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Posts archive for: 31 December, 2008
  • The 9th Symphony (4)

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    As in every December, I went to listen Beethoven's
    9th symphony this year too.--I went to two concerts
    this year.

    And, as in every end of a year, I thought over
    various matters about my life while listening
    the symphony. To me, it is the moment to reflect
    on my life in the music.

    (I have been coming to at least two concerts of
    Beethoven's 9th symphony in every December in the
    last 10 years)

    There is a part of the symphony--certain part of the
    4th movement--where I am reminded of the German POWs
    who performed this symphony for the first in Japan.
    Whenever the performance comes to the part, I think
    about those German POWs. I wonder what emotion those
    Germen POWs held in their mind at the part when they
    played this music. I imagine they thought about their
    defeated homeland and their families and friends in
    Germany, playing the part in front of many Japanese
    who listened this symphony for the first time in
    Japanese history.--And now, I am listening the same
    music in this country.

    This year was the 90th anniversary of the first
    performance of Beethoven's 9th symphony in Japan.

    Adiu 2008.

    Nori

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  • The 9th Symphony (3)

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    Concerning this tradition in Japan, I would like you
    to know certain history. It is the history about the
    first artists who performed this symphony--Beethoven's
    9th symphony--in Japan.

    They were German POWs of the World War I, who were
    captured by the Japanese in Tsintao which was the
    German territory in Shantao peninsula in Northern
    China.

    This may need explanation--Japan, who participated in
    the World War I as the British ally, declared war
    against Germany in W.W.I and occupied the small
    German territory in Northern China, Tsintao.
    There were Gernmans, and they were made Japanese
    POWs of W.W.I. THen, they were taken to Japanese
    southwestern island Shikoku and spent their years in
    a camp there. And many of those POWs came to the
    camp in Japan with instruments.

    The relation between the German POWs and the Japanese
    was quite good. And the friendship was even widened to
    the local Japanese living around their camp.

    In such human relationship, when the World War I ended,
    those German POWs held a concert for the Japanese who
    ran the camp in Bantoh POW camp in Shikoku on June 1st
    of 1918. It was in this concert Beethoven's 9th symphony
    was first performed in Japan.

    There were no female singers, of course. And there were
    no female choir group too. So, it was not a perfect
    performance of the 9th symphony.
    However, they performed Beethoven's 9th symphony in the
    remote camp of Japan in 1918.
    It is amazing those Germans could organize an orchestra
    of whatever level and could manage to perform Beethoven's
    9th symphony without female singers there in 1918.

    This amazing history had been forgotten for many years.
    It was in the mid-1970s that this amazing history of the
    first performance of the Beethoven's 9th symphony was
    told by a TV documentary in Japan and then many books
    appeared about this history.

    I was one of those who learnt this amazing history by
    the TV documentary in 1970s and was deeply moved by
    the figure of a few very old German ex-POWs who were
    still alive and played part of the 9th symphony in the
    TV documentary in the mid-1970s.--The 9th symphony in
    Japan's December had such amazing history.

    (To be continued)

    Nori

    (I am sorry I could not find a good English web-site
    about this rather unknown history of the first performance
    of the Beethoven's 9th symphony in Japan.
    But here is a web-site about this history in German.
    If you can read German, please click and read this web-site.)

    http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kriegsgefangenenlager_Band%C5%8D

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