The iUniversity
Section Nine
Studies in Music Drama
Richard Wagner’s innovations completely transformed musical stage presentation. He was the first to darken the auditorium during performance, with doors shut to inhibit latecomers from entering, and the first to specify that applause be reserved for the end of an act.
Richard Wagner (1813-1883) is probably the most misunderstood composer who ever lived. In seeking opinions either about the man or his music, often one will find either pure adulation, or absolute disgust. Even while he lived, Wagner was hated by a great many people, the object of scorn and ridicule, mostly because of what was written about him in the mass media and books of the time.
Wagner Takes the Baton From Beethoven
During the last five years of his life, Beethoven’s musical output rose to a new level, as witnessed by piano sonatas Opus 109, 110, and 111, composed in 1820 through 1822; the Mass in D Major Opus 123, also known as Missa solemnis, composed in 1823; Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Opus 125, composed in 1824; and Beethoven’s last six string quartets Opus 127, 130, 131, 132, 133, and 135, composed in 1825 and 1826.
When the six string quartets were first performed, the music was far beyond the comprehension of musicians and audiences of the time. One musician commented, “We know there is something there, but we do not know what it is.” Composer Louis Spohr called them “indecipherable, uncorrected horrors”. But on the otherhand, upon listening to a performance of the Opus 131 string quartet, the composer Franz Schubert remarked, “After this, what is left for us to write?”. Schubert’s last musical wish was to hear it played, which he did on 14 November 1828, five days before his death. Johannes Brahms held Beethoven’s late string quartets in profound reverence, regarding them as part of the absolute pinnacle of musical achievement.
Richard Wagner was one of the first composers to recognize the transformative power of Beethoven’s last works. In 1846, he conducted Beethoven’s ninth symphony in Dresden, and he wrote about that in his autobiography:
“I truly yearned to perform the Ninth Symphony and was emboldened in choosing this work for our concert by the fact that it was almost unknown in Dresden.
“When word of this reached the orchestra’s representatives who had to manage and enlarge the pension fund, they were so horrified that they arranged an audience with our General Director von Lüttichau and asked him to exercise his high authority to deter me from my plan. They explained that performing this symphony would be detrimental to the pension fund because the work was in disrepute in Dresden and the audience would stay away from the concert.
“Many years before, Reissiger had conducted the Ninth Symphony in a concert for the benefit of the poor, and he himself had confirmed that it had been a complete flop. So I needed all my passion and eloquence to overcome our director’s initial reservations. As for the orchestral representatives, I heard that they were complaining throughout the city about my recklessness. This left me no other choice for the moment than to break off relations with them. In order to make them ashamed of their opinion, I decided to prepare the public for the work and my performance of it in a manner that would create a furor, attract an especially large audience, and ensure the work’s success at the box office—the very thing that was feared to be under threat.
“The hall was already overflowing at the dress rehearsal. My colleague [Reissiger] committed the incredible idiocy of inciting members of the audience against the symphony, convincing them of the regrettable aberration that Beethoven had committed in composing it.[1]
Richard Wagner held Beethoven’s final six string quartets in profound reverence, viewing them as the highest expression of instrumental music and the crucial link toward his own musical philosophy. They were deeply subjective, visionary works that bypassed traditional forms to express a “superhuman” inner world. Wagner wrote about, championed, and conducted the music from Beethoven’s final years, but he considered the six quartets to be among the greatest musical compositions of all time… seeing them as the forerunner of his own harmonic language. The late quartets, particularly in their use of “unending melody” and intense chromaticism, paved the way for Wagner’s own Tristan und Isolde.
Wagner believed these quartets marked a turn away from the external world toward a deeper, spiritual interior one, partly aided by Beethoven’s deafness, which Wagner believed allowed the composer’s imagination to flourish. He also viewed the late quartets as a “watershed” moment in music history, regarding them as the peak of instrumental music.
Of the six late quartets, Beethoven’s favorite was the Opus 131 in C♯ minor, which he rated as his most perfect single work. Upon obtaining the score of this quartet, Wagner was immediately struck by its “long-sustained pure fifths”, describing them as the “spiritual keynote of my own life”. In his 1870 essay “Beethoven”, Wagner described the opening Adagio of the Opus 131 quartet as “The saddest thing ever said in tones”. He praised it for its immense emotional depth and the longing it expressed, which he felt was a profound communion with God.
