Andechs is a municipality in the district of Starnberg in Bavaria in Germany . It is renowned in Germany and beyond for Andechs Abbey , a Benedictine monastery that has brewed beer since 1455. The monastery brewery offers tours to visitors.
76-602: The 20th century German composer Carl Orff is buried in the chapel of Andechs Abbey. This town was the capital of one of the States of the Counts of Andechs , one of the most important families in Europe. This Starnberg district location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Carl Orff Carl Heinrich Maria Orff ( German: [kaʁl ˈɔʁf] ; 10 July 1895 – 29 March 1982 )
152-508: A collection of folk songs, was killed by the Nazis in Munich in 1943. Nevertheless he was a "Nutzniesser" [i.e., beneficiary] of the Nazis and can at present be classified only as "Grey C", acceptable. In view of his antinazi point of view, his deliberate av[o]idance of positions and honors which he could have had by cooperating with the Nazis, he may at a future date be reclassified higher. There
228-539: A dedication to Karl Köstler, who funded the publication. In 1911–12, Orff wrote Zarathustra (Opus 14), a large work for baritone voice, three tenor-bass choruses, winds, percussion, harps, pianos, and organ, based on a passage from Friedrich Nietzsche 's philosophical novel Also sprach Zarathustra . Orff studied at the Munich Academy of Music from 1912 until 1914. Orff later wrote that his decision to pursue music studies instead of completing Gymnasium
304-428: A group, public honor or recognition, and prefers to work alone rather than in organizations. He is emotionally well-adjusted, purposeful and egocentric. 2. Orff scored highest in his group on the political attitudes test. Psychiatric studies of his environment and development are consistent with an antinazi att[i]tude. On psychological grounds, [N]azism was distasteful to him; likewise on psychological grounds, he remained
380-576: A handwritten entry for a collection of autobiographies of German composers of the day, for which some of his colleagues wrote as many as three pages, he sent only: "Carl Orff[,] born 1895 in Munich[,] living there" (Carl Orff[,] geboren 1895 in München[,] lebt daselbst). Orff was married four times and had three divorces. His first marriage was in 1920 to the singer Alice Solscher (1891–1970). Orff's only child, Godela Orff (later Orff-Büchtemann, 1921–2013)
456-419: A lack of documentary evidence and the continuation of performances of Orff's previous works after the premiere of Carmina Burana , although in fact most of these performances used revised versions. Orff eventually qualified his oft-repeated statement: "So I had said this thoughtlessly, con leggerezza [i.e. "lightly"]: a remark that, as I well knew, was true and also not true. I only wanted to accentuate with it
532-528: A lament about the cruel indifference of fate (the brief opening and closing sections of Orff's work are titled "Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi", i.e., "Fortune, Ruler of the World"). The chorus that opens and concludes Carmina Burana , " O Fortuna ", is often used to denote primal forces, for example in the Oliver Stone film The Doors . The work's association with fascism also led Pier Paolo Pasolini to use
608-603: A member of the student resistance movement Weiße Rose (the White Rose ). He was arrested on 27 February 1943, condemned to death by the Volksgerichtshof , and executed by the Nazis on 13 July 1943. By happenstance, Orff called at Huber's house on the day after his arrest. Huber's distraught wife, Clara (née Schlickenrieder, 1908–1998 ), hoped Orff would use his influence to help her husband, but Orff panicked upon learning of Kurt Huber's arrest, fearing that he
684-542: A passive antinazi, and tried to avoid official and personal contact bot[h] with the Nazi movement and with the war. Some scholars have maintained that Orff deceived his evaluators to some degree. The counterpoint is that Orff misrepresented himself in some instances, but the Americans had enough information to assess him fundamentally correctly and rate him accordingly. The report notes some of Orff's financial support from
760-658: A performance in Stuttgart, but when Gottfried von Einem asked him in 1946 about a premiere of this version at the Salzburg Festival , he demurred and responded defensively when Einem asked if the work had been a commission from the Third Reich. Orff made further revisions still, and this version was first performed on 30 October 1952 in Darmstadt. It also had an American performance by Leopold Stokowski at
