Boris Brott
Boris Brott | |
---|---|
Born | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | March 14, 1944
Died | April 5, 2022 Hamilton, Ontario, Canada | (aged 78)
Occupation | conductor, motivational speaker |
Education | |
Spouse | Ardyth Webster |
Children | 3 |
Boris Brott, OC OOnt OQ (March 14, 1944 – April 5, 2022) was a Canadian conductor and motivational speaker.[1] He was one of the most internationally recognized Canadian conductors, having conducted on stages around the world, including Carnegie Hall, La Scala, and Covent Garden. He was known for his innovative methods of introducing classical music to new audiences. Over his career, he commissioned, performed, and recorded a wide variety of Canadian works for orchestra.
Brott was the founder and artistic director of the Brott Music Festival, National Academy Orchestra of Canada and BrottOpera all based in Hamilton, Ontario. He was the founding Music Director and Conductor Laureate of the New West Symphony in Thousand Oaks, CA and artistic director and conductor of the Orchestre classique de Montreal (formerly the McGill Chamber Orchestra). He was a former Principal Youth and Family conductor with the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa and Toronto Symphony Orchestra, where he led family and education programs.
Early life and emerging career
[edit]Boris Jeremiah Brott was born in Montreal in 1944 to violinist and composer Alexander Brott and cellist Lotte/Charlotte Brott (née Goetzel).[2] His younger brother is cellist Denis Brott. His mother was born in Mannheim, Germany, a country she had left in 1939 because of the Nazis.[3] His family was Jewish.[4] He studied violin with his father,[5] and performed at the age of five with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra at a young people's matinee. He took courses at the Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal and the McGill Conservatory, and in 1956 studied conducting at the summer school of Pierre Monteux, who engaged him as assistant for concerts in Europe.[6] He next studied with Igor Markevitch and won first prize at the 1958 Pan-American conducting competition. In 1959, at the age of 15, he founded the Philharmonic Youth Orchestra of Montreal and led it in his conducting debut in that city.
In June 1962, Brott won third prize at the Liverpool Competition. He served from 1963 to 1965 as Walter Susskind's assistant conductor with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and then embarked on a career in England as conductor of the Northern Sinfonia at Newcastle upon Tyne (1964-8). He made several tours with this chamber orchestra, among which was one in Canada, which included concerts at Expo 67.
From 1964 to 1967, Brott was principal conductor for the touring company of the Royal Ballet Covent Garden. During the 1965–6 season at Covent Garden he conducted the Royal Ballet's first production at that theatre of Stravinsky's The Soldier's Tale (1966) and toured the production in Britain. He won first prize and a gold medal at the sixth Dimitri Mitropoulos International Music Competition in 1968 and served 1968-9 as assistant conductor to Leonard Bernstein, with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra.[7]
Brott was named one of Canada's Outstanding Young Men in 1969 and 1973 by the Junior Chamber of Commerce.
In 1972, Brott was appointed conductor of the BBC Welsh Orchestra.
Later career
[edit]Development of Canadian orchestras
[edit]Brott directed the Lakehead Symphony Orchestra (Thunder Bay Symphony Orchestra) between 1967 and 1972[8] and the Regina Symphony Orchestra from 1971 to 1973.
From 1969 to 1990, Brott was artistic director and conductor of the Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra, which grew from an amateur ensemble to a professional one with a 42-week season and 16,000 subscribers. The orchestra also gave birth to the quintet Canadian Brass. Brott and the HPO were in the news when they performed in the middle of a steel factory blast furnace in Hamilton's industrial core at Dofasco Inc.- now Arcelor Mittal.[9] A charismatic maestro, Brott included visual elements, ballet dancers, Shakespearean actors, film, rock groups, even astronauts to the stages of classical music concerts.
