Somehow I’d missed this. Within days of the Sept. 11 attacks, “Agence France-Presse reports that composer Karlheinz Stockhausen causes outrage in Germany when he describes Sept 11 terrorist attacks in US as ‘the greatest work of art ever’; retracts remark at once and asks that it not be reported…” The New York Times today reiterates the issue:
In disjointed comments that were taped by a German radio station and reported internationally, Mr. Stockhausen, 73, called the attack on the World Trade Center “the greatest work of art that is possible in the whole cosmos.” Extending the analogy, he spoke of human minds achieving “something in one act” that “we couldn’t even dream of in music,” in which “people practice like crazy for 10 years, totally fanatically, for a concert, and then die.” Just imagine, he added: “You have people who are so concentrated on one performance, and then 5,000 people are dispatched into eternity, in a single moment. I couldn’t do that. In comparison with that, we’re nothing as composers.”
When he realized how the reporters were reacting, he backtracked and asked that his words not be quoted. “Where has he brought me, that Lucifer?” he asked, referring to one of three invented characters, along with Eve and Michael, who regularly figure in his works.
Stockhausen’s own website claims that he is being misrepresented and slandered.
