Degenerate music
Degenerate music (Template:Langx, {{#invoke:IPA|main}}) was a label applied in the 1930s by the government of Nazi Germany to certain forms of music that it considered harmful or decadent. The Nazi government's concerns about degenerate music were a part of its larger and better-known campaign against degenerate art (Template:Langx). In both cases, the government attempted to isolate, discredit, discourage, or ban the works.
Racial emphasisEdit
Jewish composers such as Felix Mendelssohn and Gustav Mahler were disparaged and condemned by the Nazis.Template:Sfn In Leipzig, a bronze statue of Mendelssohn was removed. The regime commissioned music to replace his incidental music to A Midsummer Night's Dream.Template:Sfn
The Nazis also regulated jazz, including the banning of solos and drum breaks, scat, "Negroid excesses in tempo" and "Jewishly gloomy lyrics".Template:Sfn
DiscriminationEdit
From the Nazi seizure of power onward, these composers found it increasingly difficult, and often impossible, to get work or have their music performed. Many went into exile (e.g., Arnold Schoenberg, Kurt Weill, Paul Hindemith, Berthold Goldschmidt); or retreated into "internal exile" (e.g., Karl Amadeus Hartmann, Boris Blacher); or ended up in the concentration camps (e.g., Viktor Ullmann, or Erwin Schulhoff).
Like degenerate art, examples of degenerate music were displayed in public exhibits in Germany beginning in 1938. One of the first of these was organized in Düsseldorf by Hans Severus Ziegler, at the time superintendent of the Deutsches Nationaltheater Weimar, who explained in an opening speech that the decay of music was "due to the influence of Judaism and capitalism".
Ziegler's exhibit was organized into seven sections, devoted to:Template:Sfn
- The influence of Judaism
- Arnold Schoenberg
- Kurt Weill and Ernst Krenek
- Minor Bolsheviks (Franz Schreker, Alban Berg, Ernst Toch, etc.)
- Leo Kestenberg, director of musical education before 1933
- Hindemith's operas and oratorios
- Igor Stravinsky
From the mid-1990s the Decca Record Company released a series of recordings under the title "Entartete Musik: Music Suppressed by the Third Reich", covering lesser-known works by several of the above-named composers.Template:Sfn
See alsoEdit
- Cultural Bolshevism
- Low culture
- Music in Nazi Germany
- Template:Ill
- {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}
- Reich Music Examination Office
- {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}
- {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}
- Swing Kids
ReferencesEdit
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Further readingEdit
- Dümling, Albrecht. 2002. "The Target of Racial Purity: The 'Degenerate Music' Exhibition in Düsseldorf, 1938". In Art, Culture, and Media Under the Third Reich, edited by Richard A. Etlin, 43–72. Chicago Series in Law and Society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Template:ISBN.
- Gregor, Neil. 2025. The Symphony Concert in Nazi Germany. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Template:ISBN. (Hbk).
- Haas, Michael. 2013. Forbidden Music: The Jewish Composers Banned by the Nazis. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. Template:ISBN (cloth); Template:ISBN (pbk).
- Levi, Erik. 1994. Music in the Third Reich. New York: St Martin's Press. Template:ISBN (cloth); Template:ISBN (pbk).
- Potter, Pamela M. 2006. "Music in the Third Reich: The Complex Task of 'GermanizationTemplate:'". In The Arts in Nazi Germany: Continuity, Conformity, Change, edited by Jonathan Huener and Francis R. Nicosia, 85–110. New York and Oxford: Berghan Books. Template:ISBN.
External linksEdit
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- "Degenerate" Music in Nazi Germany
- " 'Degenerate' Music", A Teacher's Guide to The Holocaust, College of Education, University of South Florida
- Database of "degenerate" music composers, ebonyband.nl