Artist Info

  • Name: Erich Kunzel
  • Birthday: 03/21/1935
  • Birth Place: New York, NY
  • Died: 09/01/2009
  • Place of Death: Bar Harbor, ME
  • Period: Modern
  • Genre: Classical

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Works & Performances

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  •  Boléro: Music by Ravel, Borodin, Bizet [Hybrid SACD] W
  • 2008
  •  Vintage Cinema
  • 2008
  •  Vintage Cinema [Hybrid SACD] W
  • 2008
  •  Masters and Commanders WA
  • 2007
  •  Masters and Commanders [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2007
  •  Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker - Favorite Selections WA
  • 2007
  •  Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker - Favorite Selections [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2007
  •  Christmastime Is Here
  • 2006
  •  Great Film Fantasies WA
  • 2006
  •  Great Film Fantasies (Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2006
  •  Russian Nights
  • 2006
  •  Russian Nights [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2006
  •  The Never-Ending Waltz [Hybrid SACD]
  • 2006
  •  Broadway Today: Broadway 1993-2005
  • 2005
  •  Howard Hanson: Bold Island Suite [Hybrid SACD]
  • 2005
  •  Howard Hanson: Bold Island Suite; Symphony No. 2 "Romantic"; Suite from Merry Mount
  • 2005
  •  Miklos Rozsa: Three Choral Suites
  • 2005
  •  Miklos Rozsa: Three Choral Suites [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2005
  •  The Ultimate Movie Music Collection WA
  • 2005
  •  Ballet Favorites
  • 2004
  •  Ballet Favorites [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2004
  •  Classics at the Pops
  • 2004
  •  Classics at the Pops [Hybrid SACD]
  • 2004
  •  Tchaikovsky: 1812; Beethoven: Wellington's Victory
  • 2004
  •  Tchaikovsky: 1812; Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue; An American in Paris [Hybrid SACD]
  • 2004
  •  Epics WA
  • 2003
  •  Epics [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2003
  •  Got Swing!
  • 2003
  •  Got Swing! [Hybrid SACD]
  • 2003
  •  A Celtic Spectacular
  • 2002
  •  A Celtic Spectacular [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2002
  •  Scary Music WA
  • 2002
  •  Scary Music [Hybrid SACD]
  • 2002
  •  Music of the Beatles
  • 2001
  •  Music of the Beatles [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 2001
  •  Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture & Other Orchestral Works
  • 2001
  •  Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture & Other Orchestral Works [DVD Audio]
  • 2001
  •  Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture & Other Orchestral Works [Hybrid SACD]
  • 2001
  •  Mega Movies
  • 2000
  •  Mega Movies [Hybrid SACD]
  • 2000
  •  Viennafest
  • 2000
  •  Great Movie Scores: The Films of Steven Spielberg
  • 1999
  •  Magical Musical
  • 1999
  •  George Gershwin: The Complete Orchestra Collection
  • 1998
  •  Gershwin: Selections from Porgy and Bess; Blue Monday
  • 1998
  •  Play Ball
  • 1998
  •  The Big Picture
  • 1997
  •  The Big Picture [Hybrid SACD]
  • 1997
  •  Andrew Lloyd Webber
  • 1996
  •  The Magical Music of Disney
  • 1995
  •  Verdi without Words: Grand Opera for Orchestra
  • 1995
  •  The Dance
  • 1994
  •  A Night at the Pops
  • 1993
  •  American Piano Classics
  • 1993
  •  Ein Straussfest II
  • 1993
  •  Greatest Hits
  • 1993
  •  Some Enchanted Evening
  • 1993
  •  Offenbach: Gaîté Parisienne; Ibert: Divertissement
  • 1992
  •  Rodgers & Hammerstein: Songbook for Orchestra (Orchestral Suites) WA
  • 1992
  •  Bond and Beyond
  • 1991
  •  Movie Love Themes
  • 1991
  •  Pops Plays Puccini
  • 1991
  •  The Music Man [1991 Concert Cast Recording]
  • 1991
  •  Christmas with the Pops
  • 1990
  •  Classics of the Silver Screen
  • 1990
  •  Fantastic Journey
  • 1990
  •  Fiesta!
  • 1990
  •  Star Tracks 2
  • 1990
  •  Trumpet Spectacular WA
  • 1990
  •  Broadway's Greatest Hits [Pro Arte]
  • 1989
  •  Chiller
  • 1989
  •  Selections from Victory at Sea and Other Favorites
  • 1989
  •  American Jubilee
  • 1988
  •  Gershwin: Rhapsody In Blue; Concerto in F
  • 1988
  •  Symphonic Spectacular
  • 1988
  •  The Sound of Music [1988 Studio Cast]
  • 1988
  •  Triple Feature [Time Warp/Round-Up/Hollywood's Greatest Hits, Vol. I]
  • 1988
  •  Aaron Copland: Lincoln Portrait; Old American Songs
  • 1987
  •  Grofé: Grand Canyon Suite; Gershwin: Porgy & Bess Symphonic Suite "Catfish Row" WA
  • 1987
  •  Hollywood's Greatest Hits, Vol. 1
  • 1987
  •  Pomp & Pizazz
  • 1987
  •  Round-Up [Hybrid SACD]
  • 1987
  •  Leroy Anderson: Syncopated Clock
  • 1986
  •  William Tell & Other Favorite Overtures
  • 1986
  •  Ein Straussfest
  • 1985
  •  Orchestral Spectaculars
  • 1985
  •  International Salute
  • 1984
  •  Star Tracks
  • 1984
  •  Beethoven: Wellington's Victory; Liszt: Battle of the Huns; Hungarian March to the Assault
  • 1983
  •  Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue; An American in Paris
  • 1981
  •  Tchaikovsky: 1812; Capriccio Italien; Cossack Dance
  • 1979
  •  Time Warp
  • 1973
  •  Copland: The Music of America
  •  German University Love Songs (Box Set)
  •  Kunzel's Best!
  •  My Broadway
  •  My Fair Lady And More Broadway Magic
  •  Offenbach's World
  •  Peaches and Cream: Dances & Marches by Sousa
  • (2) Music as Popularized in Kismet (after Borodin)
  • 2007
  •  Paint Your Wagon, orchestral suite after Lerner & Loewe
  • 1993
  • (2) The Never-Ending Waltz, medley for orchestra
  • 2006