[1] an extract from Wagner’s autobiography Mein Leben. This text from Richard Wagner’s Essays on Conducting by Chris Walton
Videos
Quotes by Richard Wagner
“The most burning need of the present generation is that of Universal Human Love; and we can but look with full assurance to a future element in life in which this love must needs give birth to works undreamt of as yet, works that shall turn those scraps and leaving of Greek art to unregarded toys for fractious children.”
“Art and Climate” by Richard Wagner
“I have no connection whatever with the present anti-Semitic movement. An article of mine about to appear in Bayreuther Blätter will state this in such a way that it should be impossible for intelligent people to identify me with this movement.”
Letter to Angelo Neumann Feb. 23, 1881
Learn More About Wagner on Musical Kaleidoscope – – >
Traces of Wagner
Photos by Don Robertson (1999)
Scores
Richard Wagner – Music Dramas
WS-001 – Tannhauser (415 pages)
WS-002 – Parsifal (589 pages)
WS-003 – Tristan und Isolde (439 pages)
WS-004 – Lohengrin (395 pages)
WS-005 – Das Rheingold (335 pages)
WS-006 – Die Walküre (445 pages)
WS-007 – Siegfried (445 pages)
WS-008 – Götterdammerung (615 pages)
WS-009 – Die Meistersinger Overture and 1st Act (440 pages)
WS-010 – Die Meistersinger Act 2 (365 pages)
WS-011 – Die Meistersinger 3rd Act (626 pages)
Richard Wagner – Siegfried Idyll
WS-012 – Siegfried Idyll (30 pages)
Other Scores
OS-001 – Jacques Offenbach – Tales of Hoffman Act 1 & 2 (195 pages)
OS-002 – Jacques Offenbach – Tales of Hoffman Act 3 & 4 (210 pages)
Book Reprints
Authored by Richard Wagner
BW-001 – Mein Leben (Wagner, Richard) (English translation) Volume 1
BW-002 – Mein Leben (Wagner, Richard) (English translation) Volume 2
BW-003 – Wagner – Mein Leben Volume 1
BW-004 – Wagner – Mein Leben Volume 2
BW-005 – Richard Wagner’s Prose Works (Wagner, Richard) Volume 1
BW-006 – Richard Wagner’s Prose Works (Wagner, Richard) Volume 2
BW-007 – Richard Wagner’s Prose Works (Wagner, Richard) Volume 3
BW-008 – Richard Wagner’s Prose Works (Wagner, Richard) Volume 4
BW-009 – Richard Wagner’s Prose Works (Wagner, Richard) Volume 5
BW-010 – Richard Wagner’s Prose Works (Wagner, Richard) Volume 6
BW-011 – Richard Wagner’s Prose Works (Wagner, Richard) Volume 7
BW-012 – Richard Wagner’s Prose Works (Wagner, Richard) Volume 8
BW-013 – Correspondence of Wagner and Liszt Volume 1 (1889)
BW-014 – Correspondence of Wagner and Liszt Volume 2 (1889)
BW-015 – Family Letters of Richard Wagner (Trans. English by Ellis) (1911)
BW-016 – The Nibelung’s Ring (Trans. Alfred Forman in 1877)
Books about Richard Wagner
and Others Associated With his Life
BW-100 – Aus dem Opernleben der Gegenwart (Hanslick, Eduard) (1901)
BW-101 – Vincent D’Indy – Parsifal
BW-102 – Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (Dinger, Hugo)
BW-103 – Die Moderne Oper (Hanslick, Eduard) (1892)
BW-104 – Hans von Bülow (Lipsius, Ida Marie) (1911)
BW-105 – Hans von Bülow (Zabel, Eugen) (1894)
BW-106 – Parsifal, a Study (Boughton, Rutland)
BW-107 – Richard Wagner (Landré, Willem)
BW-108 – Richard Wagner by Houston Stewart Chamberlain (1897)
BW-109 – Richard Wagner et Tannhäuser à Paris, by Charles Baudelaire
BW-110 – Richard Wagner- His Tendencies and Theories (Dannreuther, Edward) (1873)
BW-111 – Richard Wagners Bühnenfestspiel ‘Der Ring des Nibelungen’ (Famintsyn, Aleksandr)
BW-112 – Studies in the Wagnerian Drama (Krehbiel, Henry Edward) (1898)
BW-113 – The Perfect Wagnerite (Shaw, George Bernard)
BW-114 – The Ring of the Nibelungs (Cui, César) (1889)
BW-115 – Wagner 1899 by Charles A. Lidgey (1911)
BW-116 – Wagner as I Knew Him (Praeger, Ferdinand) (1892)
BW-116 – Wagner as Man and Artist (Ernest Newman 1924)
BW-117 – Wagner wie ich ihn kannte (Praeger, Ferdinand) (1892)
BW-118 – Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung (Gustav Kobbé) (1889)
Offenbach’s Tales of Hoffmann – The Movie
Read About “The tales of Hoffmann” – – >
