In addition to being a political and economic battle, the confrontation between the
United States and the
Soviet Union was a clash of cultures.
Communist party leaders depicted the United States as a cultural black
hole and cited their own significant culture as evidence that they were the inheritors of the
European Enlightenment (
Wilford 100).
Americans, on the other hand accused the
Soviets of “disregarding the inherent value of culture” and subjugating art to the controlling policies of a totalitarian political system.
The United States saw itself as being saddled with the responsibility of preserving and fostering the best cultural traditions of western civilization, as many
European artists sought refuge in the United States before, during, and after
World War II (Wilford
101).
Europe and European Universities turned out to be in the epicenter of the
Cultural Cold War.
In
1950, the
Central Intelligence Agency (
CIA) surreptitiously created the
Congress for Cultural Freedom (
CCF) to counter the Cominform’s “
peace offensive”(Wilford 101).
The Congress had “offices in thirty-five countries, employed dozens of personnel, published over twenty prestige magazines, held art exhibitions, owned a news and features service, organized high-profile international conferences, and rewarded musicians and artists with prizes and public performances” at its peak (
Saunders 2000). The intent of these endeavors was to “showcase” US and European high culture, including not just musical works but paintings, ballets, and other artistic avenues, for the benefit of neutralist foreign intellectuals (Wilford 102).
Many
US government organizations used classical symphonies,
Broadway musicals, and jazz performances (including musicians such as
Dizzy Gillespie) in attempts to persuade audiences worldwide
America was a cradle for the growth of music (Wilford 108-109).
The CIA and, in turn the CCF, displayed reluctance to patronize America’s musical avant-garde, experimental, including artists such as
Milton Babbitt and
John Cage. The CCF took a more conservative approach, as outlined under its
General Secretary,
Nicolas Nabokov, and concentrated its efforts on presenting older European works that had been banned or by the
Communist Party (Wilford
109).
In
1952, the CCF sponsored the “
Festival of Twentieth-Century
Masterpieces of
Modern Arts” in
Paris. Over the next thirty days, the festival hosted nine separate orchestras which performed works by over 70 composers, many of whom had been dismissed by communist critics as “degenerate” and “sterile,”; included in this group were composers such as
Dmitri Shostakovich and
Claude Debussy (Wilford 109). The festival opened with a performance of
Stravinsky’s
The Rite of Spring, as performed by the
Boston Symphony Orchestra (109).
Thomas Braden, a senior member of the CIA said: “The Boston Symphony Orchestra won more acclaim for the US in Paris than
John Foster Dulles or
Dwight D. Eisenhower could have brought with a hundred speeches” (Wilford
110)
The CIA in particular utilized a wide range of musical genres, including Broadway musicals, and even the jazz of Dizzy Gillespie, to convince music enthusiasts across the globe that the
U.S. was committed to the musical arts as much as they were to the literary and visual arts. Under the leadership of
Nabokov, the CCF organized impressive musical events that were anti-communist in nature, transporting America’s prime musical talents to
Berlin, Paris, and
London to provide a steady series of performances and festivals. In order to promote cooperation between artists and the CCF, and thus extend their ideals, the CCF provided financial aid to artists in need of monetary assistance.
However, the CCF failed to offer much support for classical music associated with the likes of
Bach,
Mozart, and Beethoven because it was deemed an “authoritarian” tool of
Soviet communism and wartime
German and
Italian fascism. The CCF also distanced itself from experimental musical avant-garde artists such as
Milton Babbit and John Cage, preferring to focus on earlier European works that had been banned or condemned as “formalist” by
Soviet authorities.
During the
Cold War,
Louis Armstrong was promoted around the world as a
symbol of
US culture, racial progress, and foreign policy. It was during the
Jim Crow Era that
Armstrong was appointed a
Goodwill Jazz Ambassador, and his job entailed representing the
American government’s commitment to advance the liberties of
African Americans at home, while also working to endorse the social freedom of those abroad.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_CIA_and_the_Cultural_Cold_War
- published: 05 Mar 2015
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