: Simon & Schuster.
  • —— (1992). Music in London: A History and Handbook. London: Aurum Press.
  • —— (1992). The Companion to 20th-Century Music. London: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-66654-5.
  • —— (1996). When The Music Stops: Managers, Maestros and the Corporate Murder of Classical Music. London: Simon & Schuster. Also published as Who Killed Classical Music?: Maestros, Managers, and Corporate Politics
  • —— (2000). Covent Garden: The Untold Story: Dispatches from the English Culture War, 1945–2000. London: Simon & Schuster.
  • —— (2002). The Song of Names: A Novel. London: Headline Review.
  • —— (2007). Maestros, Masterpieces and Madness: The Secret Life and Shameful Death of the Classical Record Industry. London: Allen Lane. Also published as The Life and Death of Classical Music: Featuring The 100 Best and 20 Worst Recordings Ever Made
  • —— (2009). The Game of Opposites: A Novel. New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.
  • —— (2010). Why Mahler?: How One Man and Ten Symphonies Changed Our World. London: Faber and Faber.
  • —— (2019). Genius and Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847–1947. London: Oneworld Publications.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e Kaplan, Gilbert (2 September 2007). "Norman Lebrecht – Mad About Music". WQXR. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  2. ^ a b Brown, Jeffrey Arlo (28 June 2018). "The Human Comedy: An Interview with Norman Lebrecht". VAN Magazine. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d "Cremona Music Award, "Communication" category – Prize winner: Norman Lebrecht". Cremona Musica. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Cummings, David M, ed. (1998). International Who's Who in Music and Musicians' Directory. Vol. 1 Classical and Light Classical Fields. Cambridge: Melrose Press. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-948875-92-2.
  5. ^ a b c "Lebrecht, Norman, (born 11 July 1948), writer and broadcaster". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U2000090. (subscription required)
  6. ^ a b c d Rogatchi, Inna (28 January 2020). "A conversation with novelist Norman Lebrecht". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  7. ^ "Norman Lebrecht quits Evening Standard" – Rhinegold
  8. ^ Lebrecht 1982.
  9. ^ Lebrecht 1985.
  10. ^ Lebrecht 1987a.
  11. ^ Lebrecht 1987b.
  12. ^ Lebrecht 1991.
  13. ^ Lebrecht 1992a.
  14. ^ Lebrecht 1992b.
  15. ^ Lebrecht 1996.
  16. ^ Herman Trotter (8 June 1997). "How Managers and Marketing Created a Symphony of Greed," The Buffalo News.
  17. ^ Lebrecht 2000.
  18. ^ Lebrecht 2002.
  19. ^ Daniel Walden and Evelyn Gross Avery (2006). Studies in American Jewish Literature, State University of New York Press.
  20. ^ Emma Brockes (8 January 2003). "Late starter; Norman Lebrecht has just won the Whitbread first book award – at the age of 54. He tells Emma Brockes why it took him so long," The Guardian.
  21. ^ "Clive Owen WWII film The Song of Names getting TIFF Gala Presentation". The Loop, 23 July 2019.
  22. ^ Lebrecht 2010.
  23. ^ Crane, David, "Is there no field in which the Jewish mindset doesn’t excel?," The Spectator (26 October 2019)
  24. ^ Literary Hub
  25. ^ Rashid, Tanjil. "Genius & Anxiety by Norman Lebrecht review — Jewish makers of the modern world".
  26. ^ "Bottled energies" by Mark Glanville, The Times Literary Supplement, 28 February 2020
  27. ^ Johnson, Andrew (28 October 2007). "Music Critic's Book Is Pulped as Penguin Loses Defamation Case". The Independent. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  28. ^ a b c Johnson, Andrew (28 October 2007). "Music critic's book is pulped as Penguin loses defamation case". The Independent.
  29. ^ a b c Wakin, Daniel J. (20 October 2007). "British Critic's Book Is Withdrawn". The New York Times.
  30. ^ Lebrecht.live at the BBC
  31. ^ BBC Radio 3 – The Lebrecht Interview
  32. ^ Robert Craft (26 April 1992). "Masters of the Pit and the Podium". The Washington Post. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  33. ^ Schuller, Gunther (1998). "1. A Philosophy of Conducting". The Compleat Conductor. Oxford University Press. p. 4. ISBN 9780199840588.
  34. ^ White, Michael (11 August 1996). "Where Norman Lebrecht Went Wrong". The Independent. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  35. ^ Taruskin, Richard (22 October 2007). "Books: The Musical Mystique". The New Republic.
  36. ^ John von Rhein (14 August 1992). "Maestro Myth Seldom Lets Facts Spoil Its Story". The Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  37. ^ Dettmer, Roger (23 August 1992). "Author's account of conductors is 'Maestro Myth'". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  38. ^ Bernheimer, Martin (12 April 1992). "Conduct Unbecoming". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  39. ^ Bernheimer, Martin (28 September 2015). "Grigory Sokolov refuses award because it has previously been won by Norman Lebrecht". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 13 September 2017.
  40. ^ Classics Today.com

Further reading

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