Hanns Eisler's Human Design Chart
6/2 Sacral GeneratorAustrian composer.
In the late 1920s he became friends with Bertolt Brecht. They shared a leaning toward Marxism and the creative collaboration between them lasted for the rest of Brecht’s life. In 1929, Eisler composed the song cycle Zeitungsausschnitte, Op. 11., perhaps the forerunner of a musical art style later known as “News Items” – musical compositions that parodied a newspaper’s content and style, or that included lyrics lifted directly from news media of the day. Eisler wrote music for several Brecht plays, including The Decision (Die Maßnahme) (1930), The Mother (1932) and Schweik in the Second World War (1957). They also collaborated on protest songs that intervened in the political turmoil of Weimar Germany in the early 1930s.
In 1938, Eisler finally managed to get a permanent visa for the USA. He composed music for various documentary films and for eight Hollywood film scores, two of which — Hangmen Also Die! and None but the Lonely Heart — were nominated for Oscars in 1944 and 1945 respectively.
Eisler’s promising career in the U.S. was interrupted by the Cold War. He was one of the first artists placed on the Hollywood blacklist by the film studio bosses. In two interrogations by the House Committee on Un-American Activities, the composer was accused of being “the Karl Marx of music” and the chief Soviet agent in Hollywood. Eisler’s supporters—including his friend Charlie Chaplin and the composers Igor Stravinsky, Aaron Copland and Leonard Bernstein—organized benefit concerts to raise money for his defense fund, but he was deported early in 1948.
Eisler returned to Austria and later moved to East Berlin. Back in Germany, he composed the national anthem of the German Democratic Republic, a cycle of cabaret-style songs to satirical poems by Kurt Tucholsky, and incidental music for theater, films and television, and party celebrations. His most ambitious project of the period was the opera Johannes Faustus on the Faust theme. The libretto, written by Eisler himself, was published in the fall of 1952.
He died of a heart attack (his second) in East Berlin on 6 September 1962.
Link to Wikipedia biography
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