Igor Buketoff

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Igor Buketoff (29 May 1915 – 7 September 2001) was an American conductor, arranger and teacher. He had a special affinity with Russian music and with Sergei Rachmaninoff in particular. He also strongly promoted British contemporary music, and new music in general.

Biography

Buketoff was born in Hartford, Connecticut, the son of a Russian Orthodox priest.[1] He liked to refer to himself as "the last active conductor with pre-Revolutionary blood in his veins".[2] His father knew Sergei Rachmaninoff and had been asked by the composer to assemble the choir for the 1927 world premiere of his Three Russian Folk Songs, Op. 41, using the basso profundos among the Orthodox clergy. Igor attended the rehearsals for the premiere and was told by his father that the conductor, Leopold Stokowski, had his own ideas about the tempo for the final song and refused to obey Rachmaninoff's wishes.[3]

His education was at the University of Kansas 1931-32, the Juilliard School in New York 1935-41, and the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music. He taught at the Conservatory, and at Juilliard 1935-45.[4] He directed the choral departments at Juilliard and Adelphi College.[5]

At Juilliard he programmed Rachmaninoff's Three Russian Folk Songs, and remembering what had happened with the 1927 premiere, he consulted the composer about the tempo to be used in the final song. He also recorded the work commercially. In 1940 he contributed a scholarly article on Russian chant to Gustave Reese's Music in the Middle Ages.[3]

From 1941 to 1947 he was Music Director of the Chautauqua Opera Association[3][4] and taught at Columbia University 1941-47.[4] In 1941 he won the first Ditson Conductor's Award.[5] In the early part of his career he conducted a range of orchestras in the United States, which included the New York Philharmonic in the Young People's Concerts 1948-53,[4] the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Fort Wayne Philharmonic Orchestra 1948-66.[4] He taught at Butler University 1953-63[4] and was later associated with the Festival of Neglected Romantic Music held there.

In 1959, Buketoff established the World Music Bank for International Exchange and Promotion of Contemporary Music, for which participating countries were asked to nominate outstanding scores.[5][6] The organization is now called the International Contemporary Music Exchange[3][7] and is managed by the International Rostrum of Composers. He won the Ditson Award again in 1967.[4][5]

He was conductor of the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra 1964-66[4] and also conducted internationally. He was Director of the Contemporary Composers Project for the Institute of International Education 1967-70.[4]

In 1971, Buketoff conducted the world premiere of Lee Hoiby's opera Summer and Smoke with St Paul Opera, Minnesota.[8] With that organisation he also led the U.S. premieres of Carl Nielsen's Maskarade and Werner Egk's Betrothal in San Domingo.[2]

At Eugene Ormandy's request,[citation needed] he reconstructed Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture, setting the opening section for a cappella chorus, in the style of a Russian Orthodox chant, and the finale for chorus and orchestra. He recorded this version with the New Philharmonia Orchestra.

He taught at the University of Houston 1977-79[4] and conducted the Texas Chamber Orchestra 1980-81.

At the request of Sophie Satin, Rachmaninoff's sister-in-law,[9] Igor Buketoff orchestrated Act I of Rachmaninoff's unfinished opera Monna Vanna, which was premiered in a concert performance at Saratoga, New York on 11 August 1984, with the Philadelphia Orchestra.[5] Rachmaninoff had written this act in piano score, as well as some uncompleted sketches for Act II.[10][11] The soloists were Sherrill Milnes and Tatiana Troyanos.[2] Buketoff also recorded the work with the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra, again with Sherrill Milnes, but other singers sang the other roles.

He also produced a new version of Modest Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov in which he removed most of Rimsky-Korsakov's additions and reorchestrations, and fleshed out some other parts of Mussorgsky's original orchestration. This version had its first performance at the Metropolitan Opera, New York, in 1997, under Valery Gergiev.[3][12]

He also prepared a version of Delius's opera A Village Romeo and Juliet, with reduced orchestration.[13]

The Los Angeles Conservatory awarded him an Honorary Doctorate.[4]

In his later years Igor Buketoff lived in Manhattan. He didn't follow the Eastern Orthodox tradition of his family; he was a lifetime member at St. James' Episcopal Church (New York City). He died in the Bronx on 7 September 2001, aged 86,[3] survived by his wife and a daughter.[3]

Recordings

Buketoff was known for the unusual repertoire he chose to record. These included:

Sources

References