836-469: A relationship with author Luise Rinser (1911–2002), whom he married in 1954. In 1955, they moved from Munich to Dießen am Ammersee . Their marriage was troubled and ended in divorce in 1959, by which time Orff was living with the person who would become his next wife. Orff's final marriage, which lasted to the end of his life, was with Liselotte Schmitz (1930–2012), who had been his secretary, and who after his death carried on his legacy in her capacity with
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#1732776603783912-612: A valued friend. Orff wrote a tribute upon Katz's death in the form of a letter addressed to the deceased. Orff's Carmina Burana had its premiere in Frankfurt on 8 June 1937. It became very popular in Nazi Germany over the next few years. Historian Michael H. Kater wrote that "by 1945" it "[stood] out as the single universally important work produced during the entire span of the Third Reich". Oliver Rathkolb , however, has noted that subsequent popular perception has exaggerated
988-725: A whole is called Trionfi , or "Triumphs". The work is based on thirteenth-century poetry found in a manuscript dubbed the Codex latinus monacensis found in the Benedictine monastery of Benediktbeuern in 1803 and written by the Goliards ; this collection is also known as Carmina Burana . While "modern" in some of his compositional techniques, Orff was able to capture the spirit of the medieval period in this trilogy. The medieval poems, written in Latin and an early form of German, are
1064-424: A wholly new person and begin in a certain sense entirely new. What must come, should come entirely better as the time that was. The coming fall, he was severely injured and nearly killed when a trench caved in, suffering amnesia , aphasia , and paralysis of his left-side. During his difficult recovery, he wrote to his father: I certainly never think of something that looks like the future. ... Since I am in
1140-534: Is additionally mandolin in Oedipus der Tyrann and four tenor banjos in Prometheus . Following the premiere of Prometheus , Everett Helm wrote: Orff does not make things easy for either singers or audience. But the retention of the original text undoubtedly evoked a mood such as could not have been created by a modern language. "Prometheus" is not an opera in the usual sense. Like other works by Orff, it
1216-616: Is buried in the Andechs Abbey . His tombstone bears the Latin inscription Summus Finis (the Ultimate End), taken from the end of his last work, De temporum fine comoedia . Orff is best known for Carmina Burana (1936), a "scenic cantata ". It is the first part of a trilogy that also includes Catulli Carmina and Trionfo di Afrodite . Carmina Burana reflects his interest in medieval German poetry . The trilogy as
1292-566: Is music theater in which the music is part of, and subordinated to, the dramatic whole. The voices declaim almost constantly – either in spoken rhythm or in a kind of psalmodic recitative. Only occasionally (and most effectively) does the stark psalmody give way to melismas that recall the more florid passages of Gregorian chant. There is no semblance of arias or concerted numbers. Hochschule f%C3%BCr Musik und Theater M%C3%BCnchen The University of Music and Theatre Munich (German: Hochschule für Musik und Theater München ), also known as
1368-473: Is no claim about being in the White Rose. There is, however, a reference to Orff's relationship with Huber (see quoted passage under "Denazification"). Orff told Fred K. Prieberg in 1963 that he was afraid of being arrested as an associate of Huber, but made no claim that he had been involved in the White Rose himself. In 1960, Orff had described similar fears to an interviewer but explicitly said that he
1444-497: Is no evidence that Orff was ever reclassified, but since his license had no restrictions, this was not necessary. For Orff's psychological evaluation, Schaffner wrote: 1. A highly gifted, creative individual who scored high on intelligence tests ... Orff is diplomatic, ingratiating and ingenious. Retiring and unob[tr]usive, accustomed to independence and solitude since childhood, he has steadfastly pursued his career as an unattached composer. He has little personal need of "belonging" to
1520-620: The Munich Agreement in this building in 1938. Hitler's office, on the second floor above the main entrance, is now a rehearsal room, but has been changed little since it was built. In 1974, the Bavarian University Act placed the Munich college, as well as all other Bavarian music colleges, on an educational par with art colleges. The university offers study programmes in performing and teaching in all music subjects and ballet, as well as joint study programmes with
