While Toscanini had an illustrious career in music, Samuel Antek was also celebrated for his musical talents. “He was a violinist, certainly at that point, and his dream had been to conduct and he pursued that dream and he was rewarded for that dream while he maintained his position as first violinist of the NBC Symphony through the whole span of time until 1954 when Toscanini retired at the age of 87. He began his own conducting career with the support and enthusiasm of the maestro. So, he had two parallel musical careers, and… [in] 1947, he was named musical director/conductor of the New Jersey Symphony, and in that tenure he created a format for children’s concerts which had not been done before in this way… [he] even was invited by Toscanini to guest conduct the NBC Symphony on a few occasions, so he was a rising star until he died very young.”
For readers, the hardcover edition and audiobook of This Was Toscanini complement one another and can be enjoyed together. The audiobook can be found on various platforms including Audible, Spotify, Barnes & Noble, Apple Books, Google Play, and Chirp.
Great art is timeless and this is about process. This is a behind-the-scenes peek at something through a musician’s eyes. How do I bring this back to appeal to new generations?
Most conductors have conducted from memory, but few, if any, knew this score as Toscanini did. To him, knowing the score consisted of being conscious of every printed note not only for itself, but in its relation to the others in the phrase and realizing how every phrase relates to the work as a whole.”
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