A recently published book has just come my way, Gustav Mahler: New Insights into His Life, Times and Work, by Alfred Mathis-Rosenzweig; translation, annotation and commentary by Jeremy Barham. It is a work begun in 1933 but unfinished at the time of the author's death in 1948; the typescript was presumed lost until 1997.
The author points out, early in the work, that the Nazis made a special case of Mahler. That is, it was not enough for them merely to ban his music and remove from print all references to him. "The Nazis," he writes, "were apparently clear from the outset that they would not be able to demolish the continuing force of Gustav Mahler's memory and his music through mere bureaucratic means. Therefore he was immediately put on the list of 'degenerate' composers, and books were written against him that attempted to prove his guilt in the adulteration and degeneration of the values of German musical culture." He goes on to say it would have made no difference if Mahler had not been of Jewish descent "because his music reflects with overwhelming power and intensity the sorrows of the world and the tragedy of his own life's struggle" [italics in original].
I find this an interesting observation that, while perhaps made elsewhere also, is worth our knowing.
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