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Richard Wagner

 
Who2 Profiles:

Richard Wagner, Composer / Writer

  • Born: 22 May 1813
  • Birthplace: Leipzig, Germany
  • Died: 13 February 1883
  • Best Known As: German composer of Der Ring des Nibelungen

Name at birth: Wilhelm Richard Wagner

Richard Wagner is a 19th century German composer and poet famous for taking opera to new dramatic heights in such works as Der Fliegende Holländer (1841) and Der Ring des Nibelungen (1876). Wagner began his career as a music director, and by the 1840s was gaining recognition for his musical compositions and operas. During the 1850s he lived in exile in Zürich, unwelcome in Germany because of his associations with revolutionaries in Dresden. Although he was composing what would become some of the most famous pieces in music history, Wagner struggled financially until the 1860s, when Ludwig II of Bavaria began supporting him. In 1871 Wagner settled in Bayreuth, Germany and founded a theater. A critical success, he was nonetheless forced to travel as a guest conductor and raise funds for his theater. A key figure in classical music, Wagner is known for his powerful dramatic operas based on medieval legends and for his influential writings on music and drama. He is also a controversial figure because of his hostile, anti-semitic writings and because some of his music and dramatic themes were appropriated by Adolf Hitler and the Nazis during World War II. His musical works include Tristan and Isolde (1857-59), Siegfried Idyll (1870) and Parsifal (1878-82).

Wagner's second wife, Cosima, was the daughter of Hungarian composer Franz Liszt... Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Nibelung's Ring) is a fifteen-hour cycle made up of Das Rheingold (The Rhine Gold), Die Walküre (The Valkyrie), Siegfried and Götterdämmerung (Twilight of the Gods).

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:

Wilhelm Richard Wagner

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(born May 22, 1813, Leipzig, Ger. — died Feb. 13, 1883, Venice, Italy) German composer. His childhood was divided between Dresden and Leipzig, where he had his first composition lessons; his teacher refused payment because of his talent. His first opera, The Fairies (1834), was followed by The Ban on Love (1836); the premiere performance was so unprepared that the event was a fiasco, and he henceforth determined not to settle for modest productions. The success of Rienzi (1840) led him to be more adventurous in The Flying Dutchman (1843) and even more so in Tannhäuser (1845). Caught up in the political turmoil of 1848, he was forced to flee Dresden for Zürich. During this enforced vacation, he wrote influential essays, asserting (following G.W.F. Hegel) that music had reached a limit after Ludwig van Beethoven and that the "artwork of the future" would unite music and theatre in a Gesamtkunstwerk ("total artwork"). In 1850 he saw Lohengrin produced. He had begun his most ambitious work, The Ring of the Nibelung, a four-opera cycle. The need for large-scale unity brought him to the concept of the leitmotiv. He ceased work on the Ring's third opera, Siegfried, in the throes of an adulterous love with Mathilde Wesendonk and wrote an opera of forbidden love, Tristan und Isolde (1859), which also seemed to break the bonds of tonality. He published the Ring librettos in 1863, with a plea for financial support, and Louis II of Bavaria responded, inviting Wagner to complete the work in Munich. From the late 1860s to the early 1880s, Wagner completed work on Die Meistersinger, Siegfried, Götterdämmerung, and the long-deferred Parsifal, as he also oversaw the building of the great festival theatre at Bayreuth (1872 – 76) that would be dedicated to his operas. His astonishing works made Wagner one of the most influential and consequential figures in the history of Western music and, indeed, of Western culture. In the late 20th century his undoubted musical stature was challenged somewhat by the strongly racist and anti-Semitic views expressed in his writings, and evidence of anti-Semitism in his operas was increasingly documented.

For more information on Wilhelm Richard Wagner, visit Britannica.com.

Oxford Grove Music Encyclopedia:

(Wilhelm) Richard Wagner

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(b Leipzig, 22 May 1813; d Venice, 13 Feb 1883). German composer. He was the son either of the police actuary Friedrich Wagner, who died soon after his birth, or of his mother's friend the painter, actor and poet Ludwig Geyer, whom she married in August 1814. He went to school in Dresden and then Leipzig; at 15 he wrote a play, at 16 his first compositions. In 1831 he went to Leipzig University, also studying music with the Thomaskantor, C.T. Weinlig; a symphony was written and successfully performed in 1832. In 1833 he became chorus master at the Würzburg theatre and wrote the text and music of his first opera, Die Feen; this remained unheard, but his next, Das Liebesverbot, written in 1833, was staged in 1836. By then he had made his début as an opera conductor with a small company which however went bankrupt soon after performing his opera. He married the singer Minna Planer in 1836 and went with her to Königsberg where he became musical director at the theatre, but he soon left and took a similar post in Riga where he began his next opera, Rienzi, and did much conducting, especially of Beethoven.

