Wilhelm Schüchter (15 December 1911 – 27 May 1974) was a German conductor. Between 1959 and 1962, he was the music director of the NHK Symphony Orchestra in Tokyo and is credited for raising its standards to an international level. He was Generalmusikdirektor in Dortmund from 1962 until his death. He opened the new opera house in 1966 with Der Rosenkavalier by Richard Strauss, and conducted the world premiere of the opera Eli by Walter Steffens after the drama of Nelly Sachs in 1967. He left a legacy of opera recordings, especially of excerpts sung in German.
Schüchter first visited Japan in November 1957, while accompanying the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra on tour as an assistant to Karajan, who had been appointed music director the previous year. Illness forced Karajan to cancel some of his Japanese engagements; Schüchter replaced him at a morning broadcast recording session with the NHK Symphony Orchestra on 21 November, then at an evening Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra performance in Sendai. His professionalism and efficiency in rehearsal impressed the NHK musicians,[4] who were already aware of the conductor's reputation through his recordings. They decided to appoint Schüchter as their music director, with his tenure set to begin in March 1959.[5]
When he returned to Japan on 13 February 1959 to begin his new role with NHK, his arrival in Yokohama attracted significant journalistic coverage from across Japan. The next day, he stated at a press conference that he looked forward to instilling in Japanese musicians his ideals of performance and expressive interpretation.[5]
Schüchter made exacting demands on the musicians of the NHK Symphony.[5] In his drive to raise the orchestra's standards, he fired approximately a third of its personnel.[4] He was also exigent with NHK studio staff on their broadcast and commercial recordings. He carefully supervised post-production of recordings to ensure that the best takes were edited into a finished whole seamlessly.[5]
In 1960, Schüchter led the NHK Symphony on its first world tour.[4] By 1962, during Schüchter's last season as music director, the critic Nomura Kōichi reported that the conductor's efforts resulted in the NHK Symphony attaining a level of refinement "that no Japanese orchestra had ever achieved before". Schüchter's popularity with Japanese audiences was such that NHK broadcast a retrospective of his concerts over eight consecutive nights, culminating with his farewell concert on 25 March.[5]
According to the music critic Itakura Shigeo, Schüchter is considered a pivotal figure in the NHK Symphony's history.[4]
He also conducted radio productions, namely for the NDR and the WDR.
Further reading
Rudolf Schroeder: Das Philharmonische Orchester der Stadt Dortmund. Zwölf Jahre Wilhelm Schüchter 1962–1974. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte des städtischen Musiklebens. Rabe, Dortmund 1982.
Fred K. Prieberg: Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933–1945. Kiel 2004, p. 6342 (CD-ROM-Lexikon).
Itakura, Shigeo (2024). "N響のアンサンブルを世界的水準に引き上げたシュヒター最高の遺産 [Raising the NHK Symphony Orchestra's Level to World-Class: Schüchter's Greatest Legacy]". シュヒターとNHK交響楽団〜ビクター・ステレオ録音集〜 [NHK Symphony and Schüchter: Victor Stereo Recordings] (booklet) (in Japanese). NHK Symphony Orchestra, Wilhelm Schüchter. Victor Records/Tower Records Japan. NCS88029.