Hidemith at 125_2020

Hidemith at 125_2020

This Week in Classical Music: November 16, 2020.  Hindemith at 125.  Paul Hindemith was born on November 16th of 1895 in Hanau, near Frankfurt.  We’ll pick up where we left off four Paul Hindemithyears ago when we wrote about his life until about 1923.  He was then living in Frankfurt, already well known both as a composer and a violist (he organized the Amar Quartet where he played the viola), performing in Salzburg and working at the new music Donaueschingen Festival.  (A brief note about the festival: it was organized in 1921, it’s the oldest and probably the most prestigious festival of contemporary music in existence, and Hindemith’s music was played there during its first season).  Hindemith also got married to an actress and singer named Gertrud Rottenberg; Gertrud came from a prominent Frankfurt family (her grandfather was the mayor of Frankfurt) and was partly Jewish, which affected Hindemith’s life later in the 1930s.  In 1927 he was invited to teach at the Berlin Musikhochschule.  He soon decided that teaching composition is impossible, and that only the craft of handling music material could be taught.  Lacking suitable textbooks, he embarked on leaning Latin and mathematics in order to be able to read old musical manuals.  In 1929 Hindemith left the Amar Quartet and founded a string trio with Josef Wolfstahl, who a year later was replaced by Szymon Goldberg, then the concertmaster of the Berlin Philharmonic, and the celebrated cellist Emanuel Feuermann; thus in the early thirties Hindemith was playing in a trio with two Jewish musicians.  Hindemith was not a man of the Left, he didn’t share political views of the likes of Bertolt Brecht, Hanns Eisler or Kurt Weill, but when the Nazis came to power in 1933, they nonetheless declared most of Hindemith’s music “cultural Bolshevism.”  His trio could no longer perform in Germany, only abroad, and his Jewish colleagues at the Hochschule lost their jobs.  Initially, Hindemith thought that this descent into extreme radicalism i was temporary, that another cycle of elections would change everything back to normal – but there were no free elections to come.  Hindemith embarked on writing a major composition, the opera Mathis der Maler, for which he wrote his own libretto.  The protagonist of the opera is a historical figure, the painter Matthias Grünewald, famous for his incredible Isenheim Altarpiece.  In 1934, at Furtwängler’s request, he composed a symphony based on the opera.  The premier in Berlin was a huge success, but it only led to more attacks from the Nazis.  Hindemith started thinking about emigration; at the same time he asked Furtwängler to intervene with Hitler on his behalf: he wanted Furtwängler to invite Hitler to a composition class of his.  Furtwängler did write an open letter in support of Hindemith, it was published in Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, a major newspaper of the day, in November of 1934.  The letter was met with more derision from the Nazis, especially the Nazi “theoretician” Alfred Rosenberg and Joseph Goebbels, the propaganda minister.  In 1935 Hindemith was invited by the Turkish government to advise them on the musical life of the country.  Subsequently, he visited Turkey in 1936 and 1937.  The establishment of the Ankara State Conservatory owes much to Hindemith.  In 1936 the Nazis announced a total ban on Hindemith’s music.  A year later Hindemith resigned from the Berlin Hochschule and traveled to the US for the first time.  He emigrated to Switzerland in September of 1938 and in February of 1940 moved to the US.

Here’s Hindemith’s Symphony Mathis der Maler, performed by London Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Jascha Horenstein.