Ignatz Waghalter (15 March 1881 – 7 April 1949) was a Polish-German composer and conductor.

Ignatz Waghalter in 1925

Early life

edit

Waghalter was born into a poor but musically accomplished Jewish family in Warsaw. His eldest brother, Henryk Waghalter (1869-1961), became a renowned cellist at the Warsaw Conservatory.[1] Wladyslaw (1885-1940), the youngest Waghalter brother, became a noted violinist.[2]

Waghalter made his way to Berlin at 17. There, he first studied with Philipp Scharwenka and then came to the attention of Joseph Joachim, the great violinist and close friend of Johannes Brahms. With the support of Joachim, Waghalter was admitted into the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin, where he studied composition and conducting under the direction of Friedrich Gernsheim.

Career

edit
Waghalter's String Quartet in D Major, Third Movement - Performed by the Polish String Quartet Berlin

Waghalter's early chamber music revealed an intense melodic imagination that was to remain a distinctive characteristic of his compositional work. An early String Quartet in D Major, Opus 3, was highly praised by Joachim.

In a review of a 2020 recording of the quartet, performed by the Polish String Quartet Berlin, the Neue Zeitschrift für Music wrote: "It is almost impossible to believe that the String Quartet in D Major, Opus 3 is the work of a twenty-year old. Here, a finely-honed natural talent surges through the youthful style and character landscape of the genre."[3]

Another early work, Waghalter's Sonata for Violin and Pianoforte in F Minor, Opus 5, received the prestigious Mendelssohn-Preis in 1902, when the composer was only 21.[4]

In 1907, Waghalter secured a post as conductor at the Komische Oper in Berlin, assisting Arthur Nikisch, where his reputation grew rapidly. That was followed by a brief tenure at the Grillo-Theater, the Stadttheater Essen in Essen (1911–12). Waghalter's appointment as principal conductor at the new Deutsches Opernhaus in Berlin established his position as a major figure in German music. It was inaugurated, under Waghalter's direction, on 7 November 1912 with a performance of Fidelio.

He championed the music of Giacomo Puccini, whose operas had previously failed to win public acceptance in Germany. The first performance of Puccini's La Fanciulla del West in Germany was conducted by Waghalter in March 1913 at the Deutsches Opernhaus. Its triumphant reception was followed in December 1913 by the immense success of Puccini's Manon Lescaut, again under Waghalter's direction. The Signale, a leading arts journal in Berlin, reported that "...the orchestra played with a verve, a passion, at the same time with a sensual beauty of tone, as if its salvation depended on it. One cannot help but hold the conductor Ignaz Waghalter responsible for this inspiration, in whom the Institute really seems to possess an extraordinary power."[5] The twin successes of La Fanciulla del West and Manon Lescaut secured for Puccini's operas a permanent place in the repertoires of Germany's opera houses. Waghalter also conducted the German debut performances of Tosca and La Bohème and also of Ralph Vaughan Williams' second symphony in 1923.[6]

 
Giacomo Puccini and Waghalter in Berlin in 1913
 
First page of the orchestral partitur of Waghalter's Jugend.

Three of Waghalter's own operas received their premier at the Deutsches Opernhaus: Mandragola, based on a Renaissance comedy by Machiavelli, in January 1914. The fervent melodicism of his stage works marked Waghalter as among the most lyrical of German operatic composers in the pre-1933 era. In its review of the premier, the Signale wrote that "the crucial thing is that Waghalter really has genuine melodic and rhythmic ideas. And since he is not stingy with them, he seems to be able to rely on a large supply."[7] Plans for a European tour were aborted by the outbreak of the First World War. Jugend, based on the tragic naturalist work by the German dramatist Max Halbe, in February 1917; and Sataniel, inspired by a Polish fantasy tale, in May 1923. In its review of Jugend, the Berliner Tageblatt noted that "Waghalter has always written brilliantly for the orchestra" and praised the composer's "ability to express his feelings in a natural melodic flow without becoming banal or uninteresting." The review reported that the audience "repeatedly called Ignatz Waghalter, who conducted his work himself, onto the stage to rapturous applause, leaving no doubt that he was to be congratulated on a highly favorable reception."[8]

 
The Program of Waghalter's Carnegie Hall concert with the New York State Symphony Orchestra on December 7, 1923.

