Skip to Main Content
  • Apply
  • Events
  • Support CFA
  • Directory
  • Contact & Directions
Boston University College of Fine Arts

  • About
  • Academics
  • Admissions
  • News & More
  • About
    • A Message from the Dean
    • Strategic Priorities
    • Rankings & Achievements
    • Alumni & Friends
    • Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
    • Accreditation
    • Venues & Facilities
    • Contact & Directions
  • Academics
    • Degrees & Programs
    • Explore Your Interests
    • School of Music
    • School of Theatre
    • School of Visual Arts
    • Study Abroad
    • Courses for the BU Community
    • Our Faculty
  • Admissions
    • Undergraduate
    • Graduate
    • Online Programs
    • Non-Degree
    • Events & Campus Visits
    • Admitted Students
    • BU Tanglewood Institute
    • Youth Programs
  • News & More
    • CFA Magazine
    • Calendar
    • BU Arts Central
    • Boston University Art Galleries
    • BU Arts Initiative
    • Research & Community Engagement
    • Featured Work
Search

Resources for:

  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Apply
  • Events
  • Support CFA
  • Directory
  • Contact & Directions
  • Issues
  • Collections
  • About

When Words Cease to Function

A photo of a violinist who died in Auschwitz inspires a Grammy-winning conductor

Written by Lara Ehrlich. Photo by Gustav Mahler–Alfred Rosé Collection, Music Library, Western University, London, Canada

Music

“When Words Cease to Function”

A photo of a violinist who died in Auschwitz inspires a Grammy-winning conductor

November 28, 2018
Twitter Facebook

In 1943, Austrian violinist Alma Rosé was taken to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where she was made conductor of the women’s orchestra that performed for prisoners and officers. She died of illness in Auschwitz in 1944 and is remembered for bringing her fellow prisoners and musicians a spiritual escape amidst the horrors of the Holocaust.

A decade earlier, Rosé had been an international star. The niece of composer Gustav Mahler and daughter of a celebrated concertmaster, Rosé was the founder of the all-women Wiener Walzermädeln (The Viennese Waltzing Girls), a salon orchestra that toured internationally to great success until the Nazis took control of Austria.

When reading a book about the Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz, Bramwell Tovey, an associate professor of music and director of orchestral activities, was struck by a photograph of Rosé (center) with Wiener Walzermädeln in a 1930 concert.

Tovey says the photograph, showing “the fullness of life, which we know was destroyed afterwards, and its sense of loss,” has become “an emblematic impetus” for a violin concerto he’s composing for the National Arts Centre Orchestra in Ottawa, Canada.

“I’m also writing this piece exactly 50 years after the death of my father, who died when I was 15. That particular sense of loss is helping me to realize what I’m trying to express, a narrative that can take the listener to different levels,” says Tovey, also an award-winning jazz pianist and conductor. “The German philosopher, Arthur Schopenhauer, said that music takes over where words cease function.”

This Series

Mindful Music

Also in

Muse

  • November 29, 2023

    Finding a Home in Electroacoustic Music

  • May 24, 2023

    Social Justice Music

  • October 11, 2022

    Heading to the Playground for Some Recess Therapy

Series home

  • Share this story

Share

When Words Cease to Function

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
Contact
855 Commonwealth Ave.
Boston, MA 02215

617-353-3350
Contact us
Footer image.
  • About
  • Academics
  • Admissions
  • News & More
© Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • Youtube
  • X
Boston University

© 2025 Trustees of Boston University | Digital Millennium Copyright Act

Boston University Masterplate
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
Back to Top