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Frédéric Chopin: Piano Concerto No. ...

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105,578

Kreisler Plays Beethoven & Mendelssohn

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Joseph Schmidt: The Complete Recording...

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30,771

Beethoven / Mendelssohn: Violin Concer...

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15,550

Strauss II: The Gypsy Baron

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10,880

Great Swedish Singers: Leon Björker (...

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Milestones of a Violin Legend: Fritz K...

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6,461

Mozart / Brahms: Violin Concertos, Vol...

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5,529

Lauritz Melchior, The King Size Hero, ...

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1,254

Conductor's Gallery, Vol. 20: Leo Blec...

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Biography

Leo Blech (no relation to British conductor Harry Blech) emerged as one of the major German conductors in the years before World War I. He came to professional music late, making his decision as a young adult already working in a mercantile career. He entered the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin and studied composition with Woldemar Bargiel and piano under Ernst Rudorff. In 1893 he became the conductor of the Stadttheater (Municipal Theater) in Aachen. He then continued his studies under Engelbert Humperdinck during the summers of 1893 to 1896. He left Aachen in 1899 to become the conductor of the German opera theater in Prague. In 1906, he became a conductor at the Berlin Royal Opera (Königliche Kapelle) and was appointed its general music director in 1913. Ten years later, he moved over to become the artistic director of the Deutsches Opernhaus, Berlin. In 1924, he went to Berlin's third opera company, the Berlin Volksoper, and in 1925 to the Vienna Volksoper. Blech was particularly esteemed for his operatic performances, especially those of Verdi and Wagner, and for Bizet's Carmen, and as a conductor of clear, elegant orchestral compositions. He recorded frequently, including a classic performance of Beethoven's Violin Concerto with Fritz Kreisler. As a composer, he had success, particularly in operas, three of which were premiered between 1902 and 1908. However, his music, despite possessing good compositional technique and imaginative orchestration, has not survived. He returned to Berlin in 1926 to conduct the Staatsoper. Despite being a Jew, he remained in that position until 1937. Perhaps luckily, he was guest conducting in Riga, Latvia, when it became clear that it was unsafe to return home. He found a position as conductor at the Riga Opera House. The Soviet Union absorbed Latvia and the other Baltic states, which were then overrun by German forces in 1941. Blech left ahead of the Nazi army and settled in Stockholm, where he was known through his guest appearances. He obtained a position at the Stockholm Royal Opera, remaining there until 1949. He returned to West Berlin in 1949 to become conductor of the Städtische Oper (Municipal Opera) until his retirement in 1953. Blech died in 1958 at age 87.