James Conlon
James Conlon (born March 18, 1950) is an American conductor specializing in symphonic, operatic, and choral music, with a career spanning over five decades marked by leadership of major orchestras and opera companies worldwide.[1][2] Conlon debuted professionally with the New York Philharmonic in 1974 and rapidly ascended to prominent positions, including music director of the Cincinnati May Festival from 1979 to 2016, principal conductor of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra from 1983 to 1991, and General Music Director of the City of Cologne from 1989 to 2003.[3] He served as principal conductor of the Paris Opera from 1995 to 2004, conducting a broad range of works, and later as music director of the Ravinia Festival from 2005 to 2015. Since 2006, he has been music director of the Los Angeles Opera, where he has led over 497 performances of 69 operas by 32 composers by the end of the 2024/25 season—more than any other conductor in the company's history—including the company's first complete Ring cycle.[3][4] Among his notable achievements, Conlon has earned four Grammy Awards for opera recordings, such as The Ghosts of Versailles and Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny, and received honors including the Legion d’Honneur in 2002 and the Zemlinsky Prize in 1999 for efforts to revive suppressed musical works. He founded the OREL Foundation and the Ziering-Conlon Initiative for Recovered Voices, dedicated to programming and recording compositions by European artists whose careers were destroyed by the Nazi regime, thereby addressing historical cultural erasures through direct archival and performance recovery. Conlon's tenure at Los Angeles Opera concludes in the 2025–2026 season, after which he will become conductor laureate.[3][4]Early Life and Education
Childhood and Family Background
James Conlon was born on March 18, 1950, in New York City to Joseph Conlon, an assistant to the New York City Commissioner of Labor during the Robert F. Wagner administration, and Angeline L. Conlon, a freelance writer and former teacher.[5][6] He grew up as the fourth of five children in a Catholic family with Irish, German, and Italian roots, raised on Cherry Street in the Douglaston neighborhood of Queens.[7][8] The Conlon household lacked formal musical training among its members but emphasized intellectual pursuits and compassion for the less fortunate, reflecting the broad-minded values of his parents.[9] Family members actively championed Conlon's emerging talents despite their own non-musical backgrounds.[10] This supportive environment in mid-20th-century New York fostered his early exposure to diverse cultural influences, though music initially played a peripheral role in his childhood awareness until around age 11.[7]Formal Training and Early Influences
Conlon's interest in music emerged at age 11, when he attended a performance of Verdi's La Traviata by the North Shore Opera in Queens, an experience that ignited his passion for opera.[7] [10] Despite his family's lack of musical background—his mother was a freelance writer and his father worked in New York City's labor department—they supported his pursuits, providing encouragement without formal involvement in music.[7] [10] By age 13 in 1963, Conlon experienced an epiphany that led him to pursue conducting, prompted by his deepening engagement with classical music and opera; he began piano lessons and joined a children's chorus in Queens shortly thereafter.[11] He entered Fiorello H. La Guardia High School of Music & Art at age 15, where the specialized environment marked a transformative shift from isolation to immersion in a thriving artistic community.[7] [11] Early influences included New York City's abundant resources, such as public school music appreciation classes, live concerts, and free access to materials at the New York Public Library, which facilitated self-directed exploration.[10] [11] Conlon enrolled at The Juilliard School in September 1968 specifically to study conducting, reflecting his precocious commitment to the field.[7] At age 18, he was accepted into the conducting program at the Aspen Music Festival and School, furthering his practical training.[11] Key early mentors included soprano Maria Callas, whose master classes at Juilliard exposed him to operatic interpretation and who later endorsed his debut there; he also drew guidance from figures like Dick Marzollo, assistant to Arturo Toscanini, and opera artists such as Italo Tajo, Carlo Bergonzi, Boris Christoff, Tito Gobbi, and Magda Olivero.[7] [11] These experiences shaped his comprehensive approach to opera, emphasizing its multifaceted elements over singular performance roles.[7]Professional Career
Debut and Initial Appointments
