On Friday, March 11, at 4:00 Pacific, we hope you’ll enjoy immersing yourself in the life and times of Schubert, followed by a lively questions and answers session.
Friday, March 11, 4:00 PM PST
Join us for the virtual world premier of Susan Waterfall’s Understanding Schubert—an 85-minute video biography, with art and portraits from Schubert’s era as well as 16 recorded musical excerpts, including nine lieder—wherein Waterfall explores the cultural context of Schubert’s life and music, his relationship with Romantic lyric poetry, and his position in the middle-class homes and salons of Vienna.
In 1987 Maynard Solomon presented a compelling paper ... view more »
Friday, March 11, 4:00 PM PST
Join us for the virtual world premier of Susan Waterfall’s Understanding Schubert—an 85-minute video biography, with art and portraits from Schubert’s era as well as 16 recorded musical excerpts, including nine lieder—wherein Waterfall explores the cultural context of Schubert’s life and music, his relationship with Romantic lyric poetry, and his position in the middle-class homes and salons of Vienna.
In 1987 Maynard Solomon presented a compelling paper asserting that Schubert was homosexual and died of tertiary syphilis. Solomon claimed that Schubert had written most of his music for a Viennese subculture that was exploring different types of masculinity and reacting to restrictive codes of social behavior. Susan Waterfall avoids extreme characterizations of Schubert as a sexless “tubby tunesmith” and Schubert as a standard bearer for gay musicology. He becomes a convincing person, with his sexual preferences and activities only part of the troubling circumstances he encountered in modern Viennese life.
Schubert’s art emphasized individual subjectivity, which was the thrust of Romanticism. With enormous musical and communicative gifts, he offered his vision of the world.
Learn more and secure your ticket
Q&A with Susan Waterfall, Julian Pollack and Mina Cohen follows the screening.
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