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Michael Tilson Thomas, award-winning conductor and composer, dies aged 81 | Classical music
Michael Tilson Thomas, a leading American conductor for a half-century who headed orchestras in Buffalo, Miami, London and San Francisco while also composing, died on Wednesday. He was 81.
Tilson Thomas had surgery for a brain tumor in 2021 and resumed his career, then said in February 2025 that the tumor had returned. He conducted his final concert with the San Francisco Symphony in April 2025 and died at his home in San Francisco, spokesperson Connie Shuman said.
Tilson Thomas received 39 Grammy award nominations, winning 12, and was among the Kennedy Center Honors recipients in 2019.
“It’s meant to have various intriguing and alluring, questioning things that you hear on first hearing,” he said of classical music during a 2004 interview with the Associated Press. “But by its very nature it’s holding a lot of other secrets or a lot of other perspectives much closer to its chest, which only with repeated hearing you start realizing are there.”
Tilson Thomas was born in Los Angeles on 21 December 1944, to a family steeped in the arts. His father, Ted, was a producer at New York’s Mercury Theater Company, then worked in Los Angeles in the movie and television industry. His mother, Roberta, headed research for Columbia Pictures. His grandparents, Bessie and Boris Thomashefsky, were pioneers in American Yiddish theater.
He played piano at a young age and attended the University of Southern California. By the time he received a degree in 1967, he had worked with Pierre Boulez, Aaron Copland, Igor Stravinsky and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
“I don’t fling the word genius around lightly, but I fling it around about Michael. He reminds me of me at that age, except that he knows more than I did,” conductor Leonard Bernstein told the New York Times Magazine for a 1971 profile. “Not only music, but things like the functions of the brain, cerebrology, physics, biochemistry.”
Tilson Thomas was the co-music director and then music director of California’s Ojai festival in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He was an assistant at Germany’s Bayreuth festival in 1966, won the Koussevitzky prize at the Tanglewood Music Center in 1968 and became a Boston Symphony Orchestra assistant conductor in 1969.
Tilson Thomas made his New York debut at Lincoln Center’s Philharmonic Hall on 22 October 1969, as a mid-concert replacement for an ailing William Steinberg. Tilson Thomas led Robert Starer’s Concerto for Violin, Cello and Orchestra, and Strauss’s Till Eulenspiegel.
“A tall, thin young man, he came on stage with an air of immense confidence and authority, and showed that his confidence was not misplaced,” critic Harold C Schonberg wrote in the Times. “He takes naturally to this music, as might be expected of a Tanglewood graduate and a pupil of Pierre Boulez.”
Tilson Thomas became the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s principal guest conductor from 1972 to 1974 and 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.
He helped found Miami’s New World Symphony in 1987 and served as artistic director until 2021. He was principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra from 1988 to 1995 and music director of the San Francisco Symphony from 1995 to 2020.
Tilson Thomas’s compositions include Grace (1988), Four Preludes on Playthings of the Wind (2015-16) and Meditations on Rilke (2019).
His husband, Joshua Robison, died on 22 February while recovering from a fall suffered last August. They met while playing in the orchestra of the North Hollywood junior high school (since renamed Walter Reed Middle School), became partners in 1976 and married in 2014.
In announcing his final concert would take place in San Francisco on 26 April 2025, in a belated 80th birthday celebration, Thomas issued a statement acknowledging his mortality.
“At that point we all get to say the old show business expression, ‘It’s a wrap,’” he said. “A coda is a musical element at the end of a composition that brings the whole piece to a conclusion. A coda can vary greatly in length. My life’s coda is generous and rich.”
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Multitudes festival: Echoes of Hill and Horizon review – epic light show electrifies Elgar and Vaughan Williams | Classical music
There was birdsong in the Queen Elizabeth Hall foyer. In the hall itself, hanging from the ceiling, were ropes and ropes displaying many thousands of walnut-sized LEDs, lined in huge blocks above the heads of the players and front half of the audience, promising to light the place up as if it were Harrods in December. This was Echoes of Hill and Horizon, an unlikely and delightful coming together of technology and English pastoral music at this year’s Multitudes festival.
Just over an hour of Vaughan Williams, Warlock and Elgar was played by the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment – who don’t usually play this stuff, but who drew on their experience in the earlier music that inspired it. Their agile playing, at once lean and sonorous, was filtered through the dozens of speakers that make up the QEH’s hidden surround-sound system, which occasionally blunted the orchestral blend but allowed for intriguing spatial effects or cathedral-like reverb.
These effects were all but eclipsed by the intricate lightshow happening above us, courtesy of Squidsoup. It was at its magical best in Vaughan Williams’s The Lark Ascending: the bird represented by Kati Debretzeni’s solo violin took abstract visual form as a small cluster of ice-blue lights with a narrow aura of red, never still, swooping above us as each light came alive. At first we could only hear Debretzeni, her lyrical playing seeming to come from wherever the lights led our eye. Then, stepping out from the darkness, she moved around the stage as patches of the lights turned the colours of sunlight and harvest – yellow, ochre, russet – followed by leaf-green and deep sky-blue.
The other pieces were more abstract, a feast of synaesthesia. Peter Warlock’s courtly Capriol Suite had indigo splodges moving as if with stately dance steps, or little red explosions like fireworks, or a twirling ribbon of turquoise. No prizes for guessing the leading colour in Vaughan Williams’s Fantasia on Greensleeves. Elgar’s Serenade for Strings brought clusters of poster-paint shades, Vaughan Williams’s Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis showers of stained-glass blues and reds. Thanks to the vitality of the playing and the paciness of Evan Rogister’s conducting, it all came together to create an immersive audiovisual experience that felt weightless and enchanting.
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