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Hans Pfitzner

Hans Erich Pfitzner (5 May 1869 – 22 May 1949) was a German composer, conductor and polemicist who was a self-described anti-modernist. His best known work is the post-Romantic opera Palestrina (1917), loosely based on the life of the sixteenth-century composer Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and his Missa Papae Marcelli.

Hans Pfitzner, c. 1910

Life edit

Pfitzner was born in Moscow where his father played cello in a theater orchestra. The family returned to his father's native town Frankfurt in 1872, when Pfitzner was two years old, he always considered Frankfurt his home town. He received early instruction in violin from his father, and his earliest compositions were composed at age 11. In 1884 he wrote his first songs. From 1886 to 1890 he studied composition with Iwan Knorr and piano with James Kwast at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt. (He later married Kwast's daughter Mimi Kwast, a granddaughter of Ferdinand Hiller, after she had rejected the advances of Percy Grainger.) He taught piano and theory at the Koblenz Conservatory from 1892 to 1893. In 1894 he was appointed conductor at the Staatstheater Mainz where he worked for a few months. These were all low-paying jobs, and Pfitzner was working as Erster (First) Kapellmeister with the Berlin Theater des Westens when he was appointed to a modestly prestigious post of opera director and head of the conservatory in Straßburg (Strasbourg) in 1908, when Pfitzner was almost 40.

In Strasbourg, Pfitzner finally had some professional stability, and it was there he gained significant power to direct his own operas. He viewed control over the stage direction to be his particular domain, and this view was to cause him particular difficulty for the rest of his career. The central event of Pfitzner's life was the annexation of Imperial Alsace—and with it Strasbourg—by France in the aftermath of World War I. Pfitzner lost his livelihood and was left destitute at age 50. This hardened several difficult traits in Pfitzner's personality: an elitism believing he was entitled to sinecures for his contributions to German art and for the hard work of his youth, notorious social awkwardness and a lack of tact, a sincere belief that his music was under-recognized and under-appreciated with a tendency for his sympathizers to form cults around him, a patronizing style with his publishers, and a feeling that he had been personally slighted by Germany's enemies.[1] His bitterness and cultural pessimism deepened in the 1920s with the death of his wife in 1926 and with meningitis affecting his older son Paul, who was committed to institutionalized medical care.

In 1895, Richard Bruno Heydrich sang the title role in the premiere of people like Hans Pfitzner's first opera, Der arme Heinrich, based on the poem of the same name by Hartmann von Aue. More to the point, Heydrich "saved" the opera. Pfitzner's magnum opus was Palestrina, which had its premiere in Munich on 12 June 1917 under the baton of Jewish conductor Bruno Walter. On the day before he died in February 1962, Walter dictated his last letter, which ended "Despite all the dark experiences of today I am still confident that Palestrina will remain. The work has all the elements of immortality".[2]

 
Hans Pfitzner in 1905

Easily the most celebrated of Pfitzner's prose works is his pamphlet Futuristengefahr ("Danger of Futurists"), written in response to Ferruccio Busoni's Sketch for a New Aesthetic of Music. "Busoni," Pfitzner complained, "places all his hopes for Western music in the future and understands the present and past as a faltering beginning, as the preparation. But what if it were otherwise? What if we find ourselves presently at a high point, or even that we have already passed beyond it?"[citation needed] Pfitzner had a similar debate with the critic Paul Bekker.[citation needed]

Pfitzner dedicated his Violin Concerto in B minor, Op. 34 (1923) to the Australian violinist Alma Moodie. She premiered it in Nuremberg on 4 June 1924, with the composer conducting. Moodie became its leading exponent, and performed it over 50 times in Germany with conductors such as Pfitzner, Wilhelm Furtwängler, Hans Knappertsbusch, Hermann Scherchen, Karl Muck, Carl Schuricht, and Fritz Busch. At that time, the Pfitzner concerto was considered the most important addition to the violin concerto repertoire since the first concerto of Max Bruch (1866), although it is not played by most violinists these days.[3] On one occasion in 1927, conductor Peter Raabe programmed the concerto for public broadcast and performance in Aachen but did not budget for copying of the sheet music; as a result, the work was "withdrawn" at the last minute and replaced with the familiar Brahms concerto.[citation needed]

The Nazi era edit

Increasingly nationalistic in his middle and old age, Pfitzner was at first regarded sympathetically by important figures in Nazi Germany, in particular by Hans Frank, with whom he remained on good terms. But he soon fell out with chief Nazis, who were alienated by his long musical association with the Jewish conductor Bruno Walter. He incurred extra wrath from the Nazis by refusing to obey the regime's request to provide incidental music to Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream that could be used in place of the famous setting by Felix Mendelssohn, unacceptable to the Nazis because of his Jewish origin. Pfitzner maintained that Mendelssohn's original was far better than anything he himself could offer as a substitute.

As early as 1923, Pfitzner and Hitler met. It was while the former was a hospital patient: Pfitzner had undergone a gall bladder operation when Anton Drexler, who knew both men well, arranged a visit. Hitler did most of the talking, but Pfitzner dared to contradict him regarding the homosexual and antisemitic thinker Otto Weininger, causing Hitler to leave in a huff. Later on, Hitler told Nazi cultural architect Alfred Rosenberg that he wanted "nothing further to do with this Jewish rabbi." Pfitzner, unaware of this comment, believed Hitler to be sympathetic to him.

When the Nazis came to power in 1933, Rosenberg recruited Pfitzner, a notoriously bad speaker, to lecture for the Militant League for German Culture (Kampfbund für deutsche Kultur) that same year and Pfitzner accepted, hoping it would help him find an influential position. Hitler, however, saw to it that the composer was passed over in favor of party hacks for positions as opera director in Düsseldorf and Generalintendant of the Berlin Municipal Opera, despite hints from authorities that both positions were being held for him.

