Jury
Hans Henkemans
Goffredo Petrassi
Heinz Schröter
André Souris
Friedrich Wildgans
Concerts
? Friday, 20 June 1952? – Opening Ceremony – choral concert possibly performed by the Wiener Akademie-Kammerchor *
works by
Jacobus Gallus (Slovenia, 1550-1591)
Antonio Lotti (Italy, 1667-1740)
Antonio Caldara (Italy, 1670-1736)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Austria, 1756-1791)
Michael Haydn (Austria, 1737-1806)
Anton Bruckner (Austria, 1824-1896)
Zoltán Kodály (Hungary, b. 1882; d. 1967)
Friedrich Wildgans (Austria, b. 1913; d. 1965)
Johann Nepomuk David (Austria, b. 1895; d. 1977)
Josef Matthias Hauer (Austria, b. 1883; d. 1959)
Francis Poulenc (France, b, 1899; d, 1963)
Paul Hindemith (Germany/United States, b. 1895; d. 1963)
Anton Heiller (Austria, b. 1923; d. 1979)
Friday, 20 June 1952 at 20:00 – Festkonzert featuring the Frankfurt Radio Symphony (HR-Sinfonieorchester) in the Festspielhaus (presented by the ISCM German Section)
Wolfgang Fortner (West Germany, b. 1907; d. 1987): Symphony (1947) [30′] conducted by the composer;
Karl Amadeus Hartmann (West Germany, b. 1905; d. 1963): Symphony No. 5 ‘Symphonie concertante’ (1950) [20′] conducted by Kurt Schröder;
Winfried Zillig (West Germany, b. 1905; d. 1963): Chorfantasie über ein Fragment von Hölderlin [Friedrich Hölderlin] for chorus and orchestra (1931) [25′] joined by the Hessischen Rundfunks Chorus conducted by the composer;
Werner Egk (West Germany, b. 1901; d. 1983): Allegria for orchestra (1952) [21′] conducted by the composer.
Saturday, 21 June 1952, 20:00 – 1st ISCM Orchestra Concert – Vienna Symphony Orchestra conducted by Franz André at the Mozarteum Grosser Saal
Conrad Beck (Switzerland, b. 1901; d. 1989): Symphony No. 6 (1950) [32′];
Hanns Jelinek (Austria, b. 1901; d. 1969): Phantasie for Clarinet, Piano and Orchestra, op. 18 (1951) [12′] with Friedrich Wildgans (clar) and Herbert Häfner (pf) [world premiere];
Rudolf Wagner-Régeny (East Germany, b. 1903 in Hungary [now Romania]; d. 1969): Mythologische Figurinen, three pieces for orchestra (1951) [13′];
Paul Csonka (Cuba, b. 1905 in Austria; d. 1995 in the United States): Concertino for Oboe, Bassoon and Orchestra with Friedrich Wächter (ob) and Leo Cermak (bn);
Marcel Quinet (Belgium [Wallonia], b. 1915; d. 1986): 3 Pieces for Orchestra (1951).
Sunday, 22 June 1952 at 10:00 – Solemn High Mass at the Salzburg Cathedral
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Krönungsmesse (Coronation Mass), K. 317 (1779) [25′] performed by the Salzburger Domchor and the Mozarteum-Orchester conducted by Joseph Messner.
Sunday, 22 June 1952 at 11:30 – Camerata Accademica of the Salzburg Mozarteum directed by Bernhard Paumgartner at the Mozarteum Grosser Saal
A program of Italian and German Baroque music featuring soprano Teresa Stich-Randall, flutist Kurt Redel, oboist Arturo Jensen, and viola da gambist Carl Maria Schwamberger.
Sunday, 22 June 1952 at 20:00 – Schönberg-Festkonzert (in memoriam) – Vienna Symphony Orchestra conducted by Herbert Häfner at the Mozarteum Grosser Saal
Arnold Schönberg (Austria/United States, 1874-1951): Fünf Orchesterstücke, op. 16 (1909) [17′];
Arnold Schönberg: Erwartung, monodram, op. 17 (1909) [33′] featuring Ilona Steingruber;
Arnold Schönberg: Variations for Orchestra, op. 31 (1928) [c. 22′].