Conlon made his professional conducting debut with the New York Philharmonic in November 1974, at the age of 24, leading a week of concerts that began on November 6 in Avery Fisher Hall.[12] The engagement came at the invitation of then-music director Pierre Boulez and marked Conlon's emergence as a young American talent, following his studies at the Juilliard School.[3] This debut was followed by extensive guest conducting across major North American and European orchestras, solidifying his reputation in the classical music world.[13] In 1976, Conlon debuted at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, conducting Madama Butterfly, which initiated a long association with the company encompassing over 270 performances.[3] These early guest appearances, including opera and symphony engagements, preceded his first major appointment as music director of the Cincinnati May Festival in 1979.[14] The May Festival, the oldest continuous choral music festival in the United States, appointed Conlon to lead its biennial events, a role he held for 37 years until 2016—one of the longest tenures of any American classical music director.[13] Under his direction, the festival emphasized large-scale choral-orchestral works, drawing on the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra and May Festival Chorus for performances of repertory from Beethoven to contemporary composers.[14] This position represented Conlon's initial sustained leadership role, bridging his guest conducting phase with subsequent European appointments.[3]European Orchestras and Opera Houses
Conlon assumed his first major European post as Music Director of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra in 1983, a tenure lasting until 1991, during which he expanded the orchestra's repertoire and international profile through performances of both standard and contemporary works.[3][15] In 1989, he was appointed General Music Director of the City of Cologne, a role he held until 2003 that encompassed leadership of the Gürzenich Orchestra Cologne and the Cologne Opera, where he conducted over 500 performances and championed operas by composers such as Richard Strauss and Giuseppe Verdi while integrating lesser-known 20th-century pieces.[3][4] This dual responsibility marked a significant period of artistic direction in German musical institutions, emphasizing precise ensemble work and historical authenticity in interpretations.[16] From 1995 to 2004, Conlon served as Principal Conductor of the Paris Opera, conducting more than 270 performances across a broad spectrum of the operatic canon, including Wagner's Ring Cycle and French grand opera by composers like Hector Berlioz, while fostering collaborations with leading international soloists and stage directors.[3][17] His approach in Paris prioritized dramatic intensity and vocal clarity, contributing to the house's reputation for high-fidelity productions amid the challenges of its vast acoustic demands.[15] Throughout these tenures, Conlon guest-conducted at major European venues, including the Vienna State Opera, Royal Opera House Covent Garden, and La Scala, accumulating appearances that solidified his transcontinental stature without formal directorships there.[18] In 2016, he became the first American Principal Conductor of the RAI National Symphony Orchestra in Turin, Italy, a position he continues to hold as of 2025, focusing on Italian orchestral traditions and recordings of suppressed modernist scores.[4][17] These roles underscore his sustained engagement with European ensembles, balancing administrative leadership with interpretive depth rooted in score analysis.Transition to American Institutions
Following the conclusion of his tenure as General Music Director of the City of Cologne, encompassing the Gürzenich Orchestra and Cologne Opera, in 2003, and as Principal Conductor of the Paris Opera in 2004, Conlon redirected his professional emphasis toward leading roles in the United States.[3] This shift marked a return to American cultural institutions after more than two decades primarily based in Europe, where he had built an international reputation through extended appointments in Rotterdam, Cologne, and Paris.[19] Although Conlon had maintained ties to U.S. ensembles—such as his long-standing role as Music Director of the Cincinnati May Festival from 1979 to 2016, which involved collaborations with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra—these European commitments had dominated his schedule, limiting deeper integration into American orchestral and operatic leadership.[3] In 2005, Conlon assumed the position of Music Director at the Ravinia Festival, the summer residence of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, succeeding Christoph Eschenbach and serving until 2015.[3] This appointment allowed him to conduct over 100 performances annually, emphasizing a broad repertoire that included symphonic works, operas-in-concert, and educational initiatives, thereby re-establishing his presence in the American classical music ecosystem.[20] Concurrently, his guest conducting with major U.S. orchestras, such as the New York Philharmonic (where he debuted in 1974) and others, intensified, but the Ravinia role signified a formal leadership transition, bridging his European expertise with domestic audiences.[3] The pivotal move came in 2006 with his appointment as Music Director of the Los Angeles Opera, a position he has held through the 2025–2026 season, conducting over 500 performances and earning four Grammy Awards for recordings with the company.[3][4] This role, one of the longest tenures for an American-born conductor at a major U.S. opera house, reflected Conlon's strategic pivot amid evolving opportunities in the U.S., where he prioritized operatic programming and advocacy for overlooked composers.[2] Subsequent advisory positions, including Artistic Advisor for the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra from 2021 to 2023, further solidified this American orientation while allowing flexibility for international guest work.[3] These transitions underscored Conlon's adaptability, leveraging his transnational experience to influence U.S. institutions amid a landscape favoring versatile, repertoire-expansive leaders.[20]Tenure at Los Angeles Opera
