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Classical music's twentieth-century tragedy
Timesonline.co.uk ^ | April 30, 2008 | Ian Bostridge

Posted on 05/04/2008 6:35:19 PM PDT by forkinsocket

Alex Ross’s The Rest is Noise tells the story of what happened to Western classical music in the twentieth century. We all know that the invention of recorded sound around 1900 made possible an extraordinary dissemination of the riches of the classical repertoire – largely composed for the rich and powerful – to the mass of ordinary people. On the gramophone, the radio, television and, subliminally and hence more powerfully, through the movies, the classical sound in all its variants (even the supposedly rebarbative confections of the Second Viennese School) has insinuated itself into the culture at large. Never before have so many people listened to, or liked, so-called classical music. Yet this extraordinary triumph has culminated in a malaise, a feeling, widespread in the musical profession and elsewhere, that classical music is in crisis and that things have never been so bad. Classical music feels abandoned, left behind as history has moved on, sulking in its tent as the real cultural action happens somewhere else.

Ross’s book – which, in a two-pronged attack, puts the history back into music and music back into history – offers many answers to this paradox. In a book packed full of well-chosen and depicted vignettes and anecdotes, two stand out.

In 1904, Richard Strauss, the “anarch of art” as one American critic described him, visited the United States. He was received at the White House by President Theodore Roosevelt. He was invited onto the floor of the Senate. How comforting this is for us besieged elitists, who grasp at such contemporary straws as the opera-loving Gordon Brown succeeding the Fender Stratocaster-wielding Blair. Once upon a time, serious music was given its due. Music does of course still have a political platform, a bully pulpit even; but it is pop musicians now who are wooed by political leaders, and classical musicians, with a very few exceptions (Daniel Barenboim springs to mind), who inhabit the margins. Whether political leverage, or cultural influence, were really good for classical music – tempting as it is to want to see the best of art appreciated and deferred to – is another question.

Thirty-eight years after Strauss’s American apotheosis (and some years after his shameful but complex accommodation with the Nazi regime in Germany, masterfully unpicked by Ross), in the midst of the Great Patriotic War, the score of Dmitri Shostakovich’s Seventh Symphony, the “Leningrad”, was flown into that besieged city by Soviet military aircraft. Musicians were recalled from more straightforwardly martial duties on the front line to perform it. German commanders planning to disrupt the performance found themselves pre-empted by “Operation Squall”, a Soviet diversionary manoeuvre. The symphony was relayed over loudspeakers into no man’s land. As Ross puts it, “never in history had a musical composition entered the thick of battle in quite this way: the symphony became a tactical strike against German morale”.

If we were to ask why, at the opening of the twentieth century, and through the horrors of its first five decades, classical music retained such importance, the answer would have to be: Germany. Classical music, music which was more than entertainment, music which demanded reverent attention, and which even made metaphysical claims, was written into the very DNA of German culture. The German question, the political and diplomatic issue of how the German nation fitted into the world, dominated international affairs in the century between the 1848 revolutions and the Second World War. This was reflected in the philosophical and cultural preoccupations of the European elites, rooted as they were in German philosophical conceits and German political anxieties. Hegelianism, Marxism, nationalism, Wagnerism – love them or hate them, they all came from Germany and they framed the terms of debate in philosophy, political theory and music. If Schopenhauer put music at the centre of his philosophy as the most important art, one which uniquely traced the movements of the noumenal will, Wagner responded with music that fascinated and horrified artists in all disciplines. When it came to the great contest of the 1914–18 war, German propagandists like Thomas Mann characterized it as a conflict between the Kultur of Germans and the Zivilisation of their French-led opponents; between, in musical terms, the deep, metaphysical character of the German tradition, and the superficial joie de vivre of the French.

The price paid for classical music’s proximity to power was heavy, and the central chapters of Ross’s book lay bare the moral somersaults composers turned, the degradation into which they sank. The cultural theory which the totalitarian regimes of the twentieth century had inherited from the nineteenth gave artists a dangerous potency, the all too useful capacity to become, in Stalin’s words, “engineers of human souls”. Stalin’s amateur interest in classical music – he reputedly owned ninety-three opera recordings, writing critical remarks on his record sleeves – did nothing to protect composers like Prokofiev and Shostakovich from the cultural policy of a regime which saw no role for anything that smacked of autonomous art. Shostakovich’s output veered between the cryptic privacy of his chamber music, the crassness of his patriotic cantatas and songs, and the still-contested “irony” of the major public works. Ross’s analysis of the possibility of irony in music is at one and the same time sceptical and appreciative. “To talk about musical irony”, he writes, “we first have to agree what the music appears to be saying, and then we have to agree on what the music is really saying. This is invariably difficult to do.” His concluding advice is that one should “stay alert to multiple levels of meaning”, making Shostakovich’s symphonies, the Fifth or even the supposedly propagandistic Seventh, “rich experience[s]”. The consequence of Ross’s superbly nuanced historical accounts of both Prokofiev’s and Shostakovich’s music is to send one back to the music with new ears.

