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Elisabeth Söderström obituary


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Swedish soprano whose perceptive singing and vivid acting made her a great heroine in operas by Tchaikovsky, Richard Strauss and Janáček

One of the most perceptive and admired sopranos of the postwar era, Elisabeth Söderström, who has died aged 82, had a lengthy career that carried on into the 1990s, when she was well into her 60s. In everything she attempted, her vibrantly beautiful singing was enhanced by her good looks and vivid acting. With her sensitive demeanour she was particularly successful at portraying the troubled women who abound in opera, such as Leonore in Beethoven’s Fidelio, Tatyana in Tchaikovsky’s Evgeny Onegin and the Countess in Richard Strauss’s Capriccio, three of the roles with which she delighted audiences at Glyndebourne.

She was born in Stockholm, the daughter of a Swedish naval captain and a Russian mother, and studied at the Royal Academy and Opera School there. She made her debut as early as 1947, when she was just 20, as Mozart’s Bastienne, in the Drottningholm Court Theatre. Thereafter she joined the Swedish Royal Opera, of which she remained a member throughout the rest of her career. Her roles there stretched from Monteverdi’s Nero (Poppea) through Mozart’s Countess Almaviva (in Figaro, one of her most palpitating portrayals), Strauss’s Octavian and Marschallin (both in Der Rosenkavalier) to Janáček’s Jenůfa.

At the Royal Opera in London, she also loved playing the Governess in Britten’s The Turn of the Screw and Marie in Berg’s Wozzeck, two further distressed women. But she also revelled in lighter things, such as Rosalinde in Die Fledermaus and Saffi in the same composer’s Der Zigeunerbaron (The Gypsy Baron). She sang many of her roles both in Swedish and in the original.

ln 1955 she made her debut at the Salzburg Festival, as the boy Ighino in Pfitzner’s Palestrina. She first appeared at Glyndebourne in 1957, as the Composer in Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos, and in 1963-64 she was much admired there as Elisabeth Zimmer in Henze’s Elegy for Young Lovers. She made her debut at Covent Garden in 1960, with the Royal Swedish Opera as Daisy Doody in Blomdahl’s Aniara and as Morgana in Handel’s Alcina. She returned there, with the resident company, as Octavian and as an unforgettable Mélisande under Pierre Boulez (1969-70, a role that she recorded with him).

Her Metropolitan Opera debut was as Susanna (Figaro) in 1959, followed by Strauss’s Sophie, which meant she had undertaken all three of the women’s roles in Der Rosenkavalier, once joking that she would now have to undertake Baron Ochs. She continued to appear in New York for the following four seasons. One of her later roles, that of the 300-year-old Emilia Marty in Janáček’s The Makropulos Case, was undertaken with, among others, Welsh National Opera, an unforgettable experience, also seen in London. She wonderfully conveyed Marty’s emotional cynicism and boredom at having lived so long. She followed that with the old Countess in Tchaikovsky’s The Queen of Spades, showing that she could still command attention even with reduced resources.

Söderström often sang in concerts: she appeared at the Royal Festival Hall, London, and in the recording studio with Otto Klemperer in Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis. She was also an accomplished recitalist, singing a wide repertory, but particularly happy in the songs of Sibelius, which she recorded complete in the company of the pianist Vladimir Ashkenazy. She always delighted her audiences by introducing specific items with her particular fey charm, nowhere more successfully than with Mussorgsky’s Nursery cycle. She was also an engaging broadcaster, and often regaled Radio 3 and Radio 4 audiences with her anecdotes.

From 1993 to 1996 she was director of the Drottningholm Palace Theatre, where she had started her career. In retirement, she became an accomplished giver of masterclasses, leavening her lessons with a good deal of humour and general bonhomie.

Söderström was one of the most distinguished artists of her generation. The combination of a charming, yet elusive personality, very Swedish in character, with her vibrant voice and sincere acting enhanced all her portrayals, and while she was as happy deploying them on comedy as on drama, it is undoubtedly for her interpretations of the heroines in the operas of Tchaikovsky, Richard Strauss and Janáček that she will be longest remembered.

As a person, she was the soul of kindness, had a ready wit and was never more at home than when taking part in lively conversation. Colleagues and friends alike were treated generously. In the opera house, she could be demanding, wanting others to meet her own high standards, but she was always co-operative with directors she trusted, and with them she was willing to work as hard and as long as it took to create a result full of inner meaning.

In 1950 she married Sverker Olow, and he survives her, as do their three sons.

John Amis writes: When Elisabeth was invited to make her debut in New York at the Metropolitan Opera, she took all three of her sons with her for the season. When they got to school age, she gave up New York and returned to the Royal Opera in Stockholm. This was typical of her approach to a happy marriage, and to being both a wife and a mother. By that point being rather older than many of her colleagues, she developed the knack of being an elder sister to them and coaching them at rehearsals. She excelled in masterclasses, partly through her good nature, but also because she always sought to encourage her students to give their best; at the same time she delighted her audience without ever buttering her own ego (as many masterclass teachers do).

Elisabeth giggled and laughed a lot, but that only seemed to complement the seriousness of her devotion to her art. Sometimes she would point out to people who implied that a singer’s life was an easy one, how hard it could be. “Sweat, phlegm and dirty feet is often what it’s about,” she would say. “What do we do all day when not rehearsing? We memorise and that takes up a lot of time, all part of the job. And so is winding down after a performance.”