The collapse of the German economy in 1923 and the resulting bankruptcy of the Deutsches Opernhaus led to the end of Waghalter's tenure as principal conductor. Traveling to the United States, he made his American debut as a conductor at a concert held in New York's Carnegie Hall on December 7 of that year. In its review of the concert, the New York Times wrote: "Mr. Waghalter showed himself a leader of force and fire, not a poseur. He knows his classics: his Beethoven was full blooded. His Brahms warm and vital. He is fortunate also in his manner of conducting, sufficiently graphic in gesture, turning to this choir or that in warning evocation and at a climax, flashing lightening-like upon the full band. He won response not alone of the players but of a sophisticated audience representative of more than New York alone. Gabrilowitsch of Detroit being among the box guests. Rubin Goldmark and other recognized musicians on the main floor, as the crowd prolonged its ovation."[9]

A 1925 recording of Waghalter conducting the orchestra of the Berlin State Opera in a performance of the overture to Mozart's opera, The Marriage of Figaro.

The immense success of his debut and subsequent concerts as a guest conductor led to his appointment as the successor of Joseph Stransky as musical director of the New York State Symphony, which he held during the 1925 season.[10] Deeply attached to the cultural life of Berlin, Waghalter turned down an offer to remain at the State Symphony and returned to Germany. He was active as a guest conductor and produced a large number of recordings. He also assumed the position of Generalmusikmeister of UFA, the country's largest film production company in Germany.

For UFA, Waghalter composed the original musical score for one of the most extraordinary German films of the Weimar era, Hanns Walter Kornblum's Wunder der Schöpfung. The pathbreaking film, which premiered in Berlin in September 1925, attempted to present in a popular cinematic form the greatest discoveries of modern astronomy. His music was described by one critic as a "sensation."[11]

Waghalter composed several operettas. He was appointed musical director at the National Opera in Riga, Latvia, for the 1931–32 season. Shortly after his return to Berlin, the Nazis came to power.

In 1934, he went into exile, moving first to Czechoslovakia and then to Austria, where he composed his last opera, Ahasuerus und Ester. Less than one year before the Anschluss, when Austria was annexed by Germany, he and his wife fled to the United States. In the notorious Lexicon Der Juden In Der Musik (The Lexicon of Jews in Music) published in Nazi Germany in 1940 for the purpose of identifying prominent Jewish musicians and eradicating their cultural influence, Ignatz and his daughter Beatrice, a singer, were specifically identified. The list of proscribed Jewish musicians included four other prominent musicians in the Waghalter family, including Ignatz's deceased father Abraham, brother Wladyslaw, and two nieces Jolantha and Ruth.[12] Wladyslaw died on October 20, 1940, hours after being summoned to Gestapo headquarters. Ruth was murdered in Auschwitz on February 11, 1943.[13] Jolantha escaped to Peru and became the long-time first violinist of the National Symphony Orchestra in Lima.

Founding the Negro Symphony Orchestra

edit
 
The brochure circulated by the Negro Symphony Orchestra to build support for the project.

Shortly after arriving in New York City in May 1937, Waghalter initiated a campaign to establish a classical orchestra of African-American musicians. He secured the interest and support of militant New York trade unions, the noted African-American musician Alfred Jack Thomas, and such prominent representatives of the Harlem Renaissance as James Weldon Johnson.[14] The orchestra performed publicly under Waghalter's direction in 1938.

Waghalter composed an orchestral work for the Negro Symphony Orchestra, titled New World Suite, in 1938-39. However, it was not performed by the NSO because of the demise of the orchestra due to insufficient funding. The handwritten score was discovered by British conductor Alexander Walker among Waghalter's unpublished papers in 2013. A recording of the work, conducted by Walker, was released by Naxos in 2015. The New World Suite received its world premier by the Poznań Philharmonic Orchestra in Poland in May 2019.

Waghalter placed the establishment of the Negro Symphony Orchestra in the context of the struggle against fascism. In an interview with the Baltimore Afro-American in January 1939, Waghalter declared that "music, the strongest citadel of universal democracy, knows neither color, creed, nor nationality."[15] In addition to defying racial barriers in recruiting Black musicians, Waghalter insisted on the right of women to perform in classical orchestras. According to historian and musicologist David Goldfarb, Waghalter's "sense of universal democracy included women. The orchestra stated in its call for musicians that it was open to women." The appointment of the Black violinist Mildred Franklin Howard as the orchestra's concertmaster was a testament, according to Goldfarb, of Waghalter's "egalitarianism."[16]

"Remembrance", composed by Waghalter in 1941 in New York, evokes the sadness of his final years as an exile compelled to flee Europe by the Nazis. Performed by [Giorgi Latso]

Though Waghalter appeared occasionally in the 1940s as a guest conductor, his opportunities were extremely limited.

