Artist Info

  • Name: Maurice de Abravanel
  • Birthday: 01/06/1903
  • Birth Place: Thessaloniki, Greece
  • Died: 09/22/1993
  • Place of Death: Salt Lake City, UT
  • Period: Modern
  • Genre: Classical

Works & Performances

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  •  Copland: Lincoln Portrait; An Outdoor Overture; Our Town; Quiet City; Morton Gould: Latin American Symphonette
  • 2008
  •  Berlioz: Requiem [DualDisc]
  • 2005
  •  Homage to Satie
  • 2005
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 1 "Titan" [Dual Disc]
  • 2005
  •  Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 4 [DualDisc]
  • 2005
  •  Tchaikovsky: Swan Lake [DualDisc]
  • 2005
  •  Abravanel Conducts Brahms [DualDisc]
  • 2004
  •  Abravanel Conducts Vaughan Williams [DualDisc]
  • 2004
  •  Berlioz: Requiem; Mahler: Symphony No. 1 ("Titan") [Hybrid SACD] W
  • 2004
  •  Brahms: Orchestral Works [DualDisc]
  • 2004
  •  Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 3 [DualDisc]
  • 2004
  •  Brahms: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 3 [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Brahms: Symphony No. 4; Tragic Overture; Academic Festival Overture [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Fiddle Faddle: 15 Favorites by Leroy Anderson [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Hector Berlioz: Requiem [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Johannes Brahms: Orchestral Works [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 1 "Titan" [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Rachmaninov: Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Op. 44; Chanson Georgienne [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Rachmaninov: Symphony No. 3; Chanson Georgienne [DualDisc]
  • 2004
  •  Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 4 [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 3 [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 5, 6, 7 [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Tchaikovsky: Swan Lake [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker [DualDisc]
  • 2004
  •  Vaughan Williams: Symphony No. 6; Dives & Lazarus; etc. [DVD Audio]
  • 2004
  •  Brahms: The 4 Symphonies
  • 2003
  •  Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 4
  • 2003
  •  Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 5 & 6
  • 2003
  •  Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 9 & 10
  • 2003
  •  Mahler: Symphony Nos. 7 ("Song of the Night") & 8 ("Symphony of a Thousand")
  • 2003
  •  Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 1-4
  • 2003
  •  Berlioz: Requiem; Mahler: Symphony No. 1 [Hybrid SACD] W
  • 2001
  •  Tchaikovsky: Complete Symphonies; Overtures
  • 2001
  •  Handel: Samson
  • 2000
  •  Scarlatti: Messa di Santa Cecilia
  • 2000
  •  Tchaikovsky: Swan Lake
  • 2000
  •  Bloch: Schelomo
  • 1999
  •  Hector Berlioz: Requiem
  • 1998
  •  Ralph Vaughan Williams [Hybrid SACD] W
  • 1996
  •  Ralph Vaughan Williams: Fantasie on a Theme by Thomas Tallis; Flos Campi; Five Variants of "Dives and Lazarus"
  • 1996
  •  Varese/Honegger WA
  • 1996
  •  Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis; Flos Campi; etc. [Hybrid SACD] WA
  • 1996
  •  Beethoven: Incidental Music For Goethe's Egmont/The Creatures Of Prometheus/Schubert: Incidental Music
  • 1995
  •  Brahms: Orchestral Works
  • 1995
  •  Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 1
  • 1995
  •  Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 4
  • 1995
  •  Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 4 in G Major [DualDisc]
  • 1995
  •  Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 6
  • 1995
  •  Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 7
  • 1995
  •  Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 8
  • 1995
  •  Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 9; No. 10 Adagio
  • 1995
  •  Honegger: Judith; Milhaud: La Creation
  • 1995
  •  Mahler Symphony No.2 in C Minor
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 2
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 2 "Resurrection" [DualDisc]
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 2 ("Resurrection") [DVD Audio]
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 3
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 3 in D minor
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 3 [DualDisc]
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 3 [DVD Audio]
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 4 in G major [DVD Audio]
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 5
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 5 [DualDisc]
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 8
  • 1995
  •  Mahler: Symphony No.5
  • 1995
  •  Rimsky-Korsakov: Antar/Ippolitov-Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches/Gliere: Russian Sailors' Dance WA
  • 1995
  •  Sibelius: Symphonies Nos. 2 & 3
  • 1995
  •  Sibelius: The Seven Symphonies
  • 1995
  •  Vaughan Williams: Symphony No.6/Dona Nobis Pacem
  • 1995
  •  Grieg: Works for Orchestra
  • 1993
  •  Milhaud: Pacem In Terris
  • 1993
  •  Showpieces for Orchestra
  • 1993
  •  Swan Lake
  • 1993
  •  Gottschalk, Vol.2
  • 1992
  •  Karl Goldmark: Rustic Wedding Symphony; Georges Enesco: Rumanian Rhapsodies Nos. 1 & 2
  • 1992
  •  Bloch:Schelomo
  • 1991
  •  Fiddle Faddle
  • 1991
  •  Honegger: Le Roi David
  • 1991
  •  Mahler: Symphony No. 4 in G major
  • 1991
  •  Tchaikovsky: Complete Orchestral Music Vol. II
  • 1991
  •  Tchaikovsky: Complete Orchestral Music, Vol. 3
  • 1991
  •  The Complete Ballets of Erik Satie
  • 1991
  •  Tchaikovsky: The Nutcracker (Complete); Swan Lake Suite
  • 1961
  •  The Nutcracker
  • 1961
  •  Fiddle Faddle: 15 Favorites by Leroy Anderson [DualDisc]
  •  Gottschalk: A Night in the Tropics / Gould: Latin American Symphonette [SACD] WA
  •  Gustav Mahler: Symphony No. 6 [DualDisc]
  •  Louis Moreau Gottschalk: A Night in the Tropics
  •  Mahler: Symphony Nos.1-9
  • Individual Bio

