Precursors and formation Until the 1830s, orchestral performance in Vienna was done by
ad hoc orchestras, consisting of professional and (often) amateur musicians brought together for specific performances. In 1833,
Franz Lachner formed the forerunner of the Vienna Philharmonic, the – an orchestra of professional musicians from the Vienna Court Opera (
Wiener Hofoper, now the
Vienna State Opera); it gave four concerts, each including a
Beethoven symphony. The Vienna Philharmonic itself arose nine years later, in 1842, hatched by a group who met regularly at the inn 'Zum Amor', including the poet
Nikolaus Lenau, newspaper editor
August Schmidt, critic Alfred Becker, violinist Karlz Holz, Count Laurecin, and composer
Otto Nicolai who was also the principal conductor of a standing orchestra at a Viennese theater. Nicolai and the orchestra gave only 11 concerts in the ensuing five years, and when Nicolai left Vienna in 1847, the orchestra nearly folded (
New Grove notes the disruption caused by the
Revolution of 1848 as a hindrance). Between 1854 and 1857,
Karl Eckert – the first permanent conductor of the Vienna Court Opera (
Wiener Hofoper)– led the (associated) Vienna Philharmonic in a few concerts. In 1857, Eckert was made Director of the
Hofoper – the first musician to have been given the post; in 1860, he conducted four subscription concerts of the Vienna Philharmonic. Since that time, writes Vienna Philharmonic violinist and president
Clemens Hellsberg, "the 'Philharmonic Concerts' have been staged without interruption."
The era of subscription conductors: 1860–1933 In 1860, the orchestra elected
Otto Dessoff to be the permanent conductor. According to
Max Kalbeck, the Vienna-based music critic, newspaper editor, and biographer, the fame and excellence of the Vienna Philharmonic resulted from Dessoff's "energy and sense of purpose." Clemens Hellsberg gives specifics, writing that during the Dessoff years, the Vienna Philharmonic's "repertoire was consistently enlarged, important organizational principles (music archives, rules of procedure) were introduced and the orchestra moved to its third new home [in 1870], the newly built Goldener Saal in the
Musikverein building in Vienna [in which it still performs], which has proved to be the ideal venue, with its acoustical characteristics influencing the orchestra's style and sound." After fifteen years, in 1875, Dessoff was "pushed out of his position in Vienna through intrigue", and he left Vienna to become conductor (
Hofkapellmeister) of the
Badische Staatskapelle in
Karlsruhe, Germany. In Karlsruhe the next year, he fulfilled the request of his friend
Johannes Brahms to conduct the first performance of his
Symphony no. 1; in 1873, Brahms had conducted the premiere of his
Variations on a Theme by Haydn with Dessoff's Vienna Philharmonic. who was to become
Gustav Mahler's brother-in-law and was concertmaster until the
Anschluss in 1938. In order to be eligible for a pension, Richter intended to remain in his position for 25 years (to 1900), and he might have done so, given that the orchestra unanimously re-elected him in May 1898. But he resigned on 22 September, citing health reasons, although biographer Christopher Fifield argues that the real reasons were that he wanted to tour, and that "he was uneasy as
claques in the audience formed in favour of Gustav Mahler" (who was triumphing as director of the
Hofoper). Richter recommended Mahler or
Ferdinand Löwe to the orchestra as his replacement. (On 30 May 1899, pro-Mahler and pro-Richter factions had a "heated committee meeting"; matters were finally resolved in August when Richter wrote to his supporters "gently refusing their offer".) Under Mahler's baton, the Vienna Philharmonic played abroad for the first time at the 1900 Paris
World Exposition. While Mahler had strong supporters in the orchestra, he faced dissension from other orchestral members (an unreconstructed pro-Richter faction plus an anti-Semitic one, according to Jens Malte Fischer), criticism of his re-touchings of Beethoven, and arguments with the orchestra and over new policies he imposed; ultimately, "his working relationship with the Vienna Philharmonic continued to be fueled by resentment and broke down completely in November 1900". He resigned on 1 April 1901, citing health concerns as a pretext, In 1901,
Joseph Hellmesberger, Jr. briefly took his place; he remained only until 1903. (1926) In 1908, after an interval with no official subscription conductor, the orchestra elected
Felix Weingartner to the post; he was to remain in it until 1927, and conducted at least 432 concerts with them in total, including the VPO's first tour of South America in 1922. Weingartner's interpretive stance was opposite to Mahler's (Mahler employed marked tempo fluctuations in Beethoven, whereas Weingartner decried "tempo rubato conductors"); but like Mahler, he considered himself primarily a composer, and between 1910 and 1923 led the orchestra in at least one piece of his own music per season. He was most renowned for his Beethoven – he programmed at least two symphonies per season, and complete cycles in 1916/17 and 1926/27. In 1927, when Weingartner resigned, the orchestra elected
Wilhelm Furtwängler. He resigned at the end of the 1929/30 season because of increased professional demands in Berlin. In 1930, the orchestra chose
Clemens Krauss for the position. At the
Salzburg Festival in the summers of 1929–33 he led the orchestra in an annual Strauss waltz concert, the forerunners of the
New Year's Day concerts he was later to institute.
