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Eldritch
12-04-2009, 10:06 AM
A Composer's Ties to Nazi Germany Come Under New Scrutiny

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The composer Jean Sibelius is arguably as important to early 20th-century music as Ezra Pound was to literary modernism. Now, more than 50 years after the Finnish composer died, in 1957, at the age of 91, a musicologist in Texas is claiming that Sibelius was culpably entangled with Nazi Germany, and should join Pound, Richard Wagner, and Louis-Ferdinand Céline in the select group of artists who have been cast into anti-Semitic ignominy.

Sibelius's associations with National Socialism amount to active support of Nazism and its propaganda efforts in Germany and the Nordic countries, says Timothy L. Jackson, a professor of music at the University of North Texas.

Other Sibelius experts say Jackson is making a Nazi out of a man who needed to deal with the Third Reich to earn his living, and who, along with most of the world, was perhaps too complacent about the rise of Hitler.

The role European composers may have played in laying the foundations for the grotesque ethos of Nazism has long been a contentious issue in musicological circles; the heat generated by such discussions relating to figures like Wagner suggests that the emerging dispute over Sibelius may significantly affect both the reception of his music and the way musical Romanticism is viewed in the history of 20th-century cultural life.

Jackson lays out his charges against Sibelius in a long essay in a book he has edited with three colleagues, Sibelius in the Old and New World: Aspects of His Music, Its Interpretation, and Reception, which Peter Lang Publishing Group is set to publish in the first half of next year. Jackson, a specialist in late Romantic composers such as Anton Bruckner, Richard Strauss, and Sibelius, previewed his arguments last month at the annual meeting of the American Musicological Society, in Philadelphia. That has sparked a vibrant e-mail exchange among several Sibelius experts, much of which participants have shared with The Chronicle.

From Sibelius archives and other sources, Jackson has accumulated a mass of documents, letters, government papers, and newspaper reports to challenge the standard take on Sibelius: that he was a passive, apolitical observer of the rise of Nazism and its effects on Europe.

He says Sibelius's early fascination with Finnish mythology and nationalism resonated with Nazism. And, as the Third Reich gained in strength, Sibelius enjoyed its financial arrangements for artists. For example, in 1933, when Joseph Goebbels was named minister of propaganda, Sibelius, already well established and 67 years old, began to profit from taxation and currency-exchange and currency-export preferences that Goebbels approved for artists.

Those were perks of cooperating with the "artist friendly" regime, Jackson suggests. But the Nazis were particularly well inclined toward Sibelius, he adds. For example, Sibelius in 1935 accepted a Goethe Medal that Adolf Hitler confirmed with his signature. From at least 1941, he drew a German pension that was worth half the average German annual income. In 1942, Third Reich officials approved the founding of the German Sibelius Society.

Nazi admiration of Sibelius has long led some music historians to view the composer with suspicion. Jackson is providing more fodder for that unease. He argues that, by going along with all the accolades, Sibelius was committing "a political act of considerable importance to Finland, if not Germany, with a huge propaganda significance."

No single event more clearly illustrates Sibelius's empathy with the Nazi ethos, Jackson believes, than his reneging on his promise to help a young, part-Jewish composer, Günther Raphael. In the years 1931 to 1936, Raphael implored Sibelius repeatedly, urgently, and obsequiously to help him to retain his teaching position in Germany at a time when Jewish artists were being dismissed from their posts.

Jackson insists that Sibelius could have joined the many prominent artists who asked Goebbels to protect favored Jewish colleagues. But he chose not to risk Goebbels's disfavor.

And in mid-1942, says Jackson, when it still seemed that Germany might win the war, Sibelius agreed to be interviewed at his home in Finland by Anton Kloss, an SS war reporter who had most likely taken part in war atrocities. Surely, says Jackson, by that time Sibelius would have heard what the Nazis were doing throughout Europe.

Such actions condemn Sibelius, he asserts, even though the composer did, in late 1943, denounce the Nazis' "bad social prejudices"—quietly, in his diary.

