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Stefan Amzoll

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Stefan Amzoll
Born21 October 1943
Sztum, East Germany
Died23 October 2019; aged 76
Uckerland, Germany
NationalityGerman
Occupation(s)Musicologist, journalist and independent author

Stefan Amzoll (21 October 1943 – 23 October 2019) was a German musicologist, journalist and independent author. In 1989/1990 he was editor-in-chief of Radio DDR 2 and 1990/91 deputy editor-in-chief of Deutschlandsender Culture. A main focus of his work was New Music.

Life

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Amzoll was born in Sztum and grew up in the GDR.[1] After a job-related apprenticeship as tool and die maker he attended the Arbeiter-und-Bauern-Fakultät [de] in Freiberg to prepare his university studies.[2] From 1968 to 1972 he studied musicology and theatre studies at the Humboldt University Berlin.[1] After his studies he worked as scientific assistant at the Verband der Komponisten und Musikwissenschaftler der DDR [de]. From the mid-1970s he also published articles in the association journal Musik und Gesellschaft. In 1987/88, now a music editor, he was awarded a Dr. phil. at the Faculty of Social Sciences of the Scientific Council of the Humboldt University of Berlin with the thesis Music in the Radio of the Weimar Republic – Studies on the History of the Origin of Media-Specific Art Production and Mediation. The reviewers of the thesis were Günter Mayer, Gerd Rienäcker and Dieter Boeck.[3] Amzoll was one of those researchers in the GDR who was open-minded about New Music.[4]

In 1977, he began his journalistic career as an editor for the second program of the Rundfunk der DDR (Radio DDR 2). On 1 May 1978 he was awarded the order Banner of Labor in stage II as a member of the journalistic "Collective".[5] From 1979 to December 1989 he was head of the editorial office E- und U-Musik [de] at Radio DDR 2.[2] There he initiated the program "Radio DDR-Musikklub", which was focused on contemporary music.[1] He also designed composer portraits of Georg Katzer, Friedrich Goldmann and Reiner Bredemeyer among others.[1] From December 1989 to June 1990, Amzoll worked as Chief editor of Radio DDR 2.[2] The administrative scientist Susanne Hepperle of the Saarländischer Rundfunk retrospectively described Amzoll as a former "functionary in the SED basic organization of the GDR Broadcasting Corporation".[6]

After the reunification he was provisionally taken over by the new Deutschlandsender Kultur [de] as one of few co-workers.[1] From June 1990 he worked as deputy editor-in-chiefunder the direction of Monika Künzel,[2] until he was "suspended" from service at the end of 1991 by the Broadcasting Commissioner of the newly-formed German states Rudolf Mühlfenzl [de] and the ZDF director Dieter Stolte [de].[7] The journalist Otto Köhler (1993) found little sympathy for this in a guest article in Die Zeit, since DS Kultur was "above all his [Amzoll's] work" and the music editor "has gotten himself into a lot of trouble with the SED and much admiration from expert colleagues in the West for his program initiatives".[8]

In November 1992, Amzoll was elected for the PDS by the Berlin House of Representatives for the first time in the history of the Rundfunkrat [de] of the Sender Freies Berlin.[9]

Since 1992 Amzoll has worked as a freelance author. Contributions and interviews have been published in specialist journals for new music (MusikTexte [de], Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, Neue Musikzeitung among others) and the theatre magazine Theater der Zeit[10] as well as the literary magazine neue deutsche literatur [de]. Biographical articles appeared in the music encyclopedias Komponisten der Gegenwart and Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart. In addition, he published in the theory journal UTOPIE kreativ[11] as well as in national daily and weekly newspapers (der Freitag and Neues Deutschland among others). Since the beginning of the 1990s, he has been writing for the feature pages of Junge Welt.[12] Recent radio reports have been published by Deutschlandradio Kultur; for the Deutschlandfunk he designed specialist programs such as "Atelier neuer Musik".[1]

Amzoll died in 2019[1] at the age of 76 in Uckerland. He was buried at Friedhof Pankow III [de] in Berlin.[12]

Radio plays

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Writings

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  • (ed.): Landschaft "für" Schenker. edition refugium, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-932153-12-X.
  • (ed.): Landschaft für Katzer. Akademie der Künste, Berlin 2005, ISBN 3-88331-083-2.
  • with Annette Tietz (ed.): Utopia – Thomas J. Richter [de]. Galerie Pankow, Berlin 2015.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Jürgen Schebera: Was wird man sagen über unsere Tage?. Zum Tod von Stefan Amzoll. In Neues Deutschland, 2 November 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d Renate Schubert: Without major damage? Conversations with journalists of the GDR. Ölschläger, Munich 1992, ISBN 3-88295-179-6, p. 100.
  3. ^ Stefan Amzoll: Musik im Rundfunk der Weimarer Republik. Studies on the genesis of media-specific art production and mediation. Dissertation A, Humboldt-Universität, Berlin 1988.
  4. ^ Gilbert Stöck: New Music in the districts of Halle and Magdeburg at the time of the GDR. Compositions, politics, institutions. Schröder, Leipzig 2008, ISBN 978-3-926196-50-7,pp. 90–298f.
  5. ^ High state awards on 1 May. In Berliner Zeitung, 27 April 1978, 34th year, 99th edition, p. 4.
  6. ^ Susanne Hepperle: Durchsetzung des westdeutschen Ordnungsmodells. Rundfunk und Fernsehen. In Roland Czada [de], Gerhard Lehmbruch (ed.): Transformationspfade in Ostdeutschland. Beiträge zur sektoralen Vereinigungspolitik. Campus-Verlag, Frankfurt among others 1998, ISBN 3-593-35868-9, pp. 191–238, here p. 211 / Fn. 42.
  7. ^ Short portrait at exit-online.org, retrieved 9 May 2020
  8. ^ Otto Köhler: The embezzled station. The decline of an interesting radio program after the fall of the Berlin Wall: The misery of DS culture. In Die Zeit, 12/1993, 19 March 1993.
  9. ^ Acht neue Mitglieder für Rundfunkrat gewählt. In Neue Zeit, 28 November 1992, 48th year, issue 278, p. 19.
  10. ^ Publications by Stefan Amzoll in Theater der Zeit, retrieved 9 May 2020
  11. ^ Publications by Stefan Amzoll in UTOPIE kreativ, listed in issue 129/130 (July/August 2001), pp. 659–660
  12. ^ a b Nachruf: Mit den besten Ideen und Worten. In the Junge Welt 31 October 2019, p. 11.
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