Very early in Hitler's rule, Pfitzner received an injunction from Hans Frank (by this time Justice Minister in Bavaria) and Wilhelm Frick (Interior Minister in Hitler's own cabinet) against traveling to the Salzburg Festival in 1933 to conduct his violin concerto. Pfitzner had managed to gain a stable conducting contract from the Munich opera in 1928, but ran into demeaning treatment from chief conductor Hans Knappertsbusch and from the opera house's intendant, a man named Franckenstein.

In 1934 Pfitzner was forced into retirement and lost his positions as opera conductor, stage director and academy professor. He was also given a minimal pension of a few hundred marks a month, which he contested until 1937 when Goebbels resolved the issue. For a Nazi party rally in 1934, Pfitzner had hopes of being allowed to conduct; but he was rejected for the role, and at the rally himself he learned for the first time that Hitler considered him to be half-Jewish. Nor was Hitler the first person to suppose this. Winifred Wagner, the director of the Bayreuth Festival and a confidante of Hitler, also believed it. Pfitzner was forced to prove that he had, in fact, totally Gentile ancestry. By 1939 he had grown thoroughly disenchanted with the Nazi regime, except for Frank, whom he continued to respect.

Pfitzner's views on "the Jewish Question" were both contradictory and illogical.[1] He viewed Jewishness as a cultural trait rather than a racial one. A 1930 statement that caused difficulty for him in the pension affair was that although Jewry might pose "dangers to German spiritual life and German Kultur," many Jews had done a lot for Germany and that antisemitism per se was to be condemned.[4] He was willing to make exceptions to a general policy of antisemitism. For example, he recommended the performance of Marschner's opera Der Templer und die Jüdin based on Scott's Ivanhoe, protected his Jewish pupil Felix Wolfes of Cologne, along with conductor Furtwängler aided the young conductor Hans Schwieger, who had a Jewish wife, and maintained his friendship with Bruno Walter and especially his childhood journalist friend Paul Cossman, a "self-loathing" non-practicing Jew who was incarcerated in 1933.

The attempts which Pfitzner made on behalf of Cossman might have caused Gestapo chief Reinhard Heydrich, incidentally the son of the heldentenor who premiered Pfitzner's first opera, to investigate him. Pfitzner's petitions probably contributed to Cossman's release in 1934, although he was eventually re-arrested in 1942 and died of dysentery in Theresienstadt. In 1938, Pfitzner joked that he was afraid to see a celebrated eye doctor in Munich because "his great-grandmother had once observed a quarter-Jew crossing the street." He worked with Jewish musicians throughout his career. In the early thirties he often accompanied famed contralto Ottilie Metzger-Lattermann, later murdered in Auschwitz, in recitals and had dedicated his four songs, Op. 19, to her as early as 1905. He had dedicated his songs, Op. 24, to Jewish critic and Jewish cultural society founder Arthur Eloesser in 1909. Still, Pfitzner maintained close contact with virulent antisemites like music critics Walter Abendroth and Victor Junk, and did not scruple to use antisemitic invective (common enough among people of his generation, and not just in Germany) to pursue certain aims.

 
Hans Pfitzner's grave in Vienna

Pfitzner's home having been destroyed in the war by Allied bombing, and his membership in the Munich Academy of Music having been revoked for his speaking out against Nazism, the composer in 1945 found himself homeless and mentally ill. But after the war he was denazified and re-pensioned, performance bans were lifted and he was granted residence in the old people's home in Salzburg. There, in 1949, he died. Furtwängler conducted a performance of his Symphony in C major at the Salzburg Festival with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in the summer of 1949, just after the composer's death. Following long neglect, Pfitzner's music began to reappear in opera houses, concert halls and recording studios during the 1990s, including a controversial performance of the Covent Garden production of Palestrina in Manhattan's Lincoln Center in 1997.

During the 1990s more and more musicologists, mainly German and British, began examining Pfitzner's life and work. Biographer Hans Peter Vogel wrote that Pfitzner was the only composer of the Nazi era who attempted to come to grips with National Socialism both intellectually and spiritually after 1945.[5] In 2001, Sabine Busch examined the ideological tug-of-war of the composer's involvement with the National Socialists, based in part on previously unavailable material. She concluded that, although the composer was not exclusively pro-Nazi nor purely the antisemitic chauvinist often associated with his image, he engaged with Nazi powers who he thought would promote his music and became embittered when the Nazis found the "elitist old master's often morose music" to be "little propaganda-worthy."[6] The most comprehensive English-language account of Pfitzner's relations with the Nazis is by Michael Kater.[1]

Musical style and reception edit

 
Hans Pfitzner featured on a 1994 German postage stamp

Pfitzner's music—including pieces in all the major genres except the symphonic poem—was respected by contemporaries such as Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss, although neither man cared much for Pfitzner's innately acerbic manner (and Alma Mahler repaid his adoration with contempt, despite her agreement with his intuitive musical idealism, a fact evident in her letters to the wife of Alban Berg). Although Pfitzner's music betrays Wagnerian influences, the composer was not attracted to Bayreuth, and was personally despised by Cosima Wagner, in part because Pfitzner sought notice and recognition from such "anti-Wagnerian" composers as Max Bruch and Johannes Brahms.

