Max Deutsch

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Max Deutsch
File:Max Deutsch.jpg
Born (1892-11-17)17 November 1892
Vienna
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Paris
Occupation <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Classical composer
  • Conductor
  • Academic teacher
Organization <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>

Max Deutsch (17 November 1892, in Vienna – 22 November 1982, in Paris) was an Austrian-French composer, conductor, and academic teacher. He studied with Arnold Schönberg and was his assistant. Teaching at the Sorbonne and the École Normale de Musique de Paris, he influenced notable students such as Philippe Capdenat, Donald Harris, György Kurtág and Philippe Manoury. He tried to destroy all his own compositions.

Career

Deutsch was a pupil of and assistant to Arnold Schönberg. He studied under him in Vienna before the First World War; and followed Schönberg as his assistant to Amsterdam in 1921.[1][2] Deutsch was a Fellow and taught at UNESCO, and taught at the Sorbonne (Paris IV) from 1970 to 1971, and finally, from 1972 to the École Normale de Musique de Paris.[2][3][4]

He founded in Paris the theater Der Jüdische Spiegel (The Jewish Mirror), where many works of composers such as Schönberg, Anton Webern and Alban Berg were first performed.[3]

Konstantin Stanislavsky commissioned a work which was to become the opera Schach (Chess).[3][5] His "film symphony" Der Schatz (The Treasure) came from a commission from German film director Georg Wilhelm Pabst to provide an original musical score for his 1923 film. In structure, Der Schatz was crafted in two formats: a film score and a stand-alone symphonic work. The five act symphony survived because the manuscript in the latter form was donated to the Deutsches Filminstitut in 1982, shortly before Deutsch died. A score of years later, DeutschlandRadio Berlin collaborated with the Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz, conducted by de (Frank Strobel), to produce a record of "this extremely rare and totally unknown symphonic work". The recording became the foundation of a "synchronized restoration" of the film.[1] As film music the "piece is scored for a theater orchestra of the kind typically found in European cinemas of the day". It brings to mind the work of Kurt Weill and Stefan Wolpe, and foreshadows Max Steiner's modernist film scores, adopting expressionist atonal twelve tone leitmotifs. Mood setting and character are developed; pianos appear throughout.[1]

From 1940 to 1945, Deutsch served in the French Foreign Legion.[6] He formed long lasting friendships with Georges Bernanos and Jean Cassou. He was close to Tristan Tzara, Jean Cocteau and Vladimir Jankelevitch Max Deutsch was a friend of Ferruccio Busoni.[1][3]

After the Second World War, he devoted himself mainly to teaching music, chiefly following the principles of Schönberg. In Paris, among his hundreds of students, there were composers: Jorge Arriagada, Girolamo Arrigo, Colette Bailly, Sylvano Bussotti, Philippe Capdenat, Gérard Condé, fr (Ahmed Essyad), Jacqueline Fontyn, Sylvia Hallett, Donald Harris, fr (Felix Ibarrondo), György Kurtág, Philippe Manoury, Patrick Marcland, Luis de Pablo, fr (Yves-Marie Pasquet), Kyriakos Sfetsas, fr (Raymond Vaillant); American composers David Chaitkin, Eugene Kurtz, and Allen Shearer; British composer Nicholas Maw; Canadian-born Srul Irving Glick; Italian Sylvano Bussotti; and the conductor Alexandre Myrat; and music critic de (Heinz-Klaus Metzger).[2][3]

Family

A love of music and music theory ran in the family. His brother was Frederick Dorian (1902-1991). Frederick's name metamorphosed from Friederich Deutsch before he became a naturalized American. Both Deutsch brothers studied under Schönberg in Vienna. Frederick too was a master of music and learned the subject from a number of other sources. Frederick was taught musicology by Guido Adler. He earned a PhD in 1924 with his thesis, "Fugue in the works of Beethoven" ("Die Fugenarbeit in den Werke Beethoven's"). Eduard Streurmann taught him piano. Anton Webern taught him how to conduct and music theory. He spent a four year stint, beginning in 1930, as a music critic which was capped by a year as a correspondent of the Frankfurter Zeitung in Paris. Thereafter he became a Carnegie-Mellon University music professor.[7]

Legacy

Perversely, before he died Deutsch systematically destroyed all of his compositions, so that his only surviving legacy is his students.[upper-alpha 1]

In late 2013 a part of his oeuvre was released, namely a recording. He conducted the Suisse Romande Orchestra in a performance of three "master works" by Arnold Schoenberg. It includes short lectures by Deutsch on each of the pieces.[6]

Works

  • Schach, opera (1923)
  • Der Schatz, revue (Moulin Rouge) and film music for Georg Wilhelm Pabsts (1923)
  • Die freudlose Gasse (1925)
  • Apotheosis, opera (1972)
  • The Flight, incidental music for the play Tristan Tzara
  • Prayer for us carnal, choral symphony with a text by Charles Peguy
  • Choirs of men from Vinci[4][5]

See also

References

Notes

  1. "Each sentence or phrase in this haunting project from French poet and publisher Lefebvre (not to be confused with the Marxist philosopher) describes something lost, erased, destroyed, or otherwise unfinished within the life of an artist. Some seem frivolous: “Tintin’s bedroom doesn’t appear in a single album by Hergé.” Others are serious: “The composer Max Deutsch mercilessly destroyed his musical scores, having chosen to leave no trace other than teaching.”[8] Notwithstanding the efforts of Deutsch to destroy his oeuvre, at least a few examples survive.[2]

Citations

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  5. 5.0 5.1 Werke von und über Max Deutsch in the German National Library catalogue
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  7. Adorno & Lonitz 2006, p. 239.
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Sources

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External links