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      alamy.com

      • In 1933, Strauss accepted a high-profile job from the Nazis, when propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels named him president of the Reichsmusikkammer, the State Music Bureau. Strauss wrote pieces for the Nazis including " Das Bächlein," a song dedicated to Goebbels. And he even wrote at least one letter pledging his loyalty to Hitler.
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  2. In the early 1930s, Strauss did not join the Nazi party. For reasons of expediency, however, he initially cooperated with the early Nazi regime in the hope that it would promote German art and culture.

  3. On Strauss's relationship to the Nazis. Levi: Initially he was an enthusiastic advocate [of the Nazis]. Remember that we were experiencing in the 1920s a period of tremendous economic fluctuation and a lot of composers on the bread line.

  4. Jun 10, 2014 · Composer Richard Strauss took a prominent post in Hitler’s Germany – but we should not let that ruin our enjoyment of his music, writes Clemency Burton-Hill.

  5. In March 1933, when Strauss was 68, Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party rose to power. Strauss never joined the Nazi Party, and studiously avoided Nazi forms of greeting.

  6. Aug 11, 2023 · As the German Nazi Party took power and extended its influence on the arts through the 1930s, Strauss became associated with Nazism. The composer was appointed president of the Nazi Reichsmusikkammer (Reich Chamber of Music) in 1933.

    • Mark Cartwright
  7. Jan 6, 2002 · In fact, neither label applies. As late as 1930, Strauss derided the Nazi Party culture broker Alfred Rosenberg as a political ingénue, ''who did not have one clue.''

  8. Jun 6, 2014 · It is hard to argue, though, that it was Strauss’s obliging relationship with the Nazi regime that caused him to write more conservatively.

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