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George Solti: celebrating a virtuoso

The great Hungarian-born conductor strove for quality and also had the ability to inspire those around him

September 27, 2012 09:22
George Solti

By

Jessica Duchen,

Jessica Duchen

4 min read

Sir Georg Solti, one of the 20th century’s greatest conductors, was born 100 years ago, on 21 October 1912. Now major celebrations are getting underway around the world to mark his centenary.

Looking at Solti’s multitude of musical achievements, it is hard to know where to start. From Mozart to Mahler and Bartók, his repertoire was enormous. His interpretations were filled with an almost elemental power and conviction, in the opera house, the concert hall and the recording studio alike. He carried on the rigorous musical legacy of his teachers in Budapest, who included Bartók himself, as well as Zoltán Kodály and Leo Weiner.

He won 31 Grammy awards – more than any other recording artist, even Henry Mancini and The Beatles. He enjoyed a 50-year association with just one record label, Decca, and became music director, over the years, of some of the world’s best opera houses and symphony orchestras, including the Bavarian State Opera, the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. BBC Music Magazine’s critics recently voted his set of Wagner’s Ring Cycle the greatest recording ever made.

“Solti 100” events are taking place on both sides of the Atlantic. In Chicago, where his association with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra spanned three decades, the World Orchestra for Peace (which he founded in 1995) will give a biographical concert on his birthday, narrated by his widow, Lady Valerie Solti, and filmed for TV distribution worldwide; we can expect it eventually on BBC4.