Monday, 23 June 1952 at 20:00 – 1st ISCM Chamber Music Recital in the Mozarteum Wiener Saal
Josef Tal (Israel, b. 1910 in Poland; d. 2008): Sonata for Violin and Piano (1951, rev 1952) [10′] performed by Walter Schneiderhan and Lola Granetman;
Roman Vlad (Italy, b. 1919 in Romania; d. 2003): Tre Invocazioni for soprano and piano (1948-52) performed by Magda László and the composer at the piano;
Phyllis Tate (United Kingdom [England], b. 1911; d. 1987), Sonata for Clarinet and Violoncello (1947) [20′] performed by Frederick Thurston and William Pleeth;
Alfonso Letelier (Chile, b. 1912; d. 1994): Variations in F for piano solo (1948) [18′] performed by Lola Granetman;
Don Banks (Australia, b. 1923; d. 1980): Duo for Violin and Violoncello (1951) [13′] performed by Walter Schneiderhan (vn) and Carl M. Schwamberger (vc);
Karl Ottó Rúnólfsson (Iceland, b. 1900; d. 1970): Sonata for Trumpet and Piano, op. 23 (1950) performed by Helmut Wobisch and Max Kundegräber;
Jean Martinon (France, b. 1910; d. 1976): String Quartet, op. 43 (1946) [32′] performed by the Quatuor Parrenin.
Tuesday, 24 June 1952 at 20:00 – 2nd ISCM Orchestra Concert – Vienna Symphony Orchestra conducted by Lavard Friisholm at the Mozarteum Grosser Saal
Cláudio Santoro (Brazil, b. 1919; d. 1989): Canto de amor e paz for string orchestra (1950) [12′];
Nils-Eric Ringbom (Finland, b. 1907; d. 1988): Sestetto for wind sextet (flute, oboe, English horn, clarinet, horn, and bassoon) (1951) performed by the Helsinki Wind Chamber Music Ensemble;
Humphrey Searle (United Kingdom [England], b. 1915; d. 1982): Poem for 22 Strings (1950) [16′];
Klaus Egge (Norway, b. 1906; d. 1979): Piano Concerto No. 2, op. 21 – symphonic variations and fugue on a Norwegian folk tune for piano and string orchestra (1944) [20′] featuring pianist Kjell Bækkelund;
Edward Staempfli (Switzerland, b. 1908; d. 2002): Variations for Winds (1950);
Knudåge Riisager (Denmark, b. 1897 in Estonia; d. 1974): Symphony No. 5 ‘Sinfonia Serena’ for strings and timpani, op. 52 (1949-50) [15′].
Wednesday, 25 June 1952 at 20:00 – 2nd ISCM Chamber Music Recital in the Mozarteum Wiener Saal
Claus Adam (United States, b. 1917 in Sumatra; d. 1983): Piano Sonata (1948) [17′] performed by Robert Helps;
Karl Schiske (Austria, b. 1916 in Hungary; d. 1969): Music for Clarinet, Trumpet and Viola, op. 27 (1947/48) performed by Friedrich Wildgans (cl), Eduard Körner (tp), and Josef Vácz (va);
Ronald Tremain (New Zealand, b. 1923; d. 1998 in Canada): Theme and Variations for Two Violins (1952) [22′] **;
Henri Pousseur (Belgium [Wallonia], b. 1929; d. 2009): Trois chants sacrés for soprano and string trio (1951) [5′] performed by Ilona Steingruber with the Trio Schneiderhan;
Marcel Mihalovici (France, b. 1898 in Romania; d. 1985): Sonata for Violin Solo, op. 49 (1949) performed by Roland Charmy;
Stefans Grové (South Africa, b. 1922; d. 2014): Drie Vindinge (Three Inventions) for piano (1951) [7′] performed by Eva Wollmann;
Lex van Delden (Netherlands, b. 1919; d. 1988): Duo for Flute and Harp, op. 27 (1950) [10′] performed by Camillo Wanausek and Ilse Charlemont-Zamara;
Guillermo Graetzer (Argentina, b. 1914 in Austria; d. 1993): String Trio (1948-51) performed by the Trio Schneiderhan.