In any aspirant totalitarian regime, cultural producers like musicians have to be overseen, goaded, persecuted and petted. Hitler’s Germany was different only in that a musical vision of politics was uniquely central to the nightmare that was played out in the Reich between 1933 and 1945. It wasn’t that music was too important not to be politicized, more that politics was music in another form; “Politics aspired to the condition of music, not vice versa”, as Ross puts it. The threatening rhetoric of Hitler’s coded language about the Jews from the Kroll Opera speech of 1939 on the eve of war, and the speeches from the period of the exterminations themselves, are drenched in Wagner, and Ross acutely picks out the references to Parsifal in the Führer’s tirades. Hitler’s very rise to power, his acquisition of the respectability which eased his accession, were eased by the musical culture he shared with the Wagner clan, which supported him from the early 1920s on, and whose fads and tastes – vegetarianism, animal rights, dabbling in Eastern mysticism – he enthusiastically adopted.

For Ross, the Nazi infatuation with music is the crux of his story. If nineteenth-century German politics and philosophy and musical endeavour made classical music unprecedentedly momentous, its implication in the near-annihilation of European civilization by the mid-century robbed it of moral authority, a collapse with which classical music still lives, sixty years on. As Ross points out, trivially but accurately, “when any self-respecting Hollywood archcriminal sets out to enslave mankind, he listens to a little classical music to get in the mood”.

It is Ross’s dissection of the career of Richard Strauss which most tellingly encapsulates classical music’s twentieth-century tragedy. The book opens with the Graz premiere of Salomé in 1906 (it had had its very first performance earlier the previous year in Dresden), conducted by the composer, and attended by Puccini, Schoenberg, Berg, Zemlinsky and Johann Strauss’s widow, but also very probably by a little-known Austrian teenager called Adolf Hitler. By the mid-1930s, Strauss is enthusiastically hailing the new regime: “Thank God, finally a Reich Chancellor who is interested in art!”. By 1942, he is, at once brave and pathetic, demanding entrance at Theresienstadt – “I am the composer Richard Strauss” – to try and rescue his Jewish daughter-in-law’s grandmother. By 1945, he is writing the profoundly disillusioned Metamorphosen and trying to trade on his American fame – “I am the composer of Rosenkavalier and Salomé” – to gain preferential treatment from the occupying American forces. As with Shostakovich, the moral and historical complexities lead one back to the music.

Ross’s broad historical argument, and his moral tale about music and power, occupy the central chapters of the book and inform much of the rest of it. His engagement with Stravinsky, Berg, Schoenberg, Sibelius and Britten is infectious; his accounts of New Deal arts policy, US Army sponsorship of Darmstadt Modernism, or 1960s interactions between art and pop music, are revelatory. As for the music itself, Alex Ross’s brave avoidance of musical notation and brilliant use of metaphorical and descriptive language, means that The Rest is Noise grapples with the actual stuff of music as few other books have done. And if you want to hear the sounds themselves, you can always go to his website at www.therestisnoise.com, and listen.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: book; classical; classicalmusic; music; nazis
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To: devolve

Of possible interest!


41 posted on 05/04/2008 7:31:46 PM PDT by potlatch
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To: mylife
And it did in certain periods, like the early sixties Nashville recordings,like Elton John's early work, Paul Buckmaster arranging, the Rolling Stones Moonlight Mile plus a couple of others, and the Philadelphia Sound of the 1970s - Thom Bell's productions of the Spinners and Harol Melvin, with Philly Symphony players doing the sessions.
42 posted on 05/04/2008 7:32:20 PM PDT by Revolting cat! (You're gonna cry 96 Tears on my Pillow!)
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To: All
I heard a Tx High School Chorus singing this...today on the radio

Classical music is not dead

43 posted on 05/04/2008 7:34:16 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Revolting cat!

And it was delightful!


44 posted on 05/04/2008 7:34:56 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: forkinsocket

bump for reference -


45 posted on 05/04/2008 7:36:01 PM PDT by EverOnward
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To: All

Almost 5 million views on youtube and classical is dead?


46 posted on 05/04/2008 7:39:37 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Billthedrill

Richard Wagner ping.


