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John Williams: Theme from Schindler's List

One of the most instantly recognisable and most-loved film scores of the 20th century.

Steven Spielberg’s epic Holocaust drama, Schindler’s List, premiered in Washington DC on 30 November 1993.

Stark, brutal, shot in stunning black-and-white and including gritty hand-held camera footage, Schindler’s List tells the true story of the German industrialist Oskar Schindler, who saved over a thousand Polish Jews from concentration camps by giving them work in his factories. Schindler’s List was a multi award-winning film in almost every category. Its music, by Spielberg’s life-long collaborator, John Williams, is one of the most instantly recognisable and most-loved film scores of the 20th century.

How do you write music about the Holocaust? Williams called Izhat Pearlman. "I hear a violin," he said. "Will you do it?"
The film's main theme is a beautiful, expressive and richly orchestrated work: a solo violin melody - initially held, tentatively, within the instrument's two central strings, A and D - which yearns to break free and tell a story.

But the reality of music made in the filthy and squalid camps of Nazi Germany is one of the darkest and bleakest episodes in recent history. Makeshift orchestras at Auschwitz-Birkenau and Terezin were forced to greet trains full of disorientated, terrified prisoners, many of whom were taken straight to the gas chambers. Mixing with the stench, the black smoke, the shouts of the SS, crying children, the beatings and the killings was the inexplicable sound of Schubert, Strauss, Beethoven, Verdi, Puccini and Brahms. They played as the prisoners marched to their grueling labour. They played at the infirmary as the death selection processes took place. They played to accompany the public hangings of prisoners who had attempted escape.

And they had to play for the pleasure of their captors. The men and women of the SS used classical music to cultivate an image of refinement, decency and civilisation for themselves, whilst simultaneously using it to destroy the humanity of the prisoners, depleting what might have been a last hope, a final resource for survival. The sense of utter despair in the writings of surviving musicians is palpable. Whilst some lived because they could play, suicide rates in the camps were amongst their highest in musicians.

Holocaust music was made against a backdrop of terror, hunger, illness and death. Spielberg uses music sparingly in Schindler’s List. There is no music that can encapsulate the violence of forced creativity, the physical and emotional torture that attacked musician’s identities. The most powerful musical moments in Schindler’s List are the silent ones.

This is one of 100 significant musical moments explored by Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 3’s Essential Classics as part of Our Classical Century, a Â鶹ԼÅÄ season celebrating a momentous 100 years in music from 1918 to 2018. Visit bbc.co.uk/ourclassicalcentury to watch and listen to all programmes in the season.

This is an archive recording by the Â鶹ԼÅÄ Concert Orchestra with violin soloist Chloe Hanslip and conductor Keith Lockhart.

Duration:

5 minutes

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