Pfitzner's works combine Romantic and Late Romantic elements with extended thematic development, atmospheric music drama, and the intimacy of chamber music. Columbia University musicologist Walter Frisch has described Pfitzner as a "regressive modernist." His is a highly personal offshoot of the Classical/Romantic tradition as well as the conservative musical aesthetic[7] and Pfitzner defended his style in his own writings.[8] Particularly notable are Pfitzner's numerous and delicate lieder, influenced by Hugo Wolf, yet with their own rather melancholy charm. Several of them were recorded during the 1930s by the distinguished baritone Gerhard Hüsch, with the composer at the piano. His first symphony—the Symphony in C-sharp minor—underwent a strange genesis: it was not conceived in orchestral terms at all, but was a reworking of a string quartet. The works betray a late pious inspiration and although they take on a late Romantic qualities, they show others associated with the brooding unwieldiness of a modern idiom.[9] For example, composer Arthur Honegger writes in 1955, after criticizing too much polyphony and overly long orchestral writing in a long essay devoted to Palestrina,

Musically, the work shows a superior design, which demands respect. The themes are clearly formed, which makes it easy to follow...[10]

Pfitzner's work was appreciated by contemporaries including Richard Strauss and Gustav Mahler, who explicitly described Pfitzner's first string quartet (in D-Major) of 1902/03 as a masterpiece.[11] Thomas Mann praised Palestrina in a short essay published in October 1917. He co-founded the Hans Pfitzner Association for German Music in 1918. Tensions with Mann, however, developed and the two severed relations by 1926.

From the mid-1920s, Pfitzner's music increasingly fell in the shadow of Richard Strauss. His opera, Das Herz of 1932, was unsuccessful. Pfitzner remained a peripheral figure in the musical life of Nazi Germany, and his music was performed less frequently than in the late days of the Weimar Republic.[12]

German critic Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt, writing in 1969, viewed Pfitzner's music with extreme ambivalence: initiated with sharp dissonances and hard linear counterpoint determined to be taken as (and criticized for being) modernist. This became a conservative rebellion against all modernist conformity.[13] Composer Wolfgang Rihm commented on the increasing popularity of Pfitzner's work in 1981:

Pfitzner is too progressive, not simply, the way Korngold can be taken to be; he is also too conservative, if that means to be influenced by someone like Schoenberg. All this has audible consequences. We cannot find the brokenness of today in his work at first glance, but neither the unbroken yesterday. We find both, that is, none, and all attempts at classification falter.[14]

Students of Hans Pfitzner edit

Recordings edit

His complete orchestral works have been recorded by the German conductor Werner Andreas Albert. His complete songs have been recorded on the CPO label. Also, his chamber music, including 4 string quartets, 2 piano trios, a violin sonata, a couple of odd piano works, a piano quintet and a string sextet, and a cello sonata have been recorded several times.

Works edit

Operas edit

Title Subtitle Opus Librettist Year Premiere Notes
Der arme Heinrich Music Drama in 3 acts WoO 15 James Grun (1868–1928) after Hartmann von Aue 1891–1893 1895, Mainz Richard Bruno Heydrich sang in the premiere
Die Rose vom Liebesgarten Romantic Opera with a Prelude, two acts, and postlude WoO 16 James Grun 1897–1900 1901, Elberfeld
Das Christ-Elflein (1st version) Christmas Tale Op. 20 Ilse von Stach 1906 1906, Munich
Das Christ-Elflein (2nd version) Spieloper in 2 acts Op. 20 Ilse von Stach and Pfitzner 1917 1917, Dresden Further unpublished revision in 1944
Palestrina Musical Legend in 3 acts WoO 17 Pfitzner 1909–1915 1917, Munich The composer's most famous work
Das Herz Drama for Music in 3 acts (4 scenes) Op. 39 Hans Mahner-Mons (1883–1956) 1930–31 1931, Berlin and Munich

Orchestral works edit

Work Opus Year Notes
Scherzo in C minor 1887
Cello Concerto in A minor Op. Post. 1888 for Esther Nyffenegger
Incidental music to Henrik Ibsen's play Das Fest auf Solhaug 1890
Herr Oluf Op. 12 1891 ballad for baritone and orchestra
Die Heinzelmännchen Op. 14 1902-03 ballad for bass and orchestra
Das Käthchen von Heilbronn Op. 17 1905 incidental music
Piano Concerto in E-flat major Op. 31 1922 for Walter Gieseking
Violin Concerto in B minor Op. 34 1923 for Alma Moodie
Lethe Op. 37 1926 for baritone und orchestra
Symphony in C-sharp minor Op. 36a 1932 Adapted from String Quartet, Op. 36
Cello Concerto in G major Op. 42 1935 for Gaspar Cassadó
Duo for Violin, Cello, and small Orchestra Op. 43 1937
Small Symphony in G major Op. 44 1939
Elegy and Roundelay Op. 45 1940
Symphony in C major Op. 46 1940 "An die Freunde"
Cello Concerto in A minor Op. 52 1944 for Ludwig Hoelscher
Cracow Greetings Op. 54 1944
Fantasie in A minor Op. 56 1947

Chamber works edit

Title Opus Year Notes
Piano Trio in B-flat major 1886 completed by Gerhard Frommel
String Quartet [No 1.] in D minor 1886
Sonata in F-sharp minor (Cello and piano) Op. 1 1890 „Das Lied soll schauern und beben…“
Piano Trio in F major Op. 8 1890–96
String Quartet [No. 2] in D major Op. 13 1902–03
Piano Quintet in C major Op. 23 1908
Sonata in E minor for Violin and Piano Op. 27 1918
String Quartet [No. 3] in C-sharp minor Op. 36 1925
String Quartet [No. 4] in C minor Op. 50 1942
Unorthographic Fugato 1943 for String Quartet
Sextet in G minor Op. 55 1945 for clarinet, violin, viola, cello, contrabass, and piano