In the early 1970s, he played an integral role in the acoustic aspects of the construction Hamilton Place, now known as First Ontario Concert Hall in downtown Hamilton. He conducted the first notes heard in the hall on September 22, 1973.[10]
In 1975, Brott assumed directorship of the CBC Winnipeg Orchestra. In 1977 he had made his opera debut, conducting Donizetti's Daughter of the Regiment for the COC. Brott later directed Opera Hamilton and guest-conducted with the Canadian Opera Company and Sadler's Wells Opera.
Brott served as the Principal Youth and Family conductor with both the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra. From 1982 to 1985 he was artistic director of Symphony Nova Scotia. He led the Ontario Place Pops Orchestra from 1983 to 1991.
Founding of Brott Music Festival, National Academy Orchestra of Canada and BrottOpera
[edit]In 1988, he founded the Brott Music Festival, which has since become Canada's largest orchestral music festival.[11] It is a major cultural event in Hamilton and surrounding areas for the months of July and August. From that, he created the National Academy Orchestra of Canada, recognized in 1999 as a National School by the Department of Canadian Heritage.[12] The NAO pairs music graduates pursuing a career with professional musicians from North American orchestras in a mentor-apprentice relationship. It is Canada's only professional training orchestra and has graduated about 1,200 musicians. In 2015 after Opera Hamilton folded, he founded BrottOpera with a similar model as the NAO—to provide performance opportunities for emerging young singers and keep opera alive in the City of Hamilton.
During this period, Brott also became the first music director of the New West Symphony, Thousand Oaks, California, where he remained as Maestro for 17 years. He also took over the role of Music Director at McGill Chamber Orchestra from his father, who founded the ensemble in 1945. He remained its leader, now known as Orchestre Classique de Montreal until his death.
Law school, lecturing, broadcasting and recording
[edit]Brott studied law at the University of Western Ontario from 1992 to 1995, and in 1995 began giving motivational seminars to Fortune 500 companies using symphonic music as an example of teamwork at the highest level. Brott produced, conducted, or hosted a large number of television and radio programs for the CBC, and the BBC and ITV in the UK, and recorded with various orchestras for Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Mercury, Pro-Arte and Sony Classical.
Italian Opera 2000–2022
[edit]Brott embarked on a guest conducting schedule at Italy's opera houses, including the Teatro Petruzzelli, the Arena di Verona and the Teatro Giuseppe Verdi in Trieste. In 2000, he conducted the first performance of Bernstein's Mass in Vatican City for an audience which included Pope John Paul II.[13]
In 2011, Brott was named Principal Guest Conductor of the historic Petruzzelli Theatre in Bari, Italy.
Honours
[edit]In 1986, Brott was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.[14] In 2006, he was made a Member of the Order of Ontario.[7] In 2014, he was appointed Officer of l’Ordre national du Québec.
In May 2006, he was voted one of the top five Greatest Hamiltonians of all time by Hamilton Spectator readers. In 2007, he was given the Lifetime Achievement Award by Tourism Hamilton and was also awarded Canada's National Child Day award in Ottawa for introducing classical music to over a million schoolchildren over his career to date. Also in 2007, he received the City of Hamilton Lifetime Achievement Arts Award.
In June 2022, the City of Hamilton announced that the Great Hall of First Ontario Concert Hall, formerly Hamilton Place, would be named Boris Brott Great Hall, in memory of the conductor who opened the Hall 50 years earlier.
Personal life and death
[edit]Brott was married to author and lawyer Ardyth Webster Brott, CM[15] with whom he had three children and four grandchildren. He made his permanent home in Hamilton, Ontario. He died on April 5, 2022, at the age of 78, when he was struck while walking in a hit-and-run collision by a driver who was speeding in the opposite direction on a one-way street, near Brott's home in Hamilton.[16][17]
The news sent shockwaves throughout Canada and the world's classical music community,[18] most intensely in Hamilton, the City he had helped transform from being known only as a Steeltown into a cultural hub.[19] In June 2022, then Hamilton Mayor Fred Eisenberger announced the naming of Great Hall Boris Brott at First Ontario Concert Hall he had helped to build 50 years earlier.[20] Brott is buried in Montreal's Mont Royal Cemetery with his parents.