James Conlon was appointed the second music director in Los Angeles Opera's history in 2006, serving as the Richard Seaver Music Director.[4] His tenure, spanning 20 seasons through the 2025-26 season, involved conducting over 500 performances of more than 60 works by 32 composers, including 69 distinct operas.[4] By the end of the 2024-25 season alone, he had led 497 performances with the company.[4] During his leadership, Conlon oversaw the company's first complete presentation of Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen in 2010, a milestone in Los Angeles opera history that featured new productions of Das Rheingold and Die Walküre in 2009, followed by Siegfried and Götterdämmerung.[21] He initiated the Recovered Voices series in 2007, making LA Opera the only major company to regularly program operas by 20th-century composers suppressed by the Nazi regime, such as Franz Schreker, Walter Braunfels, and Ernst Krenek, often in collaboration with the OREL Foundation.[22] This initiative included world and U.S. premieres, alongside educational lectures to contextualize the works' historical suppression.[4] Conlon's tenure emphasized premieres and rare revivals, including the West Coast premiere of Joseph Bologne's The Anonymous Lover and a city-wide Britten centenary celebration.[4] His inaugural season featured productions of Wagner's Tannhäuser, Verdi's Don Carlo and La traviata, and Kurt Weill's Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.[23] Recordings of LA Opera productions under his direction earned four Grammy Awards, notably Best Opera Recording for John Corigliano's The Ghosts of Versailles in 2017 and for Weill's Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.[4] [17] In March 2024, LA Opera announced Conlon would step down after the 2025-26 season, transitioning to the role of conductor laureate to mark his 20th anniversary and the company's 40th.[24] His final season includes Leonard Bernstein's West Side Story, Verdi's Falstaff, and Mozart's The Magic Flute.[25] Conlon's emphasis on musical precision and advocacy for overlooked repertoire elevated the company's artistic profile amid challenges like the 2019 Plácido Domingo allegations, though no direct criticisms targeted his conducting or programming.[26]Recent Roles and Transitions
In March 2024, Los Angeles Opera announced that Conlon would conclude his tenure as music director after the 2025–2026 season, marking the end of his 20-year leadership that began in 2006.[26][27] During this period, he conducted 497 performances by the close of the 2024–2025 season, encompassing 69 operas by 32 composers, more than any other conductor in the company's history.[4] Following the transition, Conlon will assume the role of conductor laureate with LA Opera, allowing continued involvement while reducing administrative duties; he has emphasized that this shift aligns with completing two decades at the helm and the company's 40th anniversary, without plans for full retirement.[4][16] Conlon's 2025–2026 season at LA Opera commenced on September 25, 2025, with his conducting of Leonard Bernstein's West Side Story, signaling the final productions under his music directorship.[28] This follows the conclusion of other recent advisory and conducting roles, including his appointment as artistic advisor to the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra from the 2021–2022 season through 2023, where he led three concert weeks annually and assisted in programming during the orchestra's leadership transition.[29][3] His principal conductor position with the RAI National Symphony Orchestra in Turin, Italy, which he held from 2016 to 2020 as the first American in that role, also ended around this timeframe, after which he focused on guest appearances with major ensembles worldwide.[4][30] These transitions reflect Conlon's pattern of selective engagements post-2020, prioritizing operatic commitments and advocacy projects over new long-term directorships, while maintaining a schedule of over 100 performances annually across symphonic and operatic venues.[16] He has conducted guest appearances with orchestras such as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in 2024, emphasizing repertoire from suppressed composers, consistent with his broader career arc.[16]Advocacy for Suppressed Composers
Origins of the Recovered Voices Initiative
James Conlon's commitment to reviving suppressed musical works predated the formal Recovered Voices Initiative, tracing back to the early 1990s during his directorship of the Gürzenich Orchestra Cologne, where a radio broadcast of Alexander Zemlinsky's music at age 40 sparked his interest in composers persecuted by the Nazis. This led to recordings of Zemlinsky's Die Seejungfrau, Sinfonietta, and Der Zwerg, as well as explorations of figures like Franz Schreker and Walter Braunfels, whose oeuvres were excised from repertoires due to political suppression rather than artistic deficiency.