Eberhard Rebling Explained

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Children:Kathinka Rebling
Jalda Rebling
Relatives:Janny Brandes-Brilleslijper (sister-in-law)

Eberhard Rebling (4 December 1911 – 2 August 2008) was a German pianist, musicologist and dance scholar as well as an anti fascist.

Life

Childhood and young adult

Born in Berlin, Rebling, who came from a Prussian officer's family, his father was a Major,[1] began to learn to play the piano at the age of 7. He later received lessons from Lydia Lenz in Berlin-Friedenau and won 1st prize at the "Interpreters" Competition of the German Artists' Association in 1929. He played pieces by Sergei Prokofiev and Ernst Toch. After passing his Abitur at the Goethe-Gymnasium in Berlin-Wilmersdorf, Rebling studied musicology, among others with Friedrich Blume, Curt Sachs and Erich Moritz von Hornbostel, as well as German studies and philosophy at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Berlin. In 1932, he followed Ernst Busch and Hanns Eisler live on stage and got to know the Dutch art historian Leo Balet and subsequently began to study Marxism. He met Georg Lukács and Andor Gábor. In 1933, he experienced the Reichstag fire in Berlin and voted for the Communist Party of Germany. He finished his studies in 1935 with a dissertation for the Dr. phil. degree under the direction of Arnold Schering on Die soziologischen Grundlagen der Stilwandlung der Musik in Deutschland um die Mitte des 18. Jahrhunderts.[2]

During the Second World War

In 1936, Rebling emigrated to The Hague due to his opposition to the National Socialism regime. In the same year, the book Die Verbürgerlichung der deutschen Kunst, Literatur und Musik im 18. Jahrhundert,[3] written together with Leo Balet, was published in Strasbourg and Leiden. In 1937, he went on a concert tour to Java and Sumatra as piano accompanist of a small dance company. In the same year, he met his wife, the Jewish actress, dancer and singer Lin Jaldati in The Hague, with whom he performed Yiddish songs in the post-war period.

Rebling took part in Dutch musical life as a pianist, music critic and musicologist. He attracted attention in 1937 with an article about De burgerlijke muziekopvattingen van Willem Mengelberg, which appeared in the monthly magazine Politiek en Cultuur. Between 1938 and 1940, Rebling gave lectures at the folk universities and at the College of Fine Arts in The Hague. He wrote articles for the music magazine Maandblad voor hedendaagse Muziek and the daily newspaper Vooruit.[4]

In early 1943, Rebling bought a house in the Netherlands under a false name and offered shelter to up to 20 Jewish refugees. The hiding place was betrayed in 1944, he was arrested by the Gestapo and sentenced to death. Rebling was able to flee, but most of the Jews living in the house were arrested and deported to concentration camps, among them Lin, who survived the Westerbork transit camp, the Auschwitz concentration camp and Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. They met again in 1945. However, six of the hidden Jews did not survive the Holocaust. On 11 October 2007, Rebling was honoured by the Israeli Holocaust memorial Yad Vashem in Jerusalem with the title "Righteous Among the Nations" for helping the refugees.[5] Rebling met Otto Heinrich Frank, the father of Anne Frank in 1945.[6] He gave him a copy after the publication of The Diary of a Young Girl. Rebling and his wife toured West Germany, France, Israel and the USA on an Anne Frank programme.

After the war

After the German occupation of the Netherlands ended, Rebling first became music editor of the daily newspaper of the Dutch Communist Party, De Waarheid. He joined the Dutch Communist Party (CPN) in 1946.

In 1951, Paul Wandel convinced him to come to the GDR. In 1952, he moved with Lin Jaldati and his two daughters Kathinka and Jalda to Berlin (GDR), where he became a member of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany in 1960.[7]

From 1952 to 1959, he was editor-in-chief of the newspaper Musik und Gesellschaft, from 1957 co-editor-in-chief of the music magazine Melodie und Rhythmus and from 1959 professor and rector of the Hochschule für Musik "Hanns Eisler", which was named "Hanns Eisler" on his initiative. Rebling was interested in ballet. After several journeys and his retirement in 1976, he wrote comprehensive works on the dance art of India and Indonesia. In 2002, he handed over his archive to the Academy of Arts, Berlin. In 1959, he accompanied Paul Robeson on the piano. In 1960, he was one of the co-founders of the . In 1976, he performed with Ernst Busch and Gisela May at the Filmtheater Kosmos.

Rebling had been a member of the Volkskammer and the Research Council for Vocational Training in Music at the East-German Ministry of Culture since 1963. He was a member of the and the Presidential Council of the Cultural Association of the GDR. Until his death, he was a member of the Party of Democratic Socialism and later the Die Linke and lectured at political events on his time and situation during the Second World War. He was a member of the party's "Council of Elders".

Rebling died in Königs Wusterhausen at the age of 96 and is buried on the Dorotheenstadt Cemetery.

His younger daughter Jalda Rebling is a singer, the older Kathinka Rebling is a violinist and music professor.

Awards

Publications

Work

Recording

Radio

Filmography

Archives

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. [Regina Scheer]
  2. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/494218327 Die soziologischen Grundlagen der Stilwandlung der Musik in Deutschland um die Mitte des 18. Jahrhunderts
  3. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1185742032 Die Verbürgerlichung der deutschen Kunst, Literatur und Musik im 18. Jahrhundert
  4. K. Hermsdorf, H. Fetting, S. Schlenstedt: Exil in den Niederlanden und in Spanien. 1981, .
  5. [Heinrich Fink]
  6. Web site: Eberhard Rebling on Anne Frank in the GDR . annefrank. org . https://archive.today/20120721064134/http://prev.annefrank.org/content.asp?pid=435&lid=3 . 21 July 2012 . 3 October 2020 . live .
  7. Web site: Interview von Jochen Voit mit Prof. Dr. Eberhard Rebling am 23. Februar 2006 . erinnerungsort.de . https://web.archive.org/web/20081020015734/http://www.erinnerungsort.de/Eberhard-Rebling-_446.html . 20 October 2008 . 2018-06-08 . de . live .
  8. See Theater der Zeit. 31 (1976), S. 7–12, 67.
  9. https://archiv.adk.de/bigobjekt/22641 Eberhard-Rebling-Archiv
  10. https://www.filmportal.de/en/person/eberhard-rebling_63121c05c26630b8e040007f01005d22 Eberhard Rebling on Filmportal