Thursday, 26 June 1952, 20:00 – 3rd ISCM Orchestra Concert – Vienna Symphony conducted by Ernest Bour at the Mozarteum Grosser Saal ***
Tibor Harsányi (France, b. 1898 in Hungary; d. 1954): Symphony in C Major (1951) (independent submission) [world premiere];
Bernd Alois Zimmermann (Germany, b. 1918; d. 1970): Violin Concerto (1950) [18′] featuring violinist Helmuth Zernick [rescheduled from the previous year];
Mario Peragallo (Italy, b. 1910; d. 1996): Piano Concerto (1949) [27′] featuring pianist Pietro Scarpini ***;
Pierre Boulez (France, b. 1925; d. 2016): Le Soleil des Eaux [text by René Char] for soloists and orchestra (1947) [10′] featuring Ginette Guillamat (soprano), Louis Rialland (tenor), and Bernard Cottret (bass).
Friday, 27 June 1952 at 20:00 – Festival Concert: “Modern Classics” WDR Symphony Orchestra Cologne conducted by Ferenc Fricsay in the Festspielhaus
Igor Stravinsky (Russia/France/United States, b. 1882; d. 1971): Divertimento, Ballet Suite from Le Baiser de la fée (1928, arranged 1934, revised 1949) [24′];
Paul Hindemith: Symphonic Metamorphosis of Themes by Carl Maria von Weber (1943) [20′];
Béla Bartók (Hungary/United States, 1881-1945): Piano Concerto No. 2 (1930-31) [c. 29′] performed by Géza Anda;
Béla Bartók: Dance Suite (1923) [16′].
Saturday, 28 June 1952 at 16:00 – Modern Organ music concert performed by Robert Schollum in the Mozarteum Grosser Saal
works by
Olivier Messiaen (France, b. 1908; d. 1992): Dieu parmi nous (from La Nativité du Seigneur) (1935) [8′];
Paul Pisk (United States, b. 1893 in Austria; d. 1990);
Robert Schollum (Austria, b. 1913; d. 1987): Organ Sonata No. 2 (?);
Josip Slavenski (Yugoslavia [Serbia], b. 1896 in Croatia; d. 1955);
Siegfried Reda (Germany, b. 1916; d. 1968).
Saturday, 28 June 1952 at 20:00 – «Moderne Österreicher» featuring the Vienna Symphony conducted by Herbert Häfner (presented by the ISCM Austrian Section) in the Mozarteum Grosser Saal ****
Georg Gruber (Austria, b. 1904; d. 1979 in South Africa): Suite for 2 Flutes and String Orchestra (1948);
Cesar Bresgen (Austria, b. 1913; d. 1988): Piano Concerto (No. 2) in C (1951) [20′] featuring the composer as piano soloist [world premiere];
Wilhelm Hübner (Germany, b. 1915 in Czechoslovakia; d. 2004): Drei kleine Orchesterstücke (1952) [8′] (Häfner died on the podium in mid-performance of the third and last of these pieces).****
Sunday, 29 June 1952 at 10:00 – Solemn High Mass at the Salzburg Cathedral
Joseph Messner (Austria, b. 1893; d. 1969): Mass in C for 5-voice choir and 5 winds, op. 42 (1935) performed by the Salzburger Domchor with wind players from the Mozarteum-Orchester conducted by the composer.
