The Spanish Civil War was a landmark conflict of the twentieth century with deep international resonance. Music, Propaganda and the Spanish Civil War explores the international dimensions of musical propaganda during the era, highlighting through a collection of essays its profound cultural and political impact on the conflict.
The Spanish Civil War was a landmark conflict of the twentieth century with deep international, political, and cultural resonance. Even given its impact, sustained interest in the plethora of ways music was employed during the era is a much more recent development. Music, Propaganda and the Spanish Civil War explores the international dimensions of musical propaganda during the time period. Through close examinations of a wide range of works, styles, and practices-from popular and traditional to cosmopolitan and modernist-this volume demonstrates the crucial role of radio, cinema, and other emerging sound technologies in propaganda and diplomatic efforts by Republicans as well as Nationalists. Through extensive coverage of musical genres that have previously received little attention in Spanish Civil War scholarship (such as Nazi military music, zarzuela, and flamenco, among others), the collection investigates the significance of music and sound in propagandistic narratives of the war in Spain. Music, Propaganda and the Spanish Civil War highlights music's critical role both during and after the conflict, centering its profound influence on a shared historical memory of the time.
Diego Alonso and Michael Christoforidis: Introduction Part
1.
International Engagement and Solidarity 1: Daniel Kowalsky: The Soviet
Cultural Offensive in Republican Spain, 1931-1939 2: Luis Velasco-Pufleau:
"High overhead some meaningless bullets are singing": Sound, Propaganda, and
Truth in George Orwell's Homage to Catalonia 3: Diego Alonso: New
Perspectives on Hanns Eisler and the Spanish Civil War 4: Manfred Heidler:
The Music Band of the Condor Legion in Wartime Spain 5: Carol A. Hess: "The
Last Great Cause": The Spanish Civil War and Classical Music in the United
States Part
2. Mass Media and Cosmopolitan Musics 6: Elizabeth Kertesz and
Michael Christoforidis: Conscripting Carmen as Cinematic and Dance Propaganda
for the Spanish Civil War in Germany and the United States of America 7:
Laura Miranda: Strengthening Onscreen Ties between Spain and Morocco: Imperio
Argentina, Florián Rey, and their Aixa's Song in Nazi Germany during the
Spanish Civil War 8: Yolanda F. Acker: Robeson, Stradivarii, and
Loudspeakers: The Radio and Music Broadcasting in Madrid during the Spanish
Civil War 9: Iván Iglesias: Popular Music, Propaganda, and Cosmopolitanism
during the Spanish Civil War: Music Hall in Barcelona (1936-1939) Part III.
Spanish Local Perspectives and International Relations 10: Enrique Mejías
García: Zarzuela and Politics in Spain during the Spanish Civil War 11:
Albert Fontelles-Ramonet: The European Tours of Cobla Barcelona (1936-1937):
Music and Dance Against Fascism during the Spanish Civil War 12: Francesc
Cortès: Cultural and Political Manoeuvres in an Operatic Setting: The
Restructuring of Barcelona's Gran Teatre del Liceu (1936-1939) 13: Olimpia
García-López: Music, Propaganda, and Charity in Seville: Benefit Concerts for
Nationalist Causes and in External Relations during the Civil War 14: Eva
Moreda Rodríguez: Musicology and/as Propaganda in the Nationalist Side during
the Spanish Civil War Part IV. Aftermaths: The Civil War and Beyond 15:
Michael Christoforidis: The Composer's Last Sigh: French Ideals, the
Homenajes, Suite, and Manuel de Falla's Retreat from Spain 16: Belén Pérez
Castillo: Tango and Its Dysphoric Narratives in Civil War and Postwar Spanish
Prisons 17: Sandie Holguín: The Politics and Propaganda of Flamenco and
Antiflamenquismo during the Civil War and Early Franco Regime 18: Walter
Aaron Clark, Rooney Josué Hernández Villanueva, and William Craig Krause: The
Zarzuela in Exile: Moreno Torroba's El orgullo de Jalisco and Spanish
Cultural Politics in the 1930s and 40s 19: Germán Gan-Quesada: Amid Echoes
and Shadows: The Spanish Civil War and Vicente Salas Viu's Professional
Career and Political Orientation during his Early Years in Exile (1936-41)
Michael Christoforidis is a Professor in Musicology at the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music, University of Melbourne. He has published extensively on nineteenth and twentieth-century Spanish music and dance, and its impact on Western culture. He has published two monographs: Manuel de Falla and Visions of Spanish Music (Routledge, 2017), and Carmen and the Staging of Spain with Elizabeth Kertesz (Oxford University Press, 2018)
Diego Alonso is a Senior Researcher at Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. He has been a visiting scholar at Humboldt University, the University of Cambridge, Goldsmiths, University of London, and the Staatliches Institut für Musikforschung. He is founder and leader of the research group "Deutsch-Ibero-Amerikanische Musikbeziehungen" of the German Musicological Society, and he has published in leading journals including Acta musicologica, Twentieth-Century Music, Music Analysis, Die Musikforschung, Journal of War and Culture Studies and Musicologica
Austriaca.