1596-877: The Munich Conservatory , is a performing arts conservatory in Munich, Germany. The main building it currently occupies is the former Führerbau of the NSDAP , located at Arcisstraße 12, on the eastern side of the Königsplatz . Teaching and other events also take place at Luisenstraße 37a, Gasteig , the Prinzregententheater (theatre studies), and in Wilhelmstraße (ballet). Since 2008, the Richard Strauss Conservatory ( de ), until then independent, has formed part of
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#17327766037831672-518: The Nazi Party has been a matter of considerable debate and analysis, sometimes colored by misinformation. Historian Michael H. Kater , whose work is critical of Orff, nevertheless wrote that "Carl Orff's name to many has become synonymous with fascist art and culture, frequently by way of a rather cavalier prejudgment." Orff never joined the Party, nor did he have any leadership position with
1748-763: The Salzburg Festival . Orff followed Antigonae with Oedipus der Tyrann , also using Hölderlin's translation of Sophocles's play , and Prometheus, using the original language of the Greek play attributed to Aeschylus . Their premieres took place in Stuttgart, respectively in 1959 and 1968, conducted by Ferdinand Leitner . All three of the Greek tragedies make no cuts or alterations to the texts. The Greek tragedies are scored for highly unusual ensembles centered on large percussion ensembles, which include non-Western instruments and numerous mallet instruments (including lithophone ), and several pianos (four in Prometheus and six in
1824-554: The Carl-Orff Stiftung. They married in Andechs on 10 May 1960. Born to devout Roman Catholic parents, Orff broke from religious dogma at a young age. His daughter tied his break from the church to the suicide of a classmate, and she reported that he did not have her baptized. Gertrud Orff said that "he never went to church; to the contrary. It was probably the time of inner rebellion against things like that. ... He
1900-611: The Empire State Music Festival on 19 July 1956. Orff revised the score yet again in 1962; this final version had its first performance on in Stuttgart on 12 March 1964. Orff was a friend of Kurt Huber (1893–1943), a professor at Ludwig Maximilian University , with whom he worked since 1934 on Bavarian folk music. Together with Orff's Schulwerk associate Hans Bergese (1910–2000), they published two volumes of folk music as Musik der Landschaft: Volksmusik in neuen Sätzen in 1942. In December 1942, Huber became
1976-801: The Günther-Schule for gymnastics, music, and dance in Munich. He developed his theories of music education, having constant contact with children and working with musical beginners. In 1930, Orff published a manual titled Schulwerk , in which he shares his method of conducting. He was involved with the Schulwerk and its associated institutions throughout his life, although he retired from the Günther-Schule in 1938. Orff also began adapting musical works of earlier eras for contemporary theatrical presentation, including Claudio Monteverdi and Alessandro Striggio 's opera L'Orfeo (1607). Orff's shortened German version (with Günther's translation), Orpheus ,
2052-415: The Nazi period but not subscribers to Nazi doctrine". Some sources report that Orff had been blacklisted before the evaluation, which would have prevented him from collecting royalties on his compositions. According to more recent research by Oliver Rathkolb, there is no evidence to support this. In January 1946, American officer Newell Jenkins (1915–1996) – Orff's former student (with whom he used
2128-802: The Royal Academy of the Art of Music ( Königliche Akademie der Tonkunst ), the State Academy of Music ( Staatliche Akademie der Tonkunst ), the University for Music ( Hochschule für Musik ) and finally to the present name in 1998. Its original location, the Odeonsgebäude , was destroyed in 1944. The current building was constructed for the Nazi party by Paul Troost and was called the Führerbau . Neville Chamberlain and Adolf Hitler signed
2204-402: The Stuttgart position by early March 1946, but Jenkins still insisted Orff undergo an evaluation at the end of that month. Schaffner's report notes: "Orff does not wish a license as 'Intendant' of an opera-house, and states that he has already refused such an offer, because the work would be primarily administrative and not musical. He wishes to have permission to appear as guest-conductor." Orff