1933 through 1945 Since 1933, the orchestra has had no single subscription conductor, but according to
New Grove (vol. 19, p. 723), "between 1933 and 1938,
Bruno Walter and
Wilhelm Furtwängler shared the Philharmonic concerts between them, and during the
Nazi period Furtwängler was the permanent conductor"; by contrast, the Vienna Philharmonic's website history says, "Furtwängler was in actuality the main conductor of the orchestra from 1933 to 1945, and again from 1947 to 1954." In support of
New Groves assertion of Walter's role, it might be noted that he made Vienna his home from 1933 until 1938 (after being driven from Germany by the Third Reich), was artistic director of the
Vienna State Opera from 1936 until 1938, and conducted the Vienna Philharmonic frequently, making a number of major recordings with the orchestra (including
Richard Wagner's
Die Walküre act 1 and parts of act 2, the first recordings of Mahler's
Das Lied von der Erde and of his
Symphony No. 9, and numerous symphonic recordings) and taking the orchestra on tour to England and France in 1935. In support of the VPO website, Otto Strasser (who played in the orchestra from 1922 until 1967 and was the VPO chairman who procured Furtwängler's wartime services) said, Furtwängler "influenced us so much that we became the true 'Furtwängler orchestra'." Other conductors who worked with the orchestra in the mid-1930s before the
Anschluss included
Arturo Toscanini, Weingartner,
Hans Knappertsbusch,
Otto Klemperer,
Adrian Boult,
Victor de Sabata and
George Szell. Walter conducted the last concert before the Anschluss, on 20 February 1938, featuring the world premiere of
Egon Wellesz's
Prosperos Beschwörungen and Anton Bruckner's
Symphony No. 4. After the Anschluss and during World War II the roster included Furtwängler, Krauss, Knappertsbusch,
Willem Mengelberg, and
Karl Böhm. The orchestra's history during this period has been a topic of ongoing discussion and research, including a large amount commissioned by the orchestra (see below, "#Period under National Socialism").
Post-World War II era to present In 1946, when these conductors were undergoing
denazification – successfully in the case of Furtwängler, unsuccessfully in the case of Mengelberg – the orchestra was led primarily by conductors untainted by Nazi association, including
Josef Krips,
Erich Leinsdorf,
Volkmar Andreae,
Paul Paray, and
Charles Munch. An exception was
Herbert von Karajan, who made his debut with the orchestra with two concerts in January, but was unable to conduct a third scheduled concert when occupying authorities required him to undergo denazification (his tribunal in Vienna was in February, 1947). After clearance, he resumed conducting in late 1947 and developed a significant association with the orchestra (more below). In 1947, Bruno Walter reunited with the orchestra as conductor when it appeared at the first
Edinburgh Festival. They performed a single work, Mahler's song cycle
Das Lied von der Erde. In the postwar era, dozens of the world's best-known conductors have led the orchestra. Among them were not only Walter, Furtwängler, Knappertsbusch, Krauss, Szell, Klemperer, and Krips, but also
John Barbirolli,
Carlo Maria Giulini,
Erich Kleiber,
James Levine,
Zubin Mehta,
Fritz Reiner,
Georg Solti,
Claudio Abbado,
Riccardo Muti,
Nikolaus Harnoncourt,
Lorin Maazel,
Mariss Jansons,
Daniel Barenboim,
Gustavo Dudamel,
Roberto Carnevale,
Valery Gergiev and
Franz Welser-Möst. The orchestra made their first US tour in 1956 under the batons of
Carl Schuricht and
André Cluytens. Three conductors were given honorific titles by the orchestra in the later 20th century: Karajan and
Karl Böhm, who were made Honorary Conductors, and
Leonard Bernstein, who was made an Honorary Member of the orchestra.
Pierre Boulez, who had conducted the orchestra often, was made an Honorary Member in 2007. Another significant relationship was with the famously reclusive conductor
Carlos Kleiber, who appeared with the orchestra first in 1974 and last in 1994, his longest association with any ensemble, even if it included only 30 appearances; Clemens Hellsberg wrote of the "contrast between those dry numbers and the defining experience which each encounter with this brilliant interpreter represented." Finally,
István Kertész' gramophone recordings with the Vienna Philharmonic during the 1960s and the 1970s represent a highlight in the orchestra's history. On 7 May 2000, the orchestra performed Beethoven's
Ninth Symphony at the site of the concentration camp at
Mauthausen, Austria, in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of its liberation.
Simon Rattle conducted, and soloists were
Ruth Ziesak,
Angelika Kirchschlager,
Vinson Cole, and
Thomas Quasthoff; all artists and the orchestra performed without fee and without applause at the end. The symphony was preceded by recitation of the
Kaddish, the prayer of mourning, by Paul Chaim Eisenberg, the
Chief Rabbi of Austria, and the funeral prayer
El male rachamim sung by
Shmuel Barzilai, the chief cantor of the
Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien (Viennese Israelite Community), accompanied by members of the orchestra and the
Wiener Singverein; the orchestral arrangement was by Erich Schagerl, a violinist in the orchestra. Each
New Year's Day since 1 January 1941, the VPO has sponsored the
Vienna New Year's Concerts, dedicated to the music of the Strauss family composers, and particularly that of
Johann Strauss II; the first such concert was given on 31 December 1939 by
Clemens Krauss (see below, "#Period under National Socialism"), and led subsequent concerts on New Year's Day from 1941 until 1945. The postwar series of concerts was inaugurated in 1946 by
Josef Krips. They were led by Krauss, then by concertmaster
Willi Boskovsky from 1955 to 1979, and since 1987 have been led by a variety of leading conductors invited by the orchestra. == Critical reputation and popularity ==