
BOSTON, March 3 (UPI) -- Conductor James Levine says a bad back has forced him to scrap the rest of his planned appearances with the Boston Symphony Orchestra this season.
The Boston Globe said Wednesday the orchestra is working to book conductors for Levine's last weeks of scheduled performances -- including seven concerts at Symphony Hall, three at Carnegie Hall in New York, and single performances at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center and the Kennedy Center in Washington.
The BSO told the Globe the 67-year-old music director was not available for comment regarding the withdrawals.
"These four weeks he's now taking off to get his health in order,'' Ronald Wilford, Levine's manager, told The New York Times Tuesday.
Levine missed more than half of the Boston Symphony's 2009-2010 season due to health issues, the Globe noted.
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