While conductor
Michail Jurowski has led many acclaimed performances in a wide variety of concert and operatic repertory throughout his career, he has become best known for his interpretations of lesser known music, particular rarely encountered works by
Prokofiev and
Shostakovich. He has mined the byways of
Prokofiev's substantial output with recordings of the incidental scores to Egyptian Nights, Hamlet, Boris Godunov, Eugene Onegin, the film score Queen of Spades, and ballet Sur le Borysthene. And
Jurowski has ventured into equally obscure
Shostakovich territory: the oratorio Song of the Forests; the cantata The Sun Shines on Our Motherland; music from the films Alone, The Fall of Berlin, and Maxim; music from the unfinished opera The Gamblers; and much else.
Jurowski has also championed the symphonies and orchestral music of Swedish composer Wilhelm Peterson-Berger. He has led major orchestras in the former Soviet Union and following his 1990 immigration to Germany, has held prestigious posts there and has heavily freelanced in Scandinavia, both in opera and symphonic music.
Jurowski has made over 60 recordings, mostly for Melodiya, CPO, and Capriccio.
Michail Jurowski was born in Moscow on December 25, 1945. His father was composer
Vladimir Jurowski, a close friend of
Shostakovich, whom young
Michail met and performed with.
Michail studied music at the Moscow Conservatory under Lev Ginzburg and Alexei Kandinsky. From his student days
Jurowski served for 24 years as an assistant to Russian conductor
Gennady Rozhdestvensky at the
Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra.
During this period
Jurowski regularly conducted at the Moscow-based Music Theater of Stanislavski and Nemirovitch-Dantchenko. Even before
Jurowski officially resettled with his family in Berlin in 1990, he had become active on the music scene in Germany: from 1989-1996 he served as permanent conductor of the Semperoper Dresden. In 1992 he was appointed music director of the
Northwest German Philharmonic Orchestra, Herford, holding the post until 1998.
In the new century
Jurowski frequently conducted the Deutsche Oper Berlin and for two seasons (1999-2001) was chief conductor at the Leipzig Opera. In 2006
Jurowski was appointed chief conductor of the Cologne-based WDR Radio Symphony Orchestra. Most of his recordings in the west have been with this ensemble and the
Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra. Among
Jurowski's recordings is the 2005 CD of
Prokofiev's Eugene Onegin and Queen of Spades, with the
Berlin RSO.
Jurowski's son,
Vladimir, serves as principal conductor of the
London Philharmonic Orchestra.