In 1839 they slipped away from creditors in Riga, by ship to London and then to Paris, where he was befriended by Meyerbeer and did hack-work for publishers and theatres. He also worked on the text and music of an opera on the ‘Flying Dutchman’ legend; but in 1842 Rienzi, a large-scale opera with a political theme set in imperial Rome, was accepted for Dresden and Wagner went there for its highly successful première. Its theme reflects something of Wagner's own politics (he was involved in the semi-revolutionary, intellectual ‘Young Germany’ movement). Die fliegende Holländer (‘The Flying Dutchman’), given the next year, was less well received, though a much tauter musical drama, beginning to move away from the ‘number opera’ tradition and strong in its evocation of atmosphere, especially the supernatural and the raging seas (inspired by the stormy trip from Riga). Wagner was now appointed joint Kapellmeister at the Dresden court.

The theme of redemption through a woman's love, in the Dutchman, recurs in Wagner's operas (and perhaps his life). In 1845 Tannhäuser was completed and performed and Lohengrin begun. In both Wagner moves towards a more continuous texture with semi-melodic narrative and a supporting orchestral fabric helping convey its sense. In 1848 he was caught up in the revolutionary fervour and the next year fled to Weimar (where Liszt helped him) and then Switzerland (there was also a spell in France); politically suspect, he was unable to enter Germany for 11 years. In Zürich, he wrote in 1850-51 his ferociously anti-semitic Jewishness in Music (some of it an attack on Meyerbeer) and his basic statement on musical theatre, Opera and Drama; he also began sketching the text and music of a series of operas on the Nordic and Germanic sagas. By 1853 the text for this four-night cycle (to be The Nibelung's Ring) was written, printed and read to friends - who included a generous patron Otto Wesendonck, and his wife Mathilde, who loved him, wrote poems that he set, and inspired Tristan und Isolde - conceived in 1854 and completed five years later, by which time more than half of The Ring was written. In 1855 he conducted in London; tension with Minna led to his going to Paris in 1858-9. 1860 saw them both in Paris, where the next year he revived Tannhäuser in revised form for French taste, but it was literally shouted down, partly for political reasons. In 1862 he was allowed freely into Germany; that year he and the ill and childless Minna parted (she died in 1866). In 1863 he gave concerts in Vienna, Russia etc; the next year King Ludwig II invited him to settle in Bavaria, near Munich, discharging his debts and providing him with money.

Wagner did not stay long in Bavaria, because of opposition at Ludwig's court, especially when it was known that he was having an affair with Cosima, the wife of the conductor Hans van Bülow (she was Liszt's daughter); Bülow (who condoned it) directed the Tristan première in 1865. Here Wagner, in depicting every shade of sexual love, developed a style richer and more chromatic than anyone had previously attempted, using dissonance and its urge for resolution in a continuing pattern to build up tension and a sense of profound yearning; Act 2 is virtually a continuous love duet, touching every emotion from the tenderest to the most passionately erotic. Before returning to the Ring, Wagner wrote, during the mid-1860s, The Mastersingers of Nuremberg: this is in a quite different vein, a comedy set in 16th-century Nuremberg, in which a noble poet-musician wins, through his victory in a music contest - a victory over pedants who stick to the foolish old rules - the hand of his beloved, fame and riches. (The analogy with Wagner's view of himself is obvious.) The music is less chromatic than that of Tristan, warm and good-humoured, often contrapuntal; unlike the mythological figures of his other operas the characters here have real humanity.

