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Why conductors from Israel are leading the way

Lahav Shani wins Mahler contest — compatriot gets to finals

June 28, 2013 09:59
Lahav Shani (Photo: Peter Eberts)

ByJessica Duchen, Jessica Duchen

4 min read

Twenty-four-year-old Israeli, Lahav Shani, has won the prestigious Gustav Mahler Conducting Competition in Bamberg, Germany, which launched the career of Los Angeles Philharmonic music director Gustavo Dudamel, the victor in 2004. Feted by the competition’s patron Marina Mahler (granddaughter of the composer), Shani takes home 20,000 euros — and, more importantly, a greatly enhanced reputation in the music world.

Just making the final stages is an impressive achievement — only 12 were selected from an entry of more than 400. And, in a particularly strong year for Israel, another highly gifted conductor, Gad Kadosh, 28, reached the quarter-finals.

Candidates were assessed on rehearsals rather than performance. In the final, the remaining three contestants each had 40 minutes to rehearse the Bamberg Symphony Orchestra in the first movement of Mahler’s Symphony No 1. Shani’s competitors included Austrian David Danzmayr, nine years his senior and displaying all the hallmarks of a fully formed, high-calibre professional.

But Marina Mahler was adamant about what she was looking for in the winner. “It’s very simple — someone with the potential to become a great artist.” Had her grandfather been there, he too would have been looking for that same quality. In Shani, it seems, the jury believed they had found it.