|
|
|
classifieds newsletter signup bars & clubs movie clock restaurants specials best of chicago film and video music and clubs stage sports words art features |
|
|
![]() Click for music events The sound of a lost generation James Conlon champions the music the Holocaust silenced
"I don't like injustice," conductor James Conlon declares in a very
matter-of-fact manner. "My parents brought me up that way: if there is
an injustice and you can undo that injustice, you should."
The injustice that Conlon refers to is that so much music written by
composers who perished in the Holocaust remains virtually unknown.
Lest anyone voice the common cliché that there are no lost
masterpieces out there, Conlon is quick to bring up recent examples such
as the looting of national treasures and archaeological sites in Iraq
and the destruction of ancient Buddhist statues in Afghanistan, "a
contemporary, documented picture of enormous masterpieces of art being
literally exploded right before our eyes on CNN," says Conlon.
"Humanity, unfortunately, has consistently destroyed its neighbors
through wars since the beginning of time," Conlon observes. "Every one
of those civilizations that got destroyed, the art got destroyed with
it." One of the most sought-after conductors on the planet, Conlon has
worked primarily in Europe for much of the last twenty years,
triumphantly taking on the impossible task of having brought stability
to a Paris Opera so volatile that it swallowed music directors alive,
including Daniel Barenboim, who was fired from that post in 1989 before
becoming music director of the Chicago Symphony. With Barenboim's
departure from the CSO after next season, Conlon is on everyone's short
list to succeed him as its music director.
Ask Conlon about such speculation, and he responds with what sounds
like a very rehearsed answer: "That's a hypothetical question. The only
time I think about a specific position is when somebody comes and says,
`We've decided that we want you.' Then I start to think about it."
For the moment, at least, Conlon and area audiences will have to be
content for him to conduct the CSO at its longtime summer home at
Ravinia, where he has guest conducted since the late 1970s.
As with every position he has accepted throughout his career, Conlon
is about to make a big splash at Ravinia right from the start. In
addition to celebrating Mozart's 2006 250th birthday by performing all
of his piano concertos across no less than three seasons, commemorating
the 400th anniversary of the publication of "Don Quixote" by performing
both popular and virtually unknown pieces related to the character,
reviving concert opera at Ravinia by presenting the crown jewel of
Italian opera, Verdi's "Otello," offering a major world premiere, a
multi-season Mahler cycle, and the long-term project nearest to Conlon's
own heart, presenting music of Holocaust-era composers who were banned
by the Nazis. Added to that struggle, however, were the additional obstacles of
"massive genocide, suppression and repression of artistic freedom from
an enormous, uncontrollable machine that rolled over their lives," adds
Conlon. "They were struggling anyway, and that finished them. And that
also finished them for successive generations because those successive
generations never knew the music."
Unearthing these lost musical treasures of the Holocaust has become
a virtual obsession for Conlon, who begins his first season as music
director of the Ravinia Festival on June 23 with a concert of music by
Mahler and a virtually forgotten composer who perished at Auschwitz,
Viktor Ullmann. Mahler and Ullmann will remain a season-long emphasis.
The pairing of Mahler and Ullmann is not a coincidence and will,
Conlon hopes, serve as a reminder that music that we now think of as
great--namely Mahler--was not widely performed or known just a few
decades ago.
"To me, the most amazing paradox is that this man [Mahler] who only
saw the first decade of the twentieth century seems to have already
found an expression that would resonate with everybody as that century
unfolded," Conlon assesses. "It's like the animals who felt the tsunami
coming and left the beach areas before it came. It has been said that
artists and neurotics can sense the anxiety of a time and express it
before anybody else. Mahler was a great genius and artist, and I think
that also applies. This is a man who foresaw intuitively so much. It is
music of our time, yet written over a hundred years ago."
Still, the popularity of Mahler is a relatively recent phenomenon
that happened during the second half of the twentieth century.
"Mahler was celebrated as a conductor everywhere he went," says
Conlon, "but not necessarily as a composer. In Europe, there was an
initial discomfort and reluctance to play his pieces. The First World
War also played a role in preventing Mahler's music from becoming
instilled. And don't forget that because Mahler was Jewish, his music
did not get performed in the German-speaking countries in the 1930s and
'40s. Even today, you still occasionally run into people--usually of an
older generation--who feel that Mahler is a phase, a mode, a craze that
will disappear."