More significant, Jackson says, is that Sibelius continued to take money from Nazi Germany throughout the war, even complaining that payments were not consistently arriving.

Jackson says he believes that Sibelius scholars have viewed Sibelius from a hagiographic rather than historical perspective that is all too common in biographies of great artists—and have, as a result, overlooked that he was less than a saint.

For other Sibelius specialists, however, it is Jackson's perspective that is warped. In telephone interviews, as in their e-mail exchanges with the Texas music historian, they characterize his allegations as a cherry-picking smear campaign.

Consider the age and isolation of Sibelius by the time the war came—he had virtually stopped composing 20 years earlier—suggests one Finnish Sibelius authority, Vesa Sirén. "Keep in mind that we are talking about a bald-headed old man with shaky hands and a cataract in his eye who probably didn't even know what the SS was," says Sirén, a music journalist, author of a study of how Sibelius's contemporaries viewed him, and the editor of the Sibelius estate's official Web site.

Sirén, like Veijo Murtomäki, a professor of music history at the Sibelius Academy, in Helsinki, and a leading authority on the composer, praises Jackson for calling attention to facts of Sibelius's life, such as the monetary value of the well-known favors that he received from Third Reich admirers. But Jackson's claims are consistently overblown and out of context, Sirén and Murtomäki insist.

Take that 1942 interview with the SS reporter. Jackson says it was highly significant, because Sibelius was a recluse who rarely granted press interviews. "Total nonsense," scoffs Sirén. Sibelius agreed to numerous interviews during the 1940s, often at the behest of the Finnish foreign ministry. "He said he wouldn't want to see so many people in his home, but he would, if it was good for Finland," says Sirén. "Sibelius was a great composer and also vain, a little bit childish. But he was also a patriot."

Or consider Jackson's characterization of Sibelius's payments from Germany as being "on the Nazi payroll." Says Sirén: "When the Nazis took over, the last thing on their mind was obeying international copyright laws." Sibelius doggedly pursued his royalties—from Germany, where most were due, as well as from other countries. "We can argue that it would have been better that he said 'I don't want anything to do with Germany,' but still, he was entitled to his copyright money," she says.

And was Sibelius's decision not to help Günther Raphael really proof of anti-Semitism? That claim, says Sirén, ignores that the composer received, and rejected, hundreds of such requests, and by the 1930s had had enough. In fact, says Sirén, Sibelius had given out so many recommendations, motivated by politeness rather than informed by their recipients' qualifications, that "he now felt that he was in the middle of a nest of lies."

Murtomäki, who with Jackson is one of the editors of a forthcoming collection of essays, Sibelius in the Old and New World, contends that the weakness in all his colleagues' criticisms of Sibelius is that they ignore historical context.

One simple example: Jackson's objection to Sibelius's accepting the Goethe Medal, in 1935. Murtomäki asks: Why would Sibelius not accept such honors, given that he was at the time arguably the world's most successful living classical composer, winning honors around the world?

Jackson also ignores the complexity of Finnish views of Germany, contends Murtomäki. He notes that at the beginning of the Third Reich, many Finns believed that Germany not only was improving the lot of its citizens but also was emerging as an effective foil to the Bolshevist threat. In 1939 the Soviet Union attacked and managed to annex part of Finland. So in 1941 Finland allied itself with Germany, hoping to stave off both Nazi and Soviet invasion. But in September 1944, it began the seven-month Lapland War against Germany.

With these turnabouts, Sibelius, too, suffered reversals: At times he was hailed as a standard-bearer of freedom; at others he was decried as a Nazi stooge trading on his Aryan birth. But throughout this vacillation, Sibelius valued his acclaim in Germany, the country that Finns considered a cultural mecca.

"Professor Jackson has some pieces of a puzzle at his hands, but the picture he is constructing with the pieces is rather strange for us who know better the cultural and political situation of Finland during the Third Reich," says Murtomäki.

