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Erich Wolfgang Korngold in the 1940s
Erich Wolfgang Korngold (May 29, 1897 –
November 29, 1957) was a film and
romantic music
composer. While his
compositional style was considered well out of vogue at the time he
died, his music has more recently undergone a reevaluation and a
gradual reawakening of interest.[1]
Along with Max
Steiner, he is often called the father of film music.
Biography
Born in a Jewish home in Brünn (Brno) (Austria–Hungary, now Czech Republic),
Erich was the second son of eminent music critic Julius
Korngold. A child prodigy, Erich played his cantata Gold to Gustav Mahler in
1906; Mahler called him a "musical genius" and recommended study
with composer Alexander von Zemlinsky. Richard Strauss
also spoke very highly of the youth. At the age of 11 he composed
his ballet Der Schneemann (The Snowman), which
became a sensation when performed at the Vienna Court Opera in
1910, including a command performance for Emperor Franz Josef. This work was
followed first with a piano trio, then his Piano Sonata No. 2 in E
major that Artur
Schnabel played throughout Europe.[1]
During his early years Korngold also made live-recording player piano music
rolls for the Aeolian Duo-Art system, all of which survive today
and can be heard.
Max Reinhardt invited Korngold to Hollywood to collaborate on the
film
A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Korngold wrote his first orchestral score, the Schauspiel
Ouverture when he was 14. His Sinfonietta appeared the
following year, and his first two operas, Der Ring des
Polykrates and Violanta, in 1914. He completed his opera
Die tote
Stadt, which became an international success, in 1920 at
the age of 23. At this point Korngold had reached the zenith of his
fame as a composer of opera and concert music. Composers such as Richard Strauss
and Giacomo
Puccini heaped praise on him, and many famous conductors,
soloists and singers added his works to their repertoires. He
completed a concerto for piano left hand for pianist Paul
Wittgenstein in 1923 and his fourth opera, Das Wunder der
Heliane four years later. He also started arranging and
conducting operettas by Johann Strauss
II and others while teaching opera and composition at the
Vienna Staatsakademie. Korngold was awarded the title professor
honoris causa by the president of Austria.[1]
Max
Reinhardt, with whom Korngold had collaborated on the operas
Die Fledermaus and La belle Helene, asked the
composer to come to Hollywood in 1934 to adapt Felix
Mendelssohn's incidental music for A Midsummer Night's
Dream to his film version of the play. Over the next four
years, he became a pioneer in composing film scores that have been recognized ever
since as classics of their kind. In 1938, Korngold was conducting
opera in Austria when he was asked by Warner Brothers to come back
to Hollywood and compose a score for their new (and very expensive)
film The Adventures of Robin
Hood (1938), starring Errol Flynn. He agreed and returned by
ship. Shortly after he arrived in California, the Anschluss took place and
the condition of Jews in Austria became very perilous so that he
stayed in America. Korngold later would say the film score of
The Adventures of Robin Hood saved his life. He won the Academy Award for
Best Original Score for the film, and was later nominated for
The Private Lives
of Elizabeth and Essex (1939) and The Sea Hawk
(1940). A Korngold authority wrote:
Treating each film as an 'opera without singing' (each character
has his or her own leitmotif) [Korngold] created intensely
romantic, richly melodic and contrapuntally intricate scores, the best
of which are a cinematic paradigm for the tone poems of Richard Strauss and Franz
Liszt. He intended that, when divorced from the moving image, these
scores could stand alone in the concert hall. His style exerted a
profound influence on modern film music.
– Brendan G. Carroll,
Korngold, Erich Wolfgang, The New Grove Dictionary of
Music and Musicians
In 1943, Korngold became a naturalized
citizen of the United States. The year 1945 became an important
turning point in Korngold's life. His father, who had never been
entirely comfortable in Los Angeles, and who had never approved of
Erich's decision to focus exclusively on film composition, died
after a lengthy illness. [2] Roughly
around the same time, the war in Europe drew to an end. Korngold
himself had grown increasingly disillusioned with Hollywood and
with the kinds of pictures he was being given, and he was eager to
return to writing music for the concert hall and the stage. [3]
Korngold stopped writing original film scores after 1946. His final
score at Warner Bros. was Deception starring Bette Davis, Paul Henreid, and Claude Rains.
