Jose Iturbi's Human Design Chart

Design
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    Design
      Personality

        Chart Properties

          Your Type is like a blueprint for how you best interact with the world. It's determined by the way energy flows through your defined centers and channels in your chart.
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          Jose Iturbi's Biography

          Temperamental, volatile Spanish-born pianist and conductor whose life and career were varied and often controversial.
          He was a child prodigy, giving piano recitals by the age of seven and supplementing the family income by playing for up to 14 hours daily at a silent cinema theatre. He was an honours graduate from the Conservatoire de Musique in Paris, and, by the age of 24, occupied Franz Liszt’s former post as leader of the piano department of the Geneva Conservatory. In 1928, he made his London debut as a concert pianist and the following year played Beethoven’s G Major Concerto to great critical and audience acclaim under Leopold Stokowski’s direction in Philadelphia. Not content with his triumphs, he branched out into conducting from 1933, eventually fronting the Rochester Philharmonic and conducting his first opera in 1959. Iturbi enjoyed an almost pop star-like status (even converting 1950’s bobby-soxers to classical music) and became the only classical artist of his day to win two gold records. In 1946, RCA-Victor paid Iturbi the record sum of $118,029 for six months royalties, primarily for his recording of Chopin’s Polonaise in A-Flat (the record went on to sell 2 million copies by 1974).
          Iturbi’s private life was as hectic as his work schedule. He had married in 1916, but his wife died tragically just 12 years later.
          A speed freak, Iturbi used to ride his motor bike and assorted sports cars with reckless abandon. When they weren’t fast enough, he would get aboard his own aircraft, ‘El Turia’. By 1946 he had logged 1500 flying hours, frequently travelling across entire continents between recitals. He had several close shaves which earned him the sobriquet ‘the flying fool’. Iturbi’s fiery temper manifested itself when he walked off the stage during a performance in Cleveland, because audience members were too audible in their consumption of hot dogs and soda pop. Earlier, while conducting the Philadelphia Orchestra, he had thrown a chair across the stage in disgust at the disturbance caused by the late arrival of the mayor and his entourage. This earned him yet another nickname, ‘Turbulent Iturbi’. There were many other such incidents. He refused to appear with Benny Goodman on the same radio show, ostensibly because he disagreed with the idea of mixing jazz and classical music. Later, he also brashly refused to perform with Rosemary Clooney on television.
          Ironically, Iturbi’s screen career was spent playing not only classical but also popular music, from boogie-woogie to honky tonk.
          From the 1950’s until just prior to his death in 1980, Iturbi continued to draw large audiences worldwide. He regularly went on tour (his last from 1976 to 1977), travelling up to 50,000 miles a year between continents. He conducted orchestras from Calgary to Albuquerque and recorded through his own company, Turia Records. In 1975, he gave a famous tour-de-force performance as both conductor and solo pianist at the Lincoln Centre in New York.
          He died 28 June 1980.

          Link to Wikipedia biography

          Jose Iturbi's Chart
          Your Type is like a blueprint for how you best interact with the world. It's determined by the way energy flows through your defined centers and channels in your chart.