Jerzy Semkow was one of the more successful conductors specializing in late 19th century Russian repertory. A onetime student of
Erich Kleiber,
Bruno Walter, and
Tulio Serafin,
Semkow brought much of the panache of that generation of early 20th century conductors to a repertory they never embraced, primarily Russian Romantic music.
Semkow's education began at the State High School in Krakow. In 1951, he began attending the Leningrad Conservatory, studying with
Boris Khaikin, and he later studied in the West with
Erich Kleiber,
Bruno Walter, and
Tulio Serafin. In 1954, he took a two-year appointment at
the Leningrad Philharmonic as the assistant to
Mravinsky, which was followed by two years as a conductor with
the Bolshoi Theater Orchestra. In 1959,
Semkow became the artistic director and principal conductor of the Warsaw National Opera, a post he held until 1962. From 1966 until 1976, he was principal conductor of the Danish Royal Opera. His American debut came in 1968 with
the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and he also appeared as a guest conductor with
the Chicago Symphony,
the Cleveland Orchestra, and
the New York Philharmonic. He also conducted
the London Philharmonic Orchestra and made his first appearance at Covent Garden conducting a performance of
Mozart's Don Giovanni. From 1976 until 1979, he held the post of music director of
the St. Louis Symphony. Then he became the music director of the Italian Radio Orchestra in Rome.
Semkow recorded for several different labels beginning in the early 1970s, and the list of works he conducted includes concertos by
Nielsen and
Chopin, and
Scriabin's Symphony No. 2. His biggest contribution to recorded music, however, may lie with his recordings of Borodin's
Prince Igor and
Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov, both done for EMI, which hold up extremely well as performances.