Paul Kletzki
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Paul Kletzki (21 March 1900 - 5 March 1973) was a Polish conductor and composer.
Born in Łódź he joined its Philharmonic Orchestra at the age of fifteen. After serving in the Great War he studied philosophy at the University of Warsaw before moving to Berlin in 1921 to continue his studies. During the 1920s his compositions were championed by Toscanini and Wilhelm Furtwängler who permitted Kletzki to conduct the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra in 1925. Because he was Jewish he left Nazi Germany in 1933 and moved to Italy, however due to the anti-semitism of the Italian Fascist regime he moved to the Soviet Union in 1936 but had to flee during Stalin's Great Terror and went to live in Switzerland.
Kletzki's most notable work is his Third Symphony, completed in October 1939, and has the subtitle 'In memoriam'. It is an elegiac work interpreted as a moving monument to the victims of Nazism.
From 1942 onwards Kletzki wrote no more compositions; he argued that Nazism had destroyed his spirit and his will to compose. During the Holocaust a number of Kletzki's family were murdered by the Nazis including his parents and his sister. In the post-war years Kletzki was a renowned conductor, especially of Mahler. Between 1958 and 1961 he was principal conductor of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. From 1966 until 1970 he was the General Music Director of the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande.
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Preceded by Walter Hendl |
Music Directors, Dallas Symphony Orchestra 1958–1961 |
Succeeded by Georg Solti |
Preceded by Ernest Ansermet |
Principal Conductors, Orchestre de la Suisse Romande 1967–1970 |
Succeeded by Wolfgang Sawallisch |