HARTMANN, KARL AMADEUS BIOGRAPHY(1905 - 1963)
Karl Amadeus Hartmann was born in Munich on 2nd August 1905. He studied at the Academy of Music in Munich with Josef Haas, then became a student of Hermann Scherchen, and later of Anton Webern in Vienna. His first international success dates from 1935, when his symphony “Miserae”
received its première at the Prague International Music
Festival. A year later his first string quartet won first prize in the
Carillon-Genf competition, and in 1939 audiences heard his Symphony “L’Oeuvre”.
During the years of World War II, little was heard of Hartmann outside
Germany, but he continued to compose extensively. He was one of the
first German artists to profess his pacifist creed and with a small
group of his friends engaged in an underground resistance against the
oppressive Nazi regime. His First Symphony (revised twice
after the war) uses poems by the American, Walt Whitman. After the war,
he cofounded a series of contemporary music concerts under the name of
Musica Viva, in order to promote the music of composers who had
suffered censorship during the Hitler regime.
In 1952 he was elected a member of the German Academy of Fine Arts
and soon after became president of the German section of the
International Society for Contemporary Music. Hartmann died in Munich
on 5th December 1963. He left eight symphonies and other works for
orchestra, two string quartets, vocal and chamber works. Musicologist
Alfred Leonard summarized Hartmann’s music as follows: “It
leaves an impression of deep seriousness, of contemplation rather than
action, of widerange ideas, of never-flagging intensity, of a passion
that carries the listener from climax to climax. This music knows
hardly any relaxation, and its predominantly small tone steps lend it
extraordinary tension.”
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