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Bernard Zweers
Bernard Zweers (born Bernardus Josephus Wilhelmus Zweers) (Amsterdam,
May 18, 1854 - December 9, 1924) was a Dutch composer and music teacher.
Life
Bernard Zweers was born in 1854 as the son of an Amsterdam book- and
music shopkeeper. Although his father was an amateur singer, he strongly
disapproved of his son’s musical interests, expecting him to follow him
in the family business. Being fundamentally self-taught, he had some
minor musical successes before his parents finally approved and sent him
to study with Salomon Jadassohn in Leipzig in 1881-1883. Of crucial
importance to Zweers' musical education was his first exposure to the
work of Richard Wagner when he was present at the Berlin premiere of the
Ring des Nibelungen, in 1881:
I, who never ventured farther than Nijmegen and who had never heard even
a normal opera before, I was in Berlin, listening to Wagner's Ring! ...
and I returned a full-blooded Wagnerian.
After his return, he became active in Dutch musical life and took on
various appointments, including the conductorship of various choirs.
However, due to deterioration of his hearing abilities and his own wish
to concentrate on teaching, he relinquished most of these. From 1895 to
1922 he was head of teaching and composition at the Amsterdam
conservatory but rather than impose his own music on his pupils, he left
them the freedom to develop their own style - a break with the policies
of his predecessor Johannes Verhulst. He became a highly-esteemed, even
revered teacher to a whole generation of Dutch composers.
Aside from his didactic abilities, Zweers was renowned for his sense of
humour. At one meeting of the Dutch Musicians’ Association (Nederlandse
Toonkunstenaars Vereeniging), Zweers’ Second Symphony was programmed
along with Huyschenruyter’s Concert Overture. Just before the concert,
Huyschenruyter approached Zweers to tell him how much he’d enjoyed his
symphony (in rehearsal). After a moment’s silence, Zweers responded:
“Sir, I have not heard your overture, but I am certain that my symphony
is on a higher level”. Dumbstruck by this display of artist’s arrogance,
Huyschenruyter stood silent until Zweers burst out laughing: “Of course,
because your overture is in D, and my symphony is written in E flat!”
Work
In 1907, the Leyden professor Pieter Blok published the last part of his
History of the Dutch People, dedicated to the arts. However, he totally
ignored music, claiming Dutch music did not possess any ‘national
character’. The composer Johan Wagenaar published a rebuttal, in which
he claimed that ‘true’ Dutch music could be characterised by a ‘simple,
spirited or firm melody, by a a sense of the cosy and quietly sensitive,
a sharp rhythm and, finally, a sense of humour’. Wagenaar named two
works as an example: Peter van Anrooy’s Piet Hein Rhapsody, an
orchestral pot-boiler based on a popular song about a seventeenth
century Dutch pirate, and Bernard Zweers’ Third Symphony, subtitled ‘To
My Fatherland’. Indeed, Zweers could be said to be the most overtly
nationalistic of all Dutch composers. Not in the sense that, like so
many other European composers, he based his music exclusively on folk
music, but more in his exploitation of national themes.
However, there is a strange dichotomy in Zweers’ ideas about music. On
the one hand, he strove to develop a specifically Dutch brand of music,
free from foreign influence. For instance, his vocal music only employs
Dutch-language texts, and when it has a programme, that is frequently
inspired by Dutch themes: Rembrandt, Vondel’s Gijsbrecht van Aemstel,
Dutch landscapes, and so forth. His aim was the greater good of Dutch
art, because “Never will art get a foodhold with a people, when it uses
a foreign language in song, or when it takes in art by means of foreign
tongues”. On the other hand, the German influences in his music are
undeniable. His Second Symphony is thoroughly Wagnerian; his Third, gave
him the epithet ‘the Dutch Bruckner’. One cannot imagine Zweers much
appreciating that honour (and it really is undeserved as well, since the
only Brucknerian thing about the work is its length).
That Third Symphony (1887-1889) was to become by far Zweers’ most famous
work. Its large scale prohibited it from being performed very often and
made publication expensive (the publisher A.A. Noske experienced a great
loss as sales were poor), but the work was, and is, regarded as a
milestone in the development of Dutch music, combining folk tunes with a
lyrical description Dutch landscapes. It was therefore unavoidable that
Wagenaar should use it as an example of ‘typical’ Dutch music.
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