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BORIS BLACHER

A Centenary Sketch

by

Dr David C F Wright

2003 is the centenary of the birth of that fine composer, Boris Blacher.

He was born in Niu-chang, China on 19 January 1903 of Baltic descent. It was in Irkulak in Siberia where he began to study music seriously. In 1919 he went to work at the opera house in Charbin in China. Three years later he moved to Berlin. This was in 1922 when his parents said that he had to study something worthwhile and so he studied architecture and mathematics. But, having pleased his parents, he was later able to recommence his music studies studying composition at the Berlin Hochschule fur Musick with Friedrich Ernst Koch. He moved up to Berlin University in 1927 and until 1931 studied under Schering, Blume and van Hornbostel.

He was a brilliant student. He composed an opera and a symphony which he destroyed. He sought perfection or, at least, satisfaction with his own work. He earned his living by making arrangements and some composition. Architecture and mathematics no longer concerned him.

Karl Böhm is only usually remembered for the fine conductor that he was. And he was. What is not known is that Böhm was a very courageous and decent man. Composers like Blacher were frowned upon and were treated with suspicion by Nazi Germany. Blacher was a Baltic and had lived in China. He was not of the pure German race. Hitler and his national socialists hated all races that were not pure German. And hatred leads to all sorts of crime and despicable deeds.

At this time Böhm was conductor at Dresden a post he had taken up in 1932 after successful tenures at Munich opera (1921-7), Darmstadt (1927-31) and Hamburg (1931-4). He was Austrian, of course and had no love for Nazism. Böhm found Blacher a teaching post at Dresden Conservatory in 1938. Böhm was impressed with two orchestral works of Blacher's, the Serenade of 1933 and the Capriccio also of 1933.

But Blacher had to relinquish this post in 1939 since it did not conform to the Nazi's ideas of culture. He was accused, among others, of writing degenerate music. It is often the case in human affairs that those who are guilty of a particular thing accuse others of their own crimes and mistakes. Blacher went hungry. He could not pursue his career as he wished. From all sides he was dismissed and mentally persecuted.

The defeat of Hitler was the best thing that could have happened to Blacher and, indeed, to all of us. Blacher resumed teaching composition at the International Music Institute in Berlin-Zehlendorf and, from 1948, as professor at the aforementioned Berlin Hochschule and, from 1953 to 1973, its director.

He was a brilliant teacher only equalled by Mátyás Seiber. He was in demand everywhere. He gave lectures and workshops at summer schools at Bryanstown (1949 and 1950), at the Salzburg Mozarteum (1950 and 1951) and at Tanglewood (1955). Also in 1955 the West Berlin Academy of Arts appointed him a regular member of its music section and the leadership of it was given to him in 1961. From 1968 to 1971 he was President of the Academy. Germany was admitting their previous wrongful treatment of him. Nonetheless these honours were more than deserved.

To backtrack on his teaching. Among his many composition pupils were Francis Burt, Gottfried von Einem (Blacher helped extensively with the libretto for Der Prozess), Klebe and Reimann. Blacher himself received many prizes for his own music including the Hamburg Bach Prize and the Grosser Kunstpreis of North Rhine, Westphalia.

His music is quite extraordinary. Although a German composer his music is not grim-laden as is much German music with its Teutonic dullness and heavy ponderous tread. His music is playful and witty. He was a brilliant orchestrator. His music has colour and brilliance and is seldom showy. The brightness of tone and textural clarity quite unlike British orchestral music of the first half of that century which was thick, turgid and embarrassing.

Of great importance are his works for the theatre which are graphic, the music being precise. His ballet scores are infused with fine melodic ideas, rhythmically fascinating and of unflagging interest.

His Symphony of 1938 is a masterly work written in the days of acceptance in Dresden and shows signs of atonality and tremendous originality. It was in 1950 that dodecaphony was introduced in his ballet, Lysistrata.

Something must be said here about the difference between atonality and dodecaphonic, or serial music since many writers on music and music dictionaries get it wrong. Atonal music is generally accepted as music not written in a key and while serial music is not written in a key it is assumed that all serial music is atonal. There are serial works which have a key basis as there are atonal works which have an orientation to a key. Comparatively little atonal music is serial. Serial music is serial music. To call it atonal is misleading since, as we have said, many works which are atonal are certainly not serial. It takes a very great composer to write serial music and this is why few have with any success. This is why serial music is dismissed but it is really a mere camouflage for the composers and musicians who have not the intellect and ability to deal with it.