References
[edit]- ^ "Presenting Boris Brott News: Boris Brott Biography". Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved January 15, 2008.
- ^ "Densi Brott". Biography in The Canadian Encyclopedia
- ^ "Lotte Brott | the Canadian Encyclopedia".
- ^ "Lotte Brott – A Tribute (Part 1)". February 8, 2022.
- ^ Roderick L. Sharpe; Jeanne Koekkoek Stierman (May 30, 2008). Maestros in America: Conductors in the 21st Century. Scarecrow Press. p. 30. ISBN 978-1-4616-6948-7.
- ^ Bill Griffiths (2004). Northern Sinfonia: A Magic of Its Own. Northumbria University Press. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-904794-07-3.
- ^ a b Boris Brott: Meet the Maestro". GoodTimes, October 1, 2018, By Peter Feniak
- ^ "Music A Keynote Of Brott Family". Port Arthur News Chronicle. September 25, 1968. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
- ^ "1969: Boris Brott takes lead of Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra". Hamilton Spectator, Sep 23, 2016
- ^ "HPO celebrates 50 golden years of FirstOntario Concert Hall/Hamilton Place". The Hamilton Spectator. September 14, 2023.
- ^ "Leonard Turnevicius: Brott Music Festival’s 30th anniversary something to sing about". Hamilton Spectator, Apr 08, 2017 by Leonard Turnevicius
- ^ "Thirty years later, the National Academy Orchestra of Canada still develops Canada’s professional musicians". By William Littler Toronto Star, June 23, 2018
- ^ "Boris Brott". The Canadian Encyclopedia, by Claire Versailles, Betty Nygaard King, Gilles Potvin. February 8, 2007
- ^ "Tributes pour in for maestro Boris Brott after the renowned conductor was fatally struck by car". CBC News. April 5, 2022.
- ^ Hewitt, Fallon (December 28, 2023). "Hamiltonians Paul O'Byrne, Ardyth Brott named to Order of Canada". The Hamilton Spectator.
- ^ Fallon Hewitt (April 5, 2022). "Renowned conductor Boris Brott killed in hit and run". The Hamilton Spectator.
- ^ Lofaro, Joe (April 5, 2022). "Montreal conductor Boris Brott killed in hit-and-run in Hamilton, Ont". montreal.ctvnews.ca. Retrieved April 6, 2022.
- ^ "Boris Brott remembered by his peers as an unforgettable conductor, mentor and visionary". The Globe and Mail. April 7, 2022.
- ^ "'Boris brought music to the people' — Hamiltonians pay tribute to classical virtuoso". The Hamilton Spectator. April 5, 2022.
- ^ "Hamilton to name Great Hall after legendary conductor Boris Brott in tribute - Hamilton | Globalnews.ca".
External links
[edit]- Official site
- Brott Music.com
- National Academy Orchestra
- McGill Chamber Orchestra now Orchestre Classique de Montréal
- New West Symphony- Los Angeles
- "Boris Brott fonds - Search Research Collections". McMaster University Library. William Ready Division of Archives and Research Collections. Retrieved November 6, 2016.
- Boris Brott discography at Discogs
- Boris Brott at IMDb
- 1944 births
- 2022 deaths
- Anglophone Quebec people
- Canadian male conductors (music)
- Canadian expatriates in the United Kingdom
- Canadian motivational speakers
- Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal alumni
- Members of the Order of Ontario
- Officers of the Order of Canada
- Musicians from Hamilton, Ontario
- Musicians from Montreal
- University of Western Ontario alumni
- 21st-century Canadian conductors (music)
- McGill University School of Music alumni
- 21st-century Canadian male musicians
- 20th-century Canadian conductors (music)
- 20th-century Canadian male musicians
- Principal conductors of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales