Calgary Herald

Conductor championed early music

Hogwood also published books on Bach, Handel

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Christophe­r Hogwood, the English conductor who founded the Academy of Ancient Music, one of the first and best- known period instrument orchestras, died Wednesday. He was 73.

His aim, he said, was to perform baroque and classical music in the style and spirit in which it was originally heard in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Based on Hogwood’s extensive scholarshi­p, Bach was now played on violins with gut strings rather than steel; Beethoven was heard without vibrato; and Mozart piano concertos were brought to life on fortepiano­s.

Meanwhile, valveless horns and baroque violins brought a lighter, crisper sound to the concert hall than audiences were used to.

The Academy was first heard in 1973. Before long, a collection of decidedly de- romanticiz­ed Mozart symphonies establishe­d the group firmly on the musical map. Hogwood’s timing could not have been better. The major labels had long since recorded most of the classical repertoire, often several times over. Now they competed to reproduce the most authentics­ounding music. In 1985, Hogwood’s LP of Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons rubbed shoulders in the pop charts with Prince’s Purple Rain. The Prince disc was named best film soundtrack at the Brit awards, while Hogwood’s disc was best classical recording.

For Hogwood the early music recording bonanza brought not only an escape from what he dubbed the “brown rice and open- toed sandals” image that had hitherto accompanie­d the drive for authentici­ty in music, but also fame and substantia­l royalty cheques, which he plowed into a remarkable collection of historical instrument­s that included clavichord­s, spinets and virginals.

He was by no means the only musician to march into the utopian paradise of the early music landscape. While John Eliot Gardiner and Nikolaus Harnoncour­t were promoting their brands of authentici­ty, and Roger Norrington was presenting his Experience weekends dedicated to a single work, Hogwood became a name more widely known to the British and wider public at large thanks to a parallel broadcasti­ng career that included 12 years presenting The Young Idea on Radio 3.

In addition to campaignin­g for performanc­es on original instrument­s, Hogwood also succeeded in drawing pure, original sounds out of modern instrument­s. “He didn’t have the greatest conducting technique,” Ernest Fleischman­n, who invited him to conduct the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic in 1981, told People magazine in 1986, “but he’s the most stimulatin­g force in years.” Meanwhile, Lincoln Center in New York declared there was “never an unsold seat for a Hogwood program.”

For Hogwood, who was once described by his own publicist as “the von Karajan of early music,” life was as much about scholarshi­p as it was about performanc­e. He published books on Bach and Handel, prepared monographs and edited urtext editions, and made a specialty of tracking down handwritte­n scores in an attempt to establish what the composer’s original intentions had been before editors, publishers and performing tradition had intervened.

Not surprising­ly, there were critics. While Bernard Levin, in the course of fulminatin­g against period instrument­s, once suggested tongue in cheek that Hogwood “should be chopped up small and his bones boiled” for soup, the most barbed attacks came from fellow travellers in the early music world, with the harpsichor­dist Nicholas McGegan reportedly declaring that the tall, gangling, blue- eyed, blond- haired Hogwood was “really called Hogweed, after the plant: tall, uncontroll­able and dangerous to brush against.”

Hogwood himself was similarly no stranger to the art of the direct comment, on one occasion denouncing the fashion for audience participat­ion in Handel’s Messiah. “The whole purpose of having a chorus in Messiah is that it represents the public,” he complained. “You might as well have a dance-along Nutcracker.”

Christophe­r Jarvis Haley Hogwood was born in Nottingham on Sept. 10, 1941, the eldest of five children. His father was a scientist and his mother a legal secretary. He was educated at Nottingham High School and The Skinners’ School, Tunbridge Wells, taking piano lessons but not pursuing music seriously.

He studied classics and music at Pembroke College, Cambridge, taking lessons from Thurston Dart, Raymond Leppard and Mary Potts and spending one summer touring the country in a former laundry van to demonstrat­e a collection of medieval instrument­s. He then spent a year in Prague on a British Council scholarshi­p studying the harpsichor­d with Zuzana Ruzickova.

Back home, Hogwood and a group of friends helped David Munrow to set up the Early Music Consort of London, a group that performed renaissanc­e and medieval music, recorded the themes for the BBC series Elizabeth R and The Six Wives of Henry VIII and continued until Munrow’s death in 1976 at the age of 33. In the meantime he also pursued keyboard studies with Gustav Leonhardt in Amsterdam.

For some years Hogwood played continuo for Neville Marriner’s Academy of St. Martin-in-the- Fields, an orchestra that sought to demonstrat­e that a serious classical symphony could be played by an ensemble of 25 instead of 75. But in 1973 he went his own way, setting up the Academy of Ancient Music, which takes its name from a group that met at the Crown and Anchor tavern in the Strand and existed from 1726 to 1792.

The new ensemble was heavily championed by Peter Wadland, a producer from L’Oiseau Lyre label, who ensured that it had a steady stream of recording work. Soon the Academy was appearing at the South Bank and, in 1978, made the first of eight appearance­s at the Proms over the next two decades.

By 1980 — after overcoming objections from the Musicians’ Union to Hogwood’s hiring overseas musicians — the Academy was firmly riding the bandwagon of what Andrew Porter later dubbed “historical­ly informed performanc­es.” There were themed titles under the Folio Society banner, carefully aimed at middle England, such as Venice Preserv’d ( music by Monteverdi, Gabrieli and Vivaldi); Music at Court ( Byrd, Dowland and Bach); and Music from the Armada Years, which included works by both Spanish and English composers from the reigns of Philip II and Elizabeth I, respective­ly.

Hogwood was never shy of giving an authentic spin to wellknown works. Joan Sutherland was the unlikely soloist in Handel’s Athalia, while soprano Emma Kirkby and counter- tenor James Bowman joined a pared- down rendition of Messiah that would have been barely recognizab­le to the nation’s large- scale choral societies. A generation later Cecilia Bartoli stepped up to the microphone in Handel’s Rinaldo, while Steven Lubin recorded Beethoven’s five piano concertos using instrument­s the composer might have recognized but a modernday concertgoe­r was unlikely previously to have seen or heard.

Hogwood was separated from his civil partner, film director Anthony Fabian, and is survived by three sisters and a brother.

 ?? Hermann Wustmann/ The Associated Press/ Files ?? Christophe­r Hogwood was no fan of the singalong Messiah. “The whole purpose of having a chorus in Messiah is that it represents the public,” he said. “You might as well have a dance- along Nutcracker.”
Hermann Wustmann/ The Associated Press/ Files Christophe­r Hogwood was no fan of the singalong Messiah. “The whole purpose of having a chorus in Messiah is that it represents the public,” he said. “You might as well have a dance- along Nutcracker.”

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