Beethoven in the Bunker by Fred Brouwers audiobook

Beethoven in the Bunker: Musicians under the Nazi Regime 

By Fred Brouwers
Translated by Eileen J. Stevens
Read by Grover Gardner

Blackstone Publishing 9781635423297

Unabridged

Format : Library CD (In Stock)
  • ISBN: 9798212342179

  • ISBN: 9798212342162

  • ISBN: 9798212342186

Runtime: 6.19 Hours
Category: Nonfiction/History
Audience: Adult
Language: English

Summary

Summary

Winner of an AudioFile Earphones Award

This compelling study examines the remarkable relationship between the Nazis and classical music through the stories of musicians, composers, and conductors across the political spectrum.

May 1945. A Soviet military patrol searches Hitler’s secret bunker in Berlin. They find bodies, documents, jewelry, paintings—and also an extensive collection of 78 rpm records. It comes as no surprise that this collection includes work by Beethoven, Wagner, and Bruckner.

The same goes for a procession of other giants promoted by the Nazi regime: “It seems as if the Nazis put a steel helmet on Mozart, girded Schubert with a saber, and wrapped barbed wire around Johann Strauss’s neck,” composer Robert Stolz once said. But how is it possible that Hitler’s favorites also included “forbidden” Jewish and Russian composers and performers?

While Hitler sat secretly enjoying previously recorded music in his bunker, musicians made of flesh and blood were denied a means of making a living. They died in concentration camps or in other war-related circumstances. They survived but ended up in psychiatric care; they managed to flee just in time; they sided with the regime—out of conviction or coercion—or they joined the resistance.

From fiery conductor Arturo Toscanini, who defied Mussolini and Hitler, to opportunistic composer Richard Strauss and antisemitic pianist Elly Ney, who collaborated with the Third Reich to varying extents and for different reasons, Brouwers profiles the complex figures of this extraordinarily fascinating chapter in music history.

Editorial Reviews

Editorial Reviews

“Narrator Grover Gardner performs with genuine engagement, a broad pitch range, and a rich lower-register voice…with the dignified sound of his slower pacing and his clear pronunciation of English and foreign words…Winner of the AudioFile Earphones Award.” AudioFile
“Brouwers is meticulous in detailing the musical and personal biographies of these artists…he muses on the political and social uses of music during World War II, concluding that ‘art and indeed music know no boundaries.’” Jewish Book Council
“[In] this intriguing study of ‘the complex relationship between Hitler, the Nazis, and music’…Brouwers’s love of music and fascination with the era come through.” Publishers Weekly
“A fascinating collection of historical glimpses, curated and examined with palpable enthusiasm by a man who has passionately served and studied music for most of his life.” Arianna Warsaw-Fan Rauch, author of Declassified
“Crisply written accounts of the trials and tribulations of classical musicians, composers, and conductors under Nazism are also about the importance culture has in building our humanity and about how politics at their very worst seek to tear up what makes us humane.” Michaël Amy, professor of art history, Rochester Institute of Technology

Reviews

Reviews

Author

Author Bio: Fred Brouwers

Author Bio: Fred Brouwers

Fred Brouwers is a Flemish radio and television presenter and connoisseur of classical music. For many years he has hosted the prestigious Queen Elisabeth Competition in Brussels, Belgium, for up-and-coming classical musicians. Beethoven in the Bunker is his first book in English.

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Details

Details

Available Formats : CD, Library CD, MP3 CD
Category: Nonfiction/History
Runtime: 6.19
Audience: Adult
Language: English