However, he was asked by Republic Pictures to adapt the music
of Richard
Wagner for a film biography of the composer, released in Trucolor, as Magic Fire (1955),
directed by William Dieterle from a script by Ewald Andre Dupont. Korngold also wrote
some original music for the film and had an unbilled cameo as the
conductor Hans Richter.
After World War
II Korngold continued to write concert music in a rich,
chromatic late
Romantic style, with the Violin Concerto among his
notable later works. Korngold died in North Hollywood on November
29, 1957 and was buried at Hollywood Forever
Cemetery.[1]
Legacy
Despite his achievements and considerable popularity with the
musical public, Korngold for years attracted almost no positive
critical attention, but considerable critical disdain. Then, in
1972, RCA Victor released an LP titled The
Sea Hawk, featuring excerpts from Korngold's film scores
performed by the National Philharmonic
Orchestra, conducted by Charles Gerhardt and
supervised by the composer's son George. (This album and other
classic film scores by Hollywood composers were later issued by RCA
on CD in Dolby Surround Sound.) This was followed by recordings of
Korngold's operas and concert works, which led to performances of
his symphony and concertos, as well as other compositions.
In 1973, Warner Brothers released special LPs featuring excerpts
from the original soundtracks of films scored by Korngold, which
had actually been conducted by Warner's music director Leo
Forbstein, as a well as a rare recording of Korngold playing the
main theme from Kings
Row on the piano. In addition, a KFWB radio broadcast from 1938 with Korngold
conducting the studio orchestra in excerpts from The Adventures
of Robin Hood, narrated by actor Basil Rathbone, was released on LP. In
1975 Die Tote Stadt was revived to capacity houses in New
York.[4]
There have also been a number of new digital recordings of
Korngold's film scores, as well as some of his concert works,
especially his violin concerto and his symphony. RCA Victor was the
first to record a complete Korngold opera (in stereo), Die Tote Stadt, conducted by Erich Leinsdorf
in Germany. His complete orchestral works have been recorded by the
German conductor Werner Andreas Albert. Korngold's
complete piano works are currently being recorded by the American
conductor-pianist Alexander Frey for Koch International
Classics.
Further recognition came in the 1990s; two full-scale
biographies of him appeared almost simultaneously. One is Jessica
Duchen, Erich Wolfgang Korngold (Phaidon Press, 20th
Century Composers series, 1996). The other is Brendan G. Carroll,
Erich Korngold: The Last Prodigy (Amadeus Press, 1997).
Carroll is President of the International Korngold Society.[5]
Works
Orchestral and vocal
works
- Der Schneemann (a Pantomime). Composed and first
performed 1910
- Schauspiel-Ouvertüre (Overture to a Play), Op. 4,
composed and first performed 1911)
- Sinfonietta, Op. 5 (composed
1912, orchestrated and first performed 1913)
- Der Sturm (The Tempest) for chorus and
orchestra, after Heinrich Heine, composed 1913
- Kaiserin Zita-Hymne for solo voice, choir and piano /
orchestra, composed 1917
- Military March in B major, composed 1917
- Much Ado About Nothing, Op. 11 (Incidental music to
the play by Shakespeare 1918–1919. First performed 1920
- Sursum Corda, Op. 13 (Symphonic Overture, composed
1919, first performed 1920
- Piano Concerto in C♯
for the left hand alone, Op. 17, (composed 1923; first performed
1924)
- Baby Serenade, Op. 24, composed 1928–1929, first
performed 1932
- Tomorrow, Op. 33, tone poem for mezzo-soprano, women's
choir and orchestra, for the movie The Constant Nymph.