2280-503: The Third Reich, one of whom recalled that Jenkins had been trying to portray Orff as a "resistance fighter" ( Widerstandskämpfer ) and thus believed that Jenkins had been the source of the alleged legend. A few years later, Viennese historian Oliver Rathkolb discovered Orff's denazification file, which was distributed to reporters in a press conference at the Orff-Zentrum München on 10 February 1999. In this document, there
2356-573: The Third Reich. He was a member of the Reichsmusikkammer , which was required of active musicians in the Third Reich. Several of Orff's friends and associates went into exile between 1933 and 1939, including Sachs and Leo Kestenberg , the latter of whom was an advocate for his Schulwerk. Orff reconnected with several of these exiled colleagues after the war and in some cases maintained lifelong friendships, as with singer and composer Karel Salmon [ de ] , who emigrated within
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2432-522: The White Rose resistance movement in Germany. Kater also made a particularly strong case that Orff collaborated with Nazi German authorities. The source for the White Rose claim was a 1993 interview with Jenkins. Kater described his finding as "nothing less than sensational" ( nichts weniger als sensationell ). The episode was the source of considerable strife. The controversy elicited objections from two people who had known Orff in their youth during
2508-432: The White Rose without any reference to the denazification file. While Kater's account has been accepted by some scholars who have investigated the matter further, Rathkolb and others have examined the theory that Orff lied about being a member of the resistance and found insufficient evidence to believe it, noting there is no solid corroboration outside of Kater's interview with Jenkins. Writing in 2021, Siegfried Göllner
2584-756: The architect Alwin Seifert (1890–1972) in 1924. Despite his family's military background, Orff recalled in 1970: "In my father's house there was certainly more music making than drilling." At age five, he began to play piano, and later studied cello and organ. He composed a few songs and music for puppet plays. He had two vignettes published in July 1905 in Das gute Kind , the children's supplement to Die katholische Familie . He began attending concerts in 1903 and heard his first opera ( Richard Wagner 's The Flying Dutchman ) in 1909. The formative concerts he attended included
2660-737: The battlefield, all threads and connections from earlier are torn to shreds. ... For him who has been out here once, it is better (especially in my profession) that he remains out here. When I hear music I get palpitations & fever and it makes me sick; I can't think at all about when I might be able to hear a concert again, let alone make music myself. After Orff's death, his daughter wrote that she believed this experience "made him think and rebel yet more revolutionarily." After recovering from his battle injuries, Orff held various positions at opera houses in Mannheim and Darmstadt , later returning to Munich to pursue his music studies. Around 1920, Orff
2736-543: The cities of Frankfurt and Vienna, his participation in the 1936 Summer Olympics , and the music for A Midsummer Night's Dream (although the number of its performances was undercounted ), which Orff said he wrote "from his own private musical point of view" but "admit[ted] that he chose an unfortunate moment in history to write it." Orff said "that he never got a favorable review by a Nazi music critic"; however, his work had been enthusiastically received by audiences and many critics. He also said that "[h]is great success"
2812-413: The composer's parents "nevertheless always remained lovingly inclined toward him, even when his way of life did not meet their expectations", and Orff and his sister "were watched over and supported with loving tolerance." She also wrote that her father's mother, Paula Orff, always fostered her son's creativity and gave him "the gift of inspiration". Orff himself wrote of his mother: "From time immemorial I
2888-601: The conventional sense. Live performances of them have been few, even in Germany. In a letter dated 8 January 1947 to his student Heinrich Sutermeister , Orff called Die Bernauerin "the last piece in the series of my earlier work; Antigonae starts a new phase." Antigonae is a setting of Friedrich Hölderlin's translation of the play by Sophocles . Orff first became interested in this source material shortly after his trauma in World War I and began planning his work late in 1940. The premiere took place on 9 August 1949 at
