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Strauss, De Lancie and the Oboe Concerto
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Classical
History
Music
Categories Via RSS |
Music
Music History
Publication Date |
Feb 26, 2022
Episode Duration |
00:02:00

Synopsis

On today’s date in 1946, the Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra gave the premiere of a new oboe concerto by the German composer Richard Strauss, then in his 80s. The soloist was a Swiss oboist named Marcel Saillet, to whom the work is dedicated.

The concerto owes its existence, however, to a 20-something American oboist and GI named John de Lancie, who was then stationed in Germany and who visited Strauss at his Bavarian home shortly after the end of World War II.

“I asked him,” recalled de Lancie, “in view of the numerous beautiful, lyric solos for oboe in almost all his works, if he had ever considered writing a concerto for oboe. He answered ‘No,’ and there was no more conversation on the subject.”

But de Lancie’s question did plant a seed, and after returning to civilian life in the states in 1946, de Lancie got a letter from Strauss’s publisher offering him the work’s American premiere.

As it turned out, the American premiere of the Strauss Concerto was given by another oboist named Mitchell Miller – a musician who some of us “of a certain age” remember as an energetic choral conductor of a sing-along TV show entitled “Sing Along with Mitch.”

Music Played in Today's Program

Richard Strauss (1864 — 1949) Oboe Concerto (John de Lancie, oboe; Chamber Orchestra; Max Wilcox, cond.) RCA/BMG 7989

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