Lorin Maazel, who turns 82 this month, led the orchestra entirely from memory in both Mozart's Symphony No. 40 and his own arrangement of Wagner called the "Ring Without Words." No score meant no music stand — and so he had an even more immediate connection to the orchestra.
Melanie Burford for NPR
According to the Vienna Philharmonic's own description, their string section "is more like a workshop in the Middle Ages, where newlyarrived musicians are initiated into and absorb the secrets of the orchestra's special musical style."
Melanie Burford for NPR
The evening's second half was dedicated to Maazel's own arrangement of Wagner's 17-hour "Ring" cycle — down to a 70-minute suite for orchestra, with no singing.
Melanie Burford for NPR
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Maazel thanks the Vienna musicians.
Melanie Burford for NPR
The musicians acknowledge the audience's warm reception.
Melanie Burford for NPR
Lorin Maazel leads the revered orchestra in Mozart's Symphony No. 40 and his own 'Ring Without Words' — Wagner's 'Ring' whittled down to 70 singer-free minutes.
Editor's note on Oct. 29, 2015: The writing that initially appeared on this page has been removed because some unattributed words or phrases in it matched those in previously published sources. NPR cannot allow such work to stand. But a news organization should not hide its mistakes. We have moved the material that was on this page to another location, highlighted the words and phrases that were at issue and added links to show where the material was originally published. NPR's policy on plagiarism is clear: It is unacceptable.
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