The son of an old friend asked to read this series. I posted it here for easier access, and I hope you don’t mind reading, or reading it again. The pictures have been removed, and all the links have been checked. M
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Music
had always been an important part of German society from children’s songs to the
unique atonal music of the 1920’s. Under
Joseph Goebbels' Ministry of Propaganda, music also became a tool of the
government and a core part of Nazi German propaganda. At the web site “Music and the Holocaust”, we are reminded that, “…Germany had a
long tradition of musical success – Germans are disproportionately
represented among the great classical composers, including Mozart, Bach, Beethoven,
Haydn, Schubert, and Wagner – leading some to claim that music was ‘the most German
of all the arts’.”
Head
of Propaganda, Goebbels wrote, “Music affects the heart and emotions more than
the intellect. Where then could the heart of a nation beat stronger than
in the huge masses, in which the heart of a nation has found its true
home?” For Joseph Goebbels, the German
state was, “the premier musical nation on the earth”…and that music was
classical.
Following
a 1938 art exhibit of Third Reich Art, Goebbels held a exhibit featuring the
best of Third Reich music. Recently, a
show focused on Third Reich music was held at the Cité de la Musique in Paris. In 2004, “Le IIIe Reich
et la Musique,” ION Arts wrote about this exhibition saying that
they attempted to explain this music to the audience using, “engravings, stage
decoration, scores, concert posters, (and) films.” "Germany, country of music,"
proclaims the poster that greeted you at the door. Here, they announced cheerfully, “You see
there the German state eagle merged with a pipe organ.”
In
the Reich, music approved by Hitler and Goebbels was from the three master
composers that represented good German classical music: Ludwig van Beethoven,
Richard Wagner, and Anton Bruckner. All three of these composers lived prior to
the 20th century. Hitler’s favorite of
the three, Wagner, lived in Bayreuth until his death in 1883, and began the
annual Bayreuth Festival in August 1876 primarily as a means of stabilizing his
finances. J. Anthony
McAlister, Los Angeles Music
critic, writes that “Bayreuth and the Festival were eagerly appropriated by
Germany's… Nazi regime (with the blessing of Winifred Wagner) in one of several
attempts by the Nazi's to align themselves with German traditions and history.
(It)…was a rather odd blessing of sorts as it allowed the Festival far greater
artistic freedom than most other German cultural institutions were afforded
during the Nazi era.”
The
online site Music in the Holocaust
writes of music critic Herbert Gerigk’s politically powerful, comprehensive,
race-based guide to German music, “Lexikon der Juden in der Musik”,
(Lexicon of Jews in Music). By 1943, thousands of copies were in circulation,
and Gerigk was made “Leader of the Music Branch by order of the Führer for the
Supervision of the Entire Intellectual and Ideological Enlightenment of the
Nazi Party.” Gerigk “…reflected on the
positive impact his Lexikon had wrought on the German
cultural landscape. Remembering the pre-Nazi era, he warned his readership
not to forget the times when the German was almost at the point of becoming
homeless in his own Fatherland. Key positions were occupied mostly by
Jews. Besides that, freemasons and exponents of other political entities
outside the state were also influential in music. It is very instructive
to reflect upon the conditions of that time.”
Goebbels’s
Propaganda Division did encourage music for all levels of German citizens. Children’s folk tunes were written to not
only appeal to children but to bind the children closer to the Fatherland. Hitler youth developed a powerful music
program to reach the young in every corner of the Reich. Songs were structured to energize
workers. Members of the Hitler youth
were encouraged to question music itself through swing early in the Nazi
years. Chorale music was
enthusiastically embraced everywhere.
Most stirring of all were the marches that encouraged everyone to
support the Fatherland, the Fuhrer, and the war.
Every
organization had their own band, and even the concentration camps had their own
orchestras. Although Jazz was officially
banned, the model concentration camp Terezin had not only a classical orchestra
but a jazz band also. A jazz band
member, Eric Vogel, said: “We musicians did not think that our oppressors saw
us only as tools in their hands. We were obsessed with music and were
happy that we could play our beloved jazz. We contented ourselves with
this dream world that the Germans were producing for their propaganda.” (Music and the Holocaust
-Theresienstad.)