2964-399: The degree of its importance to the culture of the Third Reich, as numerous other works received more stagings. Given Orff's previous lack of commercial success, the monetary gains from Carmina Burana ' s acclaim, including a 500 RM award from the city of Frankfurt , were significant to him but the composition, with its unfamiliar rhythms, was also denounced with racist taunts. Orff
3040-494: The dictatorship – and the insistence of the composer on a purely artistic, aesthetic viewpoint inevitably changed under this condition to a momentous error." Orff went on to rework his Ein Sommernachtstraum score three times. The next version was to have its premiere on 10 September 1944, but the closure of all theaters in dire wartime conditions prevented it from occurring. In December 1945, Orff expressed hope for
3116-406: The entire gravity of the loss." Godela Orff described her relationship with her father as having been difficult at times. "He had his life and that was that", she tells Tony Palmer in the documentary O Fortuna . Their relationship became especially strained in the late 1940s; they reconciled around the early 1970s. Orff died of cancer in Munich on 29 March 1982, at the age of 86. He
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3192-709: The first few months of the Nazi takeover. Another such figure is the art historian Albin von Prybram-Gladona (1890–1974), whose parents had converted from Judaism before his birth and who survived multiple incarcerations in concentration camps after he fled to France. Prybram-Gladona testified to Orff's character during the denazification process. Another important friend to Orff was the German-Jewish musicologist and composer Erich Katz (1900–1973), who fled in 1939 after temporary incarceration in Dachau . Orff reestablished contact with Katz in 1952, and Katz considered Orff
3268-533: The informal du ), who went on to have a career as a conductor – informed him that he did not need a license as a composer if he was not seeking to conduct, teach, or otherwise appear in public. Jenkins, however, hoped that Orff would take an Intendant position in Stuttgart, which Orff was considering after initially saying no. This would require evaluation, and thus Jenkins encouraged Orff to think of how he could prove that he had actively resisted Nazism, as such persons were most highly valued. Orff turned down
3344-512: The latter of which was never publicly known while he was alive. Nor is there any mention of the potentially subversive and anti-authoritarian texts in his works, notably the passages in Die Kluge (premiere 1943) that have been identified as such, sometimes even during Orff's lifetime (including by Carl Dahlhaus ). According to Michael Kater , Orff cleared his name during the denazification period by claiming that he had helped establish
3420-546: The meaning that the Carmina Burana held in my creations up to that point, as was clear to me myself." When asked about the quotation in 1975, Orff replied: "For the first time I had done exactly what I wanted, and I also knew that I had treated it right. Really there is nothing more to say." Orff went on to revise many of his earlier works, and later in his career he reissued some of his pre- Carmina Burana compositions with minimal revisions. One of his final publications
3496-618: The movement "Veris leta facies" to accompany the concluding scenes of torture and murder in his final film Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom . Pasolini was concerned with the question of art being appropriated by power when he made the film, which has relevance to Orff's situation. Orff often said that, following a dress rehearsal for Carmina Burana , he told his publisher the following: "Everything that I have written up until now and that you, unfortunately, have printed you now can pulp. With Carmina Burana begins my collected works." Michael H. Kater has called this statement into question, citing
3572-491: The other two); the traditional string section is dispensed with excepting nine contrabasses. They also have six flutes and six oboes (with various auxiliary doublings of piccolo, alto flute, and English horn), as well as trumpets (six in Antigonae and Prometheus ; eight in Oedipus der Tyrann , behind the scene). Oedipus der Tyrann and Prometheus also have six trombones and organ. All three works also have four harps; there
