FABER POETRY SUBSCRIPTION NOW AVAILABLE

A Book Extract on International Holocaust Remembrance Day

The wooded slopes of the Ettersberg stand in the center of Germany, a few miles north of Weimar. Beginning in the eighteenth century, the area served as the playground of dukes, who went there for hunting, and later as the preserve of poets, who traversed its rugged hills while contemplating the wonders of nature. No less an eminence than Goethe, the greatest of all German poets, traveled often to the forests of the Ettersberg, and over the years he grew particularly fond of one large oak tree near a clearing with expansive views of the countryside. On a bright autumn morning in 1827, a banquet-like breakfast was laid out in the shade of this grand oak. Leaning back against its regal trunk, Goethe feasted on roast partridges, drank wine from a gold cup, and gazed out at the rolling landscape. “Here,” he declared, “a person feels great and free . . . the way he should always be.”

After Goethe’s death, as a cult of reverence formed around him as the standard-bearer of both German genius and European humanism, the legend of his favorite local tree evidently survived—all the way down to one summer day more than a century later. That day in 1937, a group of prisoners was led into the same high forests of the Ettersberg, stopping at a limestone ridge just six miles north of Weimar. Under harsh conditions and with minimal equipment, these men cleared away the trees to make room for a concentration camp.

As the prisoners labored day after day, building their own future prison, their guards identified one particular oak that would not be felled. This oak, it was determined, must be the mythic Goethe’s oak. And so the anointed tree was left standing, and in the years that followed, the concentration camp of Buchenwald rose up around it on all sides.

To the Nazis who created Buchenwald, Goethe’s oak represented a tangible link to German history at its most illustrious, a history that proved the German people’s cultural superiority while pointing toward the thousand-year empire of their dreams. To the inmates of Buchenwald, the tree took on different meanings, as an incongruous vestige of the older Germany, a potent reminder of European culture’s utopian promise, and a silent witness to unspeakable crime. Over the course of the next seven years, the men and women in the surrounding camp were enslaved, murdered, and worked to death. Some of Hitler’s victims, according to one account, were hanged from the branches of Goethe’s tree. The oak itself eventually stopped producing leaves. In one photograph taken by a prisoner with a stolen camera, its branches appear bare and skeletal, reaching up into the empty sky.

Some prisoners linked the tree’s fate with that of Nazi Germany, which by the summer of 1944 was careening toward its own downfall. At approximately noon on August 24, 1944, 129 American aircraft converged over the camp and rained down their fury, dropping one thousand bombs and incendiaries and successfully destroying a munitions factory attached to the Buchenwald complex. That factory had been their prime target, but there were additional casualties: one hundred SS men, nearly four hundred camp inmates—and the old oak tree, which had been scorched by flames. The camp leadership had it felled and sawed for firewood, but one resourceful inmate named Bruno Apitz—a Communist prisoner who had survived in the camp since the year it opened—managed to smuggle back to his barracks an entire block of the tree’s heartwood. With his fellow prisoners standing guard, Apitz risked his life to carve from the wood a bas-relief in the form of a death mask. He called it Das letzte Gesicht (The Last Face).

This simple, rough-hewn sculpture—later smuggled from the camp and now owned by the German Historical Museum—individualizes the enormity of Nazi violence through the prism of a single face. It can be thought of as among the early memorials to the Second World War and to the events that, years later, would be called the Shoah or the Holocaust. The grief that lines this last face is grief for all that died at Buchenwald: for the inmates but also perhaps for what the oak represented—that is, the grand European promise of a high culture of poetry, music, and literature, and the very idea of a humanism that might one day unite all people as equals.

While Apitz was at work, chisel in hand, another memorial inspired by the heartwood of German culture was taking shape some three hundred miles away. In Richard Strauss’s villa in the mountain-ringed town of Garmisch, the eighty-year-old composer wrote out two short poems by Goethe, the first one opening with the lines “Niemand wird sich sel- ber kennen, / Sich von seinem Selbst-Ich trennen” (No one will ever know himself / Separate himself from his inner being). The second poem begins “What happens in the world / No one actually understands.” These reflections on the limits of self-knowledge must have resonated with Strauss, a composer who had spectacularly failed to understand his own actions and the world in which he found himself in 1933. During the years of the Third Reich, he had severely misjudged his surroundings, remained in Germany, and forever tainted his reputation by working with the Nazis in the area of cultural policy. He also witnessed the suffering of his Jewish family members (which included his daughter-in-law and his grandchildren) and the wartime destruction of his true spiritual homes, the opera houses of Munich, Dresden, and Vienna.

Now, in August 1944, the world-weary Strauss began work on a choral setting of the first of the Goethe poems, but never completed it. Instead, he swept the musical ideas, which still bore the ghosted impressions of Goethe’s language, into a new composition—a spiraling work of mournful grandeur titled Metamorphosen. It would become an elegy to German culture, a death mask in sound, and one of Strauss’s most moving musical utterances, speaking forcefully to the emotions while sealing its secrets behind the music’s veil of wordless beauty. On the score’s final page, Strauss inlaid a quotation from the funeral march of Beethoven’s Eroica Symphony, and below it he inscribed a single lapidary phrase: “IN MEMORIAM!”

Unlike the artist of the sculpture carved at Buchenwald, however, Strauss did not specify what precisely his music was attempting to remember. To this day, whenever the piece is performed, the question reappears. It is no longer his to answer.

From Hiroshima, to Nanjing, to Pearl Harbor, to the killing fields of the eastern front, the Second World War was a global catastrophe— and a tear in the fabric of humanity. Somewhere near the center of this darkness was the Holocaust itself, an event that continues to haunt Western society’s historical memory just as experiences of trauma may haunt individual memory. It has been likened to an earthquake that shattered all the instruments designed to record it.

