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  • Romain Rolland
  • Romain-Rolland

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Correspondence

  • DLA 69.930/8 Handwritten letter from Schenker to Halm, dated October 27, 1919

    Schenker writes of the deteriorating intellectual conditions in Germany and Austria with respect to other nations, and of the devastating political and psychological consequences. Schenker praises Halm's Klavierübung for its sensitivity to voice leading, and speaks of it as an antidote to the decline of musical literacy. He hopes to talk with Halm about these matters when he moves to Germany.

  • OJ 10/3, [28] Typewritten letter from Deutsch to Schenker, dated February 14, 1922

    Deutsch offers to provide several books to Schenker instead of two or three hardback copies of the "Moonlight" Sonata edition, and then details several misprints and factual errors in Romain Rolland's biography of Beethoven.

  • OC 12/1 Handwritten letter from Theodor Frimmel to Deutsch, dated February 22, 1922 (forwarded from Deutsch to Schenker with marginal note dated Feburary 27, 1922)

    Deutsch forwards Schenker a letter from Theodor Frimmel regarding errors in Rolland's Beethoven biography. In the original letter, Frimmel asks Deutsch to send his regards to the Schenkers.

  • DLA 69.930/10 Handwritten letter from Schenker to Halm, dated September 25, 1922

    Acknowledges OJ 11/35, 20 and composition; expects to be able to comment on Halm's Klavierübung in Tonwille 4; reports Leipzig University's decision not to appoint him; speculates on the impact of Kontrapunkt 2 and Der freie Satz; public difficulty in accepting Urgesetze. — Aristide Briand: The importance of being well-read on a topic before commenting in public: Schoenberg and Reger; newspapers. — Maximilian Harden: although faithful to Schenker, Harden had not mastered the topics on which he wrote. — National Govenment: Schenker's publishing plans, including "The Future of Humanity": man's anthropomorphic thinking is a delusion, he needs to adapt to nature, to return to a primitive state, to abandon "development" and "progress" and return to primordial laws; inferior man wants to "govern" (bowel wants to become brain); Schenker deplores "artifice" (French) as against nature (German). — Things French: praises German superiority over French in its joy of work. — Higher Plane: the German should not abase himself before the Frenchman.

  • OJ 10/3, [42] Typewritten letter from Deutsch to Schenker, dated November 6, 1925

    Deutsch informs Schenker that due to space constraints the editors have (without Deutsch's prior knowledge) cut the first four paragraphs of Schenker's article, leaving only the last two paragraphs, which refer particularly to Schubert. He asks Schenker to agree to this cut, but also offers him the option of removing his article so that it can be used in full elsewhere. Deutsch asks Schenker to look at a Beethoven manuscript at Heck's.

  • DLA 69.930/15 Handwritten letter from Schenker to Halm, dated July 11, 1927

    Thanking Halm for his Beethoven book, he believes that their misunderstandings could be removed and hopes Der freie Satz will help bring that about; gives order of publication for Meisterwerk II and Der freie Satz, and compares his "Das Organische der Fuge" with the work of others on Bach. — Schenker took no part in the Vienna Beethoven festival. — Describes his correspondence with Hindemith.

  • OJ 10/3, [115] Typewritten picture postcard from Deutsch to Schenker, dated January 27, 1930

    Deutsch clarifies one or two misunderstandings in Schenker’s previous postcard: Vrieslander has been contracted by the publisher Strache to bring out some unpublished sonatas by C. P. E. Bach.

  • OJ 13/25, [9] Typewritten letter from Rinn to Schenker, dated March 8, 1930

    Vrieslander's article about Schenker for Der Kunstwart is too technical and too long for a journal with amateur readership; he has asked Vrieslander to shorten it. — He expresses enthusiasm for Schenker's idea of writing about the relationship of the great German poets to music.

  • OJ 6/7, [49] Handwritten letter from Schenker to Moriz Violin, dated July 10, 1930

    Acknowledging his recent letter to Jeanette, Schenker expresses his regret that Violin and his son Karl are still troubled by health problems and reports some recent news. Furtwängler's intervention with Breitkopf & Härtel on behalf of Weisse's Octet was in vain; he had also sought the same firm's agreement to publish the "Eroica" analysis, but this will now appear as the third Meisterwerk Yearbook. The Schenkers are expecting many visitors in Galtür, including Furtwängler, Reinhard Oppel, Schenker's nephew and his wife, and Jeanette's sister and family. Hoboken is prepared to fund the publication of a collected edition of the works of C. P. E. Bach (with financial support from the city of Hamburg), but Schenker is cautious about this because his paid involvement in the project might result in work that would jeopardize progress on Der freie Satz. He has been included in the latest edition of Meyers Konversations-Lexicon, and has received favorable citation in Romain Rolland's latest Beethoven book.

  • OJ 6/7, [50] Handwritten letter from Schenker to Moriz Violin, dated July 31, 1930

    Schenker assures his friend that he understands his difficulties, and that he can be proud of holding his head high above those who do not understand music, or are incapable of interpreting it beautifully. His own problems are focussed around money, especially as his brother (Moses) has not given him the second part of his inheritance. He has sought to find cheaper ways of producing the music examples for his latest writings: he is more satisfied with the Eroica examples than the engraved illustrations from previous volumes of Das Meisterwerk in der Musik, and is planning to issue Der freie Satz with a volume of examples that is separate from the text. He repeats the news, from an earlier letter, of his being mentioned in Romain Rolland's most recent Beethoven book, and of his entry in Meyers Konversations-Lexicon, and also reports on an item about him in the Deutsche Tonkünstler-Lexikon.

  • OJ 10/3, [134] Handwritten picture postcard from Deutsch to Schenker, dated December 14, 1930

    Deutsch thanks Schenker -- and Hans Weisse -- for Weisse’s lecture. Hoboken has recently acquired a second edition of Beethoven’s Sonata Op. 22, which Schenker may wish to consult.

Diaries