Braunfels studied law and economics at the university in
Munich until after a performance of
Richard Wagner's Tristan und Isolde he decided on music. He went to Vienna in 1902 to study with the pianist and teacher
Theodor Leschetizky. He then returned to Munich to study
composition with
Felix Mottl and
Ludwig Thuille.[1] In February 1918 he was wounded at the front and in June 1918 on his return to Frankfurt converted from Protestantism to Catholicism, composing his Te Deum of 1920–21 "not as music for musicians but as a personal expression of faith".[3]
He achieved early success with the melodious opera Die Vögel (The Birds, 1920), such that
Adolf Hitler, not realising that Braunfels was half-Jewish, in 1923 invited Braunfels to write an anthem for the Nazi Party, which Braunfels "indignantly turned down".[4]
Braunfels performed as a professional pianist for many years. In 1949 he played Beethoven's Diabelli Variations on a radio broadcast.[5]} At his farewell concert as pianist on 19 January 1952, he played Bach's D major Toccata, Beethoven's
piano sonata no. 32 op. 111 and the arrangement of the Organ Fantasy and Fugue in G minor by Liszt.[6]
Braunfels was invited by
Konrad Adenauer, then mayor of Cologne, to serve as the first director (and founder together with
Hermann Abendroth) of the
Cologne Academy of Music (Hochschule für Musik Köln) from 1925 to 1933, and again from 1945 to 1950.[1][6][7] With the rise of the
Nazis to power he was dismissed, and listed as being half-Jewish in the Nazi list of musicians composing what the regime called degenerate music.[8] He retired from public life during the Hitler years but continued to compose. The war passed peacefully for Braunfels and his wife, though his three sons were conscripted into the Wehrmacht.[9] After World War II, he returned to public life and on 12 October 1945 again became director, and in 1948 president, of the Cologne Academy of Music and further enhanced his reputation as a music educator with high ideals.[6]
Work as composer
Walter Braunfels was well known as a composer between the two World Wars but fell into oblivion after his death. There is now something of a renaissance of interest in his works. His opera Die Vögel, based on the play The Birds by
Aristophanes, was recorded by Decca in 1996 and has been successfully revived (for example, by the
Los Angeles Opera in 2009). In 2014 Die Vögel was staged at
Theater Osnabrück and Der Traum ein Leben at
Oper Bonn.[10]
Braunfels's music is in the German
classical-
romantic tradition. His Phantastische Erscheinungen eines Themas von
Hector Berlioz is a giant set of variations. "Structurally the work has something in common with Strauss' Don Quixote—on
LSD", noted
David Hurwitz of ClassicsToday. "The orchestral technique also is quite similar, recognizably German school, with luscious writing for violins and horns, occasional outbursts of extreme virtuosity all around, and a discerning but minimal use of additional percussion."[11]
Braunfels composed music in a number of different genres, not only operas, but also songs, choral works and orchestral, chamber and piano pieces.
Tanzspiel Der Zauberlehrling after
the poem by
Goethe, Op. 71 composed as a Ballade for television (1954). "In the television studios of Hamburg-Lokstedt there was the premiere of Der Zauberlehrling during February to music by Professor Walter Braunfels in charge of the NWDR Television."[13]
Oratorios
Offenbarung Johannis – Revelation of John Op. 17 (1919)
Te Deum Op. 32 (1920–21)
Große Messe, Op. 37 (1923–26)
Passionskantate, Op. 54 (1936–43)
Das Spiel von der Auferstehung des Herrn – Resurrection play, Op. 72 (1954) after the Alsfelder Passionsspiel, arranged by Hans Reinhart (
Anon. 2015)
Selected other works
Variations on an Old French Children's Song, Op. 15 (1909)