The opera was given, under Bülow, in 1868; Wagner had been living at Tribschen, near Lucerne, since 1866, and that year Cosima formally joined him; they had two children when in 1870 they married. The first two Ring operas, Das Rheingold and Die Walküre, were given in Munich, on Ludwig's insistence, in 1869 and 1870; Wagner however was anxious to have a special festival opera house for the complete cycle and spent much energy trying to raise money for it. Eventually, when he had almost despaired, Ludwig came to the rescue and in 1874 - the year the fourth opera, Götterdämmerung, was finished - provided the necessary support. The house was built at Bayreuth, designed by Wagner as the home for his concept of the Gesamtkunstwerk (‘total art work’- an alliance of music, poetry, the visual arts, dance etc). The first festival, an artistic triumph but a financial disaster - was held there in 1876, when the complete Ring was given. The Ring is about 18 hours music, held together by an immensely detailed network of themes, or leitmotifs, each of which has some allusive meaning: a character, a concept, an object etc. They change and develop as the ideas within the opera develop. They are heard in the orchestra, not merely as ‘labels’ but carrying the action, sometimes informing the listener of connections of ideas or the thoughts of those on the stage. There are no ‘numbers’ in the Ring; the musical texture is made up of narrative and dialogue, in which the orchestra partakes. The work is not merely a story about gods, humans and dwarfs but embodies reflections on every aspect of the human condition. It has been interpreted as socialist, fascist, Jungian, prophetic, as a parable about industrial society, and much more.

In 1877 Wagner conducted in London, hoping to recoup Bayreuth losses; later in the year he began a new opera, Parsifal. He continued his musical and polemic writings, concentrating on ‘racial purity’. He spent most of 1880 in Italy. Parsifal, a sacred festival drama, again treating redemption but through the acts of communion and renunciation on the stage, was given at the Bayreuth Festival in 1882. He went to Venice for the winter, and died there in February of the heart trouble that had been with him for some years. His body was returned by gondola and train for burial at Bayreuth. Wagner did more than any other composer to change music, and indeed to change art and thinking about it. His life and his music arouse passions like no other composer s. His works are hated as much as they are worshipped; but no-one denies their greatness.

works:
Dramatic music
  • Die Feen (1833, perf. 1888)
  • Das Liebesverbot (1836)
  • Rienzi (1842)
  • Der fliegende Holländer (1843)
  • Tannhäuser (1845)
  • Lohengrin (1850)
  • Tristan und Isolde (1865)
  • Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (1868)
  • Der Ring des Nibelungen (1876): Das Rheingold (1869), Die Walküre (1870), Siegfried (1876), Götterdämmerung (1876)
  • Parsifal (1882)
  • incidental music
Orchestral music
  • Sym., C (1832)
  • Siegfried Idyll (1870)
  • ovs., marches
Piano music
  • 3 sonatas
  • Fantasia (1831)
  • other pieces
Vocal music
  • Das Liebesmahl der Apostel, biblical scene (1843)
  • other choral pieces
  • 5 songs to texts by Mathilde Wesendonck (1858)
  • songs, arias


Gale Encyclopedia of Biography:

Richard Wagner

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The German operatic composer Richard Wagner (1813-1883) was undoubtedly the most important seminal figure in 19th-century music, Beethoven notwithstanding. Wagner was also a crucial figure in 19th-century cultural history for both his criticism and polemical writing.

Richard Wagner was born on May 22, 1813, in Leipzig into an unassuming family. His father died shortly after Richard's birth, and within the year his mother married Ludwig Geyer. There is still some controversy as to whether or not Geyer, an itinerant actor, was Wagner's real father. Wagner's musical training was largely left to chance until he was 18, when he studied with Theodor Weinlig in Leipzig for a year. He began his career in 1833 as choral director in Würzburg and composed his early works in imitation of German romantic compositions. Beethoven was his major idol at this time.

Wagner wrote his first opera, Die Feen (The Fairies), in 1833, but it was not produced until after the composer's death. He was music director of the theater in Magdeburg from 1834 to 1836, where his next work, Das Liebesverbot (Forbidden Love), loosely based on Shakespeare's Measure for Measure was performed in 1836. That year he married Minna Planner, a singer-actress active in provincial theatrical life.

In 1837 Wagner became the first music director of the theater in Riga, where he remained until 1839. He then set out for Paris, where he hoped to make his fortune. While in Paris, he developed an intense hatred for French musical culture that lasted the remainder of his life, regardless of how often he attempted to have a Parisian success. It was at this time that Wagner, in financial desperation, sold the scenario for Der fliegende Holländer (The Flying Dutchman) to the Paris Opéra for use by another composer. Wagner later set another version of this tale.

Disillusioned by his lack of success, Wagner returned to Germany, settling in Dresden in 1842, where he was in charge of the music for the court chapel. Rienzi, a grand opera in imitation of the French style, enjoyed a modest success; the Overture is still popular. In 1845 Tannhäuser was premiered in Dresden; this proved the first undoubted success of Wagner's career. In November of the same year he finished the poem for Lohengrin and began composition early in 1846. While at work on Lohengrin he also made plans for his tetralogy, Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelungen), being captivated by Norse sagas. In 1845 he prepared the scenario for the first drama of the tetralogy to be written, Siegfried's Tod (Siegfried's Death), which later became Die Götterdämmerung (The Twilight of the Gods).

Years of Exile

Wagner had to flee Dresden in 1849 in the aftermath of the Revolution of 1848. He settled in Switzerland, first in Zurich and then near Lucerne. He remained in Switzerland for the most part for the next 15 years without steady employment, banished from Germany and forbidden access to German theatrical life. During this time he worked on the Ring, which dominated his creative life over the next 2 decades.

The first production of Lohengrin took place in Weimar under Franz Liszt's direction in 1850 (Wagner was not to see Lohengrin until 1861). By this time Wagner was moderately notorious as a polemicist, and his most fundamental work of theory, Opera and Drama, dates from 1850-1851. In it he discusses the significance of legend for the theater and how to write singable poetry, and he presents his ideas with regard to the realization of the "total work of art" which would effectively change the course of theatrical life in Germany if not the world.

The year 1850 also saw publication of one of Wagner's most scurrilous tracts, The Jew in Music, in which he viciously attacked the very existence of the Jewish composer and musician, particularly in German society. Anti-Semitism remained a hallmark of Wagner's philosophy the rest of his life.

Between 1850 and 1865 Wagner fashioned most of the material to which he owes his reputation. He purposefully turned aside from actual composition to plan an epic cycle of such grandeur and proportion as had never been created before. In 1851 he wrote the poem for Der junge Siegfried (Young Siegfried), the work now known as Siegfried, to prepare the way for Götterdämmerung. He realized he would need not only this drama to clarify his other work but two additional dramas as well, and he sketched the remaining poems for the Ring by the end of 1851. He completed Das Rheingold (The Rhinegold) in 1852 after he had revised the poem for Die Walküre (The Valkyrie).

In 1853 Wagner formally commenced composition on the Rheingold; he completed the scoring the following year and then began serious work on the Walküre, which was finished in 1856. At this time he was toying with the notion of writing the drama Tristan and Isolde. In 1857 he finished the composition of Act II of Siegfried and gave himself over entirely to Tristan. This work was completed in 1859, but it was mounted in Munich only in 1865.

Last Years

In 1860 Wagner received permission to reenter Germany except for Saxony. He was granted full amnesty in 1862. That year he began the music for Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (The Mastersingers of Nuremburg), which he had first thought of in 1845. He resumed composition on Siegfried in 1865 and began sketching what would eventually become Parsifal, also a vague possibility since the mid-1840s. He began Parsifal at the urging of the Bavarian monarch, Ludwig II, then Wagner's patron. The Meistersinger was completed in 1867; the first performance took place in Munich the following year. Only then did he pick up the threads of the Ring and resume work on Act III of Siegfried, which was finished in September 1869, a month that also saw the first performance of the Rheingold. He wrote the music for Götterdämmerung from 1869 to 1874.

The first entire Ring cycle (Rheingold, Walküre, Siegfried, and Götterdämmerung) was given at the Festspielhaus, the shrine Wagner built for himself at Bayreuth, in 1876, over 30 years after the idea for it had first come to mind. He finished Parsifal, his final drama, in 1882. Wagner died on Feb. 13, 1883, in Venice and was buried at Bayreuth.

Philosophy of the Ring

The Ring is central to Wagner's career. Here he wished to present new ideas of morality and human activity that would completely alter the course of history. He envisioned a world made entirely free from subservience to supernatural bondage, which he believed had adversely affected Western civilization from ancient Greece to the present. Wagner also held that at the source of all human activity was fear, which must be purged so that man can live the perfect life. In the Ring he attempted to set forth the standards for superior humans, those beings who would dominate individuals less fortunate; in turn, such lesser mortals would recognize their own inferior status and yield to the radiance offered by the perfect hero. The implications inherent in a quest for moral and racial purity are vital to Wagner's intentions in the Ring.