3648-517: The play as early as 1917 and 1927, long before the Frankfurt commission; no materials from these earlier (presumably incomplete) versions are extant. Orff's publisher had serious reservations about the project, and Orff's commission was unable to make the original deadline of the commission, resulting in the reduction of his payment from 5,000 RM to 3,000 RM. He later called the 1939 iteration "a compromised (unfortunately printed) version. In place of
3724-422: The small onstage ensemble there was again a normal small opera orchestra, no more magical percussion, all inexcusable concessions." The composer's discontent, together with his initial difficulties in composition, sometimes has been interpreted at least in part as due to pangs of conscience. Thomas Rösch has written of this project: "The autonomy of art, which Orff always held highly, was only more illusion within
3800-449: The statement of Jenkins." In 1999, at the height of the controversy, musicologist Reinhard Schulz described the affair as a "scholarly cockfight" ( wissenschaftlichen Hahnenkampfes ), adding: "Far more important than a single fact would be an understanding of [the] connection" to Orff's life and creativity. Carl Orff was very guarded as to his personal life. When asked by the theater scholar Carl Niessen [ de ] to provide
3876-593: The university. In 1846, a private institution called the Royal Conservatory of Music ( Königliches Conservatorium für Musik ) was founded, and in 1867, at the suggestion of Richard Wagner , this was transformed by King Ludwig II into the Royal Bavarian Music School ( Königliche bayerische Musikschule ), financed privately by Ludwig II until gaining the status of a state institution in 1874. It has since been renamed several times: to
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#17327766037833952-407: The war, Clara Huber asked Orff to contribute to a memorial volume for her husband; he contributed an emotional letter written directly to Kurt Huber, similar to what he did for Katz years later. Orff's Die Bernauerin , a project which he completed in 1946 and which he had discussed with Huber before the latter's execution, is dedicated to Huber's memory. The final scene of this work, which is about
4028-698: The works of Arnold Schoenberg , and one of his most important influences at this time was the French composer Claude Debussy . These influences can be heard in his first stage work, the music drama Gisei: Das Opfer ( Gisei: The Sacrifice , Opus 20), written in 1913 but not performed until 2010. Orff's source material is a German translation of part of Sugawara Denju Tenarai Kagami , specifically "Terakoya" ("The Village School") in Act IV. In 1914 Orff wrote Tanzende Faune: Ein Orchesterspiel (Opus 21). The work
4104-476: The world premiere of Gustav Mahler 's Das Lied von der Erde in 1911 and Richard Strauss conducting his opera Elektra on 4 June 1914. In 1910–12, Orff wrote several dozen Lieder on texts by German poets, including the song set Frühlingslieder (Opus 1, text by Ludwig Uhland ) and the song cycle Eliland: Ein Sang von Chiemsee (Opus 12, text by Karl Stieler ). The poet whose work he most frequently used
4180-711: The wrongful execution of Agnes Bernauer , depicts a guilt-ridden chorus begging not to be implicated in the title character's death. In late March 1946, Orff underwent a denazification process in Bad Homburg at a psychological screening center of the Information Control Division (ICD), a department of the Office of Military Government, United States (OMGUS). Orff was rated "Grey C, acceptable", which his evaluator Bertram Schaffner (1912–2010) defined as for those "compromised by their actions during
4256-508: Was Heinrich Heine ; he also chose texts of Walther von der Vogelweide , Princess Mathilde of Bavaria (1877–1906) , Friedrich Hölderlin , Ludwig August Frankl , Hermann Lingg , Rudolf Baumbach , Richard Beer-Hofmann , and Börries von Münchhausen , among others. Orff's songs fell into the style of Richard Strauss and other German composers of the day, but with hints of what would become Orff's distinctive musical language. Some of his songs were published in 1912. These include Eliland , with
