Mozart, Wagner, and the Nazi Myth
How National Socialism Reinvented a Musical Legacy
The Führer’s admiration for Wagner’s racially charged ideology not only influenced the policies of the Nazi regime but also reshaped the legacy of Mozart. Under National Socialism, Mozart was not celebrated as a universal genius but as a symbol of German purity and superiority. His music, stripped of its international influence, was rebranded as an expression of Aryan identity, intended to unify and inspire the German people.
This reinvention extended beyond the concert halls and festivals; it infiltrated German society, influencing education, cultural programs, and the media. Mozart’s image became a tool of propaganda, aligning with the National Socialist agenda, while Jewish and foreign composers were systematically erased from the narrative. The myth of a racially pure Mozart was central to the Nazi effort to control and redefine Germany’s cultural heritage.
Mozart: The Fall of the Gods
This book compiles the results of our studies on 18th-century music and Mozart, who has been revered for over two centuries as a deity. We dismantle the baseless cult of Mozart and strip away the clichés that falsely present him as a natural genius, revealing the contradictions in conventional biographies. In this work, divided into two parts, we identify and critically analyze several contradictory points in the vast Mozart bibliography. Each of the nearly 2,000 citations is meticulously sourced, allowing readers to verify the findings. This critical biography of Mozart emerges from these premises, addressing the numerous doubts raised by researchers.
"The Viennese portrait of Mozart as the great Aryan coincided with the claims of exiled composers Weill and Schönberg, who believed themselves to be his true German heirs."
Mozart: The Fall of the Gods
Wagner’s Influence on Nazi Ideology
The Führer’s admiration for Richard Wagner’s music and his racially charged writings laid the cultural foundation for National Socialist ideology. Wagner’s views on the Jewish people, expressed with shocking clarity, became a tool for reshaping German identity and, by extension, the narrative surrounding Mozart’s legacy.
Wagner’s Anti-Semitism and Its Consequences
Wagner claimed that the Jewish people, who, as he noted, had “a God of their own,” were marked by a repulsive appearance regardless of their European nationality. According to him, Jews were “incapable of living” and could “never possess the art of sound.” He observed, with a chilling foresight, that Jews needed to redeem themselves “through self-annihilation.” Wagner’s essay Judaism in Music was not, as some claim, the epilogue of anti-Semitism in a cultural-political sense, but rather its origin.
Personal Cruelty and Tyranny
Wagner’s behavior was tyrannical, marked by cruelty towards individuals like Levi, the son of a rabbi, whom he attempted to coerce into baptism. When Levi begged to be excused from directing Parsifal, Wagner’s sadistic, calculated response mirrored the cat-and-mouse games that philosopher Adorno would later describe.
The Evolution of Wagner’s Racial Ideology
The composer’s anti-Semitism evolved into the “ominous biological racism of his late Bayreuth period,” a strain that grew within Germany until 1945 and extended to the interpretation of Mozart. Mozart was exalted for his supposed Aryan and Dinaric characteristics. For over three decades, Wagner incited hatred against Jews and foreigners. In his 1881 work Know Thyself, he proposed ideas that foreshadowed Hitler’s “final solution”: “Only the Jews remain without hope of salvation.” For Wagner, the Jew, the “demon of man’s ruin,” could never be racially improved; no matter whom they married, “a Jew would always be born.”
The Viennese School and Its Exclusion of Jewish Composers
The so-called “Viennese classicism” reflected the narrow, xenophobic, racist, and pan-Germanic views of the small bourgeois class. In the programs of the “First Viennese School,” there was no place for Jewish composers, aligning perfectly with Wagner’s vision of Judaism in music. The racial purity guaranteed the quality of performances. People were convinced of “the greatness of the musical tradition,” “the enormous German contribution to world culture,” and “the wealth of the Germano-centric popular repertoire,” while simultaneously being stirred to defend their traditions against foreigners.
Antisemitism in German Folk Music
Amid the trinitarian music of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven (HMB), distinctly antisemitic völkisch songs emerged, designed to transmit the “authentic Germanic feeling.” Youth events concluded with Anton Wilhelm Florentin von Zuccalmaglio’s (1803-1869) “Kein schöner Land,” an anthem embraced by early National Socialists.
