Tag: Erwin Schulhoff

  • Schulhoff’s Joyous Music & Holocaust Remembrance

    Schulhoff’s Joyous Music & Holocaust Remembrance

    International Trombone Week meets Yom HaShoah, a day of Holocaust remembrance.

    At first glance, it may seem wildly incongruous to present music by Erwin Schulhoff – a composer whose life ended in a concentration camp at the age of 48 – with whimsical images of Buster Keaton and Fatty Arbuckle. But in remembering composers who perished in the Holocaust, we risk a tendency to think of them, reductively, as victims, which can inadvertently have the effect of diminishing their overall achievements. These were not artists who created and lived their lives with the expectation of being memorialized for their senseless deaths. I mean no disrespect with this observation. Schulhoff was one of the great musical losses of the Holocaust. But a broader appreciation of his work, if anything, deepens our understanding of what was taken from this world too soon – a vital, creative being, snuffed out, because of a “solution” formulated by a monstrous ideology.

    http://orelfoundation.org/composers/article/erwin_schulhoff


    “The Syncopater’s Peter” (1934) for trombone, with Buster Keaton footage

    Schulhoff’s String Quartet No. 1 (1924)

    The Dada ballet “Die Mondsüchtige,” or “Moonstruck” (1925). The scenario describes a somnambulist dancing across the roofs of Prague with a figure identified as “The Moon Dandy.”

    Concertino for Flute, Viola and Double Bass (1925):

    “Symphonia Germanica” (1919)

    Symphony No. 2 (1932)

    Symphony No. 6 (1940-41)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88ivh1Lfqe0


    PHOTO: Schulhoff and son

  • Dada’s Legacy Still Resonates Today

    Dada’s Legacy Still Resonates Today

    It’s not for nothing that a baby’s first word is frequently “Dada.”

    Dada was also the name given to an avant-garde arts movement that sprang up in the late ‘teens and early ‘20s in response to the horrors of the First World War. Nonsense and irrationality were embraced as forms of protest, holding up a funhouse mirror to the alleged reason and rationality that had plunged the world into violence and devastation.

    In 2018, characteristics of the movement, which had once been regarded as scandalous, have now practically been absorbed into the mainstream. As pianist Guy Livingston is only too happy to point out, the legacy of Dada is all around us. Unfortunately, so are the influences that spurred it into existence.

    On today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network, we’ll hear highlights from Livingston’s presentation-with-recital, “Dada at the Movies,” which was given on October 17 at the Baruch Performing Arts Center in New York City.

    The program relates Dada’s last stand, the movement’s most famous event – which, ironically, also spelled its demise. On July 6, 1923, the poet and performance artist Tristan Tzara hosted “Soirée du Coeur à Barbe” (“Evening of the Bearded Heart”) at the Théâtre Michel. The presentation, which included a play and three films, devolved into a good old fashioned Parisian riot. The result was that the Dadaists, many of whose movements were limited by confining costumes, were routed by the Surrealists. Police were summoned, arms were broken, and people were hurled from the stage.

    According to Livingston’s program note, “Dadaism is now 102 years old, but is newly relevant. The turmoil of our political world, our dissatisfaction with institutions, the seeming randomness of daily life in our era; and the confusion over reality and fiction find ready echoes in Dada art.”

    The noon concert will feature music by Erik Satie, Darius Milhaud, and Trenton’s Bad Boy of Music, George Antheil. Livingston, probably the world’s foremost interpreter of Antheil’s keyboard works, researched the program at Princeton University and the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris.

    Since the original program was so closely tied up with visuals – video, props, and costumes – it required some judicious pruning for radio. Some of the lengthier spoken segments, especially those in foreign languages, have been excised. However, all of the music remains, as well as a few passages in which Livingston expounds on the paradoxically whimsical though deadly serious and strangely profound movement that was Dada.

    Following today’s broadcast concert, we’ll also hear Erwin Schulhoff’s Dadaist ballet “Die Mondsüchtige” (“The Moonstruck”), in which a somnambulist dances across the rooftops of Prague with a figure identified as “The Moon Dandy.”

    Even adults will exclaim “Dada!” beginning at 12:00 EST. Stick around, as I too devolve into surreality, until 4:00 p.m., on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Czech Music from Marlboro Festival Schulhoff & Dvořák

    Czech Music from Marlboro Festival Schulhoff & Dvořák

    In a spirit of unusual generosity, I’ll be picking up the Czech for this week’s “Music from Marlboro.”

    That’s right, it’s an all-Czech hour.

    We’ll begin with music by Erwin Schulhoff, who was encouraged as a young man by Antonin Dvořák. A Jew, a communist, and a nose-thumbing Dadaist, Schulhoff must have been regarded as a triple threat by the Nazis. Who else but Schulhoff would set “The Communist Manifesto” to music? His promising career was cut short when he was arrested while fleeing to the Soviet Union. He died of tuberculosis in a concentration camp in 1942.

    We’ll hear Schulhoff’s cheeky “Divertissement for Wind Trio” from 1928. The 2002 performance will feature oboist Ariana Ghez, clarinetist Charles Neidich, and bassoonist Shinyee Na.

    Then kick back and enjoy Dvořák’s beloved Piano Quintet in A Major. Composed in 1887, Dvořák’s amply melodic and affirmatively gorgeous Quintet is the perfect antidote to any of your day’s cares. The 2008 performance will feature Marlboro Artistic Director Mitsuko Uchida as pianist, with Benjamin Beilman and David Bowlin, violins; Maiya Papach, viola; and Judith Serkin, cello.

    Only three weekends left to attend this year’s Marlboro Music Festival in Marlboro, VT. On Sunday at 2:30 p.m., Uchida will perform Mozart’s Piano Quartet No. 2 in E-flat, K. 493, on a program that will also include works by Schumann and Marlboro Resident Composer, Pulitzer Prize winner Shulamit Ran.

    Ran’s music will also feature on Saturday’s program, at 8 p.m., which will also include works by Beethoven and Alexander Zemlinsky. For more information or to plan your visit, look online at marlboromusic.org.

    Then join me this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT for an all-Czech hour, on the next “Music from Marlboro,” on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • Daylight Saving Time Musical Commiseration

    Daylight Saving Time Musical Commiseration

    The possibility of stroke is elevated, even as productivity plummets. Sunday drives will become snarled in traffic accidents. Everyone will be moody and depressed.

    Sleepers, awake! Welcome to Daylight Saving Time!

    Brew yourself an extra strong pot of coffee, and join me on WPRB for a morning of musical commiseration.

    Among our featured highlights, Trenton’s own George Antheil will collaborate with George Balanchine on “Dreams.” A female somnambulist will dance across the rooftops with the Moon-Dandy in Erwin Schulhoff’s ballet “Moonstruck.” And Jean Francaix will puzzle over how to change his flower clock in “L’horloge de flore.”

    It’s all about lost sleep and syncopated clocks, this Sunday morning from 7 to 10 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. I’m told we’ll get our hour back on November 4. Until then, enjoy the Circadian Apocalypse. If you’re on time, you’re already late, on Classic Ross Amico.

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