    The state of Utah became a flourishing classical music scene thanks to the efforts of Maurice Abravanel, who served as music director of the Utah Symphony for 32 years starting in 1947. Although his peers might have looked at a posting in Utah as death in the boondocks, to Abravanel it was an opportunity to accomplish his dream of building up a permanent symphony orchestra of his own in a part of the world that was sorely lacking such a resource. Doing this meant turning down a lucrative contract with Radio City Music Hall, and even working without pay during the orchestra's most extreme periods of financial struggle.

    Born of Spanish and Portuguese parents (and a descendant of Queen Isabella of Spain), Abravanel spent his early years in Switzerland. He studied in Germany under Kurt Weill, who was a major influence both technically and philosophically. Abravanel conducted an orchestra for the first time as a teenager in Switzerland, and his abilities soon put him in front of the orchestras of the Berlin State Opera and the Paris Opera. He went to Australia for several years, the first indication of his dedication toward hands-on musical involvement outside the geographical mainstream. When he was 33 he was hired as the youngest conductor of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City. He took on an incredibly busy schedule, at one point conducting seven performances of five different operas over a period of nine days. While in the Big Apple, he shifted his talents to Broadway, renewing his relationship with Weill to become the conductor of all of the composer's American productions.

    A few years later came the first one-year contract to conduct the nearly amateurish Utah Symphony. The Western scenery may have balanced out the sour notes, however, and Abravanel decided to stay put. He retired from the orchestra in 1979, but he remained active in Utah's cultural community, as well as internationally, until his death. Under his guidance, the Utah Symphony developed a superb international reputation, which Abravanel accomplished not by importing players from outside the area, but by working diligently with the local musicians in order to turn them into more than competent full-time players. The symphony made four world tours and recorded with Vanguard, Vox, Angel, and CBS. Abravanel is the only conductor to have recorded the entire Mahler symphonic output with the same orchestra. He also championed contemporary music, programming compositions by Edgard Varèse as well as Utah composers such as Leroy Robertson and Crawford Gates.

    Other Abravanel activities outside of Mormon territory included directing the Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara, CA, from 1956 through 1979. In 1981 he was appointed an artist-in-residence for life at Tanglewood. He served on the National Council of the Arts from 1970 through 1976, and received the American Symphony Orchestra League's Golden Baton Award in 1981. In 1970, he became a member of the first music panel of the National Endowment for the Arts. He received a Tony Award for Regina and Grammy nominations for some of the more than 100 recordings with the Utah Symphony, many of which are considered classics. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide