MICHAEL TILSON THOMAS
Michael Tilson Thomas is Music Director of the
San Francisco Symphony, Founder and Artistic Director of the New
World Symphony and Principal Guest Conductor of the London Symphony
Orchestra. Born in Los Angeles, he is the third generation of his
family to follow an artistic career. His grandparents, Boris and
Bessie Thomashefsky, were founding members of the Yiddish Theater
in America. His father, Ted Thomas, was a producer in the Mercury
Theater Company in New York before moving to Los Angeles where he
worked in films and television. His mother, Roberta Thomas, was the
head of research for Columbia Pictures.
Mr. Tilson Thomas began his formal studies at
the University of Southern California where he studied piano with
John Crown and conducting and composition with Ingolf Dahl. At age
nineteen he was named Music Director of the Young Musicians
Foundation Debut Orchestra. He worked with Stravinsky, Boulez,
Stockhausen and Copland on premieres of their compositions at Los
Angeles' Monday Evening Concerts. During this same period he was
the pianist and conductor for Gregor Piatigorsky and Jascha
Heifetz.
In 1969, after winning the Koussevitzky Prize
at Tanglewood, he was appointed Assistant Conductor of the Boston
Symphony Orchestra. That year he also made his New York debut with
the Boston Symphony and gained international recognition after
replacing Music Director William Steinberg in mid-concert. He was
later appointed Principal Guest Conductor of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra where he remained until 1974. He was Music Director of
the Buffalo Philharmonic from 1971 to 1979 and a Principal Guest
Conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic from 1981 to 1985. His
guest conducting includes appearances with the major orchestras of
Europe and the United States.
His recorded repertoire of more than 120 discs
includes works by composers such as Bach, Beethoven, Mahler,
Prokofiev and Stravinsky as well as his pioneering work with the
music of Charles Ives, Carl Ruggles, Steve Reich, John Cage, Ingolf
Dahl, Morton Feldman, George Gershwin, John McLaughlin and Elvis
Costello. He recently finished recording the complete orchestral
works of Gustav Mahler with the San Francisco Symphony.
Mr. Tilson Thomas's television work includes a
series with the London Symphony Orchestra for BBC Television, the
television broadcasts of the New York Philharmonic Young People's
Concerts from 1971 to 1977 and numerous productions on PBS Great
Performances. Mr. Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony
produced a multi-tiered media project, Keeping Score,
which includes a television series, web sites, radio programs and
programs in schools.
In February 1988 he inaugurated the New World
Symphony, an orchestral academy for graduates of prestigious music
programs. In addition to their regular season in Miami Beach, they
have toured in Austria, France, Great Britain, South America,
Japan, Israel, Holland, Italy and the United States. Prior to their
January, 2007 appearance at Carnegie Hall, the New World Symphony
was profiled in a feature story in The New York Times. New
World Symphony graduates have gone on to major positions in
orchestras worldwide. In 1991 Mr. Tilson Thomas and the orchestra
were presented in a series of benefit concerts for UNICEF in the
United States, featuring Audrey Hepburn as narrator of From the
Diary of Anne Frank, composed by Mr. Tilson Thomas and
commissioned by UNICEF. This piece has since been translated and
performed in many languages worldwide.
In August 1995 he led the Pacific Music
Festival Orchestra in the premiere of his composition
Showa/Shoah, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the
bombing of Hiroshima. Thomas Hampson premiered his settings of
poetry by Walt Whitman, Renee Fleming premiered his settings of the
poetry of Emily Dickinson and the San Francisco Symphony premiered
his concerto for contrabassoon entitled Urban Legend. As a
Carnegie Hall Perspectives Artist from 2003 to 2005, he had an
evening devoted to his own compositions which included Island
Music for four marimbas and percussion, Notturno for
solo flute and strings and a new setting of poems by Rainer Maria
Rilke. Other compositions include Street Song for brass
instruments and Agnegram, an overture for orchestra.
As Principal Conductor of the London Symphony
Orchestra from 1988 to 1995, Mr. Tilson Thomas led the orchestra on
regular tours in Europe, the United States and Japan as well as at
the Salzburg Festival. In London he and the orchestra have mounted
major festivals focusing on the music of Steve Reich, George
Gershwin, Johannes Brahms, Toru Takemitsu, Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov
and the School of St. Petersburg, Claude Debussy and Gustav Mahler.
As Principal Guest Conductor of the LSO, he continues to lead the
orchestra in concerts in London and on tour.
His fifteen-year tenure as Music Director of
the San Francisco Symphony has been broadly covered by the
international press with feature stories in Time, Newsweek, The
Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The
Times of London and The Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung among many others. With the San Francisco Symphony he
has presented eight summer festivals including ones devoted to the
music of Mahler, Stravinsky, Wagner and American Mavericks. With
the San Francisco Symphony he has made numerous tours of Europe,
United States and the Far East.
Mr. Tilson Thomas is a Chevalier dans l'ordre
des Arts et des Lettres of France, was Musical America's
Musician of the Year and Conductor of the Year, Gramophone
Magazine's Artist of the Year and has been profiled on CBS's
60 Minutes and ABC's Nightline. He has won ten
Grammy Awards for his recordings. In 2008 he received the Peabody
Award for his radio series for SFS Media, The MTT Files.
In 2010, President Obama awarded him with the National Medal of
Arts, the highest award given to artists by the United States
Government.