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・ Leo Ditrichstein
・ Leo Dixon
・ Leo Dobrigh
・ Leo Doerfler
・ Leo Binz
・ Leo Bird
・ Leo Birinski
・ Leo Blair
・ Leo Blair (barrister)
・ Leo Blanchard
・ Leo Blech
・ Leo Boccardi
・ Leo Bogart
・ Leo Bohan
・ Leo Boivin
Leo Borchard
・ Leo Bosschart
・ Leo Bourgeault
・ Leo Boyle
・ Leo Brady
・ Leo Branton Jr.
・ Leo Braudy
・ Leo Brecht
・ Leo Breiman
・ Leo Breithaupt
・ Leo Brent Bozell
・ Leo Brereton
・ Leo Bretholz
・ Leo Brewer
・ Leo Brewster


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Leo Borchard : ウィキペディア英語版
Leo Borchard

Lew Ljewitsch "Leo" Borchard (March 31, 1899 – August 23, 1945) was a German-Russian conductor and briefly musical director of the Berlin Philharmonic.
==Biography==
Borchard was born in Moscow to German parents, and grew up in Saint Petersburg where he received a solid musical education, as well being a regular visitor to the Stanislavsky Theatre. In 1920, after the Russian Revolution, he emigrated to Germany. Otto Klemperer engaged him as his assistant at the Kroll Opera in Berlin (Klemperer, lacking confidence in his own abilities, expected Borchard to critique his conducting technique).〔
〕 He conducted the Berlin Philharmonic for the first time in January 1933. In 1935, he was banned by the Nazi regime as politically unreliable. He continued teaching at his apartment and received his friends, including Boris Blacher and Gottfried von Einem.〔Friedrich, Ruth-Andreas. ''Der Schattenmann – Tagebuch Aufzeichnungen 1938-1945.'' Surhrkamp Verlag, 1947; as quoted in notes by Myriam Scherchen and René Trémine for CD Tahra 520.〕
During World War II he remained in Berlin as a Resistance activist under the name Andrik Krassnow, during which time his duties included contact with Ludwig Lichtwitz, a specialist in false identity papers.
On 26 May 1945, two and a half weeks after Germany's unconditional surrender, he conducted the Berlin Philharmonic at the Titania Palast cinema, in a concert featuring the Overture to Mendelssohn's ''A Midsummer Night's Dream'', Mozart's Violin Concerto in A major and Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 4, to great public acclaim.〔Patmore D. Review of Tahra CD 520. ''Classic Record Collector'', August 2004.〕 One week later he was appointed musical director of the orchestra by the Soviet official Nikolai Berzarin, replacing Wilhelm Furtwängler, who was in exile in Switzerland. His anti-Nazi credentials and command of the Russian language enabled him to enjoy a close relationship with the occupiers.〔
〕 He gave 22 concerts in total as chief conductor of the BPO.
Borchard was killed while being driven home after a concert on 23 August 1945. His British driver misinterpreted an American sentry's hand signal to stop and the sentry shot him dead.〔
〕 The British driver and Borchard's partner Ruth Andreas-Friedrich survived. As a result of this incident, it was decided to mark military checkpoints more prominently so that hand signals were not required.〔
On 5 and 6 September 1995 Claudio Abbado and the Berlin Philharmonic marked the anniversary of Borchard's death with performances of Mahler's 6th Symphony.〔

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