Israeli orchestra strikes note of controversy with Wagner work (INDEPENDENT UK) DONALD MACINTYRE JERUSALEM 05/31/12)
Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/classical/news/israeli-orchestra-strikes-note-of-controversy-with-wagner-work-7804991.html
INDEPENDENT UK
INDEPENDENT UK Articles-Index-Top
Publishers-Index-Top
A seven-decade old cultural taboo will be broken next month when an
Israeli symphony orchestra will play works by Richard Wagner inside
the country for the first time since the state´s foundation in 1948.
The Eretz Israel orchestra, the pre-state forerunner of the world-
famous Israel Philharmonic, stopped playing the music of the German
composer, who was notorious for expressing anti-Semitic views in 1938
after the Nazis´ Kristallnacht pogrom of Jews. Attempts to include
Wagner, who was also Hitler´s favourite composer, in Israeli concert
repertoires since then have always been thwarted by heated opposition.
When the conductor Daniel Barenboim used an encore to lead the
visiting Berlin Staatskapelle orchestra in playing the overture of
Tristan Und Isolde at a Jerusalem concert in 2001, there were angry
walkouts and he was widely denounced from the then Prime Minister,
Ariel Sharon, down. The concert will be part of a day of discussion
and music at Tel Aviv University. It will explore the inspiration the
Zionist visionary, Theodor Herzl, drew from Wagner´s opera Tannhäuser
when he was writing the first draft of his seminal book The Jewish
State.
The event, which will also consider the interpretations of Wagner by
the conductor Arturo Toscanini, a noted anti fascist, is the idea of
the Israel Wagner Society, which includes Holocaust survivors among
its members.
The founder of the society, Jonathan Livny, told The Independent
yesterday that although his father, who was a Holocaust survivor,
brought a Wagner record to Israel, his first real encounter with the
composer was in Britain, as a 14-year-old with a portable cassette
player at the now defunct Jewish boarding school, Carmel College in
Oxfordshire. "I remember thinking, here I am, an Israeli kid on the
banks of the Thames, near Oxford, listening to this goddamned
terrible man who writes God´s music."
Mr Livny, 65, said he had circumvented the long-held view that
publicly subsidised orchestras should not play Wagner by ensuring
that each of the 100 musicians who will play Der Ring des Nibelungen,
The Valkyrie and other works will be privately engaged as
individuals. He pointed out that the Israeli train system uses German
trains and that Israel´s Navy deploys German-built
submarines. "Wagner is the last boycott," he said. "I imagine Admiral
Dönitz must be turning in his grave to think that Jewish marines are
sailing German U-boats."
He said that those who were most vociferous in calling for a boycott
of Wagner "don´t listen to classical music anyway". He added: "The
important thing is that this is good music, and I am against any
boycott of that regardless of who wrote it. Also you can´t understand
modern music without listening to Wagner. Schoenberg, Mahler, all
these composers were disciples of his. It´s like saying ´don´t listen
to Beethoven´. He made his imprint on music. And so did Wagner."
Mr Livny referred to the recent row in Britain over Israel´s Habima
Theatre´s staging of The Merchant of Venice, declaring: "I am against
cultural boycotts of any kind and people who live in glass houses
shouldn´t throw stones. You can´t do everything to ensure that the
Habima plays in London and then say ´don´t listen to Wagner´.
(©independent.co.uk 05/31/12)
Return to Top
MATERIAL REPRODUCED FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY