Albany Times Union

Conductor Mariss Jansons dies at 76

- By David Mchugh

Mariss Jansons, conductor of top classical ensembles including the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and the Royal Concertgeb­ouw Orchestra in Amsterdam, has died in Russia. He was 76.

Jansons’ death in St. Petersburg was confirmed by the Bavarian Radio Sy mphony Orchestra, where he was chief conductor. Jansons had canceled concerts this summer because of health reasons, the dpa news agency reported.

Born in German-occupied Riga in 1943 in what is now independen­t Lat via as the son of a conductor father and an opera singer mother, Jansons grew up in the Soviet Union and studied at the Leningrad (now St. Petersburg ) Conser vator y. A Soviet-era exchange prog ram brought him to Austria in 1969, where he studied with famed conductor Herbert von Karajan. Jansons’ work was also inf luenced by the legendar y Soviet conductor Evgeny Mravinsky, who brought him in as his assistant at the Leningrad Philharmon­ic in 1972.

He was chief conductor in Pittsburgh from 1997 to 2004, reg ularly appeared at the Salzburg Festival, and in 2006 and 2012 conducted the Vienna Philharmon­ic New Year ’s Concert broadcast around the world. He left the Pittsburgh orchestra to become principal conductor of the Royal Concertgeb­ouw, a post he held until 2015. Jansons is credited with raising the reputation of the Oslo Philharmon­ic through recordings and internatio­nal tours during a 23-year tenure as music director.

Jansons’ musical focus was largescale orchestral works by 19th-century central and eastern European composers, including Mahler, Dvorak, Bartok, Brahms and Shostakovi­ch. He was known for close attention to detail in rehearsal and made extensive pre-concert sound checks, listening from different points in the hall while one of the musicians wielded the baton and even adjusting the position of players’ chairs to get the sound he wanted.

“The notes are just signs,” he was quoted as saying in a 2012 inter view in the Guardian. “You have to go beyond them and see what your fantasy tells you. But how do you express that through sound? If you think of the technical aspects of conducting as being on the ground f loor of a big building, then 20 f loors up you are beginning to get the sound you want.”

Jansons, who said in the Guardian inter view that he held both Russian and Latvian passports, collapsed on stage during a concert performanc­e of Puccini’s opera “La Boheme” in Oslo in 1996 after suffering a heart attack and was subsequent­ly fitted with a defibrilla­tor.

 ?? Ronald Zak / Associated Press archive ?? In this 2012 file photo, Mariss Jansons conducts the Vienna Philharmon­ic Orchestra during the traditiona­l New Year’s Concert at Vienna’s Musikverei­n. Jansons has died; he was 76 years old.
Ronald Zak / Associated Press archive In this 2012 file photo, Mariss Jansons conducts the Vienna Philharmon­ic Orchestra during the traditiona­l New Year’s Concert at Vienna’s Musikverei­n. Jansons has died; he was 76 years old.

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