Historical dictionary of Weimar Republik

WALTER, BRUNO

Walter, Bruno: translation

born Bruno Walter Schlesinger (1876-1962), conductor; the last great exponent of German romanticism. Born in Berlin,* he began study-ing music* at the Stern Conservatory in that city when he was eight. Although he gave a piano recital at age nine, the next year he decided on a conducting career. He was engaged at seventeen by the Cologne Opera and went to Ham-burg in 1894 to work with Mahler (who advised that he drop the name Schles-inger). After conducting briefly in Breslau, Pressburg (now Bratislava), and Riga, he returned to Berlin in 1900 and then joined Mahler at Vienna s Court Opera in 1901; in 1911 he took Austrian citizenship. After Mahler s death, Walter premiered the composer'sDas Lied von der Erde(The song from the earth) and the Ninth Symphony.During 1913-1922 he directed the Munich Opera (his "most beautiful and most rewarding" years), premiering Hans Pfitz-ner s*Palestrinain 1917 and launching the Mozart-Wagner festivals; he was also interim conductor in 1919 of the Berlin Philharmonic. His postwar tours (he first visited New York in 1923) won him international recognition. In 1925, the year he became music director of the Berlin City Opera, he began directing the Salzburg Festival Orchestra. In 1929 he established the Bruno Walter Foun-dation for needy musicians and succeeded Wilhelm Furtwangler* as conductor of Leipzig s Gewandhaus Orchestra.
Of Jewish ancestry, Walter was forced to resign his German positions in 1933, an event that provoked worldwide protest. Living from 1933 in Vienna, he conducted the ViennaStaatsoperand the Salzburg Festival Orchestra until 1938 and was associate conductor of Amsterdam s Concertgebouw Orchestra during 1934-1939. He settled briefly in France after theAnschluss(he was granted French citizenship), emigrated to the United States in 1939, and served for several years as a celebrated guest conductor. His interpretations of Mozart and Mahler were widely acclaimed.
REFERENCES:Benz and Graml,Biographisches Lexikon; Thomas Mann, "To Bruno Walter";New Grove, vol. 20; Schonberg,Great Conductors; Wellesz, "Bruno Walter."

  1. walter, brunoWalter Bruno translation German conductor. Born in Berlin He was opera coach at the Municipal Opera of Cologne. Later he became assistant conductor of the Hamburg StadtTh...Dictionary of Jewish Biography