词条 | Max Reiter |
释义 |
Conducting appointments
Growing upReiter was born in Trieste, Italy, on October 20, 1905 to Isaac Reiter, a German-born businessman father, and Cella, a native Italian mother. When he was ten years old, his family moved to Munich, where he continued his middle-school education and went on to attend a university. He studied conducting with Bruno Walter and, at the insistence of his father, earned a doctorate in law.[5][6][7][8] Immigration to AmericaReiter fled his home in Italy in 1939, during the rise in fascism and antisemitism. He arrived in New York in January 1939, where the Steinway family advised him to go to Texas, a place they felt held employment potential. The Steinways felt that Texas was least affected by the Great Depression, and, given strong piano sales, showed great enthusiasm for music. The Steinway family informed Reiter Texans had purchased more Steinway pianos per capita than in any other state. Move to TexasWith a list of eighteen Texas cities to visit, Reiter's first stop was in Waco, at Baylor University,[9] where he persuaded the university president to let him work one week with the orchestra, which he did with success. A couple of people from San Antonio who heard the concert persuaded him to try conducting in San Antonio. On June 12, 1939, Reiter gave a demonstration concert at the Sunken Garden Amphitheater. From then on, Reiter flourished as the founding musical director of the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra, while directing the quality symphony orchestra that he founded in Waco.[10] DeathIn December 1950, Reiter was told to give his heart a rest. Heeding the advice, he recommended Victor Alessandro as a guest conductor. Alessandro, who was a Texas-born conductor, was at the time the conductor of the Oklahoma City Philharmonic. Reiter's condition was more serious than he thought; within a week he was dead. Pleased with Reiter's endorsement, the San Antonio Symphony Society offered Alessandro a three-year contract in January 1951.[11] References1. ^Biography Index. A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines. Volume 1: January 1946 – July 1949, H. W. Wilson Company, New York (1949) {{DEFAULTSORT:Reiter, Max}}2. ^Biography Index. A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines. Volume 2: August 1949 – August 1952, H. W. Wilson Company, New York (1953) 3. ^Obituaries on File, Two volumes, compiled by Felice D. Levy (born 1940), New York: Facts on File (1979) 4. ^Jan Onofrio, Texas Biographical Dictionary, Volume 2, third edition, pg. 164, Somerset Publishers, New York (1996) {{ISBN|040309951X}} 5. ^Theodore Albrecht, 101 Years of Symphonic Music in San Antonio, Southwestern Musician, Texas Music Educators Association, March, November 1975 6. ^San Antonio Express-News, October 11, 1964 7. ^San Antonio Light, October 6, 1963. 8. ^Lois Isabel Oppenheimer (née Goldsmith; 1919–2010), Max Reiter, The Handbook of Texas Online, Texas State Historical Association (Oppenheimer was the stepdaughter of Max Reiter) 9. ^Max Reiter, Founder of Texas Symphony Orchestras, Is Dead, Reading Eagle, December 14, 1950 10. ^Pioneer Jewish Texans, by Natalie Gene Ornish, (née Moskowitz; 1926) & Sara Alpern-Tarlow, PhD, Texas A & M University Press, pg. 231 (1989) {{OCLC|759158575}} {{ISBN|1603444335}} {{ISBN|9781603444330}} 11. ^Music: Texan to San Antonio, Time (magazine), January 22, 1951 8 : 1905 births|1950 deaths|American classical musicians|People from San Antonio|Italian emigrants to the United States|20th-century classical musicians|20th-century American musicians|Classical musicians from Texas |
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