Hi,
I realize that the thread about Beethoven and Hitler was closed for good reason, but I thought I would offer a clarification which seemed important to make. As somebody mentioned, Hitler appropriated quite a bit of German music for use in highly charged Nazi-political contexts, and bent the music of both Beethoven and Wagner (as well as others) to conform to his ideology. The Ninth Symphony, with its message of brotherhood, in particular became a kind of anthem for Nazism, and it was performed twice as far as I know, once in 1938 under Hermann Abendroth in the context of a Dusseldorf Nazi music festival, and then again in 1942 under Wilhelm Furtwangler as a part of Hitler's birthday celebrations. But obviously this kind of thing cannot be thought to reflect badly on Beethoven! And keep in mind that the Ninth was perhaps most famously performed at the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 (under Bernstein). He substituted the word "Freheit" (Freedom) for "Freude" (Joy) in that performance. See Nicholas Cook's book on the Ninth, and also Esteban Buch's political history of the Ninth.
I realize that the thread about Beethoven and Hitler was closed for good reason, but I thought I would offer a clarification which seemed important to make. As somebody mentioned, Hitler appropriated quite a bit of German music for use in highly charged Nazi-political contexts, and bent the music of both Beethoven and Wagner (as well as others) to conform to his ideology. The Ninth Symphony, with its message of brotherhood, in particular became a kind of anthem for Nazism, and it was performed twice as far as I know, once in 1938 under Hermann Abendroth in the context of a Dusseldorf Nazi music festival, and then again in 1942 under Wilhelm Furtwangler as a part of Hitler's birthday celebrations. But obviously this kind of thing cannot be thought to reflect badly on Beethoven! And keep in mind that the Ninth was perhaps most famously performed at the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 (under Bernstein). He substituted the word "Freheit" (Freedom) for "Freude" (Joy) in that performance. See Nicholas Cook's book on the Ninth, and also Esteban Buch's political history of the Ninth.
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