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'''Clemens Heinrich Krauss''' ([[March 31]], [[1893]] – [[May 16]], [[1954]]) was a [[Austria]]n [[conducting|conductor]] and opera intendant, particularly associated with the music of [[Richard Strauss]].
'''Clemens Heinrich Krauss''' ([[March 31]], [[1893]] – [[May 16]], [[1954]]) was an [[Austria]]n [[conducting|conductor]] and opera [[impresario]], particularly associated with the music of [[Richard Strauss]].


==Biography==
==Biography==

Revision as of 16:31, 21 September 2008

Clemens Heinrich Krauss (March 31, 1893May 16, 1954) was an Austrian conductor and opera impresario, particularly associated with the music of Richard Strauss.

Biography

Krauss was born in Vienna, the out-of-wedlock child of Clementine Krauss, then a 15-year-old dancer in the Vienna Imperial Opera Ballet, later a leading actress and operetta singer, who was a niece of the prominent nineteenth-century operatic soprano, Gabrielle Krauss (1842-1904). His natural father, the chevalier Hector Baltazzi (1851-1916)[1], belonged to a family of prominent Phanariot bankers resident in Vienna. Baltazzi's older sister Helene was married to baron Albin Vetsera and was the mother of Marie Vetsera, who was thus Clemens Krauss' first cousin.[2]

As a boy, Krauss was a chorister in the Hofkapelle (Imperial Choir). He attended the Vienna Conservatory, graduating in 1912. He studied composition with Hermann Graedener and theory with Richard Heuberger. After graduation he was chorus master in the Brno Theater (1912-1913). There he made his conducting debut in 1913. The great Romanian soprano Viorica Ursuleac, with whom he often performed, was his wife.

Career

Krauss made the rounds of regional centers, conducting in Riga (1913-1914), Nürnberg (1915), and Sczeczin (1916-1921). The latter appointment gave him ample opportunity to travel to Berlin to hear Arthur Nikisch conduct the Berlin Philharmonic, a major influence. Krauss's next post was back in Austria, where he became director of the opera and symphony concerts in Graz. In 1922 he joined the conducting staff of the Vienna State Opera and teacher of the conducting class at the State Academy of Germany. In 1923 he became conductor of the Vienna Tonkünstler Concerts until 1927, and Intendant of the opera in Frankfurt am Main and director of the Museum Concerts in 1924, until 1929.

Krauss visited the United States in 1929, conducting in Philadelphia and with the New York Philharmonic. Also in 1929 he became director of the Vienna State Opera. Its orchestra, in its independent concert form as the Vienna Philharmonic, appointed him its music director in 1930. He was a regular conductor at the Salzburg Festival from 1926 to 1934. In 1930 he conducted Alban Berg's Wozzeck.

In 1933 and 1934 Krauss gave up his Vienna positions, becoming director of the Berlin State Opera in 1935 after Erich Kleiber resigned in protest over Nazi rule. In 1933 he took over the preparations for the premieres of Strauss' Arabella when the conductor Fritz Busch (another non-Jewish anti-Nazi) left. In 1937 he was appointed Intendant of the Nationaltheater München, following the resignation there of Hans Knappertsbusch. He became a close friend of Richard Strauss, for whom he wrote the libretto to the opera Capriccio which he premiered in Munich in 1942. Also, he conducted the premieres of Strauss's operas Friedenstag and Die Liebe der Danae.

After the Munich opera house was bombed, shutting it down, Krauss returned to conduct the Vienna Philharmonic until it closed shortly before the end of the War (1944-1945). After the War, Allied officials investigated his pro-Nazi activities and because of them forbade him from appearing in public until 1947. They also found that he had frequently acted to assist a number of individual Jews escape the Third Reich machine. When his ban was lifted he resumed frequently conducting the Vienna Philharmonic, including its famous New Year's Day concerts.

Following Krauss's rehabilitation he conducted at Covent Garden in London from 1951 and the Bayreuth Festival in 1953 . He died during a visit to Mexico City, and is now buried along with his wife, who died in 1985, in Ehrwald, Austria.

He didn't make many recordings; but his 1950 performance of Johann Strauss II's "Die Fledermaus", made in Vienna, is still regarded by some as the best one.

References

  1. ^ Notes to a reissue of Krauss' Decca recordings of the orchestral music of Richard Strauss, Testament SBT1184
  2. ^ http://geneweb.inria.fr/roglo?lang=fr;m=N;v=baltazzi
  • Joseph Gregor, Clemens Krauss: Seine Musikalische Sendung (Munich, 1953)
  • G. K. Kende and Signe Scanzoni, Der Prinzipal: Clemens Krauss-Fakten, Vergleiche, Rückschlüsse (Berlin, 1988) ISBN 3-7952-0549-2

External links

Preceded by Music Director, Staatsoper Unter den Linden
1935-1936
Succeeded by