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Press Release from the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra.
CINCINNATI – The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra is deeply saddened to announce
that conductor Erich Kunzel died this morning after a four-month battle with
cancer of the pancreas, liver and colon. The seventy-four year old conductor of
the Cincinnati Pops had been in Maine receiving treatment. He led the orchestra
in his final performance in Cincinnati on August 1. Maestro Kunzel is survived
by his wife Brunhilde.
“The world has lost a musical giant and we have lost a dear friend,” said
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra President Trey Devey. “Erich Kunzel built the
Cincinnati Pops into one of the best known orchestras in the world and is not
only beloved in Cincinnati, but around the globe. Today we honor his tremendous
legacy and offer our deepest sympathies to Brunhilde and their entire
family.”
The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Board of Directors met in a special session
this morning and unanimously conferred upon Maestro Kunzel the title of Founder
and Conductor Emeritus, honoring his 44 years of exemplary artistic leadership
that brought worldwide acclaim to the Orchestra and the region.
The Cincinnati Pops has launched a special memorial webpage where the public
is encouraged to view photos from Maestro Kunzel’s celebrated career, as well as
post tributes and remembrances. The link can be found at www.cincinnatipops.org. The Pops is
also accepting cards and notes for Mr. Kunzel’s family at the organization’s
Music Hall office located at 1241 Elm Street in Cincinnati, Ohio, 45202.
In addition to naming him Founder and Conductor Emeritus, the CSO Board of
Directors passed a resolution to inaugurate the Erich Kunzel Pops Legacy Fund,
established to specifically support artistic and programming initiatives for the
Cincinnati Pops.
“Erich Kunzel’s legacy was simply tremendous and one the Cincinnati Pops is
deeply committed to honoring this season and well into the future,” said CSO
Board of Directors Chair Marvin Quin. “We were truly fortunate to have this
world-famous conductor spend 44 years with us in Cincinnati.”
Hailed by the Chicago Tribune as “The Prince of Pops,” Maestro
Kunzel’s musical journey brought him fame over the far reaches of the world.
“Erich Kunzel was a musician who dared to dream in a realm that respected the
basic structure of a great symphonic orchestra, yet challenged the boundaries of
its entertainment possibilities,” said Cincinnati Pops Orchestra violist Paul
Frankenfeld. “Whether exploring the subtleties of a Beethoven symphony for a
concert in Eden Park or jumping around the Music Hall stage surrounded by
exploding pumpkins in a Halloween television production, Maestro Kunzel reached
out to audiences in Cincinnati, throughout the U.S., and abroad, making them
part of his fantasy world built upon great music. Despite the enormous success
of all the Cincinnati Pops recordings sold worldwide, Erich’s greatest dream
continues to unfold with the impending opening of the the new School for
Creative and Performing Arts. As we mourn the passing of Erich Kunzel, the
musicians of the orchestra embrace his wife, Brunhilde, as well those in his
extended family. We celebrate Erich’s life for the imagination he provided us,
as well as his inspiration that enabled us to realize our own dreams.”
The late Maestro Max Rudolf invited Mr. Kunzel, then a young conductor on the
faculty of Brown University, to join the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra as an
associate conductor in 1965. That October Maestro Kunzel conducted his first
sold-out “8 O’Clock Pops” concert, marking his ascent as a modern orchestral
legend. The Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, part of the Cincinnati Symphony
Orchestra, was then officially founded in 1977 with Maestro Kunzel at the helm.
For decades he led the orchestra, packing houses in Cincinnati’s Music Hall and
Riverbend Music Center, most recently on August 1, and also gaining new fans the
world over through tour performances, PBS television specials and millions of
recordings sold on the Telarc label.
“I am deeply saddened by the loss of my friend and colleague Erich Kunzel,”
said Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Music Director Paavo Järvi. “He was a
remarkable spirit and a tremendous musician. His many years of music making
with the Cincinnati Pops brought joy to literally millions, and I join with our
community in Cincinnati as well as his fans around the world in mourning the
loss of this great musical icon.”