He allows that Jackson is doing a service to the history of Finnish cultural, scientific, and political relations with German colleagues during the Third Reich. But while Jackson insists that his evidence against Sibelius is more than circumstantial, Murtomäki is not so sure: "So, Sibelius was selfish and flattered by his fame in Germany and wanted the money. I am sorry for that. But it does not make him a Nazi or a great friend of any SS person or acts made by them. History is not that easy."

Source. (http://chronicle.com/article/A-Composers-Ties-to-Nazi-G/49256/)

In other words: can't think of anything else? "Hitler" and "Nazi Germany" are always sure-fire buzzwords guaranteed to land you a book deal and sort our your academic career. :thumbs up

Arrow Cross
12-04-2009, 11:03 AM
The usual infantile mainstream spit-contest. Whatever happened to supposed "journalist neutrality"? "Objectivity?" This line here is exceptionally ridiculous in its gross generalization:

Sibelius agreed to be interviewed at his home in Finland by Anton Kloss, an SS war reporter who had most likely taken part in war atrocities.

It really isn't a surprise so many musicians and other traditional artists supported the Axis. It was representing an old world in opposition to violent revolution and rampant money-rule, a world where traditions and moral values still held ground.

Articles like this are what they call 'hate-filled'.

Treffie
12-04-2009, 12:39 PM
Who cares? He made great music - isn't that what matters?

Eldritch
12-04-2009, 08:43 PM
The usual infantile mainstream spit-contest. Whatever happened to supposed "journalist neutrality"? "Objectivity?" This line here is exceptionally ridiculous in its gross generalization:


It really isn't a surprise so many musicians and other traditional artists supported the Axis. It was representing an old world in opposition to violent revolution and rampant money-rule, a world where traditions and moral values still held ground.

Articles like this are what they call 'hate-filled'.

To be fair, this is a meta-article -- an article about something someone else has written. I agree with you that the original research seems simplistic, sensationalist and done ass-backwards in the hopes of making headlines, but this article, the one that comments on it, seems fairly balanced -- even if it refers to Vesa Sirén as "she". :p

The Ripper
05-23-2010, 11:00 AM
An American by the name of Timothy Jackson has in recent times raised some eye brows in Finland with his sensationalist claims of Sibelius' supposed support for German National Socialism. One could view this as the moralistic sensationalism of someone far removed from the realities of the period and thus able to make such rash conclusions. But the accusations are in fact far older than that.

In today's Helsingin Sanomat I read an article about Sibelius making some sort of come back in Germany, where he has been considered a "third rate" composer and he has generally been excluded. What caught my eye was the comments by Sir Simon Rattle, the British conductor conducting Sibelius in Berlin, where he said that "Theodor W. Adorno killed Sibelius in this country" referring to Sibelius' low popularity in Germany.

Those who have studied the origins of cultural marxism, critical theory and other anti-national, anti-European political/sociological tendencies will know Adorno as one of the Jewish leftist intellectuals who were very influential in setting up the post-WWII mental straight-jacket that we Europeans now wear. It would seem that his main opposition to Sibelius was quite politically / culturally motivated. Sibelius had been popular in NS Germany and Sibelius did not represent the "newest trends" but was rather the "last national romantic". I think its a fairly interesting example of how a patriotic and nationally orientated artist is sidelined in the post-war cultural and political climate.

I did some googling, and found some interesting articles. For example this article from 2000, about a doctoral thesis centering on Adorno's criticism of Sibelius. Antti Vihinen, the author of the thesis, claims quite ironically, that "Adorno's theories prove to be... nationalistic, chauvinistic, and even racist," and another Sibelius scholar says that this Jew swore by German supremacy in the field of music. :D

Here is the article:


Culture - Tuesday 24.10.2000

Theodor Adorno vs. Jean Sibelius - seconds out for the final round?

Thesis argues that Adorno's criticisms of Sibelius's Nazi sympathies were unfounded

By Vesa Sirén

Why is it that the music of Jean Sibelius (1865-1957) and perhaps also that of other Finnish composers finds a relatively chilly reception in Germany? One reason that has been offered up for decades is the writing of the German philosopher and sociologist Theodor Wiesengrund Adorno (1903-1969), who took a very dim view of our national composer.

