Article 6C8SW We can revile Putin’s violence in Ukraine, but we’re not at war with Russian culture | Kenan Malik

We can revile Putin’s violence in Ukraine, but we’re not at war with Russian culture | Kenan Malik

by
Kenan Malik
from US news | The Guardian on (#6C8SW)
Elizabeth Gilbert was wrong to stop her novel being published on account of its setting

On 4 September 1939, the day after Britain had declared war on Germany, the BBC Proms opened with extracts from Richard Wagner's works including The Mastersingers of Nuremberg, Gotterdammerung, Tristan and Isolde, Tannhauser and Die Walkure. Later concerts that year included works by Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Mendelssohn, Strauss and a lot of Wagner. The BBC may have been an instrument of Britain's war effort but few of even the most patriotic Britons thought it immoral to play the works of the great German classical composers.

The following year, the BBC Symphony Orchestra, which had relocated to Bristol, opened its 1940 concert series with a performance in which the entire second half was given over to Wagner. In response to a letter of complaint, Ralph Hill, the Bristol Evening Post's music critic, dismissed the fantastic myth that the music of Wagner cannot or should not be appreciated by civilised people at war with Germany".

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