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Thread started 02/11/13 11:04am

theAudience

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Conductor & Juilliard Emeritus James DePreist dies

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PORTLAND, Ore. — James DePreist, one of the first African-American conductors and a National Medal of Arts winner, died Friday at his home in Scottsdale, Ariz., his manager Jason Bagdade said.

DePreist, who was 76, had been in and out of the hospital since a massive heart attack last March that was followed by open-heart surgery, his wife, Ginette DePreist, told The Oregonian newspaper.

DePreist was director emeritus of The Juilliard School's conducting program in New York. He was the Oregon Symphony's music director from 1980 until 2003, transforming it from a small, part-time group into a full-time nationally recognized orchestra with 17 recordings.

DePreist also led orchestras in Quebec, Monte Carlo, Tokyo and Malmo, Sweden.

The Oregon Symphony will dedicate its weekend performances to the charismatic conductor known as "Jimmy."

"We are talking about a man with an international career, who achieved many things on international stages," Oregon Symphony conductor Carlos Kalmar said. "And you can only do that if — aside from technicalities — you are a real personality, someone the musicians look up to, and you keep the audiences very, very interested. And I think in that sense Jimmy was great."

Peter Frajola, a principal violinist hired by DePriest more than a quarter-century ago, said the symphony took "phenomenal musical journeys" with the conductor, and his influence went beyond the concert hall.

"A huge figure in the Portland area; everybody knew him," Frajola said. "Even if you weren't a musician, even if you never went to the symphony, you knew who Jimmy was. Everybody loved him. He was just absolutely wonderful speaker to the audience. Made everyone feel welcome."

DePreist was born in Philadelphia in 1936. According to his website, he studied composition with Vincent Persichetti at the Philadelphia Conservatory of Music and earned bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Pennsylvania.

He contracted polio in 1962 while in Thailand, affecting his walk for the rest of his life. He developed kidney disease in the 1990s and had a transplant in 2001.

In 2005, President George W. Bush presented DePreist with the National Medal of Arts, the nation's highest honor for artistic excellence. The conductor also received more than a dozen honorary doctorates, was honored in countries from Finland to Japan, and managed to write two books of poetry.

DePreist was the nephew of Marian Anderson, a celebrated contralto whose 1939 concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial was a landmark moment in civil-rights history. DePreist told National Public Radio in 2005 that that his aunt "was simultaneously the most humble person I ever met in my life and the most powerful."

Though DePreist was a pioneer in terms of African-American conductors, he downplayed that aspect of his career.

"He never seemed to bring that to the foreground," Frajola said. "It was always more important to him to play the music well, to be thinking artistically and to take care of his orchestra."

In a 1992 letter to the editor of the New York Times, in which he responded to an article about minority conductors, DePreist made clear that artistry was his major concern.

"What self-respecting musician would really want to be engaged for reasons primarily other than artistic?" DePreist wrote. "In my view, any orchestra that engages a conductor, soloist or player because that individual is black not only offends the process but also demeans the musician and compromises the artistic integrity of the institution.

"Any prize artificially pushed toward our grasp is a prize not worth having."

—Copyright 2013 Associated Press

http://online.wsj.com/art...4d53c.html

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James DePreist dies at 76; artistic advisor to Pasadena Symphony

DePreist, nephew of contralto Marian Anderson, was one of the few black conductors to lead major orchestras in the United States and abroad.

February 08, 2013|By Elaine Woo, Los Angeles Times

James DePreist, artistic advisor to the Pasadena Symphony and Pops and one of the few African American conductors to lead major orchestras in the United States and abroad, died Friday at his home in Scottsdale, Ariz. He was 76.

The cause was complications of a heart attack he had last spring, said his manager, Jason Bagdade.

DePreist overcame polio in his 20s to pursue a conducting career that took him to stages from Sweden to Japan over four decades. His longest and most distinguished tenure was with the Oregon Symphony, where he was music director from 1980 to 2003, a period when that orchestra gained national and international renown.

In 2010 he assumed the top musical post at the Pasadena Symphony after the unamicable departure of its longtime music director, Jorge Mester.

"We brought him in after our 25-years-long music director left. There was a bit of uneasiness and unsettled feelings among the orchestra," Paul Jan Zdunek, chief executive of the Pasadena Symphony Assn., said Friday.

