Yugoslav composer and conductor
Oskar Danon in 1961 during practice with the Maribor Symphony Orchestra in Maribor
Oskar Danon (7 February 1913 – 18 December 2009)[ 1] was a Yugoslav composer and conductor .[ 2]
Biography
Danon, a Bosnian Jew , was born in 1913 in Sarajevo , then in the Austro-Hungarian Empire (modern Bosnia and Herzegovina ).[ 3] He studied music in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and Prague , Czechoslovakia ,[ 3] where he obtained his Ph.D. in musicology .
He worked as a conductor in Sarajevo, and after World War II became conductor and director of the Belgrade Opera (1944–1965) and the chief conductor of the Slovenian Philharmonic Orchestra (1970–1974).[ 3] He was also a conductor of the Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra . With these orchestras he performed both in Yugoslavia and abroad (Paris, Wiesbaden , Florence , etc.).
In 1955, as part of a Russian complete opera recording project with Decca and the Belgrade National Opera, he conducted Prince Igor , Eugene Onegin and A Life for the Tsar in the Dome of Culture.[ 4]
With the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London he recorded works by Smetana, Enescu, Dvořák, Rimsky-Korsakov, Prokofiev, Stravinsky and Saint-Saëns for Reader's Digest in 1962-63, and in 1963 Die Fledermaus in German and English for RCA in Vienna with Adele Leigh, Anneliese Rothenberger, Risë Stevens, Sándor Kónya, Eberhard Waechter and George London,[ 4] as well as recording for Supraphon in Czechoslovakia: Scheherazade , Orpheus , Pulcinella and the Franck symphony .
Danon's Vienna State Opera debut in 1964 was The Gambler , in a production from Belgrade, followed over the years by Don Quichotte (Massenet), The Miraculous Mandarin (Bartók), Tannhäuser with Gottlob Frick , Wolfgang Windgassen , Eberhard Waechter , Christa Ludwig and Gundula Janowitz , Carmen , La traviata , Aida , The Flying Dutchman , Rigoletto , Madama Butterfly and Otello . For the Verdi Theatre in Trieste he conducted Boris Godunov , The Golden Cockerel and Countess Maritza .
Danon was professor at the Belgrade Music Academy . He was awarded the October Award of the City of Belgrade for his conducting activity, as well as the AVNOJ Award (1970). Danon was also a member and former president of the Association of Musical Artists of Serbia .
Danon died in Belgrade on 18 December 2009, aged 96. He is interred in the Alley of Distinguished Citizens in the Belgrade New Cemetery .
See also
References
Sources
Holmes, John L. Conductors on Record , Victor Gollancz, London 1982.
Kolar, Vladimir. Oskar Danon. Tonovi jednog vremena , Savez kompozitorajugoslavije, Beograd 1973.
Krleza, Miroslav. Leksikon Jugoslavenske Muzike , Jugoslavenski Leksikografski Zavod, Zagreb 1984.
Maksimović, M. (1971): Beogradska filharmonija 1951–1971 , Beogradska filharmonija, Beograd
Mala enciklopedija Prosveta , I (1978), Prosveta, Beograd
Muzička enciklopedija , I (1971), Jugoslovenski leksikografski zavod, Zagreb
Muzika i muzičari u NOB — Zbornik sećanja (1982), Grupa izdavača, Beograd
Pedeset godina Fakulteta muzičke umetnosti (Muzičke akademije) 1937–1987 (1988), Univerzitet umetnosti u Beogradu, Beograd
Pejović, R. (1986): Oskar Danon , Univerzitet umetnosti u Beogradu, Beograd
Peričić, V. [1969]: Muzički stvaraoci u Srbiji , Prosveta, Beograd
Sadie, Stanley. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians , Macmillan, London 1980.
Danon Oskar i Hribar Svjetlana "Ritmovi nemira", I. izdanje Sarajevska zima, Sarajevo 2005., II. izdanje Beogradska filharmonija, Beograd 2006. godine
International National Artists Other