First performed in concert 1944
- Violin Concerto, Op. 35
(composed 1945; first performed 1947)
- Cello Concerto in C major, Op. 37 (1950, expanded from a work
written for the 1946 film Deception)
- Symphonic Serenade in B♭
major for string orchestra 1947–48; First performed 1950
- Symphony in F♯
major, Op. 40 (composed 1947–52; first performed 1954)
- Theme and Variations, Op. 42 (composed and first performed
1953)
- Straussiana, for orchestra (composed and first
performed 1953)
Songs
- So Gott und Papa will (If God and daddy agree), Op. 5,
composed 1911
- Einfache Lieder (Simple Songs), Op. 9, composed
1911–13
- Lieder des Abschieds (Songs of Farewell), Op. 14,
(composed 1920; first performed 1921; orchestral version first
performed 1923)
- Drei Lieder (Three Songs), Op. 18, composed 1924,
first performed 1926
- Drei Lieder (Three Songs), Op. 22, composed 1928–29,
first performed 1930
- Narrenlieder (Songs of the Clown), Op. 29, from Twelfth Night
by William Shakespeare, composed 1937,
first performed 1941
- Vier Shakespeare-Lieder (Four Shakespeare Songs), Op.
31, composed 1937–41, first performed 1941
- Fünf Lieder (Five Songs), Op. 38, composed 1948, first
performed 1950
- Sonett für Wien (Sonnet for Vienna), Op. 41, composed
1953, first performed 1954
Spiritual Music
- A Passover Psalm, Op. 30, hymn for solo voice, chorus,
and orchestra. Composed and first performed 1941
- Prayer, Op. 32, for tenor, women's choir, and organ.
Composed and first performed 1941
Piano music and Chamber
works
- Piano Sonata No. 1 in D
minor with concluding passacaglia, (composed 1908; first
performed 1908–09)
- Don Quixote. Six characteristic pieces for piano,
composed 1909
- Was der Wald erzählt (What the Forest tells). Suite
for piano, composed 1909
- Piano Sonata No. 2 in E
major, Op. 2, in four movements (composed 1910; first performed
1911)
- Sieben Märchenbilder (Seven Fairy-Tale Pictures, Op.
3, for piano, composed 1910, first performance 1912
- Vier kleine fröhliche Walzer (Four little cheerful
Waltzes), composed 1912
- Vier kleine Karikaturen für Kinder (Four little
caricatures for children), composed 1926
- Geschichten vom Strauß (Tales from Strauss), Op. 21,
for piano solo, composed 1927
- Suite for 2 violins, cello and piano left hand, Op. 23,
composed 1930; first performed 1930
- Piano Sonata No. 3 in C
major, Op. 25 (composed 1931; first performed 1932) ([1])
- Piano Trio in D major,
Op. 1 (composed and first performed 1910)
- Violin Sonata in G
major, Op. 6 (composed 1912; first performed 1916)
- String Sextet in D major, Op. 10 (first performed 1917)
- Quintet for two violins, viola, cello and piano in E major, Op.