Sunday, 29 June 1952 at 11:30 – All-Mozart Concert featuring the Mozarteum-Orchester conducted by Bernhard Paumgartner at the Mozarteum Grosser Saal
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony in G Major, K. 318;
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Piano Concerto in G Major K. 453 featuring Hans Henkemans;
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Scene and Rondo “Mia speranza adorata,” K. 416 sung by Teresa Stich-Randall;
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Aria “Vorei Spiegavi, o Deo,” K. 418 also sung by Stich-Randall;
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony in A, K. 201.
Sunday, 29 June 1952 at 18:00 – Solemn Pontifical Mass at the Salzburg Cathedral
Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber (Austria 1644-1704): Missa Salisburgensis à 53 voci (1682) ******
performed by the Salzburger Domchor, the Mozarteum-Orchester, and the Vienna Symphony conducted by Joseph Messner.
Sunday, 29 June 1952 at 20:30 – 4th ISCM Orchestra Concert featuring the Vienna Symphony conducted by Ettore Gracis in the Mozarteum Grosser Saal
Matija Bravničar (Yugoslavia [Slovenia], b. 1897; d. 1977): Simfonična Antiteza (1940) [20′];
Yoritsune Matsudaira (Japan, b. 1907; d. 2001): Theme and Variations on a Theme from Etenraku for piano and orchestra (1951) [17′] featuring Eva Wollmann;
Göte Carlid (Sweden, b. 1920; d. 1953): Hymnes à la beauté for soloists, chorus und orchestra (1952) featuring soprano Mary Gimmi, alto Luise Haager-Gruber, and the David-Chor Eferding *****;
Marius Flothuis (Netherlands, b. 1914; d. 2001): Violin Concerto, op. 39 (1951) [16′] performed by Hermann Salomon;
Giorgio Federico Ghedini (Italy, b. 1892; d. 1965): Canzoni for orchestra (1949) [23′].
Monday, 30 June & Wednesday 2 July 1952 at 20:00 – 2 chamber music concerts of the Third International Twelve-Tone Congress in the Mozarteum Wiener Saal (presented by the ISCM Austria Section)
Works by
Erich Schmid (Switzerland, b. 1907; d. 2000);
Hans Erich Apostel (Austria, b. 1901 in Germany; d. 1972);
Josef Matthias Hauer (Austria, b. 1883; d. 1959);
Giselher Klebe (Germany, b. 1925; d. 2009);
Hanns Jelinek (Austria, b. 1901; d. 1969);
Mátyás Seiber (United Kingdom [England], b. 1905 in Hungary; d. 1960);
Hans Ulrich Engelmann (Germany, b. 1921; d. 2011);
Dika Newlin (United States, b. 1923; d. 2006): Piano Trio, op. 2 (1948) [18′] featuring the composer at the piano;
Ernst Krenek (United States, b. 1900 in Austria; d. 1991);
Michael Gielen (Austria, b. 1927; d. 2019).
Tuesday, 1 July 1952 at 20:00 – Chamber music concert of the “Salzburg Music Circle” at the Mozarteum Wiener Saal featuring the Camerata (Academica des Mozarteums) Salzburg directed by Gerhard Wimberger
Works by
Wilhelm Keller (Austria, b. 1920; d. 2008);
Friedrich Neumann (Austria, b. 1915; d. 1989);
Rolf Maedel (Austria, b. 1917; d. 2000);
Cesar Bresgen;
Gerhard Wimberger (Austria, b. 1923; d. 2016): Chamber Concerto for four winds, percussion, and strings (1952)
Wednesday, 2 July 1952 & Thursday 3 July 1952 at 20:00 – Opera performance at the Aula Academica
Cesar Bresgen: Visiones amantis (a.k.a. Do frayg Amors; Die kalte Liebe) scenic oratorio derived from the music of Oswald von Wolkenstein (1951) [90′] featuring Ilona Steingruber, Walter Dicks, and Erwin Faber with dancers, choristers, and instrumentalists conducted by the composer [world premiere].
