Reno
News & Review
November 15, 2001
Sounds of Silence
A Concert at UNR Honors Music that was Banned in Nazi Germany
By
Kelley Lang
The
year was 1933. In Germany, the fiery Nazi leader
Adolf Hitler had just assumed nearly dictatorial powers. And
the great Bruno Walter, then the conductor of the Gewandhaus
Concerts in Leipzig, had just returned to his native country
after a hugely successful tour in the United States.
Walter
was scheduled to make an appearance at a concert in Leipzig
and to conduct a concert at Berlin's Philharmonic Hall. He
was informed, however, that "certain difficulties"
would occur if he did not cancel his appearances. The Nazis
threatened to disrupt both events, even through violent means.
Gustav Mahler's music was banned in Nazi Germany.
His niece, violinist Alma Maria Rosé, died in the
Auschwitz concentration camp.
Silenced Voices begins 7:30 p.m. Nov. 15 in Nightingale Concert
Hall, inside the Church Fine Arts Complex at the University
of Nevada, Reno. Tickets are $13 for general admission and
$8 for students, seniors and children; tickets will be available
at the door. Call 784-6847.
Their
reason? Walter was Jewish.
The
silencing of Bruno Walter signaled the beginning of the Nazi
campaign to wipe Jewish musicians and composers and their
music from the face of the Earth.
Between
1933, when the Nazi party came into power, and 1939, more
than 1,500 musicians, composers and various music professionals
who were of Jewish faith or heritage were systematically eliminated
from all forms of cultural and public life in Germany. Jewish
musicians and conductors were expunged from orchestras and
symphonies. Music that had been written by composers of Jewish
faith or with any trace of Jewish background could not be
performed. Silenced were such great composers as Felix Mendelssohn,
Jacques Offenbach and Gustav Mahler, who were of Jewish heritage.
The
Nazis believed they were building a Third Reich that would
last 1,000 years and purify German culture by eliminating
all "inferior" influences, including music written
or performed by Jews. Their perverse dream died in the ashes
of World War II, of course, while the music they worked so
hard to destroy lives on, stronger than ever.
Tonight,
Nov. 15, the University of Nevada, Reno, Music Department
and the Center for Holocaust, Genocide and Peace Studies will
celebrate some of the music that the Nazis banned in a concert
titled Silenced Voices. It is the first concert in what Viktoria
Hertling, founder and director of the center, hopes will be
a continuing series of programs dealing with the banned music,
art and literature of the Nazi regime.
This
program will focus on musicians and composers, because they
were among the first targets of the Nazis' campaign to "cleanse
the German body," Hertling says.
"Music
moves very, very deep into the soul, into the psyche. It captures
you," Hertling says. "The Nazis really wanted to
cleanse the German cultural arena from influence that they
considered dangerous, subversive--that they considered non-German."
Hertling
says the date of the concert, Nov. 15, is important, because
it marks the 65th anniversary of the Nazis' destruction of
a statue of Felix Mendelssohn in Leipzig, Germany. This act
declared to the world that his music--and all music by composers
of Jewish faith or background--would not be welcomed in the
Third Reich.
Although
musicians and composers such as Walter, Arnold Schönberg
and Kurt Weill were able to escape the Holocaust, many others
could not get out of Nazi-controlled countries and were put
in concentration camps. One of most notable victims of the
camps was violinist Alma Maria Rosé, niece of the great
composer Mahler. She died in the Auschwitz camp. Another prominent
victim was Viktor Ullmann, a student of Schönberg's.
Ullmann wrote an opera, The Emperor of Atlantis, while in
the Theresienstadt concentration camp. He also died in Auschwitz.
What
was Germany's loss, however, became America's gain, as prominent
musicians and conductors helped enrich our cultural landscape,
Hertling says. Walter conducted the New York Philharmonic;
Schönberg taught at the University of California at Los
Angeles; and Weill wrote music for Broadway.
Hertling
says she got the idea for the program about two years ago
after talking with a rabbi at Temple Emanu-El. She wanted
to present the music of Jewish composers, cantoral music,
klezmer music and other forms of music that had been banned
by the Nazis. But the project was put on hold after the rabbi
accepted a job in another city.
Hertling
then approached Phillip Ruder, a violinist for the Argenta
Quartet and associate professor of music at UNR. She asked
him if he and the other members of the quartet would develop
a program of music on Jewish themes and music banned by the
Nazis.
The
quartet decided on compositions by Mendelssohn, Max Bruch
and Ernest Bloch, as well as two pieces by a modern-day composer:
Max Raimi, a member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. His
songs, "Story of the Pennies" and "At My Wedding,"
will open the program. Raimi is also scheduled to attend the
concert.
Although
some people may think that a program focusing on a bleak era
in history will feature music that reflects that mood, Ruder
says the pieces are not at all depressing.
"The
music we're doing is by no means gloomy stuff. A lot of it
is very upbeat and positive," he says, describing the
Mendelssohn and Bloch pieces as particularly uplifting.
Hertling
says the concert will be recorded and released on CD, which
can be purchased for a donation to the Center for HGPS. Proceeds
will fund future programs on art, music and literature that
were banned by the Nazis.
She
says she hopes audience members will leave the concert with
the knowledge of how close we came to losing this music, and
also value what we have so that something like this won't
happen again.
"The
cultural diversity that we have in the United States is something
really precious," Hertling says. "It is my hope
that through this musical program, awareness of the richness,
the diversity [and the] multicultural aspects of our lives
becomes solidified, and that we fully become aware of how
beautiful this multicultural tradition is that we sometimes
take for granted, and that we almost lost during those 12
years of fascism."
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