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28 - “… he can write music all right…”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Chris Walton
Affiliation:
University of Stellenbosch in South Africa and Orchestre Symphonique Bienne in Switzerland
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Summary

On 14 and 15 January 1935 Schoeck conducted his Lebendig begraben in the Zurich Tonhalle, with Loeffel as soloist; Bruckner's Fourth Symphony comprised the rest of the program. A couple of days later, a man dressed as a tramp knocked at the door of Schoeck's home on the Lettenholzstrasse. When the door opened, he asked, in German: “Does the man live here who composed Lebendig begraben? I‘d like to meet him.” It was James Joyce. He was visiting Zurich to see his opthalmologist, Alfred Vogt, and—being a music lover—had ventured into the Tonhalle for the concert on the fourteenth. He wrote to his daughter-in law the next day as follows:

Helen, please go out and buy Kassell's German-English, English-German Dictionary and sit down with Giorgio to study, first of all, the text of Gottfried Keller's poem sequence Lebendig begraben which I forward under separate cover together with piano score for bass voice by Othmar Schoeck. I heard this sung last night by the Bern bass Fritz [sic] Loeffel … bought the score just now and have rung up Prof. Fehr to ask O.S. to sign it for Giorgio…. If I can judge by last night he stands head and shoulders above Stravinsky and Antheil as composer for orchestra and voice anyhow. I did not know Keller wrote this kind of gruesome-satiric semi-pious verse but the effect of it on any audience is tremendous…. Schoeck is a type rather like Beckett who gets up at 2.30 p.m. his wife says. But I hope to catch him before he falls asleep again. But he can write music all right.

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Chapter
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Othmar Schoeck
Life and Works
, pp. 204 - 214
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2009

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