Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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The idea came from a piece of tabloid-style "no smoke without fire". When he was dying, he did accept a commission to compose an Austrian Nazi cantata. He did that to make sure his family were left in peace, but he made sure that he never wrote a note of the thing. At his death there were no sketches for any such work. He found Nazism and its perpetrators anathema.
His work is neglected because it needs full concentration from the listener to reveal its secrets. It is "caviar to the general", and lacks the populist clout of Mahler, for example. His music will never be popular, I think, but will always appeal strongly to a few people prepared to put in the effort of getting to grips with it.
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