Ironically, it was conductors such as Bruno Walter and Otto
Klemperer who fled the Nazis and came to the States who brought Mahler
with them and who were the first to introduce the music into America.
Mahler was slow to catch on at first because the atonal twelve-tone
system of Schoenberg, Berg and Webern had taken firm hold of the
post-World War II generation of composers.
"We passed through a period at least twenty-to-thirty--perhaps
forty--years of a certain type of orthodoxy," says Conlon. "That is what
happens when an orthodoxy prevails. Arbitrary judgments are made about
the language, the mode of expression or even the modes of behavior that
need to be practiced or not practiced in order to constitute a
meaningful member of the community. We do that in the secular world, the
religious world and the artistic world. My personal belief is that that
type of orthodoxy--certainly in the artistic world--always leads to an
uprooting or a strangling of the extraordinary spirit of creativity that
exists in humanity. Orthodoxy is an attempt to narrow the field to one
given viewpoint, however valuable that viewpoint might be."
Mahler's acceptance was finally able to transcend the fact that it
was not serial or twelve-tone music, but that acceptance came about
gradually.
For Conlon himself, now in his mid-fifties, that epiphany came about
when he was an 18-year old conducting student at Aspen singing in the
chorus that was part of the Mahler Second "Resurrection" Symphony. "The
day that work became real to me is a day I will never forget," recalls
Conlon, who will conduct the same monumental work with the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra and Chorus at Ravinia on June 24.
"The person whose charismatic personality would popularize Mahler in
the U.S. was Leonard Bernstein," says Conlon. "So it took successive
generations of people convinced in the value of Mahler's music to
actually impose it. Once it was imposed, it took, and has stayed with
us. It is not an accident that everybody now plays it, everybody now
listens to it, that everybody who conducts wants to conduct it. This
music has already found its place as a universal message that will speak
to all times. It certainly spoke to the latter part of the twentieth
century."
Conlon sees a parallel to composers from the Holocaust era, and
feels that anytime there is a composer--or a group of composers--whose
music has not been played for the wrong reasons, the music needs
committed performances from persons who believe in the music.
"Yes, there is a moral aspect," Conlon admits, "but it takes on an
historical artistic aspect as well in that we, ourselves have been
deprived--not just the victims--of this period of art. If you suddenly
found 2,000 paintings from a period of art that was unknown or
considered irrelevant, somebody, somewhere would display them and say,
`Come and look at these and feel the ethos of the time.' That is what I
am doing.
"There is a worldview contained in the collective voice of these
composers--not all the same, nor should they be--that will invoke
feelings not just about the political reality of the time and the
Holocaust, but about what art was doing at that time. Remember that most
of this music is not about the Holocaust. This music is about what
artists were feeling and grappling with and trying to express at that
time. The Holocaust mowed them down or forced them to flee. The artistic
garden was uprooted and we have lived with the consequences of that
catastrophe the entire latter half of the twentieth century. But we
should know the facts, and the facts are that this art is there, and
this art should be heard."
For Conlon, it is not enough to simply know the names of these
composers and that they were Holocaust victims. "The way that we `know'
music," he says, "is by live performance."
If Conlon's mission is successful and little by little this music
gets performed and has committed performances by people who love it,
"those pieces that have a universal message and that survive their time
and their story will rise to the surface," says Conlon. "My contention
is that there are literally hundreds of such pieces and that they've got
to get out there."
Where would we be, Conlon wonders, if Mendelssohn had not insisted
on reviving Bach, a century after the music had been virtually forgotten
after his death? "When might it have happened?" Conlon ponders. "Would
it have happened? Likewise, if Arab Muslim scholars had not saved
Aristotle and Plato, we would not necessarily have had them in our
Western civilization. It is not important, in the end, how long it is
before something is unearthed and disseminated, it is only important
that it is disseminated."
Viktor Ullmann is the first of at least three Holocaust-era
composers that Conlon will spotlight for a year, each over multiple
seasons, which will also coincide with a multi-season emphasis on
Mahler, whom Conlon says was far more important to the lost generation
of these lost composers than was ever known.
