When it comes to listening, whether to music or to discourse, the answer to the question: how many ears are involved? depends, of course, on the number of listeners; but one thing seems quite sure: it will be a multiple of two. Ears, in the act of listening, work by pairs. There seem to be no exceptions …
Fojan Gharibnejad’s
In Bruckner’s third-to-last motet, the
The paper deals with the performance history of Gustav Mahler’s symphonic works in Japan before the Second World War and the cultural-political events connected with it. While Mahler’s symphonies had been a regular feature of concert programs in Japan in the 1920s, in the 1930s attempts to establish a »Japanese harmony« increasingly challenged the previously uncritically adopted music from Germany and Austria. Klaus Pringsheim, who was convinced of the universality of functional harmony, became an enemy of this movement and was dismissed from the Tokyo Music Academy in 1937. His commitment to Mahler in Japan was also criticized. A study of Japanese music journals, however, makes it clear that Mahler’s music did not disappear from the Japanese scene until the last year of the war, despite the intensification of German-Japanese alliance politics.
The essay discusses Nikolaus Matthes’ new composition of the lost
Bestell-Informationen
Service / Kontakt
Kontakt