Maestro Kunzel led the Cincinnati Pops on tours that include many concerts in
Carnegie Hall, Radio City Music Hall, the Grand Ol’ Opry in Nashville, and at
the Blossom Music Festival. The numerous international tours included a
celebrated tour to China in 2005 (the first appearance of a pops orchestra in
that country), highlighted by concerts in the Great Hall of the People in
Beijing. Maestro Kunzel conducted the first ever pops concert in China in 1998
in Beijing with the China National Symphony Orchestra. In August 2008, Erich
Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops made an historic return to China to participate
in the Opening Festivities of the Summer Olympics.
Starting in 1977, Mr. Kunzel recorded over 85 albums on the Telarc label with
the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra including the most recent From the Top at the
Pops, released on August 25. More than 55 of these albums appeared on the
Top 10 Billboard Charts. He was named Billboard Magazine’s Classical
Crossover Artist of the Year for an unprecedented four consecutive years.
Several Grammy Awards, the distinguished Grand Prix Du Disque, and the Sony
Tiffany Walkman Award for “visionary recording activities” highlighted his
fantastic recording career of over 125 albums.
Mr. Kunzel’s distinguished career was personified by his 2006 National Medal
of Arts, presented by President and Mrs. Bush at a ceremony in the Oval Office
at The White House in 2007. The National Medal of Arts, the highest honor given
to artists and arts patrons by the United States Government, is awarded to those
who have made outstanding contributions to the excellence, growth, support and
availability of the arts in the United States. He was also honored in September
2008 as an inductee into the American Classical Music Hall of Fame. The
induction ceremony took place in May of this year.
Educated at Dartmouth, Harvard and Brown Universities, Mr. Kunzel studied
with, and was personal assistant to, the great French conductor Pierre Monteux.
He made his professional conducting debut in 1957 leading Pergolesi’s La
Serva Padrona with the Santa Fe Opera Company. By 1970, when Arthur
Fiedler invited him to conduct the Boston Pops for the first time, Mr. Kunzel’s
commitment to “pops” was assured.
In addition to the National Medal of Arts and his induction into the American
Classical Music Hall of Fame, Mr. Kunzel was recently appointed honorary
artistic director for the 2012 World Choir Games, which will host its first-ever
event in the United States. He was honored with the President’s Award from the
Public Relations Society of America’s Cincinnati Chapter in June of 2009, and in
2006 with the Irma Lazarus Award from the Ohio Arts Council. He received the
1994 Presidential Medal for Outstanding Leadership and Achievement from
Dartmouth College, his alma mater, and in 2006 he was elected into Phi Beta
Kappa, America’s oldest honor society. Dartmouth College honored him in June
2007 with the Honorary Doctor of Arts degree. He also received honorary degrees
from University of Cincinnati, Xavier University, College of Mount St. Joseph,
Wilmington College and Northern Kentucky University. He was named by the Ohio
Arts Council as a special recipient of the 1991 Governor’s Awards for the Arts
in Ohio. In 1995, Mr. Kunzel received the 1995 Salvation Army “Others” award in
recognition of his contributions to the city of Cincinnati, the same year that
the Cincinnati MacDowell Society honored his contributions to the arts community
by awarding him the MacDowell Medal. In 1996 the Phi Delta Theta International
Fraternity presented him with its Distinguished Alumnus Award in recognition of
his outstanding achievements in the performing arts.
Maestro Kunzel was also Chair of the Greater Cincinnati Arts and Education
Center, an organization whose plan to build a new School for the Creative and
Performing Arts adjacent to Music Hall will be complete in 2010.
Honoring Maestro Kunzel’s wishes, the Pops will move forward and present the
concerts he was scheduled to conduct during the 2009-2010 season, including the
season opening performances on September 11, 12 and 13. Jack Everly, Principal
Pops Conductor of the Baltimore and Indianapolis symphony orchestras, Naples
Philharmonic Orchestra and National Arts Centre Orchestra (Ottawa) has
graciously agreed to step in and conduct Maestro Kunzel’s concert program paying
tribute to composer John Williams with Star Wars actor Anthony Daniels
narrating.
In addition to his home in Newport, Kentucky, Erich Kunzel lived on Swans
Island, Maine and in Naples, Florida with his wife Brunhilde.
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