In Lysistrata Blacher introduces variable metres and to great effect.

During the Second World War Blacher wrote his opera Romeo and Juliet for four singers and seven instrumentalists. With the restrictions upon him he could not have used larger forces. It was completed in 1943 and clearly is the composer's statement of disgust not only of war but the loss of life and the fact that often things were never quite what they seemed. Neither Romeo nor Juliet should have died. In the war loved ones die unnecessarily. War is never convenient or kind. The opera Die Flut of 1946 takes further Blacher's social statements. It deals with the behaviour of people in extreme conditions and it is clear that war is not far from his mind. His opera-ballet Preussiches Marchen mocks the trust Germany had in their leadership and authority and the absurd veneration of uniforms. Both these works are commentaries and condemnations of the Socialism of Nazis.

The confidence of this amazing composer took his interest into the world of electronics of which there are seven major compositions. Zwischenfalle bei einer Notlandung of 1965 returns to the subject of people under extreme pressure revealing the retained effects and dismay of the composer at war and injustice. His opera Abstrakte oper no. 1, with a text by his friend and fellow composer Werner Egk, dating from 1953, deals with a vast range of emotions such as love, fear and panic. It is this interest in human situations which shows the character of this innovative composer.

He was neither a snob nor a bigot. He used jazz in some of his works including an unpublished Concerto for Jazz orchestra of 1946. There are the Two Poems for Jazz Quartet of 1957 but it is probably his orchestral music that has made the greatest effect.

The Concertante Musick of 1937 has a vitality and instant appeal and at its close a soaring music of untiring beauty. I introduced it to and conducted a youth orchestra in this superb piece many years ago. Their parents complained that we were to perform a modern piece but the young people loved it and rightly so! There is a fine Violin Concerto of 1948. The Variations on a theme of Paganini of 1947 established him as a composer. It is a work of enviable mastery. 1954 saw the appearance of a very fine Viola Concerto. Variable metres are exploited further in Ornaments of 1953 and Music for Cleveland of 1957 was adored by George Szell.

Study in Pianissimo is very clever and totally original. There is no work to compare with it.

I was present at the London premiere of the 1964 Cello Concerto in which the soloist was Siegfried Palm. I have never forgotten it. Nor will I. The orchestration is sparse at times Sbut the cello writing has never been bettered. It is the greatest cello concerto of the 20th century. It is original, clear, beautifully structured, well written, full of ideas and rhythmic contrasts and totally fascinating.

All his concertos employ a small orchestra. He wanted clarity and he successfully achieved it.

There are three piano concertos of 1947, 1952 and 1961 respectively. The Piano Concerto no. 2 is a work that any composer would be proud of, possessing an intellectual power second to none. I believe it is still available on Berlin Classics 0090152BC. It is dedicated to Gery Hertzog. The piano concertos are played by Horst Gobel with the orchestras conducted by Rudolf Alberth and Takao Ukigaya on Thorofon - #2167. A Trumpet Concerto appeared in 1970. There are five string quartets which rank alongside those of Bartók and Bacewicz.

As might be expected Blacher's music often has an oriental touch. His music has a mercurial quality seen throughout his impressive output.

When Blacher died in Berlin in 1975 he left a legacy of over twenty major theatre works, over forty orchestral works, a dozen choral works including the fine oratorio Der Grossenquisitor of 1947 as well as an impressive Requiem of 1958, premiered in 1959 by Solti, many songs and chamber music of rare quality.

As previously stated Blacher was not a snob. Jewish Chronicle was a joint oratorio composed by Dessau, Hartmann, Henze and Wagner-Regeny premiered by Christoph von Dohnanyi in 1961. Blacher wrote the Prologue.

The Symphony of 1938, the Violin Concerto of 1948 and the Poeme of 1974 are available on Signum LC8939. The violin soloist is Kolja Blacher and the Frankfurt (Oder) Philharmonic Orchestra is conducted by Nikos Athinaos.

I adore his Thirteen ways of looking at a blackbird which, like so much of his work teems with detail. I had the pleasure of meeting him once ... a gaunt man, kind but slightly severe-looking whose opinions on music were both succinct and precise.

I will accept that there are too many interesting composers worthy of attention but here is one who is at the top of the list of discerning musicians and music lovers.

Copyright David C F Wright, 1972 renewed 2003

This article or any part of it must not be copied, used, downloaded or stored in any retrieval system without the prior consent of the author. Failure to comply constitutes a breach of copyright and is actionable at law."

 

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