However, a notable event was the live radio performance of Ahasuerus und Ester on February 10, 1941, which was broadcast by New York City's historic classical music station, WQXR, Waghalter himself directed the performance from the piano. The role of Ester was sung by his daughter, Beatrice Waghalter (1913-2001), who, prior to fleeing Nazi Germany, had achieved renown as a singer performing on behalf of the Jüdischer Kulturbund.[17] A recording of the broadcast has survived. In 2013, the handwritten orchestral partitur was discovered, thus raising the possibility of a future performance of the opera as it was conceived by Waghalter.

Segment from the 1941 live New York City radio broadcast of Waghalter's "Ahasuerus und Ester." The soprano is the composer's daughter, Beatrice Waghalter.
 
Beatrice Waghalter c. 1940

Waghalter's final work was an operetta, Ting-Ling, which was performed in the summer of 1948 at the Olgonquit Playhouse. The composer died in New York City on April 7, 1949, at the age of 68.[18]

Legacy

edit

Even though he was one of many Central European musicians whose lives and careers were shattered by the Nazi catastrophe, his subsequent and protracted obscurity, when contrasted to the scale of his pre-1933 prominence, is striking. His fate may be explained, to a large extent, by the radical shift in musical aesthetics in the aftermath of World War II. Waghalter's inexhaustible melodic imagination and seriousness of his thematic ideas had led to his being described as the "German Puccini." He did not experiment with atonality and serialism, and his commitment to melodicism placed him well outside the precincts of what was then considered the musical avant-garde. However, more recent critical questioning of atonalism and a corresponding revival of interest in composers who worked in a melodic idiom have encouraged a reconsideration of Waghalter. The Deutsche Oper, the successor of the Deutsches Opernhaus, staged a concert performance of Waghalter's Jugend in 1989, and a new recording of his early chamber music was released in March 2006

In March 2011 Waghalter's Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra and Concerto for Violin and Orchestra were recorded by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London, with conductor Alexander Walker and soloist Irmina Trynkos. The CD was released, under the Naxos label, in October 2012.[19] In 2015 Waghalter's New World Suite was released, also under the Naxos label.[20]

In the liner notes accompanying the CD of the Concerto for Violin, Michael Haas - director of Research at the Jewish Music institute's ‘International Centre of Suppressed Music’ at Royal Holloway, University of London, and a leading expert on Central European composers whose careers were effectively destroyed by the Nazi accession to power, describes Waghalter as "one of the most unjustly forgotten musicians of pre-1933 Europe," whose remarkable work compels the listener to wonder "how was it possible that this music went missing for a century?"[21]

The December 2012 issue of Pizzicato Magazine awarded the Naxos release of the Violin Concerto a coveted Supersonic designation. In his review, editor-in-chief Remy Franck wrote: "What a discovery: The Violin Concerto of composer Ignatz Waghalter was, with its romantic characteristics, somewhat 'out of fashion' at the time of its composition in 1911 – but the wealth of ideas in this composition is fascinating. And that goes as well for the other works in this CD."[22]

The revival of interest in Waghalter's compositions continues. A performance of his Concerto for Violin by the Poznań Philharmonic Orchestra was broadcast in Germany by the Deutschlandradio Kultur in commemoration of the 135th anniversary of the composer's birth, in March 2016.[23] On September 1, 2023, at an official commemorative meeting in Berlin marking the 84th anniversary of Nazi Germany's invasion of Poland, Waghalter's String Quartet was performed.[24]

The emotional authenticity and force of his lyricism, combined with the high technical quality of his compositions, may be best appreciated as a distinctive expression of a lost musical culture whose destruction was among the tragic consequences of the barbarism unleashed by fascism in Europe.[25]

 
Ignatz Waghalter in New York, 1945

Waghalter, closed his autobiography Aus dem Ghetto in die Freiheit (From the Ghetto into Freedom), written in Czechoslovakia in 1936 after fleeing Nazi Germany, with a statement of his artistic ethos. "I want to serve my art and humanity, according to the words of Moses: 'You have been sent out to serve your brothers.'” [26]

Selected works

edit
  • String Quartet in D Major, Opus 3
  • Sonata for Violin and Piano in F Minor, Opus 5
  • Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra, Opus 9
  • Concerto for Violin and Orchestra, Opus 15
  • New World Suite for Orchestra (1939)
  • Operas: Der Teufelsweg, Mandragola, Jugend, Sataniel and Ahasverus und Ester
  • Operettas: Der späte Gast, Wem gehört Helena, Bärbel, Lord Tommy, Der Weiberkrieg, and Ting-Ling
  • Piano Works: Zwölf Skizzen für Klavier, Opus 17, Drei Klavierstuecke Opus 8, Trois Morceaux, Opus 13
  • Works for piano and violin: Idyll, Opus 14a, Gestaendnis, Opus 14b
  • Several Song Cycles

Waghalter's Autobiography, Aus dem Ghetto in die Freiheit, was published in Czechoslovakia in 1936.