[2] Upon assuming the role of Music Director at Los Angeles Opera in 2006, with support from general director Plácido Domingo, Conlon elevated this focus into a structured program, coining the term "Recovered Voices" in collaboration with executive colleague John Nuckols, then a key strategic officer at the company. The initiative targeted composers—predominantly Jewish—who faced exile, internment, or death under the Third Reich, including those deemed producers of Entartete Musik (degenerate music) by Nazi authorities, aiming to reintegrate their contributions through performances and contextual education about the era's cultural devastation.[2][31] The project's inaugural event took place on March 7 and 10, 2007, at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, presenting excerpts from operas by Ernst Krenek (Jonny spielt auf), Viktor Ullmann (Der Kaiser von Atlantis), Erwin Schulhoff (Flammen), Schreker (Die Gezeichneten), Braunfels (Die Vögel), and Erich Wolfgang Korngold (Die tote Stadt), alongside a complete staging of Zemlinsky's one-act Eine florentinische Tragödie. Subsequent early productions included the American premiere of Ullmann's Der zerbrochne Krug paired with Zemlinsky's Der Zwerg, underscoring the initiative's emphasis on full operas by these silenced voices to highlight both musical merit and historical erasure. Supported initially by philanthropist Marilyn Ziering and her family foundation, the multi-year endeavor positioned Los Angeles Opera as a hub for scholarly and performative recovery of this repertoire.[32][33]Key Performances and Educational Efforts
Conlon has conducted numerous performances featuring works by composers suppressed under the Nazi regime as part of the Recovered Voices initiative, often highlighting figures like Erwin Schulhoff, whose music was banned due to his Jewish heritage and communist affiliations.[34] In November 2004, he led the Los Angeles Philharmonic in Schulhoff's Symphony No. 6, advocating for its rediscovery amid the composer's obscurity post-Holocaust.[35] Similarly, in April 2014, Conlon programmed the Scherzo from Schulhoff's Symphony No. 5 with the same orchestra, emphasizing the work's energetic fragments preserved despite wartime destruction.[36] Other notable concerts include a February 2021 program with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, featuring pieces by four composers who perished in Nazi concentration camps, such as Viktor Ullmann and Gideon Klein, to underscore their silenced legacies.[37] In March 2024, a recital at the Colburn School under the initiative presented music by Harold Arlen and Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, both exiled or marginalized, blending jazz influences with classical forms banned in Europe.[38] The initiative expanded to orchestral events, such as the March 7, 2025, performance by the Music Restored Ensemble at Zipper Hall, led by Conlon, which celebrated Czech composers like Dvořák and Bohuslav Martinů whose works faced suppression.[34] Educational efforts through the Ziering-Conlon Initiative, now Music Restored at the Colburn School, include free public courses taught by Conlon on the historical context and stylistic innovations of suppressed composers, fostering scholarly engagement beyond performances.[34] These programs feature multimedia series, such as the November 2021 "Schulhoff and More" episodes, which combine Conlon's conducting with archival footage and biographical analysis to educate on Nazi-era cultural purges.[39] Additionally, young artist competitions offer cash prizes and performance opportunities for interpreting these repertoires, aiming to integrate suppressed works into emerging musicians' careers and counter institutional neglect of such music.[34] In April 2023, collaborations with institutions like UC Davis involved student ensembles performing chamber works by exiled composers, blending live music with faculty-led discussions on censorship's long-term effects.[40] Recordings, including the Fall 2022 album Shapeshifter of Schulhoff's oeuvre with Colburn artists, further support these efforts by providing accessible study materials.[34]Reception, Criticisms, and Cultural Impact
Conlon's Recovered Voices initiative, launched in the early 2000s, has garnered consistent praise from critics for illuminating works by composers suppressed under the Nazi regime, including Jewish artists like Alexander Zemlinsky and Erich Korngold. Performances under his direction, such as the 2024 Los Angeles Opera revival pairing Zemlinsky's Der Zwerg with William Grant Still's Highway 1, USA, were lauded for their dramatic vitality and historical resonance, with Los Angeles Times critic Mark Swed noting the operas' ability to "shine anew" through meticulous restoration and execution.[41] Similarly, chamber concerts featuring rediscovered pieces by Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco and Walter Arlen in 2024 impressed reviewers for their structural ingenuity and emotional depth, contributing to a growing discography that spans four decades.[38] The project has encountered minimal substantive criticism, with discussions centering more on broader challenges in classical music programming than on Conlon's approach itself. Some observers have noted the inherent difficulties in staging rarely performed operas due to logistical demands, yet Conlon's insistence on complete presentations—such as the uncut premiere of certain suppressed works—has been defended as essential for authentic assessment.