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BIOGRAPHY
By Simon Wynberg
The following article is reproduced here by permission of The OREL Foundation
(www.orelfoundation.org).
When Franz Theodor Reizenstein (June 7, 1911 October 15, 1968) left Berlin in 1934,
England presented an obvious sanctuary. His uncle Bruno, who had been injured in the
First World War and had married the English nurse who tended his wounds, lived in
South London in Kingston-upon-Thames. He acted as guarantor for Franz and several
other family members, and provided the beginnings of a local circle. Franz, just 23 when
he arrived, had already enjoyed some professional success. The son of Albert
Reizenstein, a Nuremberg doctor, and Lina Kohn, his prodigious musical gifts (he wrote
his first piece at the age of five) were nurtured by a close and artistic family, and
cultivated at the Berlin Hochschule fr Musik, where he studied composition with Paul
Hindemith and piano with Leonid Kreutzer. He had completed his first major piece, a
string quartet, by the time he was seventeen. Hindemith insisted that his students have a
broad knowledge of instrumental technique. As Reizenstein later wrote:
He arranged for his students to take up different wind and stringed instruments in
turn We played together regularly and provided most of the music by composing it
ourselves. We would not let anyone listen to the ghastly noises we produced--not that
anybody wanted to--but we did learn how to write for the various instruments.
When he arrived in England, Reizenstein was less finished and less experienced a
composer than older migr colleagues like Hans Gl, Karl Rankl, Berthold Goldschmidt
and Egon Wellesz. But his solid training, a loyalty to tonality and the musical structures
of the nineteenth-century and, particularly, a belief that he was part of its ongoing
tradition, provided him with confidence and maturity. In England his composition studies
continued with Vaughan Williams at the Royal College of Music, while the illustrious
Solomon Cutner refined his piano technique, especially with regard to touch and color.
His first published piece, the Suite for piano, Op. 6, was issued in 1936 by Alfred
Lengnick, but it was the virtuosic and flamboyant Prologue, Variations and Finale, Op.
12, composed for the violinist Max Rostal, and inspired by an extended tour to South
America (undertaken with another legendary violinist, Roman Totenberg) which brought
him to prominence. The piano part was later expanded to create an orchestral
accompaniment.
Under Vaughan Williams's tutelage, and with his generous support and encouragement
(during and after his internment), Reizenstein's musical language was freed and
broadened. English music began to inform his compositions. Comparing his 1934 Wind
Quintetwhich is assured, idiomatic and beautifully balanced, but rather sober and
unemotionalwith the concise Oboe Sonata, Op. 11, composed just three years later,
one is struck by the changed sensibility: an incipient pastoral quality, and an Englishness
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that would become more pronounced over the years that followed.
Reizenstein's status as a British resident was interrupted (and compromised) by his tour
to South America in 1937/38, and so, despite a seven-year residency in London,
Reizenstein joined the thousands of German and Austrian Jews interned in requisitioned
hotels on the Isle of Man. While he was incarcerated, he organized and performed in
concerts for his fellow internees, partnering with Sigmund Nissel, who would later play
second violin in the Amadeus Quartet. On his release, Reizenstein's army application
was turned down on account of his poor eyesight, and he eventually found work as a
railway clerk. Composing whenever he had a free moment, by the end of the war he had
produced the substantial Piano Sonata, Op. 19, and the Violin Sonata, Op. 20,
composed for Maria Lidka, a stalwart supporter of new music. This evocative and
idiomatic work, with its bold gestures and infectious, Iberian middle movement, together
with the Cello Sonata, Op. 22, completed in 1947, both deserve a place on recital
programs.
The Piano Quintet, Op. 23, one of the composer's favorite works, was finished in 1948.
Lionel Salter's 1975 Gramophone review of its only commercial recording (the Melos
Ensemble with the pianist Lamar Crowson on l'Oiseau Lyre) maintains that it stands
alongside Shostakovich's as the most noteworthy of this century's piano quintetsa
rather rash underestimation of the contributions by Faur, Elgar, Martin, Bartk and
several others, but praise indeed nevertheless. The critic and musicologist Mosco
Carner wrote of the work: Here style and idea, matter and manner are fused into a
complete organic whole, not to mention the brilliant exploitation of the medium. But
despite these plaudits and despite the obvious substance and the musical rewards the
Quintet offers both player and audience, it is fair to say the piece has only very
occasionally slipped out of obscurity. Its neglect, and that of the cello and violin sonatas,
was part of the discrimination that unapologetic traditionalists like Reizenstein
suffered--the severance that accompanied an uncompromising dismissal of serial
procedure and the avant-garde. His works were certainly marginalized by the BBC
during the tenure of William Glock, and by a post-war musical establishment that tended
to be both inward-looking and randomly anti-Semitic.
The Piano Quintet is assembled in traditional classical sonata-form: four movements, the
outer two and the second, Poco adagio, being of equivalent length; the Scherzo a
fleeting hell-for-leather romp that draws on preceding material. Reizenstein's polytonal
technique gives the work a terrific sense of tension, but whatever the distance we are
taken harmonically, there is always a return to an unequivocal tonal center, indeed the
work is securely cast in D major. The critic and theorist Hans Keller wrote of the
Scherzo: The texture proves to be immaculate [] so that one is left with the
impression that this movement may be the best, if not indeed the only, truly pianoquintettish piece ever written.
Reizenstein's vocal works include the opera Men against the Sea (1949), Voices of
Night, Op. 27 (1951), for soprano, baritone, chorus and orchestra, and the radio opera
Anna Kraus, Op. 30 (1952), whose main protagonist is a German refugee, as of course
was Reizenstein himself. In 1958 the Three Choirs Festival premiered his highly
successful oratorio Genesis, Op. 35. The text was assembled by the actor, poet and
dramatist Christopher Hassall, a close friend of Reizenstein's, who also worked with
William Walton, Malcolm Arnold, Arthur Bliss, and perhaps most famously, Ivor Novello.
The spirit of Vaughan Willams, who died the same year, is evident in both Genesis and
the cantata Voices of the Night (a series of poems that explores the progression of night
from dusk to dawn), and there are reminders of his Five Tudor Portraits, the Fantasia on
a Theme by Thomas Tallis and the Five Mystical Songs. Reizenstein also left a
significant corpus of music for winds. In addition to the Oboe Sonata, there is a set of
variations for Clarinet Quintet, a Trio for flute, clarinet and bassoon, an unfinished
Clarinet Sonata, a Flute Quartet and a substantial Serenade for winds that was
premiered at the 1951 Cheltenham Festival by Harry Blech (founder and conductor of
the London Mozart Players) and the London Winds, who had commissioned the piece.
A consummate pianist as well as a versatile and practical composer, Reizenstein
performed regularly with artists of the caliber of violinist Max Rostal and cellist Leslie
Parnas, and his work on the concert platform and in the broadcast studio was a major
part of his musical career. His compositions for the piano are not numerous, but they
include a set of Twelve Preludes and Fugues, Op. 32, dedicated to Hindemith and
influenced by his Ludus Tonalis, a piece Reizenstein himself performed. The work is a
rigorous exploration of polytonality (where two or more keys are simultaneously
suggested) and contrapuntal techniques. There are also two Piano Sonatas, Opp. 19
and 40, the first of which is dedicated to William Walton, the Zodiac Suite, Op. 41, and a
number of shorter pieces, including a Fantasy, the Four Silhouettes and an Impromptu,
Intermezzo, Scherzo and Legend.
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By Simon Wynberg
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