Leon Fleisher, 92, Dies; Spellbinding Pianist With One Hand or TwoUnable
to use his right hand, he performed pieces written for left hand only,
conducted and taught. After 30 years, he made a triumphant two-handed
comeback.
By Allan Kozinn - Aug. 2, 2020, 7:43 p.m. ET
Leon
Fleisher, a leading American pianist in the 1950s and early ’60s who
was forced by an injury to his right hand to channel his career into
conducting, teaching and mastering the left-hand repertoire, died on
Sunday in a hospice in Baltimore. He was 92. His
death was confirmed by his son Julian, who said he was still teaching
and conducting master classes as recently as last week. Mr.
Fleisher came to believe that his career-altering malady, focal
dystonia, was caused by overpracticing — “seven or eight hours a day of
pumping ivory,” as he told The New York Times in a 1996 interview — and
for 30 years he tried virtually any cure that looked promising,
including shots of lidocaine, rehabilitation therapy, psychotherapy,
shock treatments, Rolfing and EST. At times, he later said, he was so
despondent that he considered suicide. But
he also realized that the musicality and incisiveness that had been so
widely admired in his early years could be mined in other ways. He had
joined the faculty of the Peabody Conservatory, in Baltimore, in 1959,
and he devoted himself more fully to teaching, both at Peabody and at
the Tanglewood Music Center, where he was artistic director from 1986 to
1997.
He
also made his way through the estimable catalog of works composed by
Ravel, Prokofiev and many others for the pianist Paul Wittgenstein (the
brother of the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein), who lost his right arm
during World War I, and commissioned new left-hand works from American
composers. He helped start the Theater Chamber Players in Washington.
And he began conducting.
Eventually,
a combination of Rolfing — a deep massage technique — and Botox
injections provided sufficient relief that he was able to resume his
career as a two-handed pianist in 1995. He continued to play recitals
and concertos, and to make recordings, until last year. Mr.
Fleisher often pointed out after his comeback that he was not, and
never would be, fully cured. But he also acknowledged, late in life,
that the incapacitation of his right hand in 1964 ultimately gave him a
far more varied musical life than he might have had if he had been able
to pursue a conventional career as a virtuoso pianist. That
realization is implicit in the title of his autobiography, “My Nine
Lives: A Memoir of Many Careers in Music” (2010), which he wrote with
the music critic Anne Midgette.
Early
in his career, though, Mr. Fleisher was a commanding pianist who
produced a warm, sharply etched and thoughtfully contoured sound that
was ideally suited to 19th-century Viennese classics — Beethoven, Brahms
and Schubert, most notably — but also yielded illuminating readings of
Rachmaninoff, Debussy and Liszt, and of contemporary American composers
like Roger Sessions (with whom he briefly studied music theory) and
Aaron Copland. Mr. Fleisher’s
recordings of the Brahms and Beethoven piano concertos with George Szell
and the Cleveland Orchestra, made between 1958 and 1963, are still
considered among the most vivid and moving accounts of those works. In
the 1990s, he recorded spellbinding performances of the peaks of the
left-hand repertoire, including concertos by Ravel, Prokofiev and
Britten, chamber music by Korngold and Schmidt, and solo works by
Saint-Saëns, Godowsky and Bach (Brahms’s left-hand arrangement of the
Chaconne from the Partita No. 2 for solo violin). Even
after he returned to recording two-hand works, on the albums “Two
Hands” (2004) and “The Journey” (2006), he continued to revisit the
left-hand works that had kept him going for three decades. His
album “All the Things You Are” (2014) included not only left-hand
arrangements of Gershwin’s “The Man I Love” and the Jerome Kern song
that gave the collection its name, but also pieces composed for Mr.
Fleisher by George Perle and Leon Kirchner, and a deeply thoughtful,
spacious reconsideration of the Bach-Brahms Chaconne. Leon
Fleisher was born in San Francisco on July 23, 1928, to Isidore and
Bertha Fleisher. His parents, Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe — he
was from Odessa, then in Russia, now in Ukraine; she was from Poland —
each managed one of the family’s two hat shops.