Notes
* This choral performance during the opening ceremony of the festival is mentioned by Haefeli but it does not appear in the 1952 Festival brochure and it is not listed by Slonimsky. Additionally Haefeli lists the Wiener Akademie-Kammerchor among the performers who appeared during the festival but they did not perform on any of the other concerts so they probably were the performers for this one.
** Although the Tremain violin duo is listed in the repertoire by both Haefeli and Slonimsky, it is not listed in the 1952 program booklet, so there is no information about who performed it.
*** Although the 1952 Festival brochure lists the conductor of the program as Roger Désormière and the soloist for the Peragallo concerto as Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli, who gave the premiere performance of the work in Venice in 1950, neither are listed among the performers by Haefeli and the Vienna Symphony’s program listing for the 26 June 1952 concert lists the conductor as Ernest Bour and the piano soloist as Pietro Scarpini who are both also included on Haefeli’s list of performers for the 1952 festival.
**** According to the Vienna Symphony’s program listing for the 28 June 1952 concert, a total of six works were to be presented on the program, three before and three after intermission. The Hübner work was the final work scheduled before the intermission and, as a result of Haefner’s fatal heart attack mid-performance, the remainder of the concert was cancelled. There is however some discrepancy about this program and its order. In the Philharmonic listing, the first half of the program consists of Gruber, followed by
Sophie-Carmen Eckhardt-Gramatté (Austria, b. 1899 in Russia; later in Canada, d. 1974 in Germany): Concerto for Violin, Concertante Winds, and Orchestra (1951) [29′] performed by Walter Schneiderhan.
then Hübner.
After intermission, the second half of the program, which was to have featured performances by the Wiener Kammerchor and the David-Chor Eferding, is listed as
Friedrich Wildgans: Eucharistische Hymnen, a folk cantata for soloists, chorus, three pianos, winds and percussion [45′] which was to have featured soprano Ilona Steingruber and baritone Otto Wiener, plus pianists Max Kundegräber, Günther Radhuber, and Eva Wollmann;
then the Bresgen concerto; concluding with
Gottfried von Einem (Austria, b. 1918; d. 1996): Hymnus [text: Alexander Lernet-Holenia] for contralto, chorus, and orchestra, op. 12 (1949) [18′] which was to have featured Hanne Münch as the contralto soloist.
This is the same order as it appears in Haefeli’s listing for that concert as well as the order in the original 1952 program brochure for the festival, although the brochure listing ominously omits the Hübner work (and also lists participation by the Linzer Kammerchor instead of the Vienna Kammerchor). Slonimsky, who states that the final two works were not performed due to Haefner’s death, gives the program order as Gruber, Bresgen, Hübner, Eckhardt-Gramatté, and von Einem, flipping the two concertos and omitting the Wildgans cantata. (Given its hefty 45′ minute duration, were the cantata to have been performed uncut, the second half of the concert would have gone on for over 90 minutes no matter which concerto was performed, so perhaps the work had already been cancelled prior to the performance.) Slonimsky’s swapping of the Bresgen and Eckhardt-Gramatté concertos is further corroborated by musicologist Monika Voithofer in her 2015 Master’s Thesis for the Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst, Graz, who cites as evidence a diary entry by Eckhardt-Gramatté (although she dates it erroneously as 18 June rather than 28 June) describing the evening’s shocking events which resulted in the cancellation of what would have been the world premiere of this concerto which had been commissioned especially for this festival concert:
“Der tragische Tod des Dirigenten Herbert Häfners, der während des Konzertes tot zusammenbricht, verhindert jedoch die Aufführung des Violinkonzertes von S. C. Eckhardt-Gramatté mit dem Solisten Walter Schneiderhahn. Ein Tagebucheintrag von Eckhardt-Gramatté am 18. Juni 1952 gibt Auskunft über die erschütternden Ereignisse und ihre persönliche Betroffenheit darüber.”
