The Boston Globe

Yuri Temirkanov, 84; was renowned conductor

- By Tim Page

Yuri Temirkanov, an esteemed Soviet-born conductor who rebuilt the once-storied St. Petersburg Philharmon­ic after the collapse of communism and led the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra for seven inspired years at the turn of the 21st century, died Thursday. He was 84.

His death was announced in a statement by the St. Petersburg Philharmon­ic Orchestra, which did not provide additional details. Evgeny Petrovsky, a deputy artistic director for the orchestra, told the Russian news agency Tass that Mr. Temirkanov died in a hospital but did not give a cause.

Mr. Temirkanov was known for his expansive and colorful performanc­es of Russian music and especially of the works of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsk­y, Sergei Rachmanino­ff, Sergei Prokofiev, and Dmitri Shostakovi­ch, the last of whom he worked with personally.

He recorded all of the Tchaikovsk­y symphonies as well as the composer’s most celebrated opera, “Eugene Onegin.” As an interprete­r of Gustav Mahler, he found a middle ground between the angst-ridden, confession­al performanc­es of the 1960s and the cooler spirit espoused by later generation­s of conductors.

Like such past masters as Leopold Stokowski and Pierre Boulez, Mr. Temirkanov never used a baton, believing that he could lead more precisely without one. He was never much for podium glamour, preferring the role of master facilitato­r working among colleagues, letting the musicians play within a controlled but unfettered framework.

At times, he made an unusual motion with his left hand, wriggling it around as if shaking off a residue of water, but he always kept his right hand steady and exact — a combinatio­n that was fascinatin­g to watch.

Mr. Temirkanov made his first appearance with Baltimore in 1992 and became the ensemble’s music director in 1999. His years there were judged a distinct musical success. He motivated the players to their best efforts, although his deep shyness off the podium and limited command of English kept him from becoming personally close to many of them.

Never entirely comfortabl­e away from home, he returned to Russia often. Accustomed during the Soviet era to national support of his work, in Baltimore he was reluctant to move beyond music that he did not know well, avoided the mass media as much as he could, seemed uninterest­ed in contempora­ry and American works, and had minimal “meet and greet” sessions with the public.

Meanwhile, downtown street crime was high, attendance dwindled, and magnificen­t concerts were often played to nearempty houses at the Meyerhoff Symphony Hall.

In 2005, the orchestra began playing some of its concerts at the newly constructe­d Strathmore performanc­e hall in North Bethesda, Md., where it had easier access to a Washington audience. By then, however, the orchestra was in serious financial trouble: In early 2006, it spent nearly one-third of its endowment ($27.5 million of approximat­ely $89 million) to pay off a $16 million accumulate­d debt and create a reserve fund.

Meanwhile, the board of directors appointed a new music director. The charismati­c and media-savvy Marin Alsop, who became the first female music director of a major American orchestra, was radically different from Mr. Temirkanov in every way. Most of the musicians originally objected to her appointmen­t, stating that they did not feel they had been consulted adequately. But management made it clear that the appointmen­t was decided, and she remained the orchestra’s music director from 2007 until 2021.

After departing, Mr. Temirkanov waited a decade to visit Baltimore again. In 2016, he returned to lead three concerts of Rachmanino­ff and Tchaikovsk­y. He was welcomed enthusiast­ically by the orchestra and by the critics, but he soured his visit somewhat by giving an interview in which he reiterated his oft-stated disdain for female conductors, which was seen by some as a slap at his host. “There are women boxing and weightlift­ing; they can do that,” he said to the Baltimore Sun. “But I don’t like watching.”

Yuri Khatuyevic­h Temirkanov was born in Nalchik, the capital city of the southern Russian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria, on Dec. 10, 1938. His father, Khatu Temirkanov, was minister of culture for the republic and took Prokofiev into his home to work on his opera “War and Peace” far away from besieged Moscow. Not long after that, in 1941, Khatu was executed during the German invasion.

Mr. Temirkanov and his three siblings were taken by their mother to the relative safety of the nearby Caucasus Mountains. “I remember that time not well — it’s like a bad dream to me,” he told the Sun. “I remember Prokofiev only dimly — he used to take me to the local bazaar — just as I remember my father.”

Mr. Temirkanov would encounter Prokofiev again a decade later when the pupil was 13 and studying viola and violin at what was then the Leningrad Conservato­ry. Mr. Temirkanov subsequent­ly won what was then known as the Soviet AllUnion Conductors’ Prize, and he appeared as a guest conductor with the Philadelph­ia Orchestra, the Royal Philharmon­ic in London, and other prestigiou­s symphonies.

He courted Soviet disfavor by leading officially forbidden works such as Shostakovi­ch’s song cycle “On Jewish Folk Poetry,” which presented antisemiti­sm as a basic part of Russian — and Soviet — history. He also preferred to advance orchestral musicians for their talent rather than their length of stay in the ensemble, which upset the highly structured bureaucrac­y.

Mr. Temirkanov was chief conductor of Leningrad’s Kirov Opera when, in 1988, he succeeded the recently deceased Yevgeny Mravinsky as the principal conductor of the Leningrad Philharmon­ic.

In 1992, after the official dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union and the reversion of the name Leningrad to St. Petersburg, the orchestra again became known as the St. Petersburg Philharmon­ic Orchestra.

An early project was a new soundtrack for the Sergei Eisenstein film “Alexander Nevsky,” which had been made in 1938 to music by Prokofiev. The magazine Stereo Review likened the new recording by Mr. Temirkanov and the St. Petersburg Philharmon­ic to the restoratio­n of Michelange­lo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling in Vatican City.

Mr. Temirkanov stepped down as the Philharmon­ic’s music director in 2022 but continued to divide his time between St. Petersburg and London, where he also kept a home.

Critic Norman Lebrecht, writing in his online magazine Slippedisc.com, noted that the conductor had “negotiated Soviet and post-Soviet realities with great adroitness.”

“He avoided joining the Communist Party,” Lebrecht observed, “and he never became an acolyte of either [Boris] Yeltsin or [Vladimir] Putin, though the latter showered him with offers and honors.”

 ?? RICH LIPSKI/WASHINGTON POST/FILE ?? Mr. Temirkanov conducted a performanc­e by the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in 2005.
RICH LIPSKI/WASHINGTON POST/FILE Mr. Temirkanov conducted a performanc­e by the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in 2005.

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