Coming from a country whose language is comparatively remote from most of the repertoire meant that Elisabeth would often sing in several languages. Some of the Janáček operas, for example, she sang not only in the original Czech, but also in German, English and Swedish. She was the least divaish diva that you could meet. She was a good person, a good friend, good wife, good mother, good humoured and an attractive woman.

Sometimes she had a hard time of it. In Jenůfa once her heel caught in a hole in a floorboard: broken knee. Another time in Offenbach’s La Périchole, she took a dive nearly into the orchestral pit: bad back. Deputising, she was manhandled in the last scene of an unfamiliar version of Gounod’s Faust in which Marguérite does not get wafted to heaven, but bundled down to hell: broken arm.

Elisabeth wrote an informative and readable little book, In My Own Key (1979), and in the photographs of her in various roles you can usually guess which role she was playing just by her facial expression, whether it was Tatyana, Leonore, The Governess, Mélisande, Kát’a Kabanová or the Marschallin or Octavian in Rosenkavalier. She was different in each part.

At Glyndebourne, we regulars idolised the singer Sena Jurinac, who left Sussex in 1956 when her marriage broke up, leaving her husband Sesto Bruscantini to sing there by himself. We heard that there was some unknown Swedish singer coming to sing Sena’s roles, and we all hated her in advance. But as soon as she sang the Composer in Strauss’s Ariadne, our hatred turned to love and adoration. The Swede was of course Elisabeth Söderström.

• Elisabeth Söderström, soprano, born May 7 1927; died 20 November 2009

• Alan Blyth died in 2007


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Letter: Luther Dixon obituary


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Alfredo Marcantonio writes: A signi-ficant omission from Garth Cartwright’s fine tribute to Luther Dixon (obituary, 12 November) is his work on Twist and Shout by the Isley Brothers. Attending the Isleys’ session at Bell Sound studios to record another track, Dixon was so unsure of the song that, according to the Wand label boss Florence Greenberg, he devoted just 15 minutes to it at the end of the booking. But there can be few more widely performed, iconic numbers in the R&B songbook.

Like Dixon’s Baby It’s You and Boys, it became the victim of a Beatles cover version. According to Diana Reid Haig, in her sleeve notes to the compilation The Scepter Records Story, Dixon was playing golf with Sir Joseph Lockwood, head of EMI records in 1963, when Brian Epstein approached and “excitedly told Dixon that the Beatles had recorded several songs which Dixon had produced or written”. An acclaimed producer and writer, he would not have been surprised by this, nor particularly flattered. As Haig points out: “Dixon wasn’t familiar with the Beatles at that time.”


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Derek B: 1965-2009


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He led the way for British rap artists in the 1980s

Derek B, who has died of a heart attack aged 44, was a pioneering rapper, DJ and producer who paved the way for the current slew of successful British rap and dance acts. Although his time at the top was short-lived, it was full of noteworthy events, including performing live to almost a billion people worldwide at the 1988 Nelson Mandela birthday concert at Wembley Stadium, in north London.

In the late 80s, you couldn’t move for Derek B hype. He was the first British rapper to achieve major chart success, with Good Groove and Bad Young Brother (both released in 1988), and the first to appear on Top of the Pops and in Smash Hits magazine. This was no mean feat at a time when rap was still being dismissed as a passing fad.

Back then, black British entertainers received scant support. So the fact that Derek B was signed to a major record company (Phonogram), prised a huge marketing budget out of it, and established his own production imprint (Tuff Audio), was groundbreaking.

Despite being a lifelong West Ham fan, he collaborated with the footballer Craig Johnston to create Liverpool FC’s 1988 FA Cup song Anfield Rap, which reached No 3 in the charts. In the same year, he was the subject of a World in Action television documentary, No Porsche for Derek B, in which he talked about the difficulties of being a conspicuously successful black man. He related how he had been forced to sell his beloved Porsche because the police repeatedly stopped and searched him, assuming that he had stolen it.

He was born Derek Boland in Hammersmith, west London, and was brought up in Woodford, in the north-east of the city, the son of a Trinidadian nurse, Jenny Boland. He was devoted to his mother, proudly mentioning her in his single Bad Young Brother.

Aged 15, he started his own mobile DJ business. He graduated to residencies at London clubs such as the Wag, on Soho’s Wardour Street, with its notoriously selective door policy (he later immortalised the Wag’s doorman in his lyric, “Winston at the Wag didn’t give me any agg”). Tall and handsome, Derek spearheaded a movement in which Soho came to be regarded as a mecca for dance music and “beautiful people”. He joined the pirate radio station Kiss FM and later launched his own station, WBLS, also working in A&R for Simon Harris’s hip-hop label Music of Life.

He recorded his first rap track, Rock the Beat, in 1986, and it was released as a single the following year. Within months of his first hits, peers such as Harris, Soul II Soul, S’Express, MARRS and Coldcut were also breaking into the charts. Every notable name in British dance music seemed to have passed through Derek B’s nights at the Wag club. Interviewed in the Observer in February 1988, at the time of the release of Good Groove, his third single, he said: “I only expected to make a few club records. I’m totally over the moon, and taking it very seriously.”

The US rap mogul Russell Simmons signed Derek to Rush Artist Management, alongside Run DMC, LL Cool J and Public Enemy, but only one Derek B album was released, Bullet from a Gun (1988). After his own chart success faded, Derek B took on a number of production and remix jobs, including work for Curiosity Killed the Cat, Was Not Was, Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock, Big Daddy Kane and the Cookie Crew.

He is survived by his mother.

• Derek Boland (Derek B), rapper, DJ and producer, born 15 January 1965; died 15 November 2009


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