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Eric Zeisl

(1905 - 1959)
 

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Eric Zeisl Life

 

Eric Zeisl was born in Vienna on May 18, 1905; against strong family resistance, he entered the Vienna State Academy at age fourteen; two years later, his first publication appeared, a set of songs.

Despite acclaim as one of Austria's brightest young compositional lights, Zeisl eventually fell victim to Europe's gathering political storm.

In November, 1938, he fled Vienna for Paris and temporary refuge, but it was only upon reaching America in September, 1939 that he found permanent sanctuary.

Against formidable odds, he achieved recognition in his adopted land, with praise for his work coming from fellow composers Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Darius Milhaud, Igor Stravinsky, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Alexandre Tansman, Hanns Eisler and Ernst Toch, among others.

Then, on February 18, 1959, at the age of 53 and at the height of his creative powers, Eric Zeisl suffered a heart attack after teaching an evening class at Los Angeles City College.

He won the Austrian State Prize in 1934 (for a Requiem Mass), but because he was a Jew he could not secure a publishing contract since his works would have by that time been banned in Germany, the primary market.

Despite this disadvantage, the Viennese publishers Universal Edition and Ludwig Doblinger published Zeisl's orchestral works and songs in the 1930's.

The Anschluss in March 1938 abruptly ended hopes of any future Central European publications or performances including the planned premieres of Zeisl's comic opera "Leonce and Lena" (after Büchner) by Radio Prague and at Vienna's Schönbrunn Schlosstheater.

After narrowly escaping capture during the "Kristallnacht" pogrom of November 9, 1938, Zeisl and his wife fled from Vienna, settling first in Paris, where Zeisl began his lasting friendship with Darius Milhaud.

Upon his arrival in New York at the end of 1939, Zeisl obtained a number of radio performances (and received an unused recommendation from Hanns Eisler for study with Arnold Schoenberg), but he was soon lured to Hollywood, where he suffered from being a late-comer to the movies.

He worked on a number of well-known films, but never received a screen credit; he soon abandoned film music and returned to serious composition.

Zeisl was composer-in-residence at the Brandeis-Bardin Institute and at the Huntington Hartford Foundation.

At Los Angeles City College, his students included oscar-winning film composer Jerry Goldsmith and ragtime composer Robin Frost; the composer Leon Levitch also studied with Zeisl.

In Hollywood, Zeisl composed a piano concerto, cello concerto (for Gregor Piatigorski), four ballets, numerous choral and chamber works, and half of an unfinished opera, before being felled by a heart attack after teaching the composition theory class (later taught by Ernst Krenek) at Los Angeles City College on February 18, 1959.