Richard Wagner – Music Dramas
Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen
The way that Wagner wanted it to be staged! – Beautiful performances by the Metropolitan Opera
* English Subtitles *
* German Subtitles *
Wagner’s Influence on French Culture
by Don Robertson (2006)
Only a handful of German composers maintained the Wagner mystical tradition, mainly the great Austrian composer Anton Bruckner. The composers Richard Strauss and Gustav Mahler took Wagner’s influence to create a stress-filled anxious kind of music, and this led the introduction of the discordant classical music of the 20th century, initiated by Mahler’s protégé, Arnold Schoenberg.
It was the French that understood Wagner, not the aristocracy and the institutions: he was a dispised man in the French mainstream. It was the young artists who recognized Wagner and took his work to a new level, through art, poetry, and music.
The importance and magnitude of the artistic movement that took place in France during the last decades of the 19th Century cannot be denied. It created a transformation in the evolution of art, poetry and music.
To better grasp what was taking place in France at this time, it is necessary to understand the influence that the music and writings of Richard Wagner had upon many young creative artists living and working in Paris. The first performance of Wagner’s revolutionary work Tannhaüser that took place in Paris in 1861 created such a scandal among the entrenched establishment that another Wagner music drama would not be staged in Paris until 1887 (a performance of Lohengrin directed by Charles Lamoureux, with the help of Vincent d’Indy). Despite the lack of a French Wagnerian staging for twenty-six years, French artists, composers, and poets listened to piano reductions of Wagner’s music and consumed his writings.
The world premiere of Wagner’s fifteen-hour-long ring cycle took place in his new theater in Bayreuth, Germany in August 1876, and a handful of French composers made pilgrimages to this almost holy shrine. Upon returning, they talked and wrote profusely about what had taken place; Saint-Saëns, for example, wrote five articles about the Bayreuth experience and Catulle Mendès three. A few years after, concerts of Wagner’s music began to take place in Paris. Those at the Eden Theater, conducted by Charles Lamoureux, resembled holy services, to which painters like Blanche and Valloton, poets and writers such as Mallarmé and Proust, and many musicians and composers flocked.
By the mid-1880s, the music and thinking of the now-deceased Wagner had ignited nearly the entire intellectual and artistic movement in Paris, including the most distinguished and the most gifted artists, writers, and composers. Some, in addition to attending the Eden Theater concerts, made pilgrimages to Bayreuth. The effect of Wagner’s music was deeply felt. Ravel and Chabrier had similar experiences during performances of the prelude to Tristan und Isolde: the music so moved them that they broke into tears and sobbed. Composer Guillaume Lekeu fainted during an 1889 Bayreuth performance, and Vincent d’Indy broke down and wept while experiencing the death of Siegfied in Götterdamerung.
Wagner’s influence on French music was overwhelming. Testimony to this were Wagnerian-inspired music dramas, including Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande, Bruneau’s Le Rêve, Chapentier’s Louise, Reyer’s Sigurd, Chausson’s Le Roi Arthus, and d’Indy’s Fervaal. Additionally, composers such as Franck, Gounod, Lekeu, Bizet, Massenet, Saint-Saëns, Duparc, Fauré, Delibes, and Ravel were all inspired by Wagner, as well as the poets and writers Villiers de l’Isle-Adam, LaForgue (who influenced Eliot and Pound), Valéry, Colette, Dujardin, de Nerval, Gautier, Mallarmé, Proust, Verlaine, Ghil, Baudelaire, Morice, and Vignier. Among painters were Blanche, Valloton, Gauguin, Cézanne, Bazille, Fantin-Latour, Whistler, and Doré.