Info:
Duration: 59’ 29”
Narrated by Christopher Nupen
Year of production: 2004
Accolades:
Winner of the Jewish Cultural Award for Film and Television 2004
Winner, Best Editing, New York Film and Television Festival, 2004
Critic’s Choice in six national British Newspapers
A television film which investigates the fruitful but complex relationship between the Jews and German music.
The title of the film comes from a poem written by a 12-year-old girl, Eva Pickova, in the Theresienstadt concentration camp. Her words give the film both its title and its climax - in a setting for two choruses and orchestra by the American composer Franz Waxman, in his work THE SONG OF TEREZIN.
Our film is about many things. It is a film about freedom and captivity, about emancipation, acculturation and assimilation; it is about the roles played by Moses and Felix Mendelssohn in the dream of fruitful, unproblematic integration of the Jews into German society after their liberation from the ghettos; it is about Richard Wagner but, most of all, it is a film about how much music can mean to people, even in the direst circumstances, or particularly in the direst circumstances.
The film looks at the high level of integration of the Jews into German cultural life in the latter part of the nineteenth century and the first 33 years of the twentieth, it touches also on some of the questions raised by Richard Wagner’s ferociously anti-Semitic pamphlet Das Judenthum in der Musik (The Jews in Music) - published in 1850 and still the most aggressively anti-Semitic tract in the history of German music.
Finally, it traces some of the influences of Richard Wagner on the thinking of the Third Reich and the extraordinary place of music in the Nazi concentration camps.
-
Most people find her deeply inspiring, not just because she has survived, in incredibly good shape, to 100 (she practices the piano for two and a half hours every day and studies philosophy at London University three days a week), it is her quiet dignity and her courage in the face of appalling suffering that touches people. She lost her husband in Dachau six weeks before the end of the war and has recently had to bear the loss of her son, a fine cellist named Raphael Sommer, who was with her in the concentration camp at the age of six.
Amazingly, it is not the suffering and the tragedy that shine through but her wisdom and her extraordinary tolerance. Alice Sommer says that she has never hated and never will. She says that she is also an optimist and that these two things together explain her longevity. Her dearly loved twin sister was a pessimist, she says, which is why she died at the age of 70, “Of this I am sure. If you are a pessimist the whole organism is in a tension all the time”. She adds that she is an optimist in all things except one, “People don’t learn” she says, “They don’t learn”.
Alice Sommer is convinced that it was music which kept her, and many others, alive in those unimaginable circumstances and, listening to her today, one can well believe it. In the film she plays part of a Schubert impromptu, filmed when she was 98 years old and her son, Raphael, plays part of Ernest Bloch’s Méditation Hébraïque, recorded shortly before he died.
The film also contains music by Mahler, Bach, Schoenberg, Bruch, Mendelssohn, Schumann and Wagner performed by The Gürzenich Orchestra of Cologne, The Cologne Opera Chorus and The Cologne Cathedral Children’s Choir, conducted by Vladimir Ashkenazy.
We have made twenty six television productions with Vladimir Ashkenazy since Allegro Films was formed and enjoyed every minute of the journey because Ashkenazy is not only an internationally recognised musician of the very highest rank but a wonderfully impressive human being as well. The level of our film is elevated by his dedicated and sensitive contribution.
We released a five-and-a-half hour DVD version in November 2004.
Our Films on DVD
This is a DVD about many things. It is about freedom and captivity, about emancipation, acculturation and assimilation; it is about the roles played by Moses and Felix Mendelssohn in the dream of fruitful, unproblematic integration of the Jews into German society after their liberation from the ghettos; it is about Richard Wagner, his essay Das Judenthum in der Musik (The Jews in Music) and his influence on the thinking of the Third Reich but, most of all, it is a DVD about how much music can mean to people, even in the direst of circumstances, or particularly in the direst circumstances.
The title, We Want the Light, is taken from a poem by a 12-year-old girl, Eva Pickova, written in the Theresienstadt concentration camp. Her words provide both the title and the climax - in a setting for two choruses and orchestra by the American composer Franz Waxman, in his work The Song of Terezin. The DVD also contains music by Mahler, Bach, Schoenberg, Bruch, Schumann, Mendelssohn, Wagner, Schubert, Bloch and Brahms.
With the Gürzenich Orchestra of Cologne, the Cologne Opera Chorus, and the Cologne Cathedral Children's Choir, conducted by Vladimir Ashkenazy.
How many have the gift of forgiveness? And how many are free of hatred? Alice Sommer Herz had both of those qualities with an extraordinary depth of perception and natural wisdom. She was imprisoned, with her six-year-old son, in the Theresienstadt concentration camp and saw unspeakable atrocities. She lost both her mother and her husband in Nazi death camps but she does not hate her persecutors. That is not because they are anything other than monstrous criminals but because she has the wisdom to know that all hatred hurts the soul of the hater, not the hated and Gigi Sommer's inspiring soul is among the things which she kept intact and unblemished through her hundred and ten years on Earth.
She was a pianist of distinction, played more than 100 concerts in the Theresienstadt camp and is in no doubt that music saved both her sanity and her life and the lives of many others in those unimaginable circumstances. She elaborates on this theme in the film.
Ask her what has made her happy and she says, "Love, nature and music, which is the most beautiful thing coming out of mankind. This is my religion”. And ask her what she has learned in her long life and she says, "To recognise the difference between what is important and what is not important” and “to be grateful for everything, because life is beautiful and everything is a present."
This DVD presents Vladimir Ashkenazy as pianist, conductor, musical guide and master musician - an intimate and engaging view of one of the world's most quietly successful musicians.
It contains the portrait film Vladimir Ashkenazy: The Vital Juices Are Russian, shot in 1968 when Ashkenazy moved with his wife and son from London to Iceland, an important turning point in his life and career.
Since that film was made, Ashkenazy the pianist (possibly the most frequently recorded pianist in history, his discography runs to 56 pages), has also become an international conductor of the highest rank and we include a montage of sequences from our composer films with Ashkenazy as conductor. It also contains a short interview with Ashkenazy who talks, in his modest but penetrating way, about musical gifts and their origins.
The DVD ends with a film about Rachmaninov's Corelli Variations. In it Ashkenazy discusses the piece at length, with great affection and some telling musical insights. It ends with a complete performance of the piece, filmed at a public concert in Lugano.