Jean Kurt Forest (2 April 1909 – 3 March 1975) was a German violinist and violist, Kapellmeister and composer. He began his career as concertmaster in film orchestras conducted by Paul Dessau, then played principal viola in Frankfurt and Hamburg. Drafted to the Wehrmacht in 1942, he defected to the Red Army in 1945 and remained a prisoner of war until 1948. Back in East Berlin, he shaped musical life in the GDR in several positions, before he focused on composition from 1954, composing political songs and operas raising social awareness.
Life
Born Jean Kurt Forst[1] in Darmstadt,[2] the son of a paperhanger, he learned to play the violin at the age of four. From age six, he received a thorough and varied musical education at the Spangenberg Conservatory in Wiesbaden, studying violin, voice, piano, trumpet, timpani and harmony until 1925.[2] He mostly taught himself to play the viola and to compose.[3]
Forest composed around 250 songs,[5] several of the genre Massenlied. His opera Der arme Konrad, written between 1955 and 1957 after a play by Friedrich Wolf,[2] was followed in 1960 by the chamber opera Tai Yang erwacht,[5] also after Wolf. In his stage works, Forest focused on historic topics, pointing at social conscience, such as fascism, war and the atomic bomb.[6] In the 1960s, Forest was also active as a film score composer, for example in Credo: Martin Luther – Wittenberg 1517 [de] and Wenn Du zu mir hältst [de].[5]
Filmography
Forest wrote film scores for several films, including:[1][7]
Hans-Joachim Kynaß: Jean Kurt Forest / Kurzbiographie und ausgewählte Werke, in association with the Music Council of the GDR. Association of German Composers and Musicologists, Musikinformationszentrum, Berlin 1967.