Kurt Gudewill


Kurt Gudewill was a German musicologist and University lecturer. From 1952 to 1976 he was professor at the musicological institute of the Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel. He rendered outstanding services to Heinrich Schütz and Lied research.

Life

Birth and youth in Itzehoe

Born in Itzehoe, Gudewill came from a Prussian officer family. So was his uncle, Corvette Captain Hans Gudewill, commander of the German gunboat SMS Habicht and temporary commander of the Schutztruppen in German East Africa. Pictorial material and an overview of the military career of his elder corvette captain, Lieutenant Colonel Max Hans August Gudewill are handed down in the photo collection of the officers of the XIV Corps of the department of the.
As the son of Major Curt Caspar Adolf Gudewill, who was a departmental commander of the field artillery regiment during the first month of World War I and was wounded in the battle of Tienen in Belgium and died four days later, and his wife Margaretha Louise Auguste, née Luther, 1911 in Itzehoe, Province of Schleswig-Holstein, he became the "Luther Side relatives" counted.
Gudewill received his first musical and practical lessons and passed a state private music teacher examination in music theory and musical composition in Itzehoe. As his first music teacher he named Thiel's and Richard Hage's student Heinrich Laubach, who was the founder of the Itzehoe Concert Choir. Furthermore, according to his own statement, his successor, Otto Spreckelsen, exerted musical influence on him. Gudewill attended the, a reform Realgymnasium in his home town until the Abitur 1929

Study and Lectureship in National Socialism

From 1929 to 1935 Gudewill studied musicology as well as philosophy and phonetics at the University of Hamburg and 1930/31 at the Humboldt University of Berlin. In 1935 he was appointed by Walther Vetter in musicology at the University of Hamburg with a dissertation entitled Das sprachliche Urbild bei Heinrich Schütz und seine Abwandlung nach textbestimmten und musikalischen Gestaltungsgrundsätzen in den Werken bis 1650 to Dr. phil. promoted. The second opinion of the work took over Georg Anschütz. The work was published in 1936 at Bärenreiter-Verlag in Kassel.
In the same year he became a research assistant by Friedrich Blume and a regular lecturer for music at the Musicological Institute in Kiel. In 1944 he habilitated and applied to the Musicological Institute of the Philosophical Faculty of the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel on the topic Die Formstrukturen der deutschen Liedtenores des 15. und 16. Jahrhunderts.. Excerpts from his work were presented in the first volume of the journal Die Musikforschung under the title Zur Frage der Formstrukturen deutscher Liedtenores. Even before the end of the war, in January 1945, he received a Privatdozent.
Gudewill war member Nr. 166.492 of the NSDAP from November 1, 1929 to October 1, 1930 and again from May 1, 1937. He belonged to the SA, the Hitler Youth and the NS-Dozentenbund. Through the mediation of a musician colleague of the Semler Chapel in Itzehoe, the military music enthusiastic Gudewill successfully applied around 1933/34 on the place of the second tenor horn in the music course of the Heider SA standard 85 "Dithmarschen". During the Kristallnacht his was decisively involved in the destruction of the synagogue in Friedrichstadt. Das Machwerk Lexikon der Juden in der Musik, a publication of the Institute for Study of the Jewish Question of 1940, Gudewill commented favourably in a review. After the war, he justified his entry into the SA by saying that it was necessary for his professional advancement. The musicologist Fred K. Prieberg questioned Gudewill's self-assessment and criticized his silence about re-entering the party.

Professor at the University of Kiel after 1945

From the summer semester 1946 Gudewill was again listed as part of the Kiel teaching staff in the "Personal- und Vorlesungsverzeichnis". In 1948/49 he was a scholarship holder of the British Council. Guest lecturer at the University of Birmingham in England. In 1952 he received an extraordinary professorship in Kiel while retaining his music lecturing position, and from 1960 to 1976 he was scientific counselor and Professor of musicology. He supervised several doctoral projects and a music-making circle for early music. The main focus of his work was historical research on 17th century Lutheran church music, especially on the composers Heinrich Schütz and Melchior Franck, as well as on 16th century German Lied. Thus he had a significant part in the fact that the musical genre "tenor song" could assert itself as term techicus.
In 1957 Gutewill reactivated the Arbeitskreis für Neue Musik, which he led until 1991. In 1959 he was accepted into the student working groups of the. The working group continued the "Working Group for New Music" initiated by Hans Hoffmann in 1929, which saw itself as alternative to the absence of a local group of the International Society for New Music. 2003/07 Friedrich Wedell at the Musicological Institute of the University of Kiel revived the network as Forum for Contemporary Music.
Gudewill gave several lectures at the Schleswig-Holsteinische Universitäts-Gesellschaft, the support association of the University of Kiel.

Music journalist and Schütz researcher

As a reviewer, he published from the 1940s onwards in Deutsche Musikkultur, in Zeitschrift für Musikwissenschaft and in Die Musikforschung. In 1942 he began publishing the five-part anthology ' by the Renaissance composer Georg Forster. From 1948 on, he contributed to the first edition of the music encyclopaedia Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart published by his teacher Blume. Gudewill wrote person and material entries. Among others he contributed the first summarizing essay on the music history of Gottdorf. He was also the author of personal articles in the Neue Deutsche Biographie and in the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Together with Blume he founded in 1956 the edition series '. After Blume's death in 1975 he took over the sole editorship of the series. In 1956 he was commissioned by the Neue Schützgesellschaft to become the editor of the Neue Schütz-Ausgabe. In 1979 he was also significantly involved in the foundation of the .
From 1956 he was vice president and from 1975 to 1988 he succeeded Karl Vötterle. President of the International Heinrich Schütz Society in Kassel. From 1968 to 1981 he was director of the

Family and estate

Gudewill, a Protestant, was married to a pianist and father of three daughters. Alfred Zimmermann, professor of medicine in Kiel, was his father-in-law. His Nachlass can be found in the music collection of the in Kiel.
Gudewill died in Kiel at the age of 84.

Writings

Editions
Autobiographical works
Festschrift