4332-510: Was "ruined" ( ruiniert ). Clara Huber later said she never saw Orff again, but there is documentary evidence that they had further contact. On at least one occasion, she recalled that Orff had attempted to help her husband through Baldur von Schirach (the highest-ranking Nazi official with whom he came into contact, and whom he met at least twice ), for which no further evidence has been found. In June 1949, Orff transferred his rights to Musik der Landschaft to Huber's family. Shortly after
4408-531: Was a German composer and music educator, who composed the cantata Carmina Burana (1937). The concepts of his Schulwerk were influential for children's music education . Carl Heinrich Maria Orff was born in Munich on 10 July 1895, the son of Paula Orff (née Köstler, 1872–1960) and Heinrich Orff (1869–1949). His family was Bavarian and was active in the Imperial German Army ; his father
4484-413: Was a real mother's boy. In life's serious and most difficult situations she understood me deeply with her heart, even if her ideas, strongly set in tradition, stood in the way of it." Paula Orff died on 22 July 1960, after which Orff's colleague Karl Amadeus Hartmann wrote to him: "I know how intimately bonded you were with your mother, similar to me with mine, and can therefore especially sympathize with
4560-598: Was a religious person, yes. But not a person of the church." Nevertheless, he wanted to be buried in the Baroque church of the beer-brewing Benedictine priory of Andechs , southwest of Munich; he could see this monastery from his home in Dießen . Orff had no desire to follow in his family's military tradition, even as a child. He later wrote: "My father [Heinrich Orff] knew that everything soldierly lay far from me and that I could not warm up to it." According to Godela Orff,
4636-616: Was a volume of songs he had composed between 1911 and 1920. Most of Orff's later works – Antigonae (1949), Oedipus der Tyrann [ de ] ( Oedipus the Tyrant , 1959), Prometheus desmotes ( Prometheus Bound , 1968), and De temporum fine comoedia ( Play on the End of Times , 1973) – were based on texts or topics from antiquity. They extend the language of Carmina Burana in interesting ways, but they are expensive to stage and (on Orff's own characterization) are not operas in
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#17327766037834712-481: Was almost unknown in the 1920s, and Orff's production met with reactions ranging from incomprehension to ridicule. He told his mentor Curt Sachs , who had led him to study Monteverdi and supported his Orpheus , that the Munich press was against him: "I am made out to be not only a violator of corpses (see Monteverdi), but also a youth-seducer, who systematically corrupts our good youth with exotic perversities." Orff's relationship with German National Socialism and
4788-463: Was an army officer with strong musical interests, and his mother was a trained pianist. His grandfathers, Carl von Orff (1828–1905) and Karl Köstler (1837–1924), were both major generals and also scholars. His paternal grandmother, Fanny Orff (née Kraft, 1833–1919), was Catholic of Jewish descent. His maternal grandmother was Maria Köstler (née Aschenbrenner, 1845–1906). Orff had one sibling, his younger sister Maria ("Mia", 1898–1975), who married
4864-485: Was born on 21 February 1921. The couple separated about six months after Godela's birth and were divorced officially in 1927. Godela remained with her father when her mother moved to Melbourne to pursue her career around 1930. In 1939, Orff married Gertrud Willert (1914–2000), who had been his student and who founded a method of music therapy using the Orff-Schulwerk; they divorced in 1953. By 1952, he began
4940-532: Was deferred ... during the war is contradictory to his claim that he was not well thought of at the Propaganda Ministry. ... He does not give a very good [e]xplanation." The report likewise notes Orff's very sharp rise in income in the latter part of the Third Reich. Surprisingly absent from the report are several factors that Orff could have used in his favor, notably his associations with Jewish colleagues as well as his own partly Jewish ancestry,
5016-410: Was drawn to the poetry of Franz Werfel , which became the basis for numerous Lieder and choral compositions. In the mid-1920s, he began to formulate a concept he called elementare Musik , or elemental music, which was based on the unity of the arts symbolized by the ancient Greek Muses , and involved tone, dance, poetry, image, design, and theatrical gesture. Like many other composers of the time, he