Instrumental works edit

Title Opus Year Notes
5 Piano Pieces Op. 47 1941
6 Studien Op. 51 1942 for piano

Choral works edit

Title Opus Year Notes
Der Blumen Rache 1888 ballade for women's chorus, alto & orchestra (after Ferdinand Freiligrath)
Du altes Jahr. Rundgesang zum Neujahrsfest 1901 1900 for bass, mixed or male chorus and piano
Columbus Op. 16 1905 for mixed chorus
Gesang der Barden 1906 for male chorus and orchestra
Two German Songs Op. 25 1915-16 for baritone, male chorus ad. lib. and orchestra
Von Deutscher Seele Op. 28 1921 for four soloists, mixed choir, orchestra & organ
Das dunkle Reich Op. 38 1929 choral fantasy with soprano, baritone, orchestra & organ
Fons Salutifer Op. 48 1941 hymn for mixed choir, orchestra & organ
Two Male Choruses Op. 49 1941
Three Songs Op. 53 1944 for male chorus and chamber orchestra
Urworte. Orphisch Op. 57 1948-49 cantata for four soloists, mixed chorus, orchestra and organ, completed by Robert Rehan

Songs with piano accompaniment edit

Opus Title Year Text Notes
Six Early Songs 1884–87 Julius Sturm, Mary Graf-Bartholomew, Ludwig Uhland,
Oskar von Redwitz, Eduard Mörike, Robert Reinick
Very HIGH HIGH Voice
2 Seven Songs 1888–89 Richard von Volkmann, Hermann Lingg,
Aldof Böttger, Alexander Kaufmann, anon.
No. 2, 5, 6, 7 orchestrated
3 Three Songs 1888–89 Friedrich Rückert, Friedrich von Sallet, Emanuel Geibel Medium voice. No. 2, 3 orchestrated.
4 Four Songs 1888–89 Heinrich Heine medium voice. Also orchestrated
5 Three Songs 1888–89 Joseph von Eichendorff for Soprano. No. 1 Orchestrated
6 Six Songs 1888–89 Heine, Grun, Paul Nikolaus Cossmann for High Baritone
7 Five Songs 1888–1900 Wolfgang von Königswinter, Eichendorff, Paul Heyse, Grun No. 3 Orchestrated
9 Five Songs 1894–95 Eichendorff ):(
10 Three Songs 1889–1901 Detlev von Lilencron, Eichendorff for Medium Voice
11 Five Songs 1901 Friedrich Hebbel, Ludwig Jacobowski, Eichendorff,
Richard Dehmel, Carl Hermann Busse
No. 4, 5 Orchestrated
Untreu und Trost 1903 Anon for Medium voice. Also orchestrated.
15 Four Songs 1904 Busse, Eichendorff, von Stach No. 2, 3, 4 orchestrated
18 An den Mond 1906 Goethe Longer song (ca. 8 min.). Also orchestrated
19 Two Songs 1905 Busse
21 Two Songs 1907 Hebbel, Eichendorff for High Voice
22 Five Songs 1907 Eichendorff, Adelbert von Chamisso, Gottfried August Bürger ):(
24 Four Songs 1909 Walther von der Vogelweide,
Petrarch (trans. Karl August Förster), Friedrich Lienhard
No. 1 orchestrated
26 Five Songs 1916 Friedrich Hebbel, Eichendorff, Gottfried August Bürger, Goethe No 2, 4 orchestrated
29 Four Songs 1921 Hölderlin, Rückert, Goethe, Dehmel dedicated to his family No. 3 orchestrated
30 Four Songs 1922 Nikolaus Lenau, Mörike, Dehmel ):(
32 Four Songs 1923 Conrad Ferdinand Meyer for Baritone or Bass
33 Alte Weisen 1923 Gottfried Keller ):(
35 Six Liebeslieder 1924 Ricarda Huch Female voice
40 Six Songs 1931 Ludwig Jacobowski, Adolf Bartels, Ricarda Huch,
Martin Greif, Goethe, Eichendorff
No. 5, 6 orchestrated
41 Three Sonnets 1931 Petrarch (trans. Bürger), Eichendorff Male voice

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Michael Kater, Composers of the Nazi Era: Eight Portraits (NY: Oxford University Press, 2000), 144–182, esp. 146, 160, ISBN 978-0-19-509924-9
  2. ^ Liner notes to the Rafael Kubelik/Nicolai Gedda/Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau DG recording
  3. ^ Kay Dreyfus, Alma Moodie and the Landscape of Giftedness, 2002
  4. ^ Williamson, John (1992). The Music of Hans Pfitzner (Oxford Monographs on Music). Oxford University Press. pp. 318–319.
  5. ^ Vogel, Johann Peter (1989). Hans Pfitzner: Mit Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Reinbek: Rowohlt. p. 86.
  6. ^ Busch, Sabine (2001). Hans Pfitzner im Nationalsozialismus. Stuttgart: Metzler.
  7. ^ dtv-Atlas zur Musik: Tafeln und Text, Vol. 2: Historischer Teil: Vom Barock bis zur Gegenwart. Munich: Bärenreiter Verlag. 1985. p. 517.
  8. ^ Brockhaus, F. A. (1979). Riemann Musiklexikon, Vol. 2. Mainz: Schott. p. 297.
  9. ^ Schmidt, Felix; Metzmacher, Ingo (3 January 2008). "Warum ein Linker die Musik der Nazi-Zeit dirigert". Die Welt. Berlin. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  10. ^ Reclam, Philipp; Arthur Honegger (1980). Beruf und Handwerk des Komponisten – Illusionslose Gespräche, Kritiken, Aufsätze. Leipzig. p. 55.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  11. ^ Mahler-Werfel, Alma (1991). Mein Leben. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag. p. 69.
  12. ^ Hermand, Jost (2008). Glanz und Elend der deutschen Oper. Cologne/Weimar: Böhlau Verlag. p. 176.
  13. ^ Vogel, Johann Peter (1989). Hans Pfitzner – Mit Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Reinbek: Rowohlt. p. 143.
  14. ^ Rihm, Wolfgang; Mosch, Ulrich (1998). Ausgesprochen – Schriften und Gespräche, Volume 1. Mainz: Schott.

