Scherchen, Hermann
Related Category: Music: History, Composers, and Performers: Biographies
(hĕr´män shĕr´khĕn), 18911966, German conductor. Scherchen was largely self-taught. He played viola in the Berlin Philharmonic (190710) and made his debut there as a conductor in 1911. Scherchen conducted and taught throughout Europe and gained a reputation as an outstanding exponent of modern music. He was associated with Arnold Schoenberg in the first performances of
Pierrot Lunaire (1912). Scherchen made his American debut in 1964 with the Philadelphia Orchestra. He wrote
Handbook of Conducting (6th ed. 1949) and
The Nature of Music (tr. 1950).