Canada’s premier orchestra has asked the British conductor Sir Andrew Davis to serve as interim music director for two years while it extends the search for a permanent replacement for Peter Oundjian.

Davis, 73, was TSO music director for 13 years, from 1975 to 1988.

Some will see the move as a prudent interlude, buying more time to find an ideal music director. Others will have doubts about the orchestra going backwards to a past master who is already over-extended in his jobs with Chicago’s Lyric Opera, the Melbourne Symphony and a heavy guest conducting schedule.

photo: Chris Christodoulou/LebrechtMusic&Arts

The Van Cliburn competition has chosen its semi-finalists and Martin James Bartlett is not among them.

 

These are the 12 survivors:

Kenneth Broberg, United States
Han Chen, Taiwan
Rachel Cheung, Hong Kong
Yury Favorin, Russia
Daniel Hsu, United States
Dasol Kim, South Korea
Honggi Kim, South Korea
Leonardo Pierdomenico, Italy
Yutong Sun, China
Yekwon Sunwoo, South Korea
Georgy Tchaidze, Russia
Tony Yike Yang, Canada

The death was announced today of Jiří Bělohlávek, chief conductor of the Czech Philharmonic and former chief of the BBC Symphony Orchestra.  Jiří, who was 71, had been suffering from cancer for a considerable time.

His final recording, for Decca, was Dvorak’s Requiem.

I knew him well in the immediate post-Communist era when, in 1990, he was elected music director of the Czech Philharmonic and, two years later, was dumped by the players in favour of a provincial German conductor who came promising gifts of Sony recordings.

Jiří bore both elevation and rejection with equanimity. He lived all his life in Prague and made his career there, never seeking a position in the US that would take him away from home for long periods.

He was a reserved man who shared warmth only with those he eventually trusted. He was a conductor of great sensitivity and subtlety, never showy, often profound.

He will be universally missed.

Some honest thoughts from the great bass-baritone: