Joseph Müller-Blattau


Joseph Maria Müller-Blattau was a German musicologist and National Socialist cultural official. He is regarded as a "nestor of Saarbrücken musicology" but also as a "singer of a musical seizure of power" because of his activities in National Socialism.

Life and career

Müller-Blattau, son of a senior teacher, was born in Colmar. He took part to the First World War. He studied musicology with Friedrich Ludwig at the University of Strasbourg, studied composition and conducting with Hans Pfitzner and organ with Ernst Münch. Later he studied at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg where Wilibald Gurlitt was his teacher. During his studies he became a member of the Wettina Freiburg, later the Singererschaft Rhenania Frankfurt. In 1920, his doctorate in musicology at the University of Freiburg was completed with the work Grundzüge einer Geschichte der Fuge. In 1922, he got his habilitation and qualified at the University of Königsberg and became director of the musicological seminar and academic music director in Königsberg. From 1924 he was also director of the Institute for School and Church Music. In 1928 he was appointed extraordinary professor in Königsberg and he became musical advisor of the. In 1930 he became a member of the.
On May 1, 1933, he joined the NSDAP. In 1935 he took over a professorship for musicology in Frankfurt. A member of the SA since 1933, he worked in 1936 for the Ahnenerbe of the Schutzstaffel about Germaniser Erbe in deutscher Tonkunst. Heinrich Himmler contributed the preface. Also in 1936, he played an inglorious role in the removal of Wilibald Gurlitt by Friedrich Metz, the National Socialist rector of the University of Freiburg. In 1937 he was appointed Gurlitt's successor. From 1938 to 1942 he was the municipal music commissioner of Freiburg. From 1939 to 1945 he participated with interruptions in the Second World War. Together with tenor Reinhold Hammerstein, Blattau, who himself was a baritone, recorded battle songs for radio, such as Erde schafft das Neue and Heilig Vaterland by Heinrich Spitta or Es dröhnt der Marsch der Kolonne by H. Napiersky among other. In 1941 he was appointed to the Reichsuniversität Straßburg.
After the Second World War he was a teacher at the Oberrealschule from November 1946 and at the Pädagogische Akademie Kusel and then at the. In May 1952 he was appointed director of the Saarbrücken State Conservatory, where he founded the Institute for School Music. Since the winter semester of 1952/53, Müller-Blattau had been lecturing at the University of Saarland as a professor with full teaching responsibilities. After Saarland joined the Federal Republic of Germany, he became professor of musicology at the University of Saarland on April 1, 1958 and relinquished the direction of the Hochschule für Musik. In 1963 he became emeritus professor.
His book Geschichte der Deutschen Musik was placed on the in the Soviet occupation zone. As a result, pasted over numerous parts of the current fourth unaltered edition, which deal with B. about "Genius der Rasse", and the book could be sold for example in 1947 at the Musikhaus Stammer in Leipzig, as the corresponding stamped copies prove.
Müller-Blattau died in Saarbrücken at age 81.

Publications