***** While the 1952 program brochure lists the participation of the Linzer Kammerchor on both the 28 and 29 June concerts, the Wiener Kammerchor appears instead in the 28 June listing on the Vienna Symphony’s website cited above (for a performance that wound up not happening) and the only chorus in the 29 June Vienna Symphony website listing is the David-Chor Eferding.
****** The Biber mass was incorrectly billed in the program as the Consecration Mass (1628) by Orazio Benevoli (Italy, 1605-1672) and its scoring was listed as 16 soloists, 4 choirs, 6 orchestras, and 2 organs. In the 1970s, the attribution of the mass to Benevoli was refuted and it is now recognized as a composition by Biber.
Other significant interpreters
Violin: Walter Puschacher.
Violonello: Peter Schwarzl.
Piano: Roger Boardman.
Flute: Hubert Barwahser.
Harp: Phia Berghout.
Sources
Julian Cowley, “International Society for Contemporary Music,” chapter in Lyd og ulydighet: Ny Musikk siden 1938 eds. Anne Hilde Neset, Eivind Buene, and Audun Vinger (Oslo: Forlaget Press, 2016) (chapter available online on the Ny Musikk website).
Helmut A. Fiechtner, “Herbert Haefner,” Österreichische Musikzeitschrift, Vol. 7 No. 9 (September 1952), p. 280 [in German].
Peter Gradenwitz, “Current Chronicle: Norway,” Musical Quarterly (USA), Vol. 39, No. 4 (Oct. 1953), pp. 612-616 (available online via JSTOR).
Anton Haefeli, Die Internationale Gesellschaft für Neue Musik (IGNM), Ihre Geschichte von 1922 bis zur Gegenwart (Atlantis Musikbuch-Verlag, 1982), pp. 310, 459 (note 125), 507-509 [in German].
Hans Keller, “The 26th ISCM Festival at Salzburg,” Tempo, No. 24 (Summer 1952), pp. 14 + 31-33 (available online via JSTOR).
Ross Parmenter, “World of Music: U.S. Group Returns – American Section Irons Out Differences with I. S. C. M.,” New York Times, May 25, 1952, Drama, p. 7 (available online).
Friedrich Saathen, “Notizen zum 26. Fest der IGNM,” Österreichische Musikzeitschrift, Vol. 7, Nos. 7-8 (July-August 1952), pp. 236-238 [in German].
Nicolas Slonimsky, Music Since 1900, Sixth Edition edited by Laura Kuhn (Schirmer Reference, 2001), pp. 459-461.
Irene Suchy, “IGNM Ausgangspunkt 1945 – Vom Aufbau eine Gesellschaft,” Österreichische Musikzeitschrift 6/2010, pp. 20-29 [in German].
Monika Voithofer, Die Rolle von Komponistinnen, Interpretinnen und Musikwissenschafterinnen in der Institution Internationale Gesellschaft für Neue Musik (IGNM) (Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst, Graz: Master’s Thesis, 2015), pp. 81-82, 96, 113-115 (available online) [in German].
Monika Voihofer and Irene Suchy, “Now Austria takes the floor, as far as it wants to help and advance the cause.” World New Music Magazine, Volume 23 (2013), pp. 50-65 (a publication of the ISCM available online via Issuu).
Friedrich Wildgans, “Österreichische Komponisten der Gegenwart in Salzburg,” Österreichische Musikzeitschrift, Vol. 7, No. JG (December 1952), pp. 164-167 [in German].
Friedrich Wildgans, “Zum 26. Internationalen Musikfest der IGNM in Salzburg,” Österreichische Musikzeitschrift, Vol. 7 No. 1 (January 1952), pp. 23-24 [in German].
Karl H. Wörner, “Austria” (the second segment of “Current Chronicle”), The Musical Quarterly, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 4, October 1952, pp. 600-606 (available online via JSTOR).
(Unattributed), “Salzburg: Das erste Auslands-Gastspiel nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg,” published on the website of the Frankfurt Radio Symphony (HR-Sinfonieorchester) on June 24, 2019 (available online) [in German].
(annotated by Frank J. Oteri, in progress)