Further reading

  • Taylor-Jay, Claire (2004). The Artist Operas of Pfitzner, Krenek and Hindemith: Politics and the Ideology of the Artist. Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-0578-2.
  • Toller, Owen (1997). Pfitzner's Palestrina. Dunstable: Toccata Press. ISBN 978-0-907689-24-9.
  • Williamson, John (1992). The Music of Hans Pfitzner. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816160-8.

External links edit

hans, pfitzner, this, article, about, composer, other, people, pfitzner, surname, other, uses, pfitzner, disambiguation, hans, erich, pfitzner, 1869, 1949, german, composer, conductor, polemicist, self, described, anti, modernist, best, known, work, post, roma. This article is about the composer For other people see Pfitzner surname For other uses see Pfitzner disambiguation Hans Erich Pfitzner 5 May 1869 22 May 1949 was a German composer conductor and polemicist who was a self described anti modernist His best known work is the post Romantic opera Palestrina 1917 loosely based on the life of the sixteenth century composer Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and his Missa Papae Marcelli Hans Pfitzner c 1910 Contents 1 Life 2 The Nazi era 3 Musical style and reception 4 Students of Hans Pfitzner 5 Recordings 6 Works 6 1 Operas 6 2 Orchestral works 6 3 Chamber works 6 4 Instrumental works 6 5 Choral works 6 6 Songs with piano accompaniment 7 References 8 External linksLife editPfitzner was born in Moscow where his father played cello in a theater orchestra The family returned to his father s native town Frankfurt in 1872 when Pfitzner was two years old he always considered Frankfurt his home town He received early instruction in violin from his father and his earliest compositions were composed at age 11 In 1884 he wrote his first songs From 1886 to 1890 he studied composition with Iwan Knorr and piano with James Kwast at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt He later married Kwast s daughter Mimi Kwast a granddaughter of Ferdinand Hiller after she had rejected the advances of Percy Grainger He taught piano and theory at the Koblenz Conservatory from 1892 to 1893 In 1894 he was appointed conductor at the Staatstheater Mainz where he worked for a few months These were all low paying jobs and Pfitzner was working as Erster First Kapellmeister with the Berlin Theater des Westens when he was appointed to a modestly prestigious post of opera director and head of the conservatory in Strassburg Strasbourg in 1908 when Pfitzner was almost 40 In Strasbourg Pfitzner finally had some professional stability and it was there he gained significant power to direct his own operas He viewed control over the stage direction to be his particular domain and this view was to cause him particular difficulty for the rest of his career The central event of Pfitzner s life was the annexation of Imperial Alsace and with it Strasbourg by France in the aftermath of World War I Pfitzner lost his livelihood and was left destitute at age 50 This hardened several difficult traits in Pfitzner s personality an elitism believing he was entitled to sinecures for his contributions to German art and for the hard work of his youth notorious social awkwardness and a lack of tact a sincere belief that his music was under recognized and under appreciated with a tendency for his sympathizers to form cults around him a patronizing style with his publishers and a feeling that he had been personally slighted by Germany s enemies 1 His bitterness and cultural pessimism deepened in the 1920s with the death of his wife in 1926 and with meningitis affecting his older son Paul who was committed to institutionalized medical care In 1895 Richard Bruno Heydrich sang the title role in the premiere of people like Hans Pfitzner s first opera Der arme Heinrich based on the poem of the same name by Hartmann von Aue More to the point Heydrich saved the opera Pfitzner s magnum opus was Palestrina which had its premiere in Munich on 12 June 1917 under the baton of Jewish conductor Bruno Walter On the day before he died in February 1962 Walter dictated his last letter which ended Despite all the dark experiences of today I am still confident thatPalestrinawill remain The work has all the elements of immortality 2 nbsp Hans Pfitzner in 1905Easily the most celebrated of Pfitzner s prose works is his pamphlet Futuristengefahr Danger of Futurists written in response to Ferruccio Busoni s Sketch for a New Aesthetic of Music Busoni Pfitzner complained places all his hopes for Western music in the future and understands the present and past as a faltering beginning as the preparation But what if it were otherwise What if we find ourselves presently at a high point or even that we have already passed beyond it citation needed Pfitzner had a similar debate with the critic Paul Bekker citation needed Pfitzner dedicated his Violin Concerto in B minor Op 34 1923 to the Australian violinist Alma Moodie She premiered it in Nuremberg on 4 June 1924 with the composer conducting Moodie became its leading exponent and performed it over 50 times in Germany with conductors such as Pfitzner Wilhelm Furtwangler Hans Knappertsbusch Hermann Scherchen Karl Muck Carl Schuricht and Fritz Busch At that time the Pfitzner concerto was considered the most important addition to the violin concerto repertoire since the first concerto of Max Bruch 1866 although it is not played by most violinists these days 3 On one occasion in 1927 conductor Peter Raabe programmed the concerto for public broadcast and performance in Aachen but did not budget for copying of the sheet music as a result the work was withdrawn at the last minute and replaced with the familiar Brahms concerto citation needed The Nazi era editIncreasingly nationalistic in his middle and old age Pfitzner was at first regarded sympathetically by important figures in Nazi Germany in particular by Hans Frank with whom he remained on good terms But he soon fell out with chief Nazis who were alienated by his long musical association with the Jewish conductor Bruno Walter He