The "Handbuch der Musikwissenschaft" ("Bücken-Psalter"), which he published in 1927-1934 and with some contributions of his own, is important and was intended to support similar projects in literature and art studies.
During the Weimar Republic Bücken was a short-term member of the Deutsche Zentrumspartei.[3] After the Nazis' seizure of power in January 1933,he joined the Nazi Party and was registered with effect from 1 May 1933 under the party number 2.026.645.[1] In 1933 he also became a member of the Deutsche Akademie.[3]
In the following years he joined the National Socialist German Lecturers League and published various system-compliant writings, including Musik aus deutscher Art in 1934, published in the Schriften zur völkisch Bildung or in the same year a contribution in the Westdeutscher Beobachter [de]Aufbruch in der Musikwissenschaft. Against unconditional intellectualism - music politics as a point of view,[1] in which he spoke of the "heavy struggle of our ethnic-racial forces with other national powers".[4] In the winter semester 1934/35 he held a lecture series on Decomposition and reconstruction of music since Wagner. As part of the 1938 Reichsmusiktage he gave a lecture at the musicology conference,[5] a presentation on Musikstil, Musikpolitik und Musikkultur.[6]
In his 1941 publication Musik der Deutschen, eine Kulturgeschichte der deutschen Musik he hardly dealt with the development of music in Germany after 1933, but, according to Fred K. Prieberg, he adhered "to the music policy guidelines of the regime", whereby the following passage is found on p. 294, in which "Jewish names are mentioned only for the purpose of negative evaluation:[7]
(…) Pathological phenomena were the music styles from expressionism and from atonality to futurism and constructivism, which were able to settle down more easily and quickly in the cultural organism, shaken and weakened by the lost war, than in a normal state. Both 'inventors' and main promoters of these musical currents artificially stimulated by events of the time were Jews throughout, who saw the dawn of 'their' great musical epoch. No German musical genius was greeted by their pioneers with such fanfares as the mixed-breed Franz Schreker was greeted by his racial comrade Paul Bekker. No truly great pioneer has been so celebrated as Arnold Schönberg.(…)[8]
In 1945 Bücken was sent into retirement.[1] He died on 28 July 1949 in Overath at the age of 65.
In the Soviet occupation zone, Bücken's Musik der Deutschen (1941) was included in the List of literature to be discarded [de] in 1946.[9] His book Musik aus deutscher Art (Schaffstein, Cologne 1934), published in 1934, was included in the list of literature to be discarded in the GDR in 1952/3.[10]
Work
(ed.) Handbuch der Musikwissenschaft, 10 volumes, 1927–1934.
Anton Reicha: sein Leben und seine Kompositionen,[11] Dissertation Munich 1912.
Fred K. Prieberg: Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933–1945, CD-Rom-Lexikon, Kiel 2004, pp. 814–815.
References
^ abcdeFred K. Prieberg: Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933-1945, Kiel 2004, p. 814.
^Willi Kahl: Bücken, Ernst, in Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, CD-Rom edition, p. 10447.
^ abGernot Gabel and Wolfgang Schmitz (Editor): Cologne collectors and their book collections in the Cologne University and City Library. Univ.- und Stadtbibliothek, Köln 2003, p. 184.
^Quote from Fred K. Prieberg: Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933-1945, Kiel 2004, pp. 814–815.
^Thomas Phleps: Ein stiller, verbissener und zäher Kampf um Stetigkeit – Musikwissenschaft in NS-Deutschland und ihre vergangenheitspolitische Bewältigung, in Isolde v. Foerster et al. (ed.), Musikforschung – Nationalsozialismus – Faschismus, Mainz 2001, pp. 471–488. online Uni Giessen
^Fred K. Prieberg: Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933–1945, Kiel 2004, p. 815.
^Zitate Fred K. Prieberg, in Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933–1945, Kiel 2004, p. 815.
^quoted by Fred K. Prieberg: Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933–1945, Kiel 2004, p. 815.