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By
Norman Lebrecht, Norman Lebrecht

Opinion

Beautiful music does not drown out shameful history of the past

March 15, 2013 11:13
3 min read

The longest-serving concertmaster of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra spent his declining years in a house in Blackheath. During the Blitz he took out his Stradivarius and entertained his neighbours in the bomb shelter. None would have been aware that Arnold Rosé had been the premier violinist in Europe's finest orchestra for 56 years, brother-in-law and confidant to its most famous conductor, Gustav Mahler. In South London, that was a distant culture. In Vienna, it had been erased.

Rosé was kicked out of the Philharmonic 75 years ago this week as Hitler's forces marched into Vienna. He was spared the worst indignities of Nazi rule and escaped before the year was out, but his fellow-concertmaster Julius Stwertka died in the Terezin concentration camp in 1942 and Rosé's only daughter, Alma, was murdered in Auschwitz. News of her death, said the old concertmaster, "finished me off".

In 1946, Rosé was approached by the Vienna Philharmonic and invited to resume his seat. He refused, telling his son that there were 56 Nazis still playing in the orchestra, as opposed to just six in the Berlin Philharmonic. His son considered that an embittered exaggeration. This week, we learned that Rosé was precisely right.

A report by three Austrian historians into the VPO's activities in the Nazi era confirms much of what we already knew - that it and many of its musicians were willing instruments of a racist regime. The orchestra's official history, published by its present chairman Clemens Hellsberg 20 years ago, notes that 13 Jewish players were sacked under the Nazis and six murdered, and that the VPO once gave a concert in an SS barracks; a pleasant evening for mass murderers. It could not, you think, get worse than that.