An
older brother, Raymond, was given piano lessons. He showed little
interest in them, but when Raymond went out to play after his lessons,
Leon, who was then 4 years old, would go to the piano and repeat, by
ear, everything he had heard. His
mother soon decided that Leon, rather than Raymond, should study the
instrument. She made her intentions for her younger son clear: He would
either be the first Jewish president of the United States or he would be
a concert pianist. So devoted was
his mother to his musical training that after two weeks of kindergarten,
during which he objected strenuously to nap time, she withdrew him from
public school and hired tutors so he could devote his time to
practicing at the piano. She also found ways of bringing him to the
attention of two important San Francisco conductors, Pierre Monteux and
Alfred Hertz, who in turn persuaded the pianist Artur Schnabel to take
Leon on as a student in 1938, when he was 9, despite his policy of not
teaching children. By the time Leon
began working with Schnabel, he had already played a few concerts, but
Schnabel’s single condition for teaching the boy was that there be no
more concerts. Schnabel relaxed the rule in 1944 and allowed Mr.
Fleisher to play the Brahms Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor with Monteux
and the San Francisco Symphony and then with the New York Philharmonic
at Carnegie Hall, also with Monteux conducting. Noel
Strauss, reviewing the performance for The New York Times, wrote that
Mr. Fleisher, making his New York debut, “scored heavily in the exacting
work and at once established himself as one of the most remarkably
gifted of the younger generation of American keyboard artists.” In
1945, at Ravinia, Mr. Fleisher played the Brahms again — it quickly
became one of his signature pieces — as well as the Liszt Concerto No. 2
in A, with Leonard Bernstein conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
He also performed four concertos at Ravinia the next summer, under the
direction of William Steinberg and Szell, who soon engaged Mr. Fleisher
to perform with the Cleveland Orchestra, which he took over later that
year.
By
1949, although he had played with many of the major American orchestras
and had given recitals across the country, engagements began to dry up.
Mr. Fleisher moved to Paris in 1950 and remained in Europe — relocating
first to the Netherlands, then to Italy — until 1958. In
1952, he became the first American to win the gold medal at the Queen
Elisabeth Competition in Brussels. That victory included a substantial
list of engagements in Europe; it also revived interest in Mr. Fleisher
among American orchestras, managers and concert promoters. When
Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra were signed to a new recording
contract with the Epic label in 1954, Szell invited Mr. Fleisher to be
his go-to soloist for recordings of the great piano concertos. Shortly
after his return to the United States in the late 1950s, Mr. Fleisher
accepted an offer to teach at the Peabody Conservatory, while also
pursuing a hefty performing and recording schedule.
“I
was driven, if anything, even harder by all of my successes,” he wrote
in his memoir. “There was always more to attain, and more to achieve,
and more musical depths to plumb, and lurking behind it all, the
terrifying risk of failure.”
Failure
was not far away. During the winter of 1963, he noticed what he
described as laziness in his right index finger, as well as “a creeping
numbness” in his right hand. By the summer, the fourth and fifth fingers
of his right hand had begun to curl inward toward his palm. The
timing was disastrous. Mr. Fleisher had planned to celebrate the 20th
anniversary of his New York debut with a busy season that included 20
performances in New York alone and a spring 1964 tour of the Soviet
Union, in which he was to be the soloist in Mozart’s Concerto No. 25 in C
(K. 503) with Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra. Shortly
before the tour, Mr. Fleisher performed the Mozart in Cleveland. Szell
noted the strain Mr. Fleisher was under and told him that he did not
feel he could undertake the tour. The pianist Grant Johannesen traveled
with the orchestra instead. “The
initial problem was a very stupid kind of overwork,” Mr. Fleisher said
in 1996, cautioning young pianists against following his path. “I
see kids still falling into this, and there are many reasons for it.