[42] No major controversies have emerged regarding the initiative's scholarly rigor or artistic merit, reflecting its alignment with empirical recovery of verifiable scores over interpretive speculation. Culturally, Recovered Voices has profoundly influenced awareness of Third Reich-era musical censorship, fostering educational programs, conferences, and institutions dedicated to exiled and suppressed composers. The OREL Foundation, inspired by Conlon, documents over a hundred affected artists and promotes their rediscovery through performances and resources.[43] By 2008, the initiative had raised nearly $5 million for opera stagings, expanding to collaborations like the Ziering-Conlon Center at the Colburn School, which supports global programming and scholarships.[44][34] Conlon's advocacy has prompted guest engagements with orchestras worldwide, integrating these repertoires into mainstream concerts and recordings, thereby countering postwar neglect and emphasizing music's role in documenting totalitarian suppression.[16][45]Repertoire, Recordings, and Interpretations
Signature Repertoires and Conducting Style
James Conlon has developed signature repertoires spanning symphonic, operatic, and choral works, with a pronounced focus on core Italian and German composers. He has conducted Verdi operas in over 500 performances, Mozart in more than 200, Puccini in approximately 200, and Wagner in nearly 200, including all ten of Wagner's major operas beginning in the 1990s.[2][11] At Los Angeles Opera, where he has led over 500 performances of more than 60 works by 32 composers, Conlon conducted the company's first complete Ring cycle and emphasized staples like La Traviata—his first opera exposure at age 11—alongside La Bohème and Boris Godunov.[4][2] Conlon's conducting style prioritizes clarity and balance, employing a taut baton technique that supports vocal lines while maintaining orchestral transparency.[46] Described as possessing dramatic intuition and genuine theatricality devoid of narcissism, his approach allows the music's inherent qualities to predominate.[47] He structures his career evenly—roughly 45% opera, 45% symphonic, and 10% choral—arguing that operatic demands, such as coordinating singers and stage action, sharpen symphonic precision, as exemplified by historical figures like Mahler and Toscanini.[2] In Italian opera, Conlon champions traditional bel canto techniques, viewing them as a comprehensive language encompassing phrasing, ornamentation, and stylistic authenticity, which he sees as eroded in contemporary practice.[11] His interpretations favor repertoire-driven choices over institutional prestige, seeking opportunities for works like the Mozart-Da Ponte operas (Don Giovanni, Così fan tutte, Le nozze di Figaro) and Italian verismo pieces to preserve their idiomatic performance.[11]Major Recordings and Discography Highlights
Conlon's recordings encompass a broad repertoire, from canonical symphonies and operas to works by composers suppressed during the Nazi era, released primarily on labels such as EMI Classics, Decca, Erato, Capriccio, Pentatone, and Bridge Records. His discography includes over 100 releases, with particular emphasis on Los Angeles Opera productions and his advocacy for overlooked 20th-century music, contributing to scholarly and public rediscovery of figures like Alexander Zemlinsky and Viktor Ullmann.[3][48] Recordings tied to his Recovered Voices initiative stand out for their rarity and impact. In the 1990s, Conlon produced nine albums of Zemlinsky's orchestral, lieder, and choral works for EMI Classics, including three of the composer's eight operas, which played a key role in elevating Zemlinsky's posthumous recognition.[49] Other highlights include Ullmann's Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2 (Capriccio, 2006), Schulhoff's Symphonies Nos. 2 and 5 (Capriccio, 2004), and a recent collection Schulhoff: Shapeshifter (Delos, 2022), all advancing performances of music banned under totalitarian regimes.[48] His Grammy-winning opera recordings represent commercial and critical peaks. The Los Angeles Opera production of Kurt Weill's Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny (Naxos, 2007) earned 2009 Grammys for Best Opera Recording and Best Classical Album. Similarly, John Corigliano's The Ghosts of Versailles (Pentatone, 2016) secured 2017 Grammys for Best Opera Recording and Best Engineered Album, Classical, marking the first Grammy for that opera. These four awards underscore Conlon's leadership in high-fidelity opera documentation.[3][13][50] Standard repertoire efforts include Mahler's Symphony No. 5 (EMI Classics, 2003) and Symphony No. 4 (EMI Classics, 1993) with the Rotterdam Philharmonic, as well as Puccini's Tosca (Decca, 2010) and Verdi's La Traviata (Decca, 2007) from Los Angeles Opera. These demonstrate Conlon's precision in interpreting Romantic and verismo works.[48]| Selected Major Recordings | Year | Label | Notable Aspects/Awards |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Ghosts of Versailles (Corigliano) | 2016 | Pentatone | Grammy Awards: Best Opera Recording, Best Engineered Album, Classical (2017)[3] |
| Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny (Weill) | 2007 | Naxos | Grammy Awards: Best Opera Recording, Best Classical Album (2009)[13] |
| Zemlinsky orchestral and operatic works (series) | 1990s | EMI Classics | Nine albums reviving suppressed repertoire[49] |
| Symphonies Nos. 1 & 2 (Ullmann) | 2006 | Capriccio | Part of Recovered Voices focus on Terezin composers[48] |
| Die Gezeichneten (Schreker) | 2013 | Bridge Records | Highlights atonal opera from Weimar era[48] |