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Gustav Mahler, Julius Korngold and the Neue Freie Presse

Michael Haas

$305

Hardback

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English
Routledge
29 April 2025
Julius Korngold, critic at the highly influential newspaper Neue Freie Presse, was close to and supportive of Gustav Mahler and, for the first time, essays on the man and his music are made available in English. Those on his time at Vienna’s Imperial Opera are extensive and well informed.

Both Korngold and Mahler shared a common Moravian Jewish background, born in 1860 and both students of Anton Bruckner. The paper was Jewish owned, and Theodor Herzl, the founder of the Zionist movement, was its cultural editor and Korngold’s employer. Claims that Mahler was driven out of Vienna by an antisemitic press are shown to be wrong, given Mahler’s support by the most powerful critic of the day writing in the Empire’s most influential newspaper. Importantly, the essays also reveal a world of Modernism that includes Mahler’s innovations at the opera, and Modernism in music before departures from tonality. Mahler was claimed by Arnold Schoenberg as his musical hero, firmly placing him in the Modernist camp. Yet Korngold was universally seen as an archconservative and his relationship with Mahler was personal and his understanding profound. The book addresses the question of “Mahler, the first Modernist or the last Romantic?”.

The book will be invaluable for Mahler enthusiasts, musicians, musicologists as well as cultural historians.
By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   570g
ISBN:   9781032368528
ISBN 10:   1032368527
Series:   Rethinking Austrian and German Music
Pages:   210
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Michael Haas studied piano and composition at Vienna’s Music Academy and Vienna’s Conservatory and received his PhD in 2016 at London Middlesex University. From 1977, he was engaged as a producer at Decca Records working primarily with Sir Georg Solti. In the mid-1980s, he initiated the series “Entartete Musik”, the first retrospective of music lost during the Nazi years. He then moved to Sony Classical where he produced Claudio Abbado and the Berlin Philharmonic before being appointed Vice President at Sony Classical in New York. He returned to Decca Records in 1995. In 2000, Haas worked as a freelance producer and was appointed Director of the Suppressed Music Division at the Jewish Music Institute at SOAS, London University. From 2002–2010 he was Music Curator at Vienna’s Jewish Museum. His books include Forbidden Music – The Jewish Composers Banned by the Nazis (2013) and The Music of Exile (2023). In 2016 he co-founded the Exilarte Center at Vienna’s University of Music and Performing Arts. Over the course of his professional career as recording producer Haas has won many recording prizes including four Grammys.

Reviews for Gustav Mahler, Julius Korngold and the Neue Freie Presse

This remarkable collection of contemporary reviews and essays relating to Gustav Mahler is a revelation. Not only do we come away with a deep appreciation of the high standards of Viennese music criticism, including one of its preeminent practitioners, Julius Korngold of the Neue Freie Presse, but we gain a new understanding of the nuances and complexities of the Viennese reception of Maher’s activities and legacy as a composer, conductor, and opera administrator. With insightful commentary and valuable background annotations, Michael Haas challenges us to rethink received notions of fin-de-siècle musical modernism, cultural politics, German nationalism, and the ever-pertinent question of antisemitism in an environment in which many of Mahler’s most ardent critics (and champions) were themselves Jewish. A most welcome addition to the literature. - Christopher Hailey Frequently seen as a victim of anti-Semitic criticism in the Vienna of his day, Mahler’s later reputation actually owed much to Jewish criticism of the period, above all to that of the influential Julius Korngold. In giving us access to this fascinating writer (father of the ultimately more famous composer) and others of his contemporaries, Michael Haas provides invaluable access to a rich field of criticism not otherwise readily available to the non-German reader. - Peter Franklin Haas's efforts have produced a volume which opens a window into Mahler's professional life in Vienna and the characters which populated it that we've never had before. This is a hugely important contribution to Mahler scholarship as it offers a far more nuanced, balanced and detailed picture of Mahler's years in Vienna. - Kenneth Woods


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