incurred extra wrath from the Nazis by refusing to obey the regime s request to provide incidental music to Shakespeare s A Midsummer Night s Dream that could be used in place of the famous setting by Felix Mendelssohn unacceptable to the Nazis because of his Jewish origin Pfitzner maintained that Mendelssohn s original was far better than anything he himself could offer as a substitute As early as 1923 Pfitzner and Hitler met It was while the former was a hospital patient Pfitzner had undergone a gall bladder operation when Anton Drexler who knew both men well arranged a visit Hitler did most of the talking but Pfitzner dared to contradict him regarding the homosexual and antisemitic thinker Otto Weininger causing Hitler to leave in a huff Later on Hitler told Nazi cultural architect Alfred Rosenberg that he wanted nothing further to do with this Jewish rabbi Pfitzner unaware of this comment believed Hitler to be sympathetic to him When the Nazis came to power in 1933 Rosenberg recruited Pfitzner a notoriously bad speaker to lecture for the Militant League for German Culture Kampfbund fur deutsche Kultur that same year and Pfitzner accepted hoping it would help him find an influential position Hitler however saw to it that the composer was passed over in favor of party hacks for positions as opera director in Dusseldorf and Generalintendant of the Berlin Municipal Opera despite hints from authorities that both positions were being held for him Very early in Hitler s rule Pfitzner received an injunction from Hans Frank by this time Justice Minister in Bavaria and Wilhelm Frick Interior Minister in Hitler s own cabinet against traveling to the Salzburg Festival in 1933 to conduct his violin concerto Pfitzner had managed to gain a stable conducting contract from the Munich opera in 1928 but ran into demeaning treatment from chief conductor Hans Knappertsbusch and from the opera house s intendant a man named Franckenstein In 1934 Pfitzner was forced into retirement and lost his positions as opera conductor stage director and academy professor He was also given a minimal pension of a few hundred marks a month which he contested until 1937 when Goebbels resolved the issue For a Nazi party rally in 1934 Pfitzner had hopes of being allowed to conduct but he was rejected for the role and at the rally himself he learned for the first time that Hitler considered him to be half Jewish Nor was Hitler the first person to suppose this Winifred Wagner the director of the Bayreuth Festival and a confidante of Hitler also believed it Pfitzner was forced to prove that he had in fact totally Gentile ancestry By 1939 he had grown thoroughly disenchanted with the Nazi regime except for Frank whom he continued to respect Pfitzner s views on the Jewish Question were both contradictory and illogical 1 He viewed Jewishness as a cultural trait rather than a racial one A 1930 statement that caused difficulty for him in the pension affair was that although Jewry might pose dangers to German spiritual life and German Kultur many Jews had done a lot for Germany and that antisemitism per se was to be condemned 4 He was willing to make exceptions to a general policy of antisemitism For example he recommended the performance of Marschner s opera Der Templer und die Judin based on Scott s Ivanhoe protected his Jewish pupil Felix Wolfes of Cologne along with conductor Furtwangler aided the young conductor Hans Schwieger who had a Jewish wife and maintained his friendship with Bruno Walter and especially his childhood journalist friend Paul Cossman a self loathing non practicing Jew who was incarcerated in 1933 The attempts which Pfitzner made on behalf of Cossman might have caused Gestapo chief Reinhard Heydrich incidentally the son of the heldentenor who premiered Pfitzner s first opera to investigate him Pfitzner s petitions probably contributed to Cossman s release in 1934 although he was eventually re arrested in 1942 and died of dysentery in Theresienstadt In 1938 Pfitzner joked that he was afraid to see a celebrated eye doctor in Munich because his great grandmother had once observed a quarter Jew crossing the street He worked with Jewish musicians throughout his career In the early thirties he often accompanied famed contralto Ottilie Metzger Lattermann later murdered in Auschwitz in recitals and had dedicated his four songs Op 19 to her as early as 1905 He had dedicated his songs Op 24 to Jewish critic and Jewish cultural society founder Arthur Eloesser in 1909 Still Pfitzner maintained close contact with virulent antisemites like music critics Walter Abendroth and Victor Junk and did not scruple to use antisemitic invective common enough among people of his generation and not just in Germany to pursue certain aims nbsp Hans Pfitzner s grave in ViennaPfitzner s home having been destroyed in the war by Allied bombing and his membership in the Munich Academy of Music having been revoked for his speaking out against Nazism the composer in 1945 found himself homeless and mentally ill But after the war he was denazified and re pensioned performance bans were lifted and he was granted residence in the old people s home in Salzburg There in 1949 he died Furtwangler conducted a performance of his Symphony in C major at the Salzburg Festival with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in the summer of 1949 just after the composer s death Following long neglect Pfitzner s music began to reappear in opera houses concert halls and recording studios during the 1990s including a controversial performance of the Covent Garden production of Palestrina in Manhattan s Lincoln Center in 1997 During the 1990s more and more musicologists mainly German and British began examining Pfitzner s life and work Biographer Hans Peter Vogel wrote that Pfitzner was the only composer of the Nazi era who attempted to come to grips with National Socialism both intellectually and spiritually after 1945 5 In 2001 Sabine Busch examined the ideological tug of war of the composer s involvement with the National Socialists based in part on previously