Jascha Horenstein

Jascha Horenstein (6 May [O.S. 24 April] 1898 – 2 April 1973) was an American conductor.
Horenstein was born in Kiev, Russian Empire (now Ukraine), into a well-to-do Jewish family; his mother (Marie Ettinger) came from an Austrian rabbinical family and his father (Abraham Horenstein) was Russian.
His family moved to Koenigsberg in 1906 and then to Vienna in 1911 and he studied at the Vienna Academy of Music starting in 1916, with Joseph Marx (music theory) and Franz Schreker (composition).
In 1920, he moved to Berlin and worked as an assistant to Wilhelm Furtwängler. During the 1920s he conducted the Vienna Symphony Orchestra and the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. He became principal conductor of the Düsseldorf Opera in 1928, and then the company's Generalmusikdirektor in 1929. He had to resign his post in March 1933 after the rise of the Nazi Party. His Düsseldorf tenure was the only permanent musical directorship in his career. Forced as a Jew to flee the Nazis, he moved to the United States in 1940, and eventually became an American citizen. He taught at the New School for Social Research while in New York City.
Horenstein is particularly remembered as a champion of modern music and as a Mahler conductor, although his repertory as shown by discographies was quite wide. In 1929 he conducted the premiere of three movements of Alban Berg's Lyric Suite in an arrangement for string orchestra. In 1950, he conducted the first Paris performance of Berg's Wozzeck.
Horenstein conducted the works of Bruckner and Mahler throughout his career, and he also displayed ongoing interest in Carl Nielsen, whom he knew personally, at a time when these composers were unfashionable. For example, his 1952 Vox recording of Mahler's Symphony No. 9 was the first studio recording, and the second commercial record, of that work. Several years later, he recorded the original version of Bruckner's Symphony No. 9. He made studio recordings of several of Mahler's symphonies at various points in his career, including Symphonies Nos. 1 and 3 with the London Symphony Orchestra. A number of radio archives hold broadcast airchecks of many of the other Mahler symphonies, as well as Das Lied von der Erde. In recent years, several of Horenstein's concert performances have been reissued on the BBC Legends label, including his celebrated 1959 Royal Albert Hall performance of Mahler's Symphony No. 8 and his 1972 Manchester performance of Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde.
Horenstein also recorded Robert Simpson's Third Symphony and music by Paul Hindemith and Richard Strauss during the last few years of his life. His opera recordings included Nielsen's Saul og David. His final operatic, and British, engagement was his March 1973 performances at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden of Richard Wagner's Parsifal.
It was during a performance of Nielsen's Fifth Symphony in Minneapolis in 1971 that Horenstein suffered a heart attack and was caught in mid-air by the leader of the orchestra. Though warned by his doctors to reduce his workload, he continued to conduct. At the time of his death, he was planning to conduct Mahler's Fifth, Sixth and Seventh.

Jascha Horenstein
Jascha Horenstein (6 May [O.S. 24 April] 1898 – 2 April 1973) was an American conductor.
Horenstein was born in Kiev, Russian Empire (now Ukraine), into a well-to-do Jewish family; his mother (Marie Ettinger) came from an Austrian rabbinical family and his father (Abraham Horenstein) was Russian.
His family moved to Koenigsberg in 1906 and then to Vienna in 1911 and he studied at the Vienna Academy of Music starting in 1916, ...
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 6 'Pastoral' (stereo)
BEETHOVEN Consecration of the House Overture (stereo)
BEETHOVEN Coriolan Overture
BEETHOVEN Egmont Overture
Studio recordings, 1953 and 1957
Total duration: 72:26
Vienna Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Jascha Horenstein
BERG Altenberglieder (world première recording)
SCHOENBERG Verklärte Nacht
SCHOENBERG Chamber Symphony No. 1
Live and studio recordings, 1953 (Ambient Stereo) and 1957 (stereo)
Total duration: 67:11
Írma Kolássi, mezzo-soprano
Orchestre National de la Radiodiffusion Française
Orchestra of the Southwest German Radio (SWDR)
MAHLER Symphony No. 9
SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No. 5
Studio recordings, 1952
Total duration: 2hr 11:52
Vienna Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Jascha Horenstein
MAHLER Symphony No. 3
MAHLER Kindertotenlieder*
MAHLER Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen*
Live and *studio recordings, 1954* & 1961
Total duration: 2hr 10:39
Helen Watts, contralto
*Norman Foster, baritone
Highgate School Choir
Orpington Junior Singers
London Symphony Chorus
London Symphony Orchestra
*Bamberg Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Jascha Horenstein
MAHLER Symphony No. 5
Previously unissued BBC studio recording, 1958
Total duration: 76:55
London Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Jascha Horenstein
MIHALOVICI Sinfonia Partita for String Orchestra
STRAVINSKY Symphony in Three Movements
BARTÓK Concerto for Orchestra
Live broadcast recordings, 1953 & 1961
Total duration: 71:59
Orchestre National de la Radio-télévision Française (RTF)
Orchestre National de France
conducted by Jascha Horenstein