During the first six years of my life, Hungary was one of the most important components of the Habsburg dynasty’s vast Austro-Hungarian Empire, but after World War I it became an independent national entity.

About Georg Solti

Sir Georg Solti was a Hungarian-British orchestral and operatic conductor, known for his appearances with opera companies in Munich, Frankfurt, and London, and as a long-serving music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Born in Budapest, he studied there with Bela Bartok, Leo Weiner, and Erno Dohnanyi.

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More quotes from Georg Solti

The stag tells him that he is the eldest of the sons – the father’s favorite – and he warns the father that if he tries to shoot any of the stags, their antlers will tear him to pieces.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

Friends are very important to me, and I have always had many of them. There are probably many reasons why this is so, but two seem to me more valid than any of the others I am a naturally friendly person, and I hate to be alone.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

The experience awakened ‘my tremendous musical ambition, which has never subsided to this day.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

My entire learning process is slow, because I have no visual memory.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

I wanted to get away from my past and everything connected with it.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

I can only hope that neither of my daughters was scarred by their upbringing.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

I would never have become music director of the Chicago Symphony, which would have been an extremely sad loss.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

The academy gave me a grounding in discipline and hard work that has sustained me throughout my life, and the lessons I learned there I now try to impress on young people.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

I was born and trained to communicate music, just as the sons were born and trained to hunt, and I was lucky to have grown up in Hungary, a country that lives and breathes music-that has a passionate belief in the power of music as a celebration of life.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

During the first six years of my life, Hungary was one of the most important components of the Habsburg dynasty’s vast Austro-Hungarian Empire, but after World War I it became an independent national entity.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

Although both sides of my family were religious, I was never forced to practice the Jewish faith. I did not really rebel against it, but then, as today, I disliked organized religion. I have a strange inhibition about praying with others.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

After about six months, I told my mother that I wanted the lessons to stop, and she was intelligent enough not to force me to continue. Besides, the lessons cost money, which was anything but abundant in our household.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)

But one day, when I was still young, I was parted from my family and left my native country. I hunted and searched for music, and destiny turned me into the object of my hunt. The circumstances of life became my ‘antlers’ and prevented me from returning home.

Georg Solti

Hungarian-British conductor (1912-1997)