47 posted on 05/04/2008 7:40:05 PM PDT by Publius (A = A)
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To: forkinsocket

I have a 1947 published book “Dictionary of Opera” that flatly states that Handel operas are so musically and theatrically archaic that they will never be seen again by modern audiences.

Wrongo. Performances of Handel operas have skyrocketed worldwide between about 1990 and the present.


48 posted on 05/04/2008 7:41:32 PM PDT by rod1 (uestion)
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To: Revolting cat!
I'm afraid that Cakewalk/synthetizer QWERTY keyboard virtuosos of "techno" and "house music" are no Mozarts of the day.

What makes you think only those who generate "techno" and "house music" use Cakewalk and synthesizers? You must not know how many different varieties of modern music exist, nor how it is made...

49 posted on 05/04/2008 7:41:41 PM PDT by chilepepper (The map is not the territory -- Alfred Korzybski)
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To: forkinsocket

he doesn’t consider himself classical, but this fellow has a classical sound: http://www.william-joseph.com


50 posted on 05/04/2008 7:43:19 PM PDT by HungarianGypsy
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To: mylife

Think so?

Then you need to check THIS out:

http://kotaku.com/gaming/bungie/corporeal-performs-halo-in-studio-222825.php

The kid with the electric violin is now in Julliard.

The music? Yeah, that’s “popular” music from the video game Halo. Modern classical music, adapted for “rock” instruments... which the classical stations won’t play. They won’t even play the original which was performed by a full orchestra.


51 posted on 05/04/2008 7:45:54 PM PDT by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: forkinsocket

Classical music is more alive than literature. The beauty of music is, that you do not have to be literate to appreciate it. The rotten public school system and its high dropout rate, with declining literacy, with cultural dumbing down, and with interactive media lowering attention span, have made well read young people go the way of the dodo bird.


52 posted on 05/04/2008 7:45:54 PM PDT by Biblebelter (Barry, your Uncle Jeremiah is speaking now, Barry can you hear him, Barry what you say now.)
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To: mylife
And it was delightful!

Absolutely. I can't think of any better use of violins in popular music than the Philadelphia Sound and Paul Buckmaster. Or come to think of it, the uncredited string arrangements on Roy Orbison's records.

I know a violin player in Europe who plays with an alt-country group there, a kind of bluegrassy sound, so we'd call her a "fiddle player". But having been classically trained, unlike most of our country and bluegrass fiddle players here, she does amazing things, that unfortunately are not fully appreciated there. She'd be a session player hit if she moved to Nashville.

53 posted on 05/04/2008 7:46:58 PM PDT by Revolting cat! (You're gonna cry 96 Tears on my Pillow!)
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To: Spktyr

Love it!


54 posted on 05/04/2008 7:48:03 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Revolting cat!
alt-country group there, a kind of bluegrassy sound,

"New Grass"?

55 posted on 05/04/2008 7:49:26 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Revolting cat!

Let me know when your classical music station plays the Truth And Reconciliation Suite composed by O’Donnell and Salvatori.

Until they do, they (and you) are still elitist snobs.

I could resurrect Beethoven at the prime of his talents, have him write something completely new and different, have the LA Philharmonic perform it and it’d get NO airplay on classical stations. And traditional classical enthusiasts would decry it as “not true classical music.”


56 posted on 05/04/2008 7:51:09 PM PDT by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: Spktyr
Check out Patrick Zimmerli. I helped commission his two trios for piano, violin and cello for the Seattle Chamber Music Society.
57 posted on 05/04/2008 7:52:41 PM PDT by Publius (A = A)
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To: potlatch

.

Optimum Digital:

CH-813 - Classic Rock (Neil Young on now)

CH-828 - Solid Gold Oldies (Frankie Valli on now)

CH-841 - Light Classical (Bach on now)

CH-840 - Classical Masterpieces (Stravinsky on now)


58 posted on 05/04/2008 7:53:09 PM PDT by devolve ( -- -The_Project_Islamic_Hope_website_banner no_longer_features_Barack_Hussein_Obama_Junior)
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To: mylife
Well, they're European, they don't know what to call it. I suggested some (American genre) names to them, but nothing has helped as far as gaining wider acceptance outside the country genre. They've done an U2 cover and a Doors cover as well, but mostly country, let's say punk-country. Latest lyric fragment which scandalized a little their older producer, and my buddy (translated by me):

A woman has her cycle
I have a motorcycle

59 posted on 05/04/2008 7:55:05 PM PDT by Revolting cat! (You're gonna cry 96 Tears on my Pillow!)
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To: devolve

Too bad you don’t have 4 ears to plug each of them into - multimusic tasking!


60 posted on 05/04/2008 7:55:21 PM PDT by potlatch
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