    Individual Bio

    Erich Kunzel was dubbed the "Prince of Pops" by the Chicago Tribune in 1977 and became one of the most successful Billboard Classical/Crossover recording artists in history. He was born in New York and raised in Connecticut. He attended Dartmouth College, where he decided on music as a career. He earned degrees at Dartmouth, Harvard, and Brown and went to Hancock, Maine, to study conducting with Pierre Monteux.

    His professional conducting career began with the Santa Fe Opera in 1957. He also became a personal assistant to Pierre Monteux. Kunzel attracted the attention of another renowned teacher of conductors, the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra's music director Max Rudolf, who invited Kunzel to become a resident conductor with the orchestra. One of the duties of that position was to lead concerts in the "Eight O'Clock Pops" series. He debuted with the Cincinnati Symphony in October, 1965, leading one of the pops concerts and showed an immediate affinity for this kind of presentation. Kunzel had not considered this area of music as his career objective, but quickly decided he liked it. Arthur Fiedler, noting Kunzel's work, invited him to guest conduct his Boston Pops Orchestra in 1970. He was invited back to the Boston Pops every year under Fiedler and his two successors John Williams and Keith Lockhart, and made over 85 appearances with the original Boston Pops orchestra and taken it on tour.

    Kunzel made recordings with labels associated with the Vox record company while making the "Eight O'Clock Pops" even more of a favorite in Cincinnati. In 1977, the board of the orchestra decided to follow the organizational example of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and constitute a Cincinnati Pops Orchestra as a separate sub-organization using members of the main orchestra, and appointed Kunzel its conductor. Five years later he was also appointed pops conductor of the symphony orchestra in nearby Indianapolis in 1982. He went on to conduct over 200 pops concerts there and many more in Detroit, Toronto, Minnesota, and Naples, Florida. He held the records for attendance at Chicago's Ravinia Festival and Cleveland's Blossom Music Festival -- over 22,000 in each venue.

    In the 1980s, Telarc records, began recording in Cincinnati and included the Pops in its program. Beginning with the legendary Straussfest recording, they produced an unprecedented series of audio spectaculars including classical repertory, Broadway, popular song albums, and movie score compilations. Kunzel recorded 100 releases, including 70 on Telarc. Fifty of them have been on the Billboard charts. He has been the Billboard Top Classical/Crossover Artist of the year several times, including an unprecedented four years in a row. He was won the Grand Prix du Disque in Europe, the Award for Classical Album of the Year 1989 from the Japan Record Association, Sony's Tiffany Walkman Award, and four Grammy nominations.

    He often appeared on television, most prominently in Fourth of July and Memorial Day concerts with the National Symphony Orchestra of Washington, D.C., playing on the Mall in an annual PBS television broadcast. He has played in the Fourth of July series annually since 1990. The 1996 appearance was the largest PBS audience ever for a musical event and drew nearly a million people to hear the concert live.

    Kunzel has taught on the faculties of Brown University and the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. He conducted opera performances with the Cincinnati Opera and the Canadian Opera Company. He received numerous awards and recognition, including the 1994 Presidential Medal for Outstanding Leadership and Achievement from Dartmouth and the 1995 Salvation Army "Others" Award.

    Immediately upon his death from cancer in 2009, Kunzel was named Founder and Conductor Emeritus by a unanimus vote of the Cincinnati Symphony's board. ~ Joseph Stevenson, All Music Guide