One of those instruments was art, and in the postwar years it lay shattered too. Theodor Adorno, the German-Jewish philosopher, critic, and musical sage, famously pronounced that to write poetry after Auschwitz would be barbaric. Yet Adorno returned many times to the question of art in the wake of atrocity, ultimately revising his opinion to honor art’s powers of witness. In 1962 he wrote, “The concept of a resurrection of culture after Auschwitz is illusory and senseless, and for that reason every work of art that does come into being is forced to pay a bitter price. But because the world has outlived its own demise, it needs art as its unconscious chronicle.”

The role of music in particular as an “unconscious chronicle”—as a witness to history and as a carrier of memory for a post-Holocaust world—is the subject of this book.

It is a book of stories, of sounds, and of places. The principal dramatis personae are four towering twentieth-century composers: Arnold Schoenberg, Richard Strauss, Benjamin Britten, and Dmitri Shostakovich. During the war years, they stood at four very different windows looking out onto the same catastrophe. Each responded to the rupture through intensely charged memorials in sound—pieces that, especially when considered alongside the remarkable history surrounding their creation and reception, endure as some of the defining ethical and aesthetic statements of the twentieth century. Among them are Schoenberg’s Survivor from Warsaw, Strauss’s Metamorphosen, Shostakovich’s “Babi Yar” Symphony, and Britten’s War Requiem. This book attempts to open up new perspectives on the wartime past through these particular works of music, through the lives of their creators, and through individual moments in music’s social and cultural history.

I approach these memorial works on their own terms, but also in a broader sense as spaces of encounter, shifting constellations of sound and meaning that reach across time. Their histories are linked to some of the century’s darkest moments of war, genocide, exile, and cultural destruction. But their prehistories, which this book will explore, open onto worlds of possibility, fantasies of emancipation, genealogies of hope. Think of the winged hosannas of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, or the cosmos-embracing euphoria of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony. Only after grasping something of the unbounded optimism crystallized in these great musical statements—the dreams and prayers of music’s long nineteenth century—can we properly attempt to fathom music’s postwar requiems of profoundest mourning. This book seeks to reinscribe all of these musical works with some of the histories, lives, and landscapes they are capable of illuminating. My hope is that these stories—moments drawn from the cultural history and memory of music—will then become part of what we come to hear in the works themselves. In this sense, music can preserve for the future an extraordinary gateway to the past, and I believe it does so differently than other art forms.

‘An event seared in memory from decades ago may haunt the mind with a power far greater than events that took place only yesterday.’

Ever since the mythical poet Orpheus retrieved his beloved Eurydice from the underworld through the magical power of his song, music has been summoning souls, bridging time, and raising the dead. In his Complete Dictionary of Music of 1768, the philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau attested to these “greatest effects of sounds on the human heart.” To demonstrate the sheer potency of certain sounds, he offered the example of a Swiss folk tune, a “Ranz des Vaches” melody so beloved by the Swiss people that, according to Rousseau, it was forbidden “under pain of death” to play this tune for Swiss soldiers on assignment far from home. Why? Because “so great a desire did [the music] excite in them of returning to their country” that upon hearing it, the soldiers were known to “burst into tears, desert or die.” Rousseau’s account may sound exaggerated, but music’s ability to trigger flights of memory is a phenomenon many people still experience: think, for in- stance, of the song that pops up on the car radio and, like Proust’s madeleine, instantly calls to mind a moment or experience that took place years or even decades earlier.

Yet it is not just we who remember music. Music also remembers us. Music reflects the individuals and the societies that create it, capturing something essential about the era of its birth. When a composer in 1823 consciously or unconsciously distills worlds of thought, fantasy, and emotion into a series of notes on a page, and then we hear those same notes realized in a performance more than a century later, we are hearing the past literally speaking in the present. In this sense, music can fleetingly reorder the past, bring closer that which is distant, and confound the one-way linearity of time. In these very ways, music shares a profound affinity with memory itself. For memory by definition also challenges the pastness of the past and the objective distance of history; it also reorders time and flouts the forward march of the years. An event seared in memory from decades ago may haunt the mind with a power far greater than events that took place only yesterday. Indeed, while Mnemosyne, the Greek goddess of memory, was said to be mother of all the Muses, this book contends that one daughter was the first among equals. Memory resonates with the cadences, the revelations, the opacities, and the poignancies of music.

 

Time’s Echo: The Second World War, the Holocaust, and the Music of Remembrance by Jeremy Eichler is out now in paperback hardback, audio and ebook.
Find out more about International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
Buy the Book
Jeremy Eichler
£10.99
£9.99

Shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize, a stirring account of how music acts as a witness to history and a medium of cultural memory in the post-Holocaust world.

Jeremy Eichler
£25.00
£21.00

A stirring account of how music acts as a witness to history and a medium of cultural memory in the post-Holocaust world.

About the Author

A writer, scholar and critic, Jeremy Eichler is the author of Time’s Echo, a celebrated new book on music, war and memory that was named “History Book of the Year” by The Sunday Times and hailed as “the outstanding music book of this and several years” by The Times Literary Supplement. Chosen as a notable book of 2023 by The New York Times and The New Yorker, Time’s Echo recently won three National Jewish Book Awards including “Book of the Year,” and was a finalist for the UK’s premier non-fiction award, the Baillie Gifford Prize, whose jury described it as “a masterpiece of nonfiction writing.” A contributor to many national publications, he serves as chief classical music critic of The Boston Globe.

Jeremy Eichler
About the Author
Jeremy-Eichler.jpg