References

edit
  1. ^ Cello Tradition in Warsaw "Cello tradition in Warsaw". Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
  2. ^ Kleines biographisches Lexicon der Violinisten, by Friedrich Frick,(2009) p. 553.
  3. ^ Lutz, Leslie (2020). "Poland Abroad String Quartets". Neue Zeitschrift für Musik. 181: 70.
  4. ^ Waghalter Aus dem Ghetto in die Freiheit (Marienbad, 1936)
  5. ^ "Deutsches Opernhaus". Signale (December 3, 1913): 1822.
  6. ^ Musical Times, March 1, 1923.
  7. ^ ""WAGHALTER'S 'MANDRAGOLA'"". Signale (4): 131. 28 January 1914.
  8. ^ Translated from the Berliner Tageblatt, February 18, 1917, p. 2
  9. ^ "Ignaz Waghalter Wins An Ovation", New York Times, December 8, 1923
  10. ^ "Stransky Quits State Orchestra," New York Times, December 31, 1924.
  11. ^ Lichtbühne, 18 Jarhrgang, Nummer 179, 15.9.1925. See also "Internationale Stummfilmtage - 25. Bonner Sommerkino 2009". Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  12. ^ Stengel and Gerigk, Theo and Herbert (1940). Lexicon Der Juden In Der Musik [Lexicon of Jews in Music] (in German). Berlin: Bernhard Hanefeld Verlag. pp. 279–80.
  13. ^ "Stolpersteine in Berlin". 5 August 2024.
  14. ^ "Alfred Jack Thomas: Performer, Composer, Educator," by James Nathan Jones, Franklin F. Johnson, and Robert B. Cochran, in The Black Perspective in Music, Vol. 11, No. 1 (Spring, 1983), p. 67. The essay provides information on Waghalter's decisive role in the establishment of a "Sepia" Symphony orchestra in New York, and his longstanding fight, dating back to the early 1920s, for the recognition of African-American artists. According to Jones et al., Waghalter's "statement in Berlin's Tagblatt that the next musical genius would be a person of color caused an outcry in Germany, but his beliefs were intensified after hearing Roland Hayes in Berlin and Marian Anderson in Vienna." However, the essay states incorrectly that Waghalter died in 1938, shortly after the founding of the orchestra.
  15. ^ "'Music Knows Neither Creed Nor Nationality' Says Famous Conductor of National Negro Symphony Who Fled Nazi Purge", Baltimore Afro-American, January 28, 1939
  16. ^ "Ignatz Waghalter and the Negro Symphony Orchestra", by David A. Goldfarb, scholarly paper delivered at the Conference of the ASEEES in Chicago, November 2022.
  17. ^ "Beatrice Waghalter (1913-2001)". Retrieved 5 August 2024.
  18. ^ "I. Waghalter, 68, Long a Conductor," New York Times, April 8, 1949. This obituary provided an outline of the key events in Waghalter's career.
  19. ^ "WAGHALTER, I.: Violin Concerto / Rhapsody / Violin Sonata (Trynkos, Latsabidze, A. Walker) - 8.572809".
  20. ^ "WAGHALTER, I.: New World Suite / Mandragola: Overt.. - 8.573338 | Discover more releases from Naxos".
  21. ^ "WAGHALTER, I.: Violin Concerto / Rhapsody / Violin Sonata (Trynkos, Latsabidze, A. Walker)". www.naxos.com. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  22. ^ Newspaper clipping naxos.com
  23. ^ "Happy Birthday, Ignatz" https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/leon-botstein-dirigiert-die-posener-philharmonie-happy-100.html
  24. ^ "COMMEMORATION OF THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE GERMAN INVASION OF POLAND IN 1939". 5 September 2023.
  25. ^ "Waghalter, Ignatz" Grove Music Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.
  26. ^ Waghalter, Ignatz (1936). Aus dem Ghetto in die Freiheit [Out of the Ghetto into Freedom]. Marienbad: AD. Schnurer. p. 145.
edit
Preceded by Musical Directors, New York Philharmonic
1924–1925
Succeeded by