Jazz
and jazz related music could still be heard in the camps into 1943. At the beginning of the war years, the
Nazi’s imported Jazz and swing orchestra’s into the country to replace
draftees. This lasted until 1943. Holocaustmusic.ort.org tells us, “The defeat
at Stalingrad (31 January - 2 February 1943) and Goebbels’ proclamation of
'total war' (18 February 1943) signaled the end for most of the venues
used by swing bands, which in the end led to the downfall of jazz as well.”
Jewish
composers were forced either into exile or into the resistance once the Nazis
took power. Unable to join Goebbels new
“Reich Chamber of Music,” and finding their residuals drying up, many of the most
prominent musicians fled to America while others went to Britain.
(calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/weserems.htm.)
“They were in some senses the fortunate ones, “Music in the Third Reich” tells us. Indeed, Schoenberg talked of being “driven
into paradise,” such was his gratitude for the land that gave him a new
home.” Those who didn’t make it out in
time went to the camps.
On
“Musica Hebraica”, Simon Wynberg, the
noted director of Canada’s ARC Ensemble…writes about music under Hitler: “By the end of the war it was impossible to
claim that art-music was intrinsically improving or ennobling. Although it might have soothed a
mass-murderer’s savage breast, it had also steadied his gun. And if this
realization encouraged a more mechanistic, less spiritual appraisal of music’s
power, it also raised the possibility that music itself had betrayed society.”
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For more
information on Music during the Third Reich:
<A HREF=http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/banned.htm>Banned
Music</A>
<A HREF=http://anthonymcalister.blogspot.com/2010/06/inside-ring-part-three-bayreuth-tales.html>Bayreuth
Tales</A>
<A HREF=http://www.wagneroperas.com/indexwagnerbayreuthreich.html>Bayreuth
during the Third Reich</A>
<A HREF=http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/censorship_in_nazi_germany.htm>Censorship
in Nazi Germany</A>
<A HREF=http://orelfoundation.org/index.php/journal/journalArticle/defining_8220degenerate_music8221_in_nazi_germany/>Defining
“Degenerate Music” in Nazi Germany</A>
<A HREF=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst-Wessel-Lied>Horst
Wessel Song</A>
<A HREF=http://ionarts.blogspot.com/2004/10/music-in-nazi-germany.html>ION
Arts: Music in Nazi Germany</A>
<A HREF=http://holocaustmusic.ort.org/politics-and-propaganda/third-reich/gerigk-herbert/>Music
in the Holocaust: Herbert Gerigk</A>: (Leader of the Music Branch by
order of the Führer for the Supervision of the Entire Intellectual and
Ideological Enlightenment of the Nazi Party)
<A HREF=http://holocaustmusic.ort.org/politics-and-propaganda/third-reich/orff-carl/>Music
and the Holocaust: Carl Orff</A>
<A HREF=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Germany>Music
of Germany/20th Century</A>
<A HREF=http://fcit.usf.edu/holocaust/arts/musreich.htm>Nazi
approved music</A>
<A HREF=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_songs>Nazi
Songs</A>
<A HREF=http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/censorship_in_nazi_germany.htm>Nazi
Propaganda</A>
<A HREF=http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/ww2era.htm#Posters>Nazi
Propaganda 1933-1945</A>
<A HREF=http://promusicahebraica.org/2012/01/09/simon-wynberg-on-music-and-the-third-reich/>Pro-musica
Hebraica</A>
<A HREF=http://www.pzg.biz/cd230_landser.htm>PZG: Your
Third Reich HQ</A>
<A HREF=http://www.calvin.edu/academic/cas/gpa/weserems.htm>Reich
Chamber of Music</A>
<A HREF=http://www.thirdreichruins.com/>Third Reich in
Ruins</A>
<A HREF https://www.tracesofevil.com/2008/01/dachau.html</A>
Thomas Barnum: who encouraged me to see deeper into the
topic. Thank you.
Fascinating. Such history--sad in a way, that art was used to coerce/subliminally control people. Thanks for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteInteresting read, thanks for the links. I've read a few books about the Third Reich. My wife's grandparents and her father were from Berlin. Her father came to the US when he was 12.
ReplyDelete