Successful as pianist, composer, and especially as conductor,
André Previn has frequently bridged the gap between popular and so-called "serious" music, and in doing so broadened the horizons of both.
His father was an accomplished pianist (though a lawyer by profession) and determined that his son would follow in his musical footsteps. The talented young
André received instruction on the piano at the Berlin Hochschule, and also absorbed music in a less formal environment during the many private recitals given in the
Previn home. In the mid-1930s the Jewish family fled to France where
André continued as a scholarship student at the Paris Conservatoire. In 1939, the
Previn family relocated to southern California.
Life was difficult for the family (all their possessions had been left behind in Europe, and
Previn's father was qualified only in German law), and though barely ten years old,
André supplemented the family income by accompanying films at movie houses and playing in jazz clubs. At 14 he started working at MGM (
Charles Previn,
André's great uncle, was head of music at Universal Studios), orchestrating and arranging film music, and slowly saved enough money to study composition with
Castelnuovo-Tedesco. At 18
André was asked to compose his own full-length film score (
"The Sun Comes Up", 1949), which resulted in his first experience on the podium in front of a real orchestra --
Previn quickly realized that his future lay in conducting, though he understood the gulf between film music and serious conducting to be a wide one indeed.
Previn, who had taken U.S. citizenship in 1943, serving in San Francisco during the Korean War, where he had the opportunity to study conducting with
Pierre Monteux. Following discharge from the army,
Previn left MGM, but continued to compose, conduct, and arrange film music throughout the 1950s. He also recorded and released a series of best-selling jazz albums (something he would continue to do sporadically throughout the decades).
In 1963, having won four Academy Awards in as many years,
Previn found the courage to abandon Hollywood and pursue his dream of becoming a respected conductor. His professional debut occurred that same year with the
Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, and he spent the next several years traveling around the country conducting various little-known orchestras in an effort to gain exposure and develop his own skill on the podium. His first big break occurred in 1967 when he was asked to succeed
Sir John Barbirolli as music director of the
Houston Symphony. When offered the job of principal conductor for the
London Symphony Orchestra in 1968,
Previn left Houston. During his 11 years with the orchestra (1969-1979) a series of BBC television productions -- entitled
"André Previn's Music Hour" -- made the
LSO (and
Previn) a household name around the world. Other conducting appointments have included the
Pittsburgh Symphony, from 1977 to 1985; the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the 1985 and 1986 seasons; and, from 1987 on, the
Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. In 1993 he was named conductor laureate of the
London Symphony Orchestra, and he continues to make frequent appearances around the globe as a guest conductor.
Previn readily admits that he is not driven to compose, but only does so on occasion, and then only on specific request. Nevertheless he has composed a generous quantity of concert music, including a piano concerto for
Vladimir Ashkenazy and cello sonata at the request of
Yo-Yo Ma. His musical play, Every Good Boy Deserves Favour, was produced in London in 1978. The year 1998 saw the release of his full-length opera,
A Streetcar Named Desire at the
San Francisco Opera. In 2009,
Houston Grand Opera presented his
Brief Encounter, based on the film of the same name and the
Noël Coward play, Still Life. ~ Blair Johnston, Rovi