Economic Crisis and Cultural Propaganda
The spirit of Richard Strauss, as evoked by Damisch, intertwined with the melodies of Roßbach’s Spielschar at the early Mozart Festivals in Salzburg until the economic crisis of 1929, when cultural activities dwindled. The Berliner Philharmoniker was forced to merge with the little-known Berliner Symphoniker, becoming the official ensemble of the German Reich, spreading Nazi ideology on a larger scale.
The 175th Anniversary of Mozart: A Nationalist Rebirth
Mozart’s 175th birthday celebration became the much-anticipated moment for national resurgence. His music was used to reinforce a sense of unity feared to be lost, even as groups like the Spielschar Ekkehard tried to maintain it through the streets with anti-Semitic songs and Mozart’s Lieder.
The 1931 Festival and the Reinvention of Mozart
At the 1931 Festival, Mozart’s music was cloaked in internationalism, cosmopolitanism, and universalism, which concealed a singular interest: Germany. Mozart’s work, considered timeless, was labelled “übernational” (supranational) rather than “international.” It was, in reality, an expression of German identity, perceived as so profound and privileged that only the German people could achieve the absolute through the art of sound.
German Musicology and the Illusion of Universality
According to Guido Adler (1855-1891), the father of German musicology, and Robert Hirschfeld (1857-1914), Mozart’s cosmopolitanism was ironic, as it too was a form of Germanocentrism. For composers like Arnold Schönberg (1874-1951), Heinrich Schenker (1868-1935), and Paul Hindemith (1895-1963), the achievements of so-called “pure music” were the tangible evidence of a transcendent universalism confined to German culture. They believed that the works of Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Brahms could set precise standards for evaluating all other compositional techniques.
The Nazi Celebration of Mozart in 1941
The irony reached its peak when the Nazis celebrated the 1941 Mozart Jubilee in Vienna, with enthusiastic participation from figures such as Richard Strauss (1864-1949), Wilhelm Furtwängler (1886-1954), and the entire German musicological community. The Viennese portrait of Mozart as the great Aryan coincided with the claims made by exiled composers Kurt Weill (1900-1950) and Arnold Schönberg in America during the 1940s. While the Festival took place in Vienna, these emigrant composers were convinced that they, not others, were the legitimate German heirs of Mozart.
The Marginalization of Alfred Einstein
In 1931, Alfred Einstein published Don Giovanni for Eulenburg editions in Leipzig, expressing in the preface his hope that the work would foster “a new spiritual sense of music” and serve as an example to Germans to keep their distance from philosophical interference. However, his prophecy failed: the academic establishment, driven by the antisemitism of those same philosophers, ultimately denied him employment opportunities at the university level.
The Crisis and Oscar von Pander’s Perspective
In the same year, Oscar von Pander (1883-1968) reiterated in Münchner neueste Nachrichten that Mozart’s unique style was unparalleled for its precision and emotional purity, despite Mozart’s composition in over sixty different styles with inconsistent results. Pander’s suggestion to hold up Mozart as a model for contemporary German composers seemed the ideal paradigm during those devastating economic times.
You May Also Like
Mozart Unmasked: The Untold Story of His Italian Years
Explore the lesser-known side of Wolfgang Amadé Mozart’s early years in Italy. ‘Mozart in Italy’ unveils the complexities, controversies, and hidden truths behind his formative experiences, guided by meticulous research and rare historical documents. Delve into a story that challenges the traditional narrative and offers a fresh perspective on one of history’s most enigmatic composers.
Another Example of Borrowed Genius
The myth of Mozart’s genius continues to collapse under the weight of his reliance on others’ ideas, with Leopold orchestrating his son’s supposed early brilliance.
A Genius or a Patchwork?
The genius of Mozart had yet to bloom, despite the anecdotes passed down to us. These concertos were not the work of a prodigy, but a collaborative effort between father and son, built on the music of others.
Myth, Reality, and the Hand of Martini
Mozart handed over Martini’s Antiphon, not his own, avoiding what could have been an embarrassing failure. The young prodigy had a lot to learn, and much of what followed was myth-making at its finest.
Mozart’s Serenade? A New Discovery? Really?
In Leipzig, what was thought to be a new autograph of Mozart turned out to be a questionable copy. Why are such rushed attributions so common for Mozart, and why is it so hard to correct them when proven false?
Mozart’s K 71: A Fragment Shrouded in Doubt and Uncertainty
Mozart’s K 71, an incomplete aria, is yet another example of musical ambiguity. The fragment’s authorship, dating, and even its very existence as a genuine Mozart work remain open to question. With no definitive evidence, how can this fragment be so confidently attributed to him?