The perfection that they’re bombarded with from recordings. The kind of
sound a Horowitz produced, which is wonderful, but people don’t realize
that he had his technician work very hard on the piano, so the piano
itself helped. So when kids go to an acoustically dead hall, and get a
dead piano, and try to make these Horowitz kinds of sounds, they end up
brutalizing themselves.” Mr. Fleisher
resisted taking up the left-hand repertoire, partly because he felt
that to do so would be an admission that he would never regain the use
of his right hand. But after two years without playing concerts, he
reconsidered, agreeing to play both Ravel’s Concerto for the Left Hand
and Benjamin Britten’s left-hand work “Diversions” with Seiji Ozawa and
the Toronto Symphony in 1967. The
next year, with the pianist and composer Dina Koston, he started the
Theater Chamber Players, a flexible chamber group meant to present both
contemporary music and classics.
The ensemble — initially based at the Washington Theater Club, later at
the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History and ultimately at
the Kennedy Center — provided an opportunity for Mr. Fleisher to both
play and conduct. And an invitation to become music director of the
Annapolis Symphony Orchestra in Maryland, a semiprofessional community
group, gave him a chance to work on the symphonic repertoire. Soon,
Mr. Fleisher was guest-conducting around the country — his debut at the
head of a professional orchestra took place at Lincoln Center's Mostly
Mozart Festival in 1970 — and in 1973 he became associate conductor of
the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. He
held that post for only five years, but he maintained a close
relationship with the orchestra thereafter. When the ensemble was
preparing to inaugurate the new Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall in 1982,
its music director, Sergiu Comissiona, invited Mr. Fleisher to be the
opening-night soloist. Having
recently had an operation to relieve carpal tunnel syndrome, Mr.
Fleisher began to regain the use of his right hand, if only partly and
inconsistently. But he felt he could make the jump back to two-handed
playing, with the televised opening of Meyerhoff Hall as the occasion
for his comeback. In a bold moment,
he told the orchestra that he would play Beethoven’s Fourth Piano
Concerto. But as the occasion drew near, he decided to play Franck’s
shorter and less pianistically exposed Symphonic Variations instead.
Most
listeners thought the performance went well. But Mr. Fleisher was not
satisfied. In his view, the amount of effort he expended working to
control his right hand precluded the kind of interpretive depth he hoped
for, and he dropped plans for a broader return to two-handed playing.
Shortly
after the Baltimore performance, Mr. Fleisher married Katherine
Jacobson, a pianist who had been one of his students at Peabody. She
survives him as do his children from his first marriage, to Dorothy
Druzinsky Fleisher, Deborah Fleisher, Leah Fleisher and Richard; and his
children from his second marriage, to Rikki Rosenthal, Paula Fleisher
and Julian; and two grandchildren. Both of Mr. Fleisher’s earlier
marriages ended in divorce. In 1991,
Mr. Fleisher found a doctor who was experimenting with Botox injections
for injuries like his. At first he found that the injections loosened up
his still-cramped fourth and fifth fingers, to the point where he could
play. But the injections wore off, and Mr. Fleisher was still looking
for a permanent cure. Having tried
Rolfing in the 1970s, he decided to try again in 1994. This time he had
better results, and he found that a regimen of Rolfing and Botox
injections was enough to keep him in playing trim. As
an experiment, he played Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 12 (K. 414) with
the Theater Chamber Players in April 1995, and with the Cleveland
Orchestra and at Tanglewood shortly thereafter.
“Nothing
felt sweeter,” he wrote in his memoir of those first performances,
“than the feeling of those notes falling into place, the right hand
singing, the left hand balancing it on the lower part of the keyboard,
and the piece growing into something whole and complete, a dream become
reality.” Mr. Fleisher gradually
reclaimed the repertoire he had been unable to play for more than three
decades — but cautiously, building his recital programs with both
two-hand and left-hand works, and playing programs of piano four-hand
works with his wife.
He
was made a Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French
government in 2006, and in 2007 he was a recipient of a Kennedy Center
Honor. A film about his struggle with focal dystonia, “Two Hands,”
directed by Nathaniel Kahn, was nominated for an Academy Award for best
short documentary in 2006. Toward the
end of his life, Mr. Fleisher spoke about the level of despair he felt
when he was unable to use his right hand. But, having regained that
ability, he was also philosophical about the challenges life presents. “There
are forces out there,” he told The International Herald Tribune in
2007, “and if you keep yourself open to them, if you go along with them,
there are wondrous surprises.” Jack Kadden contributed reporting.
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