It is interesting to note that Wagner believed it was only by submitting completely to the sensuous experience that man could be liberated from the restraints imposed by rationality. However valuable the intellect might be, the rational life was regarded as a hindrance to achieving the fullest development of human awareness. Only when perfect man and perfect woman came together could a transcendental heroic image be created. Siegfried and Brünnhilde together are invincible after each has submitted to the other; apart they are imperfect.

There is no charity or idealism present in the Wagnerian myth world. The perfect ones exult only in each other. All men must recognize the superiority of certain creatures and then bow to their will. Man may quest for his destiny, but he must submit to the will of the superior one if the two come into conflict. In the Ring Wagner wanted to turn his back upon the civility inherent in the Hellenic-Judeo-Christian world. He preferred a realm dominated by the strength and savagery exemplified in the Norse sagas. The implications for the future of Germany were immense.

Philosophy of Other Operas

In Tristan Wagner rejected the affirmative way he developed in the Ring. Instead, he explored the dark side of love in order to plunge to the depths of negative experience. Tristan and Isolde, liberated and not doomed by a love potion they drink, willingly destroy a kingdom in order to love and to live; the sensual power of love is seen here as a destructive force, and the musical style of devious chromaticism and overwhelming orchestral pulsation is perfect for the messages of the drama.

Wagner's egomania, never tolerable to anyone save those who could blind themselves totally to his flaws, came to the fore in the Meistersinger. The tale of the young hero-singer who conquers the old order and forces a new, sensually more exciting style upon the tradition-bound Nuremburg society is the tale of the Ring in a slightly different guise. (Wagner openly claimed Tristan to be the Ring in microcosm.) It is obvious in the Meistersinger that Wagner identifies himself with the messianic figure of a young German poet and singer who wins the prize and is finally accepted as the leader of a new society.

In Parsifal Wagner identified himself even more intensely with the hero as the savior, the world's redeemer. The mysteries celebrated in Parsifal are those prepared for the glory of Wagner himself and not for any god.

Musical Language

The scope of Wagner's vision is as breathtaking as his ideas and metaphysics are repugnant. Without the music his dramas would still be milestones in the history of Western thought. With the music, however, Wagner's importance is greatly magnified. He conceived a musical language that would most effectively present his philosophies. He intended to batter down the resistant forces of reason by means of the music. Ideally, there would be an unending melody in which the voice and text are but part of the fabric, united with a magnificent orchestral web which becomes the action at a distinctly musical pace. The verbal language, often very obscure and tortured in syntax, is acceptable only through the music.

For Wagner, music was in no sense additive, tacked onto the dramas after completion, anymore than it was an exercise in formal rhetoric, mere "art for art's sake." Music could bind all life, art, reality, and illusion together into one symbiotic union that would then work its own unique magic upon an audience. It is no accident that Wagner's musical language is intended to dethrone reason and to ask for unquestioning acceptance of the composer's beliefs. In Wagner's reading of Schopenhauer, the musical ideal in his dramas would be not a reflection of the world but would be that very world itself.

Personal Characteristics

Such a summary of Wagner's creative life hardly hints at the extraordinary complications of his personal life which, in turn, affected his dramas. Wagner was that rare individual - a truly charismatic figure who overcame all adversities. During the years in Switzerland he managed to live for the most part on charity by means of the most amazing conniving and manipulation of people conceivable. The Wesendonck family in particular contributed to his well-being, and Mathilde Wesendonck, one of Wagner's many mistresses, was credited with partially inspiring Tristan.

Wagner's life after leaving Saxony was a constant series of intrigues, harangues, and struggles to overcome the indifference of the world, to find the ideal woman worthy of his love, and to be the worthy recipient of the benefits offered by the perfect patron. Cosima Liszt von Bülow was the answer to his quest for the ideal female, subservient and fanatically devoted to his well-being. Although Wagner and Minna had lived apart for some time, Wagner did not marry Cosima until 1870, almost a decade after Minna's death. Over 30 years her husband's junior, Cosima was to be the dominating, guiding spirit in the Wagnerian shrine at Bayreuth until her death in 1930.

