Valery Gergiev, a Putin ally, fired as chief conductor in Munich

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Valery Gergiev, a Putin ally, fired as chief conductor in Munich
Valery Gergiev leads the London Symphony Orchestra in Stravinsky's “The Firebird,” at the Lincoln Center in New York, Oct. 23, 2015. Gergiev was removed from his post as chief conductor of the Munich Philharmonic on March 1, 2022 after he refused to denounce Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. Hiroyuki Ito/The New York Times.

by Javier C. Hernández



NEW YORK, NY.- Valery Gergiev, the star Russian maestro and prominent supporter of President Vladimir Putin of Russia, was removed Tuesday from his post as chief conductor of the Munich Philharmonic after he refused to denounce Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

And Anna Netrebko, the Russian diva who is one of opera’s biggest international stars and also has ties to Putin, saw her upcoming engagements with the Bavarian State Opera canceled, and the Zurich Opera House announced that she had withdrawn from her next performances there.

Gergiev’s abrupt dismissal, three years before his contract was set to expire, was the biggest setback yet for the conductor, who has been the target of widespread anger and condemnation in recent days for his long record of support for Putin, whom he has known for three decades.

Dieter Reiter, the mayor of Munich, said that Gergiev, who had held the post of chief conductor there since 2015, had failed to respond to a demand issued Friday by Reiter that he condemn Putin’s “brutal war of aggression” by Monday or be fired.

“I would have expected him to reconsider and revise his very positive assessment of Russia’s leader,” Reiter said in a statement. “He didn’t.”

Gergiev was also dismissed Tuesday from his position as honorary conductor of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra. The orchestra’s managers, who had also recently asked Gergiev to denounce Putin, said in a statement that they had spoken with Gergiev but could not resolve an “unbridgeable” divide. The orchestra said it was eliminating its “Gergiev Festival.”

Gergiev did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

Netrebko also came under fire for her ties to Putin, who has awarded her prizes and praised her artistry. Netrebko endorsed his reelection bid, and has at times appeared to lend support to his policies, including in 2014, when she was pictured holding a flag used by some Russian-backed separatist groups in Ukraine.

While she had in recent days sought some distance from the invasion, issuing a statement over the weekend saying she opposed the war, she has remained silent on Putin.

The director of the Zurich Opera House, Andreas Homoki, called Netrebko’s statement condemning the war a “positive development” and said the company did not “consider it appropriate to judge the decisions and actions of citizens of repressive regimes based on the perspective of those living in a Western European democracy.”

But Homoki went on to note that the opera house’s “decisive condemnation” of Putin and his actions was “not compatible with Anna Netrebko’s public position.”

He said that Netrebko had decided not to sing in the upcoming performances, and relayed a statement from her that said: “This is not a time for me to make music and perform. I have therefore decided to take a step back from performing for the time being. It is an extremely difficult decision for me, but I know that my audience will understand and respect this decision.”

After the cancellations were announced Tuesday, Netrebko posted a picture on Instagram of herself with Gergiev smiling after a concert. Then, in a separate post, she wrote: “As I have said, I am opposed to this senseless war of aggression and I am calling on Russia to end this war right now, to save all of us. We need peace right now.” Both posts were then deleted.




The Metropolitan Opera did not make any announcement regarding Netrebko’s scheduled appearances this spring, but Peter Gelb, its general manager, said Tuesday that “the Met stands by its position that artists who support Putin are not going to be allowed to perform at the Met.”

Asked about Netrebko’s statement opposing the war, Gelb said, “In the case of somebody who is so closely associated with Putin, denouncing the war is not enough.”

Before the Met performed Verdi’s “Don Carlos” on Monday evening, the company sang the Ukrainian national anthem.

The fast-moving events showed how quickly arts organizations around the world had moved to sever ties with some of Russia’s most prominent cultural ambassadors since the start of Putin’s invasion Thursday.

Gergiev had lost a number of engagements in the days that followed, but the loss of his leadership position at the helm of a major European orchestra suggested much more serious ramifications for his international career.

It is a stunning turnaround for Gergiev, whose packed schedule and regular engagements with many of the world’s leading concert halls and opera houses has led the website Bachtrack, which collect statistics on classical music performances, to proclaim him the world’s busiest conductor in several recent seasons.

Gergiev endorsed Putin’s reelection and appeared at concerts in Russia and abroad to promote his policies. The two have known each other since the early 1990s, when Putin was an official in St. Petersburg and Gergiev was beginning his tenure as the leader of the Mariinsky Theater, then called the Kirov.

Putin has played an important role in Gergiev’s success, providing funding to the Mariinsky, where Gergiev serves as general and artistic director.

Gergiev’s international engagements began drying up last week, when Carnegie Hall and the Vienna Philharmonic dropped him from a series of performances. On Sunday, Gergiev’s manager announced he was ending his relationship with his client.

The manager, Marcus Felsner, said in a statement that it had become impossible to defend Gergiev, whom he described as “one of the greatest conductors of all time, a visionary artist loved and admired by many of us, who will not, or cannot, publicly end his long-expressed support for a regime that has come to commit such crimes.”

On Monday, the fallout continued, with the Verbier Festival in Switzerland saying it had asked for and accepted the resignation of Gergiev as music director of the festival’s orchestra. (The festival also said it would ban other artists who had shown support for Putin’s actions, and that it would return donations from individuals under sanctions from Western governments.)

The Edinburgh International Festival in Scotland, where Gergiev served as honorary president, also said Monday that he had resigned his position after being asked to do so. Philharmonie de Paris, a performing arts complex in France, announced it was canceling two concerts in April with Gergiev and the Mariinsky Orchestra. And the Lucerne Festival in Switzerland said it was canceling two performances in August with Gergiev and the Mariinsky.

“In view of Russia’s acts of war in violation of international law, we are sending a clear signal of solidarity to the people of Ukraine,” Michael Haefliger, the festival’s executive and artistic director, said in a statement.

Shortly after the mayor of Munich announced his decision Tuesday, a spokesperson for the Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg, Germany — another major concert hall — said it, too, had canceled Gergiev’s future engagements. Several other institutions are considering similar moves, including Teatro alla Scala, in Milan.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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