15 (composed 1920–21; first performed 1923)
- String Quartet No. 1 in A
major, Op. 16 (composed 1923; first performed 1924)
- String Quartet No. 2 in E♭
major, Op. 26 (composed 1933; first performed 1934)
- String Quartet No. 3 in D major, Op. 34 (composed 1945; first
performed 1946)
- Romance-Impromptu for cello and piano. Composed for
the film Deception (but not used) 1948
Operas
Arrangements for
operettas
- Eine Nacht in Venedig (A
Night in Venice), Johann Strauss II (1923)
- Cagliostro in Wien
(Cagliostro in Vienna), Johann Strauss II (1927)
- Rosen aus Florida (Roses from Florida), Leo Fall (1929)
- Die
Fledermaus (The Bat), Johann Strauss II
(1929)
- Walzer aus Wien (Waltzes from Vienna), Family
Strauss (1930)
- Die schöne Helena (The
Beautiful Helena), Jacques Offenbach (1931)
- Das Lied der Liebe (The Song of Love), Johann
Strauss II (1931)
- Die geschiedene Frau (The
divorced Woman), Leo Fall (1933)
- Rosalinda (= Die Fledermaus), Johann Strauss
II (1942)
- Helen Goes to Troy (=La belle Hélène) Jacques
Offenbach (1944)
- The Great Waltz (= Walzer aus Wien), Johann
Strauss II (1949)
Film
Scores
Rerecorded film scores
- Sea Hawk: Classic Film Scores of Erich Wolfgang
Korngold - Charles Gerhardt and National Philharmonic
Orchestra - 1972 - RCA Victor
- Elizabeth & Essex: The Classic Film Scores of Erich
Wolfgang Korngold - Charles Gerhardt and National Philharmonic
Orchestra - 1973 - RCA Victor
- Captain Blood: Classic Film Scores For Errol Flynn -
Charles Gerhardt and National Philharmonic Orchestra - 1974 - RCA
Victor
- King's Row - Charles Gerhardt and National
Philharmonic Orchestra - 1979 - Chalfont
- The Adventures of Robin Hood - Varujan Kojian and Utah
Symphony Orchestra - 1983 - Varese Sarabande
- The Sea Hawk - Varujan Kojian and Utah Symphony
Orchestra - 1987 - Varese Sarabande
- Anthony Adverse - John Scott and Berlin Radio Symphony
Orchestra - 1990 - Varese Sarabande
- The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex' - Carl Davis and
Munich Symphony Orchestra - 1992 - Bay Cities
- Captain Blood - Richard Kaufman and Brandenburg
Philharmonic Orchestra - 1994 - Marco Polo
- Between Two Worlds - Alexander Frey, piano; John
Mauceri and Berlin Rundfunk Sinfonie Orchester - 1995 - Decca
- Another Dawn - William Stromberg and Moscow Symphony
Orchestra - 1995 - Marco Polo
- Devotion - William Stromberg and Moscow Symphony
Orchestra - 1997 - Marco Polo
- Tribute to Erich Wolfgang Korngold - James Sedares and
New Zealand Symphony Orchestra - 2000 - KOCH
- Previn Conducts Korngold - Andre Previn and London
Symphony Orchestra - 2002 - Deutsche Grammophon
- The Adventures of Robin Hood - William Stromberg and
Moscow Symphony Orchestra - 2003 - Marco Polo
- The Sea Wolf - Rumon Gamba and BBC Philharmonic
Orchestra - 2005 - Chandos
- The Sea Hawk - William Stromberg and Moscow Symphony
Orchestra - 2007 - Naxos
- The Sea Hawk - Rumon Gamba and BBC Philharmonic
Orchestra - 2007 - Chandos
- The Prince and the Pauper - William Stromberg and
Moscow Symphony Orchestra - 2008 - Tribute Film Classics
References and further
reading
- The Last Prodigy. A Biography of Erich Wolfgang
Korngold by Brendan G. Carroll. ISBN 9781574670295 (Hardcover
- October 1997)
- Erich Wolfgang Korngold (20th-Century Composers) by
Jessica Duchen. Phaidon Publication - ISBN 0-7148-3155-7 (Paperback
- July 1996)
- Erich Wolfgang Korngold by Luzi Korngold (wife).
Verlag Elisabeth Lafite, Vienna, 1967. In German. Hardcover, 112
pages.
- "Erich Wolfgang Korngold: early life and works". Doctoral
thesis by David Ian Kram. Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
(www.monash.edu.au)
- Stanley Sadie, ed. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and
Musicians, (London: Macmilian, 1980), 20 vols. ISBN
0-333-23111-2. (Carroll, B.G., "Korngold, Erich Wolfgang.")
- Stanley Sadie, ed. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and
Musicians, Second Edition (London: Macmilian, 2001), 29 vols.
ISBN 0-333-60800-3. (Carroll, Brendan G., "Korngold, Erich
Wolfgang.")
Notes
External
links