Peter Schacht (1 July 1901 – 25 January 1945) was a German composer.

Life edit

Born in Bremen, Schacht came from a wealthy Bremen merchant family. In his home town, he attended the humanistic Gymnasium, being particularly interested in mathematical questions.[1] Early on he also received piano, violin and clarinet lessons.[1] Later (1931) he took a course in Baden-Baden taught by violinist Carl Flesch. [1] After the Abitur in 1920, he began to study medicine at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg at the request of his father. [1] In addition, he received composition lessons from the late Romantic Julius Weismann. [1] In Freiburg, he joined the Corps Suevia Freiburg in 1921,[2] which he left again in 1934 in protest against the exclusion of the so-called "Jüdisch versippt". From 1921 to 1926 he went to the University of Music and Theatre Leipzig, where he studied with Hans Grisch [de] (piano) and Fritz Reuter (music theory and composition).

Afterwards, he wanted to enter the master class by Arnold Schönberg at the Prussian Academy of Arts and applied for it with a neoclassicist String Quintet, which is considered his first surviving composition. After an initial rejection, Schönberg accepted him into his private circle of students. His Variations on a Folk Song for piano (1927) were probably written under Schönberg. In the winter semester of 1927/28 he officially became Schönberg's (longest) master student (until 1932). In 1929 he created his piano work Variations on a Theme by Bach. In 1932, his Sonata No. 2 for Violin and Piano (1932) received "distinguished recognition" at the Emil-Hertzka-Preis [de] of Universal Edition in Vienna.

After the Machtergreifung by the Nazis, the Schönberg circle dissolved. In 1933, his string quartet (1932) was given a scandalous premiere at the Dortmund Tonkünstlerfest. Schacht was not prepared to withdraw the work as demanded. He described it as a "farewell performance in Germany". Until 1936 he lived in seclusion in the inner emigration in Berlin. There he also composed his song cycle Sieben Lieder on poetry by Richard Billinger [de] (around 1933/36).

After 1936, also for financial reasons, he tried to re-establish himself with tonality music to regain a foothold. He withdrew the performance of his Two Pieces for Clarinet and Piano (1931) in 1937 at the World Music Days of the [[Internationale Gesellschaft für Neue Musik] (IGNM). However, he had his Three Pieces for String Orchestra (c. 1936/37) played at an event of the Permanent Council for the International Cooperation of Composers, a National Socialist-dominated counter-organisation to the IGNM, in Winterthur. In 1940, his ballet Andreasnacht was premiered in Essen under Winfried Zillig – although the music, according to Zillig, "looked very blatantly like jazz", the performance was a success.[1] In 1941, he was drafted into the Wehrmacht to guard British prisoner of wars and transferred to Poznań. There, he composed the Kinderstücke for piano and a serenade (lost). Shortly before the end of the war in 1945, he was killed by a Soviet shell during the Battle of Poznań.[3] He was aged 43.

Most of his works are documented in the Archiv Deutsche Musikpflege Bremen. Influenced by Schoenberg, he "composed intelligent, technically skilful, if not very original music of a lyrical basic attitude". In the early 1930s, he created "atonal and serialism-organised music, which, however, is by no means twelve-tone technique".[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Peter Gradenwitz [in German] (1998). "Peter Schacht – Widerstand und Opfer". Arnold Schönberg und seine Meisterschüler. Berlin 1925–1933. Vienna: Zsolnay. pp. 262 (259–276). ISBN 3-552-04899-5.
  2. ^ Kösener Senioren-Convents-Verband 1930, 36, 755.{{full citation needed|date=April 2024|reason=Is this a journal? Article name? Author?
  3. ^ a b Holtmeier, Ludwig (2003). "Schacht, Peter". Komponisten der Gegenwart (in German).

Further reading edit

External links edit