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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Karl_BöhmKarl Böhm - Wikipedia

    The historian Michael H. Kater records that while Böhm was music director in Dresden (1934–43) he "poured forth rhetoric glorifying the Nazi regime and their cultural aims". Kater ranks Böhm in that group of artists in whom "we also find conflicting elements of resistance, accommodation, and service to the regime, so that in the end they ...

  2. After leaving Dresden for Vienna, Böhm served two terms as music director of the Wiener Staatsoper in 1943-45 and 1954-56. Böhm’s dedicated relationship with the Nazi Party remains a controversial one and following the conclusion of World War Two in 1945 the Soviet Russian authorities prohibited him from undertaking employment of any kind ...

  3. In 1931 Böhm was appointed music director at Hamburgische Staatsoper, serving until 1934 when he left for the prestigious position at Dresden. As general music director at Dresden, Böhm grabbed the opportunity to succeed Fritz Busch. Although not Jewish, Busch was ardently opposed to Nazi ideology.

  4. Apr 17, 2024 · Böhm became musical director at Darmstadt in 1927, at Hamburg in 1931, and at Dresden in 1934. He made his London debut at Covent Garden in 1936. Böhm came under public criticism for taking the Dresden position because he had replaced Fritz Busch, who had been forced to resign by the Nazis; Böhm replaced Bruno Walter at Salzburg in 1938 ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. www.encyclopedia.com › people › literature-and-artsKarl Bohm | Encyclopedia.com

    May 23, 2018 · In 1943 he became director of the Vienna State Opera, but his tenure was a brief one due to its closure by the Nazis in 1944 and by its destruction by Allied bombing during the closing weeks of World War II in 1945. The rumors were rife of his at least passive adherence to the Nazis, although he categorically denied that he was ever a member of ...

  6. The club consisted of a music committee, three trustees, a protocol secretary, a Schatzmeister, a historian and a music director. The trustees handled all of the finances. A fee of 50 cents to join and 25 cents monthly dues were collected from members. There were 21 singers to start, and by 1917 there were 50 singers and 350 members.

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  8. Upon Adolf Hitlers intercession, Böhm was released from his contract as Hamburg’s General Music Director in 1934 to become the successor of Fritz Busch (1890-1951), whom the Nazi regime had forced to resign and emigrate, at Dresden’s Semper Opera.

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