5092-548: Was forced into the German Army in August 1917, which was a great crisis for him. In a letter to his father dated 3 August 1917, he wrote: My future lies now more than ever completely in the dark. That I [shall] go into the battlefield is absolutely certain. Here the decision should, and will, fall (you know that I am free from sentimentality): either I find an end of everything that has pushed and almost crushed me, or I become
5168-644: Was granted a license without any restrictions despite his rating of "'Grey C', acceptable", but there is no evidence that he conducted in public after the war. Schaffner believed that the root causes of Nazism included an underlying societal rigidity and authoritarianism in Germany, especially as they pertained to fathers in family life and institutions such as the school and the military. His theories informed his and his colleagues' denazification evaluations. In his report on Orff, Schaffner wrote: O[rff]'s attitudes are not Nazi. One of his best friends, Prof. Carl [sic] Huber, with whom he published "Musik der Landschaft",
5244-628: Was in 1942 with a performance of Carmina Burana in La Scala in Milan , "not under the auspices of the Propaganda Ministry." In fact, Orff later publicly characterized the second staging of Carmina Burana , which took place in Dresden on 4 October 1940, as the beginning of his great success. The American evaluators disbelieved Orff's account of his reception in the Third Reich: "The fact that he
5320-524: Was influenced by the Russian-French émigré Igor Stravinsky . But while others followed the cool, balanced neoclassic works of Stravinsky, it was works such as Les noces ( The Wedding ), an earthy, quasi-folkloric depiction of Russian peasant wedding rites, that appealed to Orff. Orff came to know the work of Bertolt Brecht in 1924, which had a profound influence on him. The same year, he and Dorothee Günther [ de ] founded
5396-578: Was not a part of the resistance himself. Kater's accusation, as he termed it, regarding the White Rose colored much of the discourse on Carl Orff in the coming years. In some instances the debate focused more on acrimony between those involved. In Composers of the Nazi Era: Eight Portraits (2000) Kater qualified his earlier accusations to some extent after reviewing the documents that Rathkolb discovered. Subsequently, however, Kater reiterated his initial claim regarding Orff and
5472-431: Was not convinced that the allegation about the White Rose lie had been refuted as unambiguously as he felt Rathkolb and Thomas Rösch had claimed, but "since the episode about the White Rose was never on the record or issued openly by Orff, it is ultimately irrelevant whether the episode reported by Jenkins to Kater actually took place or was a matter of misunderstanding. ... Kater in any case attached too much significance to
5548-506: Was one of numerous German composers under the Nazi regime who wrote new incidental music for William Shakespeare 's A Midsummer Night's Dream —in German Ein Sommernachtstraum —after the music of Felix Mendelssohn for that play had been banned. Orff's version was first performed on 14 October 1939 in Frankfurt as the result of a commission through that city. By his report, he had already composed music for
5624-470: Was staged under his direction in 1925 in Mannheim, using some of the instruments that had been used in the original 1607 performance, although several of these were unavailable and had to be replaced. Orff revised the score a few years later; this version was first performed in Munich in 1929. Orff's adaptations of early music brought him very little money. The passionately declaimed opera of Monteverdi's era
5700-590: Was the source of family strife, as the Orff patriarch (his father's older brother, also named Karl Orff, 1863–1942 ) was against the idea. Orff had the support of his mother, who persuaded his father, and of his grandfather Köstler. Orff's teacher at the Akademie was the composer Anton Beer-Walbrunn , of whom he later wrote with respect but said that he found the academy overall to be "conservative and old-fashioned" ( konservativ und altväterlich ). At this time, he studied
5776-616: Was to be performed at the Akademie ;– his first performance by an orchestra – but conductor Eberhard Schwickerath [ de ] removed it from the program following an unsuccessful rehearsal; it was first performed in 1995. In 1915, he began studying piano with Hermann Zilcher . Writing to his father, he called the studies with Zilcher his most productive teacher relationship to date. Around this time he also came to know theater director Otto Falckenberg , and saw plays by August Strindberg and Frank Wedekind . Orff
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