Robert Gerhard i Ottenwaelder (1896 – 1970) was a Catalan
composer and musical scholar and writer, generally known outside Catalonia as
Roberto Gerhard. Roberto was the son of a German-Swiss father and an Alsatian
mother. He was predisposed to an international, multilingual outlook, but by
birth and culture he was a Catalan. He studied piano with Granados and
composition with the great scholar-composer Felipe Pedrell.
Gerhard spent several years with Schoenberg in Vienna and
Berlin. Returning to Barcelona in 1928, he befriended Joan Miró and Pablo
Casals, brought Schoenberg and Webern to Barcelona, and was the principal
organizer of the 1936 ISCM Festival there. He also collected, edited and
performed folksongs and old Spanish music from the Renaissance to the
eighteenth century.
Identified with the Republican cause throughout the Spanish
Civil War (as musical adviser to the Minister of Fine Arts in the Catalan
Government and a member of the Republican Government's Social Music Council),
Gerhard was forced to flee to France in 1939 and later that year settled in
Cambridge, England. Until the death of Francisco Franco, who made it his
business to extirpate Catalan national aspirations, his music was virtually
proscribed in Spain, to which he never returned except for holidays.
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