For Adorno, Sibelius was a "scribbler" and to be classified along with the other amateurs who were frightened to study composition theory. These barbs carried some weight, since Adorno was an important figure on the cultural scene in West Germany in the post-war period.

Antti Vihinen, Managing Director of the Sibelius Hall in Lahti, presented his doctoral thesis on Friday, and listed his views on what it was precisely that so annoyed Adorno. The thrust of his conclusions is staunchly patriotic and puts Adorno down with a vengeance. To be fair, Vihinen (see photo above) himself did not escape a number of critical brickbats from his academic opponent, but even a flawed interpretation of the facts suggests that Adorno was out of line.

"Adorno's theories prove to be...
nationalistic, chauvinistic, and even racist", thunders Vihinen. He bases his claims in part on the view offered by Professor Eero Tarasti (who suggested the topic for the thesis) of Adorno's "extreme Germanic ethnocenticity". Another leading Sibelius scholar, the late Prof. Erik Tawaststjerna, observed more than 30 years ago that Adorno "wanted to swear by the world supremacy of German music".

So, where are the roots to the animosity? Adorno glanced through a short work published in 1937 by Bengt von Törne entitled Sibelius: A Close Up. According to von Törne, Sibelius was the greatest composer of his age, and much bigger than Gustav Mahler or Arnold Schoenberg. He recalls that Sibelius himself put down Mahler in private.
Adorno took a very different view:

Mahler and Schoenberg were good, and Sibelius was lousy. He published his views in the magazine Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung in 1938 under the dismissive heading "A Marginal Note about Sibelius".

In addition to taking Sibelius to task on aesthetic grounds, Adorno associated him with the National Socialist ideology. "Sibelius's supporters scream in chorus: nature is all, nature is all. Great Pan, and where necessary blood and earth, step up into the picture." Sibelius was thus identified with the Nazis' Blut und Boden slogans, stolen originally from National Romanticism.

In the 1960s Adorno, one of the doyens of the "Frankfurt School", returned to Sibelius in his lectures as "a dangerous example", and he picked up his earlier "Marginal Note" for inclusion in the anthology Impromptus (1968).

According to Antti Vihinen, Sibelius and Adorno remain even now inevitably intertwined in German programme-notes on Sibelius concerts. The one cannot be mentioned without the other.
Adorno was irritated
among other things by the great popularity accorded to Sibelius, and perhaps by the fact that Olin Downes, the influential critic of the New York Times during the 1930s and 1940s, would boost Sibelius at the deliberate expense of Mahler and Schoenberg. "If Sibelius is to be considered a good composer, then we shall have to disregard all of the criteria historically used to evaluate music from Bach to Schoenberg", grumbled Adorno. The historical benchmarks remained German, despite the fact that Adorno was himself an exile arriving in the United States via England.

And was Sibelius really a Nazi sympathiser, as Adorno indirectly hinted?

Professor Erik Tawaststjerna, the author of a definitive five-volume biography of Sibelius, argued that there was "not a scrap of truth to the claim", because the Nazi doctrines were "completely at odds with Sibelius's inherent humanism". In addtion, Tawaststjerna asserted that Sibelius felt "a strong sympathy towards things English and American".
Sibelius's most important Nazi links are easily listed. In 1934 he was invited (along with a couple of other composers) to become the deputy chairman of the Ständige Rat für die internationale Zusammenarbeit der Komponisten.

The chairman at the time was Richard Strauss, Germany's most prominent composer and an old acquaintance of Sibelius. It soon transpired that the organisation was little more than a mouthpiece for Blut und Boden propaganda.

