Sir Charles Mackerras
conductor
1925 - 14th July 2010
	
	This article was written on the death of Sir Charles Mackerras in 
	July 2010 and first published in The White Hat Melbourne Newsletter
	Over half a century ago at a festival for avant garde music the audience 
	was particularly struck by a youthful piece that was pushing the boundaries 
	and waited for the composer to come on stage to receive his acknowledgement.
	
	Last year, White Hat was listening to the radio and heard a particularly 
	youthful and aggressive performance of a Mozart symphony. We waited for the 
	back-announcement as to who this particularly brave young conductor was. 
	The conductor was the Australian Sir Charles Mackerras who had recorded 
	this performance full of youthful verve and drive at the age of 83. More 
	than half a century earlier, the audience at the ISCM Festival waiting for 
	the revolutionary wunderkind composer to appear on stage was greeted with 
	the sight of the white haired and elderly 
	Leo� Jan�ček. 
	The Australian Charles Mackerras was to become one of the revered 
	conductors of the works of Jan�ček, 
	Mozart, 
	Handel and many 
	other composers. 
	Sir Charles died yesterday at the age of 85 virtually with his boots on � 
	or at least with baton in hand. 
	His life could probably be summarised by a few simple principles. Know 
	your craft and keep working on it, take your opportunities and run with 
	them, start young and keep going right to the end. 
	As a student in Sydney he played the piano and the flute. He learned that 
	there were scholarships at the Conservatorium for oboists, so he swapped the 
	flute for the oboe. By the age of 16 he was playing in pick-up theatre 
	orchestras and on the radio with the Colgate-Palmolive band which backed 
	Jack Davey. He played in a jazz band that rose out of the floor at the State 
	Theatre. You took your opportunities and did not treat any of them lightly. 
	Bands such as these rarely had the complement of instruments originally 
	called for, so he became an orchestrator. By the time he was 18 he had 
	written a full ballet and summoned up the courage to approach the visiting 
	conductor Eugene Ormandy to look over it. Ormandy was impressed and during 
	rehearsal played the final movement � a masterly fugue based on Waltzing 
	Matilda. 
	After a stint as principal oboe with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, the 
	young Charles headed off to London, started at the bottom again but was 
	happy enough playing second oboe in Gilbert & Sullivan productions. One day, 
	while sitting in a coffee shop and studying the score of a Dvoř�k symphony 
	which he had just purchased, a stranger pointed out that there might be the 
	chance of a conducting scholarship if he went and studied in Prague. Take 
	your opportunities. Off he went and later became one of the most respected 
	conductors of Czech music in the world and particularly that by Jan�ček 
	mentioned earlier. Ask most people from the Czech region today about an 
	Australian musician and they are likely to mention Charles Mackerras with 
	reverence but know little about Australian pop bands � and that will be 
	replicated in many places throughout the world, except perhaps for 
	Australian secondary schools. When the National Trust surveyed Australians 
	to compile its list of 100 living treasures, numbers of minor passing 
	players from popular culture made the list but Sir Charles didn't. 
	Returning to England, Charles became an assistant conductor. Various 
	aging conductors in poor health had to pull out of recording sessions due to 
	illness. The young Charles was not the name you could put on a record label 
	for a major work, but not to worry. There was plenty of light music that 
	could be recorded seeing that the studio had already been booked and if 
	treated with the same respect as the �great� music its details could be 
	appreciated anew. Charles became THE conductor of Gilbert and Sullivan. He 
	was also exploring the world of period instruments and helping to blow the 
	dust off the scores from the Baroque period. His reputation grew and he 
	became the first non-Briton to conduct a last night of the Proms. 
	But with all of this he was not a flamboyant conductor. From his work 
	with pickup orchestras he knew that meticulously marking up the parts before 
	the first rehearsal meant that you could produce optimum results from 
	limited rehearsal time. 
	It was appropriate that Charles was the conductor chosen for the opening 
	season at the Sydney Opera House. 
	Vale Sir Charles � You helped give Australia a good name.
	
	
	
		
	
	
	
	
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