Although it proved difficult for Nazi theorists to define exactly
Not all of Berlin’s major Jewish musicians were forced to flee Germany in the early years of the Third Reich. Fearing that, as one Nazi functionary put it, “our artistic life might soon resemble a giant mortuary,” the regime eschewed a wholesale purge in this domain. Among the prominent musical artists who stayed, at least for a time, was Leo Blech, a conductor at the State Opera. Heinz Tietjen, the dra-maturg there, insisted that he could not get along without Blech. Moreover, the conductor enjoyed the protection of Hermann Göring, who was intent on retaining high standards in the Prussian cultural empire he oversaw. Blech was even allowed to conduct Wagner, earning a standing ovation for his interpretation of
Blech was allowed to remain in Berlin because he was a so-called
In addition to bureaucratic inefficiency, the task of weeding out undesirables was deliberately hampered by the Reichsmusikkammer’s first president, Richard Strauss, who objected to the entire policy of excluding artists on the basis of race. Before judging Strauss a paragon of virtue, however, we should note that he accepted his post in the Nazi bureaucracy in order to further his own career; and that by serving the Nazis he helped provide them with much needed cultural legitimacy. During his brief tenure as president of the Reichsmusikkammer he seesawed back and forth between opportunism and efforts to do the right thing by his fellow musicians. He was forced to resign his post in 1935 after the Gestapo discovered that he had written his librettist Stefan Zweig to say that he had taken the Nazi post only to prevent worse things from happening. The deeper reason for his ouster was that his “weakness” on the Jewish question made him impossible as a Nazi cultural bureaucrat. Strauss was happy enough to step down, for he had grown weary of deferring to Goebbels on artistic questions, just as he had once hated toadying to the kaiser. “It is a sad moment,” he wrote, “when an artist of my stature has to ask some little upstart of a minister what I may compose and perform. I have joined the ranks of the domestic servants and bottlewashers and am almost envious of my persecuted Jewish friend Stefan Zweig.”