"James came in and was just a Zen master. He had this aura about him. He didn't have to say anything. It was the way he looked at you and held himself," Zdunek said. "And his musicianship was beyond reproach."

DePreist was also permanent conductor of the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra and director emeritus of conducting and orchestral studies at the Juilliard School in New York.

He was a nephew of Marian Anderson, the celebrated contralto whose 1939 concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial was a civil rights milestone. DePreist was awarded the National Medal of Arts, the nation's highest honor for artistic achievement, by President George W. Bush in 2005.

He had a commanding presence, even though in his last years — after a kidney transplant in 2001— he conducted from a wheelchair.

He was born in Philadelphia on Nov. 21, 1936. His Aunt Marian was an influence early in his life: After his father died when DePreist was 6, she helped support him and his mother and encouraged his interest in music.

He entered the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School as a pre-law student in 1954 and earned a bachelor's degree in 1958. Realizing he did not want to be a lawyer, he switched gears, earning a master's degree in the arts from the University of Pennsylvania in 1961 and studying with noted composer Vincent Persichetti at the Philadelphia Conservatory. In college he formed a jazz group called the Jimmy DePreist Quintet that performed on "The Tonight Show" with Steve Allen in 1956.

In 1962 the State Department invited DePreist to teach and perform jazz on a cultural exchange tour of Asia. In Thailand he was given the opportunity to conduct a Bangkok orchestra, which was "that kind of revelatory experience that we read about and hope for." He knew he wanted to be a conductor.

But during that tour, he was stricken with polio, which left both his legs paralyzed. He returned to the U.S. for six months of intensive therapy and regained the ability to walk with crutches. In 1964 he won first prize in the Dmitri Mitropoulos International Conducting Competition, which brought him wide notice and a season at the New York Philharmonic as an assistant to conductor Leonard Bernstein.

Finding it difficult to obtain a serious classical conducting position in the U.S., he went abroad and made his European debut in 1969 leading the Rotterdam Philharmonic. He was associate conductor under Antal Dorati of the National Symphony in Washington, D.C., in 1971 when he conducted at Constitution Hall, the venue that had turned away his aunt in 1939 because she was black. After one rehearsal, he called Anderson and said, "You know, it's incredible to me that you couldn't do what I just did," he told the Associated Press in 2002.

He became the first African American conductor of the Houston Symphony in 1976. That year he also began a seven-year stint as music director of the Quebec Symphony.

In 1980 he was hired as music director of the Oregon Symphony, and over the next several years amplified its budget, raised players' salaries and stretched its repertoire to include more American music. He "built it into a virtuoso band more than able to hold its own in any international company," Gramophone magazine wrote in 2001.

DePreist made more than 50 recordings, including a critically acclaimed Shostakovich series with the Helsinki Philharmonic.

He also published two volumes of poetry, "This Precipice Garden" and "The Distant Siren." Maya Angelou praised his work for having "the tautness of a perfectly pitched viola and much of its resonance."

DePreist stood with leg braces to conduct until one day in Stockholm when he was conducting with violinist Itzhak Perlman, also a polio survivor.

"He asked me, 'Why are you standing up?' I had no good reason, and from that point on, I sat to conduct, and it was tremendously freeing.…"

DePreist is survived by his wife, Ginette, two daughters and two grandchildren.

http://articles.latimes.c...t-20130209

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Photo credit: AP | FILE - In this May 9, 2002 file photo, James DePreist, talks about his conducting career as he sits in his high rise apartment overlooking downtown Portland. A portrait of his aunt, the legendary opera singer Marian Anderson, hangs on the wall behind him. One of the early African-American conductors of a major orchestra and National Medal of Arts winner James DePreist has died at age 76. His manager, Jason Bagdade, says DePreist died at home Friday, Feb. 8. 2013 in Scottsdale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Greg Wahl-Stephens)


http://newyork.newsday.co...-1.4593407

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Reply #1 posted 02/11/13 4:19pm

TD3

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RIP Mr. Depreist. pray

The New York Times

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Reply #2 posted 02/12/13 2:12pm

paligap

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...

pray Rest in peace, James DePriest....

...

" I've got six things on my mind --you're no longer one of them." - Paddy McAloon, Prefab Sprout
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Reply #3 posted 02/12/13 2:49pm

HuMpThAnG

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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Conductor & Juilliard Emeritus James DePreist dies