"By illuminating them," says Conlon, "at the same time, we
illuminate him. So Mahler's influence and importance--although it is
enormous and grandiose today--is even larger than we think. And the CSO
is one of the greatest Mahler orchestras, so a multi-year Mahler cycle
will be an essential part of that. You hear Mahler all the time, and
James Levine did a Mahler cycle in 1979 that I participated in, but it
is rare to hear a cycle done in order so that the audience will be able
to follow it over several years."
Another interesting Chicago Symphony connection is that the
orchestra has Holocaust survivors in its ranks and past music directors
such as Fritz Reiner and Sir Georg Solti ended up conducting in the
States after having fled the Nazis.
"There is actually a citation from the Mahler First Symphony in the
Ullmann Second Symphony, which is why I am pairing them together,"
Conlon explains. "That work is one of the two compositions Ullman was
working on when he was transported to Auschwitz, so it remains his last
word, so to speak."
The fact that we have any Ullmann scores at all is the result of his
having methodically kept all of his music together while he was in
concentration camps.
"There was a library at Theresienstadt--which the Nazi officers
loved and took advantage of--and Ullmann correctly calculated that the
librarian would survive, and he did," Conlon relates. "He was his friend
and he had consigned all of the music to him. Ullmann had asked him to
send the music to certain addresses after the war in the event that
those particular people would survive. Fortunately, one of those persons
did survive, the music was sent to him and all of that music ended up in
London and remained in an attic until the 1970s."
After the war, Ullmann's Piano Concerto was found in Prague but was
not performed until 1992. Conlon and pianist Garrick Ohlsson gave the
American premiere of the work last year in Aspen and Conlon, Ohlsson and
the Chicago Symphony will perform the work at Ravinia on July 1.
"When he went to the concentration camp," says Conlon, "he didn't
have everything with him. There are, for instance, two string quartets
that have been performed and reviewed favorably, but they have never
been found. The third string quartet, which was written at
Theresienstadt, is an absolute masterpiece."
One of the most fascinating Ullmann scores that has survived is a
one-act opera called "The Emperor of Atlantis," which blatantly parodies
Hitler and the Nazi regime and which Conlon will conduct at Temple
Shalom on June 30. That idea is Conlon's, who says that presenting the
work in a synagogue is "a very powerful way to send its message."
"It is a fairy tale and a political satire," assesses Conlon, "and
is one of the most powerful, life-affirming works and is spellbinding in
its theatrical genius. It has a Brechtian way of synthesizing classical
elements, citations from meaningful music symbols of the German and
Czech traditions that would be immediately recognizable to the inmates
and the musicians themselves. You can also smell Berlin of the twenties
in some of the nightclub music."
Though the work was extensively rehearsed at Theresienstadt, the
theme was too close to the bone for the camp officials, and the
performance itself was cancelled. All of those involved were ultimately
exterminated by the Nazis, with the ironic exception of the singer who
portrayed the role of Death, who survived into the 1980s, according to
Conlon.
Conlon will pair the work with the Sextet from Richard Strauss'
final opera "Capriccio," an idea that came to him in the middle of the
night by complete accident.
"I was looking at `Capriccio' for other reasons," Conlon recalls,
"and when I saw the date of the premiere, it went off like a bomb
because I saw that it was being rehearsed in September and October of
1942; Ullmann entered Theresienstadt on September 8, 1942. `My God,' I
thought, `here is this man [Ullmann] with all of these gifts going into
a concentration camp, and here is one of the world's greatest composers
[Strauss] at the end of his career and his life about to create his last
operatic masterpiece--and a sublime work it is--rehearsing it at the
same time with every advantage and every piece of glory that was his
due, but at least he had them.
"The contrast was so strong that it set my mind on fire. To hear
this music juxtaposed is so extraordinary, because you see how the
entire world was on two tracks at that point. Here you have the highest
achievement of one of the most sublime, artistic traditions in our
civilization--that of the Germanic tradition of classical art--yet at
the same time, capable of the atrocities that were going on. That makes
a powerful statement of its own."
"Unfortunately," Conlon further reflects, "history has taught us
that the presence of great art in great civilizations has not
necessarily protected those civilizations from turning the wrong way. It
is a lesson we should learn and we shouldn't be afraid to turn a mirror
on ourselves as well."
Also by Dennis Polkow Tip of the Week
Tip of the Week
|
|
about Newcitychicago | about Newcity magazine | advertising | privacy policy | FAQ | employment |