unavailable material She concluded that although the composer was not exclusively pro Nazi nor purely the antisemitic chauvinist often associated with his image he engaged with Nazi powers who he thought would promote his music and became embittered when the Nazis found the elitist old master s often morose music to be little propaganda worthy 6 The most comprehensive English language account of Pfitzner s relations with the Nazis is by Michael Kater 1 Musical style and reception edit nbsp Hans Pfitzner featured on a 1994 German postage stampPfitzner s music including pieces in all the major genres except the symphonic poem was respected by contemporaries such as Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss although neither man cared much for Pfitzner s innately acerbic manner and Alma Mahler repaid his adoration with contempt despite her agreement with his intuitive musical idealism a fact evident in her letters to the wife of Alban Berg Although Pfitzner s music betrays Wagnerian influences the composer was not attracted to Bayreuth and was personally despised by Cosima Wagner in part because Pfitzner sought notice and recognition from such anti Wagnerian composers as Max Bruch and Johannes Brahms Pfitzner s works combine Romantic and Late Romantic elements with extended thematic development atmospheric music drama and the intimacy of chamber music Columbia University musicologist Walter Frisch has described Pfitzner as a regressive modernist His is a highly personal offshoot of the Classical Romantic tradition as well as the conservative musical aesthetic 7 and Pfitzner defended his style in his own writings 8 Particularly notable are Pfitzner s numerous and delicate lieder influenced by Hugo Wolf yet with their own rather melancholy charm Several of them were recorded during the 1930s by the distinguished baritone Gerhard Husch with the composer at the piano His first symphony the Symphony in C sharp minor underwent a strange genesis it was not conceived in orchestral terms at all but was a reworking of a string quartet The works betray a late pious inspiration and although they take on a late Romantic qualities they show others associated with the brooding unwieldiness of a modern idiom 9 For example composer Arthur Honegger writes in 1955 after criticizing too much polyphony and overly long orchestral writing in a long essay devoted to Palestrina Musically the work shows a superior design which demands respect The themes are clearly formed which makes it easy to follow 10 Pfitzner s work was appreciated by contemporaries including Richard Strauss and Gustav Mahler who explicitly described Pfitzner s first string quartet in D Major of 1902 03 as a masterpiece 11 Thomas Mann praised Palestrina in a short essay published in October 1917 He co founded the Hans Pfitzner Association for German Music in 1918 Tensions with Mann however developed and the two severed relations by 1926 From the mid 1920s Pfitzner s music increasingly fell in the shadow of Richard Strauss His opera Das Herz of 1932 was unsuccessful Pfitzner remained a peripheral figure in the musical life of Nazi Germany and his music was performed less frequently than in the late days of the Weimar Republic 12 German critic Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt writing in 1969 viewed Pfitzner s music with extreme ambivalence initiated with sharp dissonances and hard linear counterpoint determined to be taken as and criticized for being modernist This became a conservative rebellion against all modernist conformity 13 Composer Wolfgang Rihm commented on the increasing popularity of Pfitzner s work in 1981 Pfitzner is too progressive not simply the way Korngold can be taken to be he is also too conservative if that means to be influenced by someone like Schoenberg All this has audible consequences We cannot find the brokenness of today in his work at first glance but neither the unbroken yesterday We find both that is none and all attempts at classification falter 14 Students of Hans Pfitzner editSem Dresden 1881 1957 Ture Rangstrom 1884 1947 Otto Klemperer 1885 1973 W H Hewlett 1873 1940 Heinrich Jacoby 1889 1964 Czeslaw Marek 1891 1985 Charles Munch 1891 1968 Felix Wolfes 1892 1971 Carl Orff 1895 1982 Heinrich Sutermeister 1910 1995 Recordings editHis complete orchestral works have been recorded by the German conductor Werner Andreas Albert His complete songs have been recorded on the CPO label Also his chamber music including 4 string quartets 2 piano trios a violin sonata a couple of odd piano works a piano quintet and a string sextet and a cello sonata have been recorded several times Works editOperas edit Title Subtitle Opus Librettist Year Premiere NotesDer arme Heinrich Music Drama in 3 acts WoO 15 James Grun 1868 1928 after Hartmann von Aue 1891 1893 1895 Mainz Richard Bruno Heydrich sang in the premiereDie Rose vom Liebesgarten Romantic Opera with a Prelude two acts and postlude WoO 16 James Grun 1897 1900 1901 ElberfeldDas Christ Elflein 1st version Christmas Tale Op 20 Ilse von Stach 1906 1906 MunichDas Christ Elflein 2nd version Spieloper in 2 acts Op 20 Ilse von Stach and Pfitzner 1917 1917 Dresden Further unpublished revision in 1944Palestrina Musical Legend in 3 acts WoO 17 Pfitzner 1909 1915 1917 Munich The composer s most famous workDas Herz Drama for Music in 3 acts 4 scenes Op 39 Hans Mahner Mons 1883 1956 1930 31 1931 Berlin and MunichOrchestral works edit Work Opus Year NotesScherzo in C minor 1887Cello Concerto in A minor Op Post 1888 for Esther NyffeneggerIncidental music to Henrik Ibsen s play Das Fest auf Solhaug 1890Herr Oluf Op 12 1891 ballad for baritone and orchestraDie Heinzelmannchen Op 14 1902 03 ballad for bass and orchestraDas Kathchen von Heilbronn Op 17 1905 incidental musicPiano Concerto in E flat major Op 31 1922 for Walter GiesekingViolin Concerto in B minor Op 34 1923 for Alma MoodieLethe Op 37 1926 for baritone und orchestraSymphony in C sharp minor Op 36a 1932 Adapted from String Quartet Op 36Cello Concerto in G major Op 42 1935 for Gaspar CassadoDuo for Violin Cello and