The perfect patron proved to be Ludwig II, who literally rescued Wagner from debtors' prison and brought the composer to Munich with a near carte blanche for life and creativity. Once salvaged, however, Wagner was so offensive to all save the blindly adoring young monarch that he was forced to flee within 2 years. Ludwig, despite eventually disillusionment, remained a loyal supporter of Wagner. It was his generosity that made possible the first festival performances of the Ring in Bayreuth in 1876.

Never one of amenable disposition, Wagner held convictions of his own superiority that developed monomaniacal proportions as he grew older. He was intolerant of any questioning, of any failure to accept him and his creation. His household revolved completely in his orbit, and his demands upon wives, mistresses, friends, musicians, and benefactors were legion. Those who ran afoul of him were pilloried unmercifully, often unscrupulously, such as Eduard Hanslick, the distinguished Viennese music critic who became the model for Beckmesser in the Meistersinger.

When the young philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche first met Wagner, he thought he had found his way into the presence of a god, so radiant and powerful did Wagner seem to him. Later Nietzsche realized that the composer was something less than the perfection of the superman incarnate he had imagined him to be and turned away in disgust. Wagner never forgave Nietzsche for his desertion.

Place in History

In retrospect, Wagner's accomplishments outweigh both his personal behavior and his legacy for the 20th century. He has even managed to survive the predictable rejection by later generations of composers. Wagner created such an effective, unique musical language, especially in Tristan and Parsifal, that the beginnings of modern music are often dated from these scores.

Wagner demonstrated that music was not restricted to being pure formalism and abstract theoretical exploration but was a living, vibrant force capable of changing men's lives. He also proved that the music theater is a proper forum for ideas as opposed to being an arena for only escape and entertainment. And he demonstrated that a composer could rightfully take his place among the great revolutionary thinkers of Western civilization, questioning and attacking what seemed intolerable in traditional modes of behavior, experience, learning, and creation. Together with Karl Marx and Charles Darwin, Wagner must be given his rightful due as one of the greatest forces in 19th-century cultural history.

Further Reading

A representative sampling of Wagner's important prose writings is in Wagner on Music and Drama, edited by Albert Goldman and Evert Sprinchorn (1964). The standard biography in English is that of the great English Wagnerian, Ernest Newman, The Life of Wagner (4 vols., 1933-1946). See also Newman's other important studies, The Wagner Operas (1959) and Wagner as Man and Artist (1960). Recommended to bring Newman's work up to date are Robert Gutman, Richard Wagner: The Man, His Mind, and His Music (1968), and Chappel White, An Introduction to the Life and Works of Richard Wagner (1970). Also valuable are the specific studies, such as Jack Stein, Richard Wagner and the Synthesis of the Arts (1960); Robert Donington, Wagner's Ring and Its Symbols: The Music and the Myth (1963); and Elliot Zuckerman, Tristan: The First Hundred Years (1964).

Oxford Dictionary of Dance:

Richard Wagner

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Wagner, Richard (b Leipzig, 22 May 1813, d Venice, 13 Feb. 1883). German composer. He wrote no ballet scores but some of his music (often in extracted form) has been used for dance: Tannhäuser (chor. Massine in Bacchanale, New York, 1939, also Béjart in Bacchanale de Tannhäuser, a dance initially performed within the opera at Bayreuth, 1961, then as a separate ballet, Brussels, (1963); Tristan and Isolde (chor. Massine in Mad Tristan, New York, 1944, and H. Ross in Tristan, New York, 1955); Siegfried Idyll (chor. Sparemblek, Brussels, 1965), Wesendonck Lieder (chor. Joffrey in Remembrances, New York, 1973, and Spoerli in Dreams, Stuttgart, 1980); and extracts from the Ring Cycle (chor. Béjart in Ring around the Ring, Berlin, 1990, and More Powerful Than Gold and Death, chor. M. Lavrovsky, Moscow, 1996). P. Schaufuss combined extracts of Wagner's music with the songs of Elvis Presley in The King, Holstebro (1999).