In 1935 Adolf Hitler awarded Sibelius the Goethe Medal on the occasion of the composer's 70th birthday. And in 1942 Joseph Goebbels founded (according to his diary entries at least) a German Sibelius Society on the initiative of "Finns" - more than likely the Finnish Foreign Ministry.
It is almost as simple
and speedy a task to wipe off the smears on Sibelius's reputation. According to his secretary, Jean Sibelius was always eager to accept honorary appointments, even to the extent of becoming the honorary chairman of a) a Japanese gramophone record club, and b) an American anglers' association. His acceptance was a routine exercise, and hardly the result of serious consideration. I'd also tend to the view that in 1934 only the very sharpest-eyed of foreigners would have been able to spot the true nature of the foundation chaired by Richard Strauss.

The Goethe Medal was only one of dozens of gongs received by Sibelius when he turned seventy (or indeed before and after this point). In the 1930s he was arguably the most popular living composer in the world. For him to have turned down this particular accolade would have been quite an achievement, and not without political ramifications. At this point nobody sought actively to isolate Germany; let us not forget that Britain, France, and the United States all took part in the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.

As for the establishment of a Sibelius Society in Germany, this was almost certainly a ministerial request from Helsinki. Gainsaying this honour would have caused friction and problems between Sibelius and the Foreign Ministry at a moment when the composer wished to add his symbolic weight to the cause of the nation. In his thank-you address, broadcast on radio, he even mentioned the "shared destinies" of Germany and Finland. Then again, the two countries were both fighting against the Soviet Union at this juncture.
Some while ago
I collected the memories of Sibelius's contemporaries and the composer's and others' own diary entries and correspondence for inclusion in a book. According to Sibelius's granddaughter, he was "aggrieved" in the 1930s when "the Finnish press wrote for the first time about the doings of Mr Hitler". "Pappa was in no sense a Hitler devotee", stressed Laura Enckell in my interview with her.

Other family members reinforced this perception in separate interviews: Sibelius remained dubious about Hitler and wondered at the personality cult that surrounded him. Already in the Swedish-language edition of the Tawaststjerna biography there is a reference to a diary entry from August 1943 in which Sibelius condemns anti-semitism out of hand.

Sibelius continued in this vein on September 19, 1943, with the back-handed remark that "In certain countries, Germany for example, the ‘Aryan Clause' is essential in order to get rid of awkward talented people. Without it, eugenics would never get its place in the sun". Sibelius recognised the big lie when he saw it.

The very next day, he condemned the race laws. "You (meaning himself; Sibelius often used the secon person to address himself in his writings) are a cultural aristocrat, and you can fight against such stupid prejudices". Another day went by and he was writing even more strongly: "These childish Rassenbestimmungen, which are the most complete hogwash! I am an artist, and I have without doubt benefited from the good sides of different races".
Whilst Sibelius may show himself
to be no admirer of Nazi German policies on race, the Party's wooing of him does make Adorno's ire somewhat easier to understand. And it is quite true that Sibelius and many other foreign composers really were buttered up and politicised by the regime.

The Nazis even wrote new lyrics of The War Song of Tyrtaeus, known to the Finns as "The Song of the Athenians". Gesang der Atherner became Hymne des Wehrwillen - A "Hymn to Defensive Resolve".
Antti Vihinen notes that Sibelius
benefited in kind from the advances of the Nazis, since his music was performed in Germany more often after their rise to power. This is true enough, but it is also true that Sibelius's popularity increased in Britain and the United States during the 1930s.

Vihinen also sees Sibelius spreading "fascist propaganda" in his statement to the U.S. in 1941, when he spoke of the Bolshevik assault on Finland and the dangers of Bolshevism in Europe. One could read these things another way.

Antti Vihinen's work contains a whole host of other delicious references. This is one of the most extensive examinations in Finnish of National Socialist music policy and indeed of Adorno himself, although the "opponent" or ex officio examiner did find translation errors in Vihinen's text and things that he regarded as clear misunderstandings by the writer.

Theodor Adorno's Germanic bias stands proven, albeit that Adorno applauded only those German composers whom he regarded as the best, and he also had great respect for figures such as Béla Bartók, Leos Janácek, and other non-German giants. For some reason "the Germanic in music" was for Adorno "a suitable tongue for humanism". He had little truck with other languages.