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Unveiling Arnold Schönberg’s Japanese Connection
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This study uncovers Arnold Schönberg’s little-known connection to Japan through his correspondence with Takatoshi Kyogoku, a Japanese music journalist, and explores a potential teaching opportunity for Schönberg in Japan during the 1930s. The essay traces Kyogoku’s 1931 interview with Schönberg in Berlin and their postwar correspondence, revealing Schönberg’s openness to engaging with Japanese musicians. Central to the investigation is Wilhelm Furtwängler’s 1933 inquiry about Schönberg’s interest in relocating to Japan, linked to a broader campaign by Japanese medical scientist Aihiko Sata to invite displaced Jewish scholars and artists to Japan. Despite the initiative’s ultimate failure due to political and logistical hurdles, the study sheds light on Schönberg’s transnational networks and the intersection of music, politics, and exile during the Nazi era.
Sachsische Landesbibliothek, Staats- und Universitatsbibliothek Dresden
Title: Unveiling Arnold Schönberg’s Japanese Connection
Description:
This study uncovers Arnold Schönberg’s little-known connection to Japan through his correspondence with Takatoshi Kyogoku, a Japanese music journalist, and explores a potential teaching opportunity for Schönberg in Japan during the 1930s.
The essay traces Kyogoku’s 1931 interview with Schönberg in Berlin and their postwar correspondence, revealing Schönberg’s openness to engaging with Japanese musicians.
Central to the investigation is Wilhelm Furtwängler’s 1933 inquiry about Schönberg’s interest in relocating to Japan, linked to a broader campaign by Japanese medical scientist Aihiko Sata to invite displaced Jewish scholars and artists to Japan.
Despite the initiative’s ultimate failure due to political and logistical hurdles, the study sheds light on Schönberg’s transnational networks and the intersection of music, politics, and exile during the Nazi era.
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