The Phnom Penh Post

Conductor Mehta takes final bow with Israeli orchestra

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STAR conductor Zubin Mehta took the stage in Tel Aviv on Sunday for an emotional final performanc­e as music director of the Israel Philharmon­ic, retiring after 50 years with the orchestra.

The 83-year-old, who underwent treatment for a cancerous tumour last year and walked with a cane, earned a long standing ovation from the packed house as he said “goodbye to my family”, as he put it in an interview beforehand.

The f i nal performanc­e included Liszt’s Piano Concerto No 2 and Mahler’s Symphony No 2, known as Resurrecti­on, at the Mediterran­ean city’s Charles Bronfman Auditorium.

Indian-born Mehta was joined by pianist Yefim Bronfman, soprano Chen Reiss and mezzo-soprano Okka von der Damerau.

“From my heart, what this orchestra has given me . . . not only this one but all the generation­s before them. I cannot begin to even describe what I have learned with these musicians,” he told the audience during the intermissi­on.

At the end of the performanc­e, flower garlands were placed around the necks of Mehta and his wife, who watched from the audience.

Mehta, who will be succeeded by 30-year-old Lahav Shani, was also named the orchestra’s musical director emeritus.

The charismati­c maestro has famously conducted in poignant settings, including when he led a group of Israeli and German musicians near the site of the Nazis’ Buchenwald concentrat­ion camp in 1999, where he also conducted Mahler’s

Resurrecti­on Symphony.

He also famously rushed to Israel to perform in support of the country during the 1967 Six-Day War, though he would later say he opposed the settlement building that followed in the occupied West Bank.

‘Very emotional’

“You’re not usually tongue tied for words, but at this moment I’m feeling so strongly,” he said in an interview aired during Sunday’s intermissi­on by medici.tv, which streamed the concert live.

“And I hope I don’t fall apart. I hope I don’t make emotional mistakes because this symphony is very emotional for me.”

The Israel Philharmon­ic Orchestra appointed Mehta music adviser in 1969, music director in 1977, and music director for life in 1981.

His official biography says that during his tenure, “Mehta has conducted over 3,000 concerts with this extraordin­ary ensemble including tours spanning five continents”.

He has simultaneo­usly had other strings to his bow.

He was music director of the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic from 1962 to 1978 and of the New York Philharmon­ic from 1978 to 1991.

Dur i ng h i s t i me i n New York, he conducted more than 1,000 concerts, according to t he New York Philharmon­ic website, which says his tenure “was t he longest i n t he orchestra’s histor y”.

He has conducted other orchestras around the world, including in Austria, Germany and Italy.

Born in Mumbai, India in 1936, Mehta grew up in a musical environmen­t.

His father, Mehli Mehta, founded the Bombay Symphony and was music director of the American Youth Symphony in Los Angeles.

Together with his brother Zarin, he is a co-chairman of the Mehli Mehta Music Foundation in Mumbai, where children are educated in Western classical music.

 ?? JOE SCARNICI/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Conductor Zubin Mehta at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, California in 2015.
JOE SCARNICI/GETTY IMAGES/AFP Conductor Zubin Mehta at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, California in 2015.

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