296 Pages
by
Routledge
296 Pages
by
Routledge
292 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
The political control of music in the Third Reich has been analysed from several perspectives, and with ever increasing sophistication. However, music in Germany after 1945 has not received anything like the same treatment. Rather, there is an assumption that two separate musical cultures emerged in East and West alongside the division of Germany into two states with differing economic and... Read more
Contents: Introduction. Part 1 Allied re-education, 1945-49: Music and regeneration; Denazification; Anti-fascism and music; 'Cultural freedom' or 'contemporary realism'? Part 2 New Musical Cultures, 1949-55: Bach 'shenanigans'; Music and state in Germany: 1950-55; Dance music: the enemy within?; Collaboration, confrontation, and infiltration; Conclusion: when music mattered. Bibliography and sources; Index.
Biography
Toby Thacker is Lecturer in the School of History and Archaeology, Cardiff University, UK
'Toby Thacker’s Music after Hitler, 1945-1955 is a much needed, comprehensive examination of the murky history of musical life in post-war Germany, a complex matter that generated much more controversy and conflict than one would imagine. Going beyond existing studies of post-war cultural policies that pay little attention to music, or of the roles of the individual Allied forces or of musical life in specific locales, Music after Hitler, 1945-1955 draws on previously unavailable sources to weave together a carefully balanced comparative analysis of the diverse attitudes and policies of the four powers occupying Germany and of the Germans themselves. Most of all, Thacker calls our attention to the importance of music in both the Germans’ cultural heritage and the Allies’ perception of Germany’s cultural and political future, highlighting the unique treatment of musical matters in the period of the occupation and in the formative years of the two German states. In the process, Thacker succeeds in dispelling several myths, questioning long-held assumptions about the 'golden years' of Germany’s regeneration, the progressiveness of post-war musical tastes, and the fundamental differences between the musical ideals of East and West Germany. Pamela M. Potter, University of Wisconsin, USA ’...presents a very detailed description and analysis of disruptions and continuities in postwar German musical culture... Recommended.’ Choice ’...it is perhaps surprising that Toby Thacker has so intricate and absorbing a story to tell. Yet the story is there, and its telling benefits greatly from Thacker's close focus on the archival and documentary materials that have survived...the book acts as a valuable corrective to the broad -brush generalizations found in sources like The New Grove... Thacker has the historian's capacity for persuasive interpretation of the results of this seemingly limitless burrowing into the vast array of archival materials that remain f






