Claude Monteux
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Claude Monteux has established a dual international career as both concert flutist and conductor. As a flutist, he played under the batons of Toscanini, Walter, Beecham, Stokowski, Casals, Stravinsky, and his father Pierre Monteux. On the podium he served as Music Director of the Columbus Symphony (1953-1956) and the Hudson Valley Philharmonic (1959-1975). Mr. Monteux studied flute with Georges Laurent, then principal flutist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and conducting with his father, both privately and at the Monteux School for conductors. He has appeared in concert and in recording with orchestras throughout the world, including the London Symphony, the Royal Philharmonic, the Pittsburgh Symphony, the NBC Symphony, the Metropolitan Opera orchestra, and has guest-conducted orchestras in Berlin, Paris, Brussels, Norway and Holland. He has recorded extensively on London, Phillips and other labels, including concerti by Mozart and Bach with the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields. Mr. Monteux has served on the faculties of the New England Conservatory of Music, the Peabody Conservatory, Vassar College and Ohio State University. Now affiliated with the SDSU School of Music and Dance, he spends his summers in Maine, where he is Musical Advisor of the Pierre Monteux School, coaches chamber ensembles, and works privately with conductors in their score study.
- In 1959, Claude Monteux, the son of renowned conductor, Pierre Monteux, elevated the beginnings of the (Hudson Valley Philharmonic) orchestra to a fully professional ensemble and renamed it the Hudson Valley Philharmonic Society, Inc. It became a regional orchestra serving Ulster, Orange, Rockland, Columbia and Dutchess counties. The Young People's Concerts we offer today are a direct descendant of the in-school concerts introduced by Maestro Monteux.