Irma Wolpe Rademacher (March 15, 1902 – January 6, 1984), née Schoenberg, was a Romanian-born American pianist and teacher.
Life and career
She was born in 1902 in Galați, Western Moldavia, Romania, into a bourgeois Jewish family, the third of four children. In 1910 the family moved to Iași (Jassy), where her father, Jacob Schoenberg (1864–1930), was offered the position of vice president with the newly formed Banca Moldova. Her mother, Rachel Schoenberg née Segall (1879–1943), conversant in many languages, was a gifted essayist and poet. Both parents were Zionists and eminently active in the Jewish community life. They were closely connected with leading Zionists, including the presidents of the World Zionist OrganizationChaim Weizmann and Nahum Sokolow. Rachel Schoenberg was a member of the Women's International Zionist Organization and a sought-after speaker at its European congresses. Jacob and Rachel Schoenberg were engaged in establishing agricultural stations for training Jewish adolescents to become farmers at settlements in Palestine, especially at the Ness Ziona colony.
Irma was a graduate of the piano class of Enrico Mezzetti at the Conservatory in Iași (now Universitatea Națională de Arte "George Enescu"]). She then studied for a year with Hermann Vetter at the Conservatory for Music and Theatre in Dresden (now Hochschule für Musik Carl Maria von Weber). Between 1921 and 1924 she was a piano student of Leonid Kreutzer and Elsa Rompe in Berlin and attended the rhythmical courses of the Dalcroze School.
In 1924 she moved to Paris, where she studied piano for two years with Alfred Cortot, and rhythmics and improvisation at the Eurythmic Seminar of Émile Jaques-Dalcroze. She graduated as a rhythmist from the Institute Jaques-Dalcroze in Geneva in 1927. Most of her time thereafter until 1933 she lived in Berlin, where she taught at the private piano school of Elsa Rompe and at the Schule für Rhythmus, Musik und Körperbildung of Anna Epping and Marie Adama van Scheltema. Having met the German-Jewish composer Stefan Wolpe (1902–1972), she performed his compositions in her concerts, and also in some concerts of the November Group.
Before 1932 her performances were mainly in Romania and British Mandate Palestine. Marc Chagall, whom she met in Jerusalem, was instrumental in organizing her Paris debut in January 1932 at the Salle Pleyel. This marked also the first performance of three of Stefan Wolpe's Cinque marches caractéristiques (1928–1934). Thereafter Stefan Wolpe dedicated his piano compositions to Irma.
In 1933, after the National Socialist takeover in Germany, Irma Schoenberg helped Stefan Wolpe, threatened as a Jewish communist and avant-garde composer, to flee Berlin. His first station was Czechoslovakia, afterwards they both fled via Switzerland, Austria, and Romania, before arriving 1934 to British Mandate Palestine, where they were married. Irma Wolpe played concerts and taught piano at the Palestine Conservatoire (now Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance) until 1938, when they emigrated to the US.
In 1949 she divorced Stefan Wolpe and married the mathematician Hans Rademacher (1892–1969). During a yearlong stay in Bombay (now Mumbai) (1954–1955), where Rademacher taught at the Tata Institute for Fundamental Research, she played in concerts together with Mehli Mehta and his Quartet, and had improvisation sessions with Vilayat Khan, the Sitar virtuoso.
After Hans Rademacher’s death, she returned to piano teaching, and finished her pianistic career as a professor at the New England Conservatory in Boston with two remarkable solo recitals: In 1973 she performed an all Arnold Schoenberg program, and in 1975, in an homage to Stefan Wolpe, her first husband and lifelong musician-friend, she performed the first-ever all Wolpe piano concert. Irma Wolpe Rademacher was the most important performer of Stefan Wolpe's piano compositions. Her students David Tudor and Jacob Maxin carried on this legacy. Wolpe Rademacher died in New York City, aged 81.
In more than 100 concerts, she mastered a wide repertory with emphasis on the music of the 20th century. As a teacher and mentor she inspired and promoted the careers of many musicians, including: Leonard Battipaglia, Louise Costigan-Kerns, Eric Kamen, Lily Friedman, Anezia Garcia, Laura Gigante Sharpe, Susan Kagan, Peter Jona Korn, Jerome Lowenthal, Jacob Maxin, Garrick Ohlsson, Benjamin Oren, Zaidee Parkinson, Donald Pirone, Elizabeth Rich, Sonia Rubinsky, Krista Seddon, Peter Serkin, Russell Sherman, Thomas Stumpf, David Tudor, Meira Warshauer, and Konrad Wolff. Having viewed piano technique as an art of movement, Irma Wolpe Rademacher developed a most personal approach in her teaching, emphasizing that "music is the sound of motion".
Publications
Irma Wolpe Rademacher: Comments on L'Art de toucher le piano, in: Piano Journal, EPTA, London, 1981, pp. 15–20.
Recordings
Radio Bucharest; Palestine Broadcasting Service (Kol Yerushalayim), Jerusalem; Radio Bombay, India; New England Conservatory, Boston.
References
Nora Born: "Irma Schoenberg Wolpe Rademacher. In den Wassern meines Lebens: «...Es flüstert, meist rauscht es und stürmt.». edition text+kritik, Munich, 2024, ISBN978-3-96707-911-1.
Nora Born (ed.): Das Gesetz harmonischer oder dis-harmonischer Entsprechungen. Irma und Stefan Wolpe – Briefwechsel 1933–1972. edition text+kritik, Munich, 2016, ISBN978-3-86916-500-4.
Austin Clarkson: Essays in Actionism: Wolpe's Pieces for Three Pianists. In: Perspectives of New Music. vol. 40, no. 2, 2002, pp. 115–133, JSTOR25164489.
Austin Clarkson (ed.): On the Music of Stefan Wolpe. Essays and Recollections. In: Dimension and Diversity. Bd. 6, Hillsdale, Pendragon, 2003.
Ina Henning: "Stefan Wolpe", in: Komponisten der Gegenwart, edition text+kritik, Munich 2018.
Barbara von der Lühe: Die Emigration deutschsprachiger Musikschaffender in das britische Mandatsgebiet Palästina. Ihr Beitrag zur Entwicklung des israelischen Rundfunks, der Oper und Musikpädagogik seit 1933, Lang, Frankfurt am Main, 1999.
Krista Seddon: "Piano Playing as an Art of Movement: The Technique of Irma Wolpe", Problem in lieu of thesis, Master of Music, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, 1987.
Josef Tal: Der Sohn des Rabbiners. Ein Weg von Berlin nach Jerusalem, Quadriga Verlag, 1985.
Horst Weber, Stefan Drees (eds.): Quellen zur Geschichte emigrierter Musiker 1933–1950/Sources Relating to the History of Emigré Musicians 1933–1950, vol. 2, Saur Verlag, New York, Munich, 2005.