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Green Room: Sir Colin at 80
By Michael White Colin Davis, who recently completed a glorious decade at the helm of the London Symphony Orchestra, conducts the New York Philharmonic in two programs in late March.
There's an element of teasing disingenuousness when Sir Colin represents himself as old. He has been doing so for half his life, after a stormy youth in some of the toughest top jobs in British music — Sadler's Wells Opera, BBC Symphony, and the Royal Opera, Covent Garden — which left him weary of the machinations that it takes to build a neon-lit career. Stepping back, he acquired a new persona — ruminative, zen-like. He also learned to knit; it helps him think. And, as he told me once, "that's the chief task of a conductor. Players don't have time, but conductors should be thinking 'What is this piece?' Not in a panic, not 'What on earth can I do with the B-minor Mass when I've done it so often before?' but 'How can I set it up to ensure that, like all the great works of the past, it will survive?' This is what absorbs the mind."
Asked if he isn't of an age to be cutting down on transatlantic travel, he's equivocal. "It's not the flights so much as the exasperating nonsense of U.S. Immigration procedure that gets to me, but I'll bear it as long as I can because there are U.S. orchestras I love to conduct. When I started coming here, back in the '60s, they gave me a confidence that was critical at the time. Now, they're pure enjoyment."
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