About the Book
On March 10 1948 world-renowned composer and pianist Ernst von Dohnányi (1877−1960) embarked for the United States leaving Europe for good. Only a few years earlier the seventy-year-old Hungarian had been a triumphant internationally admired musician and leading figure in Hungarian musical life. Fleeing a political smear campaign that sought to implicate him in intellectual collaboration with fascism he reached American shores without a job or a home. A Wayfaring Stranger presents the final period in Dohnányi’s exceptional career and uses a range of previously unavailable material to reexamine commonly held beliefs about the musician and his unique oeuvre. Offering insights into his life as a teacher pianist and composer the book also considers the difficulties of émigré life the political charges made against him and the compositional and aesthetic dilemmas faced by a conservative artist. To this rich biographical account Veronika Kusz adds an in-depth examination of Dohnányi’s late works—in most cases the first analyses to appear in musicological literature. This corrective history provides never-before-seen photographs of the musician’s life in the United States and skillfully illustrates Dohnányi’s impact on European and American music and the culture of the time.