small Orchestra Op 43 1937Small Symphony in G major Op 44 1939Elegy and Roundelay Op 45 1940Symphony in C major Op 46 1940 An die Freunde Cello Concerto in A minor Op 52 1944 for Ludwig HoelscherCracow Greetings Op 54 1944Fantasie in A minor Op 56 1947Chamber works edit Title Opus Year NotesPiano Trio in B flat major 1886 completed by Gerhard FrommelString Quartet No 1 in D minor 1886Sonata in F sharp minor Cello and piano Op 1 1890 Das Lied soll schauern und beben Piano Trio in F major Op 8 1890 96String Quartet No 2 in D major Op 13 1902 03Piano Quintet in C major Op 23 1908Sonata in E minor for Violin and Piano Op 27 1918String Quartet No 3 in C sharp minor Op 36 1925String Quartet No 4 in C minor Op 50 1942Unorthographic Fugato 1943 for String QuartetSextet in G minor Op 55 1945 for clarinet violin viola cello contrabass and pianoInstrumental works edit Title Opus Year Notes5 Piano Pieces Op 47 19416 Studien Op 51 1942 for pianoChoral works edit Title Opus Year NotesDer Blumen Rache 1888 ballade for women s chorus alto amp orchestra after Ferdinand Freiligrath Du altes Jahr Rundgesang zum Neujahrsfest 1901 1900 for bass mixed or male chorus and pianoColumbus Op 16 1905 for mixed chorusGesang der Barden 1906 for male chorus and orchestraTwo German Songs Op 25 1915 16 for baritone male chorus ad lib and orchestraVon Deutscher Seele Op 28 1921 for four soloists mixed choir orchestra amp organDas dunkle Reich Op 38 1929 choral fantasy with soprano baritone orchestra amp organFons Salutifer Op 48 1941 hymn for mixed choir orchestra amp organTwo Male Choruses Op 49 1941Three Songs Op 53 1944 for male chorus and chamber orchestraUrworte Orphisch Op 57 1948 49 cantata for four soloists mixed chorus orchestra and organ completed by Robert RehanSongs with piano accompaniment edit Opus Title Year Text Notes Six Early Songs 1884 87 Julius Sturm Mary Graf Bartholomew Ludwig Uhland Oskar von Redwitz Eduard Morike Robert Reinick Very HIGH HIGH Voice2 Seven Songs 1888 89 Richard von Volkmann Hermann Lingg Aldof Bottger Alexander Kaufmann anon No 2 5 6 7 orchestrated3 Three Songs 1888 89 Friedrich Ruckert Friedrich von Sallet Emanuel Geibel Medium voice No 2 3 orchestrated 4 Four Songs 1888 89 Heinrich Heine medium voice Also orchestrated5 Three Songs 1888 89 Joseph von Eichendorff for Soprano No 1 Orchestrated6 Six Songs 1888 89 Heine Grun Paul Nikolaus Cossmann for High Baritone7 Five Songs 1888 1900 Wolfgang von Konigswinter Eichendorff Paul Heyse Grun No 3 Orchestrated9 Five Songs 1894 95 Eichendorff 10 Three Songs 1889 1901 Detlev von Lilencron Eichendorff for Medium Voice11 Five Songs 1901 Friedrich Hebbel Ludwig Jacobowski Eichendorff Richard Dehmel Carl Hermann Busse No 4 5 Orchestrated Untreu und Trost 1903 Anon for Medium voice Also orchestrated 15 Four Songs 1904 Busse Eichendorff von Stach No 2 3 4 orchestrated18 An den Mond 1906 Goethe Longer song ca 8 min Also orchestrated19 Two Songs 1905 Busse21 Two Songs 1907 Hebbel Eichendorff for High Voice22 Five Songs 1907 Eichendorff Adelbert von Chamisso Gottfried August Burger 24 Four Songs 1909 Walther von der Vogelweide Petrarch trans Karl August Forster Friedrich Lienhard No 1 orchestrated26 Five Songs 1916 Friedrich Hebbel Eichendorff Gottfried August Burger Goethe No 2 4 orchestrated29 Four Songs 1921 Holderlin Ruckert Goethe Dehmel dedicated to his family No 3 orchestrated30 Four Songs 1922 Nikolaus Lenau Morike Dehmel 32 Four Songs 1923 Conrad Ferdinand Meyer for Baritone or Bass33 Alte Weisen 1923 Gottfried Keller 35 Six Liebeslieder 1924 Ricarda Huch Female voice40 Six Songs 1931 Ludwig Jacobowski Adolf Bartels Ricarda Huch Martin Greif Goethe Eichendorff No 5 6 orchestrated41 Three Sonnets 1931 Petrarch trans Burger Eichendorff Male voiceReferences editNotes a b c Michael Kater Composers of the Nazi Era Eight Portraits NY Oxford University Press 2000 144 182 esp 146 160 ISBN 978 0 19 509924 9 Liner notes to the Rafael Kubelik Nicolai Gedda Dietrich Fischer Dieskau DG recording Kay Dreyfus Alma Moodie and the Landscape of Giftedness 2002 Williamson John 1992 The Music of Hans Pfitzner Oxford Monographs on Music Oxford University Press pp 318 319 Vogel Johann Peter 1989 Hans Pfitzner Mit Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Reinbek Rowohlt p 86 Busch Sabine 2001 Hans Pfitzner im Nationalsozialismus Stuttgart Metzler dtv Atlas zur Musik Tafeln und Text Vol 2 Historischer Teil Vom Barock bis zur Gegenwart Munich Barenreiter Verlag 1985 p 517 Brockhaus F A 1979 Riemann Musiklexikon Vol 2 Mainz Schott p 297 Schmidt Felix Metzmacher Ingo 3 January 2008 Warum ein Linker die Musik der Nazi Zeit dirigert Die Welt Berlin Retrieved 20 July 2018 Reclam Philipp Arthur Honegger 1980 Beruf und Handwerk des Komponisten Illusionslose Gesprache Kritiken Aufsatze Leipzig p 55 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mahler Werfel Alma 1991 Mein Leben Frankfurt am Main Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag p 69 Hermand Jost 2008 Glanz und Elend der deutschen Oper Cologne Weimar Bohlau Verlag p 176 Vogel Johann Peter 1989 Hans Pfitzner Mit Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Reinbek Rowohlt p 143 Rihm Wolfgang Mosch Ulrich 1998 Ausgesprochen Schriften und Gesprache Volume 1 Mainz Schott Further reading Taylor Jay Claire 2004 The Artist Operas of Pfitzner Krenek and Hindemith Politics and the Ideology of the Artist Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 0578 2 Toller Owen 1997 Pfitzner s Palestrina Dunstable Toccata Press ISBN 978 0 907689 24 9 Williamson John 1992 The Music of Hans Pfitzner Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 816160 8 External links editHans Pfitzner at AllMusic UbuWeb A New Musical Reality Futurism Modernism and The Art of Noises by Robert P Morgan Free scores by Hans Pfitzner at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Newspaper clippings about Hans Pfitzner in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hans Pfitzner amp oldid 1218351190, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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