Resurrecting Forbidden Music

you might be wondering

what star wars and john williams have to

do with the nazi suppression

of artists and musicians i’m james

conlon

i’ve been conducting symphonic concerts

and operas for the last 50 years

and for 30 of those years i have been on

a mission

to revive and restore the music of

composers

who were suppressed during the nazi

regime many of us are interested in

roots

and we all have ancestry well music too

has a genealogy

sometimes it’s harder to track but it

too

has a family tree when george lucas

asked steven spielberg

to find a composer for star wars he said

he wanted a classical sound

a corn gold sound so john williams was

their man

and eric wolfgang cordgold was the model

kron gold was born in 1897. he can be

considered

one of the fathers of the hollywood film

scores and in that way

a parent of john williams

[Music]

corngold emigrated to hollywood before

the nazi regime

but then was forced to stay there until

after the war was over

his music in hollywood had become famous

but not

the music that he wrote before he came

to the united states

corngold was declared a genius by gustav

mahler

and about every other important composer

musician and music critic

of the time at 11 years old he played

for mahler

and muller said he wanted him to study

composition

with the best composition teacher in

vienna

a man named alexander ziminski

[Music]

ziemlinski introduced corngold to the

art of orchestration

so in a way that makes him a grandfather

of the hollywood film schools

many years ago after a performance at

the cologne opera

i went to my favorite italian restaurant

afterwards i drove home

and while in the car i turned on the

radio and little did i realize

my life was about to change i heard an

exquisite piece of music

i was stunned and i said to myself

who wrote this i must know who wrote

this and what is this piece of music

the piece was disagree the mermaid

based on hans christian anderson and the

composer was the same

alexander simlinsky

those questions led me on a journey

and later on a mission i asked myself

how can i a classical musician since the

time i’m a child

have never heard this music and the

answer actually is quite simple

the nazis did not want me to

nor did they want you nor did they want

anyone

to hear this music semlinsky was the

first to catch my attention

but later i became familiar with many

others considered

degenerate by the nazi regime

as the nazis rose to power they burned

books

and persecuted artists and when it came

to music

it was mostly the jewish composers and

musicians who were their targets

in my estimation there may be as many as

20 000

pieces of music that have been neglected

some of which would be considered in the

first rank of music

had it not been suppressed by the nazis

evan schulhoff is an example of one of

the composers i have championed a very

interesting man

multi-faceted avant-garde rebellious

part-time jazz musician part-time

marxist

he was particularly interested in jazz

and he believed it was the music of the

future

he wanted to integrate jazz music into

the classical tradition

he continued on through a varied life

but it all came to an end that great

energy and vitality

in a concentration camp in bavaria in

1942

zimmermannski’s pupil card gold wrote

his most famous opera

toto start the dead city he was only 23

and this was long before his hollywood

fame here we’ll hear an excerpt

sung by the renowned renee fleming

[Music]

salvaging music is no less important

than recovering the looted art treasures

that were found in a cave at the end of

world war

ii a group of british and american art

historians and curators

called the monuments men did just that

now i’m restoring unknown

pieces why unknown they were stolen from

us in a different sense

because the nazis refused them

a first hearing this music should be

revived and restored

for three reasons moral reasons

historical reasons and artistic reasons

the first moral reason it would go a

long way to correcting

the great injustice that these composers

experienced

their careers were cut short their

voices were stifled

some lost their lives we can’t give them

back

their lives we cannot change the past

what we could do the thing that would

mean more to them than anything else

and that is let the world hear their

music

the second is historical the chronicle

of 20th century classical music

has been written with great omissions

it’s the job of the historian when

finding

new information to reintegrate it into

our greater understanding of the subject

that way older versions that are

untrue half true or simply incomplete

can be revised so that we have a proper

understanding

this is what needs to be done through

the restoration

of this music the third reason is the

artistic reason

and the most important none of this

would matter

if it weren’t for the artistic quality

of this music

we can’t judge that artistic quality if

we’ve never heard it

literature must be read art must be seen

music must be heard

75 years after the end of the world war

and the nazi regime

the effects of their suppression

are still palpable they have in their

way

enjoyed a posthumous victory i am

opposing that victory and trying to

restore the music

that they banned all you

have to do is simply listen to it

and share it with other people

in the 30 years since i began this

mission

performances and recordings of these

works have multiplied

that night in cologne destiny made me

stumble

like the monument’s men into a

metaphoric cave

of suppressed music

[Music]

it didn’t take long to understand with

what devastating efficiency

authoritarianism can crush art and hide

truth

but it cannot destroy either and

together

we can work to restore all of that

the musical examples that i’ve played

for you are only an

infinitesimal a fraction of a fraction

of the so-called lost music that is out

there

i hope this presentation will make you

curious

for the beauty of the music that still

remains in our world

to be discovered thank you for joining

me