Research Catalog
Erich Itor Kahn papers
- Title
- Erich Itor Kahn papers, 1895-2000.
- Author
- Kahn, Erich Itor, 1905-1956.
- Supplementary Content
- Finding Aid
Items in the Library & Off-site
Filter by
80 Items
Status | Container | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Not available - Please for assistance. | Box 80 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 80 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 79 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 79 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 78 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 78 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 77 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 77 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 76 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 76 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 75 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 75 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 74 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 74 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 73 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 73 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 72 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 72 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 71 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 71 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 70 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 70 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 69 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 69 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 68 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 68 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 67 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 67 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 66 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 66 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 65 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 65 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 64 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 64 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 63 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 63 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 62 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 62 | Offsite |
Available - Can be used on site. Please visit New York Public Library - Offsite to submit a request in person. | Box 61 | Mixed material | Supervised use | JPB 90-26 Box 61 | Offsite |
Details
- Additional Authors
- Description
- 40 linear feet (80 boxes )
- Summary
- The central component of the Erich Itor Kahn papers consists of the composer's music.
- Subjects
- Composers
- Pianists
- Composers > United States > 20th century
- Photographs
- Scores
- Musical sketches
- Kahn, Erich Itor, 1905-1956
- Posters
- Legal documents
- Wills
- Diaries
- Pianists > United States > 20th century
- Kahn, Frida, 1905-
- Exiled women authors
- Jews, German > United States > Intellectual life
- Translators
- Jewish refugees > United States
- Piano teachers
- Clippings
- Correspondence
- Manuscripts
- Jews, German > New York (State) > New York
- Women translators > New York (State) > New York
- Genre/Form
- Clippings.
- Correspondence.
- Diaries.
- Legal documents.
- Manuscripts.
- Musical sketches.
- Photographs.
- Posters.
- Scores.
- Wills.
- Access (note)
- The Medical series, containing Frida Kahn's medical documents, is restricted from researchers.
- Source (note)
- Kahn, Frida
- Biography (note)
- German-American composer and pianist, Erich Itor Kahn (1905-1956), fled Nazi Germany in 1933 and eventually immigrated to the United States, where he continued to work until the time of his death.
- Born Frida Rabinowitsch, Erich Itor Kahn's wife grew up as the daughter of a tobacco factory owner in Kremenchug, Ukraine.
- Language (note)
- English is the predominant language represented in the collection, but considerable material in French, German, and Russian can be found throughout the collection.
- Indexes/Finding Aids (note)
- Collection guide available in repository and on internet.
- Call Number
- JPB 90-26
- OCLC
- 84833679
- Author
- Kahn, Erich Itor, 1905-1956.
- Title
- Erich Itor Kahn papers, 1895-2000.
- Access
- The Medical series, containing Frida Kahn's medical documents, is restricted from researchers.
- Biography
- German-American composer and pianist, Erich Itor Kahn (1905-1956), fled Nazi Germany in 1933 and eventually immigrated to the United States, where he continued to work until the time of his death. His wife, Frida Kahn (1905-2002), who worked as a piano teacher and translator, did much to promote and maintain her husband's legacy after his death. Born in Rimbach, Germany to a Russian-Jewish father (original family name, Rogowksy) and a mother of Portuguese descent, Erich Itor Kahn started to play the piano at the age of six and wrote his first composition, a suite for two violins and piano, at the age of nine. He began his musical studies with his father, Leopold, who was a high school math teacher and cantor, and continued his training at the Hochs Conservatory in Frankfurt am Main. After graduating in 1928, Kahn joined Radio Frankfurt (Südwest-Deutscher Rundfunk) as an assistant director and pianist. Through this position, Kahn would gain contact with many of the leading composers of the day, including Arnold Schoenberg (whose compositional technique was to influence Kahn greatly), Igor Stravinsky, and Anton Webern. In 1933, following the Nazi rise to power, Kahn left Germany and took up residence in Paris, where he was active in chamber music circles and became one of the founders of the Schubert Society. In 1937, he met Pablo Casals and toured with him as an accompanist throughout Europe and North Africa until 1939. Kahn was interned at the beginning of the war, but released by the authorities because of his reputation as a performer. In 1940, however, after the German occupation began, Kahn and his wife would be sent to a series of concentration camps in France, until they finally obtained permission to emigrate. In 1941, with the assistance of friends, who already were based in the United States, including the émigré violinist Samuel Dushkin, and his American-born wife, Louise Rorimer-Dushkin, the Kahns finally were able to move to the United States, where they settled in New York City. Once relocated, Kahn became a United States citizen and actively pursued his concert career. In 1944, he formed the Albeneri Trio with Alexander Schneider and Benar Heifetz. In 1948, he was awarded the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge medal by the Library of Congress for his contributions to the field of chamber music. Kahn composed numerous works for instrumental solo and ensembles, vocal and orchestral music. Among his most noted works, include Die Nacht, a choreographic poem based on the work of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, which had been commissioned in 1927 by Rudolf von Laban, Actus tragicus, Chansons populaires, Ciaccona dei tempi di guerra, and Symphonies bretonnes. Although many of his pieces were performed or published during his lifetime, Kahn was more well-known as a pianist. Supported by the efforts of his widow, interest in Kahn's work as a composer began to increase steadily following his untimely death in 1956.Born Frida Rabinowitsch, Erich Itor Kahn's wife grew up as the daughter of a tobacco factory owner in Kremenchug, Ukraine. Having survived earlier pogroms, the family was forced to leave Russia after the revolution, arriving in Constantinople, Turkey during the spring of 1920. The Rabinowitsch family stayed briefly in Lausanne, Switzerland, but soon moved to Germany, where they had some connections. At first, Frida lived with her parents within the Jewish refugee community of Bad Homburg, but she soon began commuting to Frankfurt to take piano lessons, eventually moving there to continue her studies. In 1924, she met Erich Itor Kahn in Frankfurt and the two were married in 1928. Frida, however, soon became a refugee once again, leaving for Paris with her husband in the fall of 1933 after the Nazi party began to consolidate its power in Germany. Although the couple's initial years in Paris were filled with activity, after the outbreak of war and the occupation of France, both of the Kahns faced difficult times in French concentration camps, before escaping to the United States via Morocco, after the intervention of influential friends. Frida Kahn would chronicle these experiences in an autobiography, Generation in Turmoil (1960), that was published by Channel Press. Active as a piano treacher in New York City, Frida Kahn also translated the works of Russian authors into English, including stories and plays by Anton Chekhov and poems by Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin, under own name. She also wrote quasi-autobiographical, unpublished fiction under a pseudonym, Raissa Mirsky. In addition to time spent on her own writing, Frida Kahn devoted considerable energy in the years following her husband's death to keeping his memory and music alive, up until the time of her own death in 2002.
- Language
- English is the predominant language represented in the collection, but considerable material in French, German, and Russian can be found throughout the collection.
- Indexes
- Collection guide available in repository and on internet.
- Connect to:
- Occupation
- Composers.Pianists.Piano teachers.Translators.
- Added Author
- Kahn, Frida, 1905-Kahn, Frida, 1905- Generation in turmoil.Casals, Pablo, 1876-1973.Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich, 1860-1904.Coolidge, Elizabeth Sprague, 1864-1953.Dushkin, Samuel, 1891-1976.Heifetz, Benar.Laban, Rudolf von, 1879-1958.Schneider, Alexander, 1908-1993.Albeneri Trio.pm Music Division, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, 40 Lincoln Center Plaza, New York, NY 10023-7498 WPRC/HK
- Research Call Number
- JPB 90-26