Wagner, Richard (1813–83), German opera composer and music theorist who wrote the texts of his musical dramas and who remains as highly controversial as he has been extremely influential. He studied music in Leipzig and held brief appointments at theatres in Würzburg, Magdeburg, and Riga in the 1830s while writing and composing several early operas. It was with one of these, Rienzi (1840), in the style of grand opera of the 1830s, that he achieved his first notable stage success and appointment in 1843 as court Kapellmeister in Dresden. His fame rests, though, on the operas that followed: Der fliegende Holländer (The Flying Dutchman, 1841); Tannhäuser (1845); Lohengrin (1847); the tetralogy Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung), comprising Das Rheingold (The Rhinegold, 1854), Die Walküre (The Valkyrie, 1856), Siegfried (1870), and Götterdämmerung (The Twilight of the Gods, 1874); Tristan und Isolde (1859); Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (The Mastersingers of Nuremberg, 1867); and Parsifal (1882)—all of which continue to be performed regularly. With the exception of Die Meistersinger, these operas that followed Rienzi drew heavily on myth, legend, folk beliefs, and medieval epic. Even Die Meistersinger prominently employs the biblical story of the Fall and Christian imagery and folk traditions, notably that surrounding St John's Eve. Wagner's very first opera, Die Feen (The Fairies, 1833), was based on a fairy‐tale play by Carlo Gozzi; and fairy‐tale motifs are evident in several of the later operas, particularly the borrowing of the motif of the youth who yearns to experience goose flesh (the fourth story in the Grimms' Kinder‐ und Hausmärchen) for Siegfried and, less obviously, the motif of a sister's magically transformed brother—as found in a number of Grimm tales, notably ‘Die zwölf Brüder’ (‘The Twelve Brothers’), ‘Brüderchen und Schwesterchen’ (‘Little Brother and Little Sister’), and ‘Die sechs Schwäne’ (‘The Six Swans’)—in Lohengrin. The legends of the Flying Dutchman, who is cursed with sailing the seas until he finds salvation through love, and of Tannhäuser's sojourn with the love goddess Venus—legends well‐known in Wagner's day as popularized by the poet Heinrich Heine—formed the basis for those two operas. The Wagner operas from Der fliegende Holländer to Parsifal invariably include such elements of magic, marvel, or miracle, employing it to provide a transcendent or metaphysical dimension to the action and its psychological motivation. His Musikdramen (music dramas) represent both a culmination of German romantic opera and a development beyond it towards realism and modernism.

Bibliography

  • Cooke, Deryck, I Saw the World End: A Study of Wagner's ‘Ring’ (1979).
  • Donington, Robert, Wagner's ‘Ring’ and its Symbols: The Music and the Myth (1963, repr. 1974).
  • McCreless, Patrick, Wagner's Siegfried: Its Drama, History, and Music (1982).
  • McGlathery, James M., Wagner's Operas and Desire (1998).
  • Rank, Otto, Die Lohengrinsage: Ein Beitrag zu ihrer Motivgestaltung und Deutung (1911).

— James M. McGlathery

Wagner, Richard (Leipzig, 1813-83, Venice), was the youngest of nine children. His father died when he was a few months old and his stepfather when he was still a child; the theme of the lost father was to become a recurrent one in his works. His musical studies at Leipzig University proved abortive and in 1833 he took a post as assistant choirmaster at Würzburg, where he wrote his first opera, Die Feen (first performed in 1888). His next post was as conductor at Magdeburg, where he wrote a comic opera, Das Liebesverbot, based on Shakespeare's Measure for Measure and influenced by the hedonistic ideas of Heinse and by the Junges Deutschland movement. In this otherwise unimportant opera Wagner first made significant use of the Leitmotiv, the most familiar feature of his work. Towards the end of 1836 he followed his fiancée, the actress Minna Planer (1809-66), to Königsberg, where he married her and for a few months obtained work at the theatre.

In 1837 Wagner moved to Riga, again as conductor, but finding himself in financial difficulties in 1839, he slipped away to London and thence to Paris, where he remained for three hard years, completing Rienzi (1840), begun in Riga, and writing Eine Faust-Ouvertüre (1840) as well as Der fliegende Holländer. The success of Rienzi in Dresden on 20 October 1842 was soon followed by that of the first night of Der fliegende Holländer, which led to his being appointed musical director (Hofkapellmeister) at Dresden in 1843. All this time he was reading avidly, delving into Germanic myth and legend and writing the text of Siegfrieds Tod, the first stage in the genesis of Der Ring des Nibelungen, as well as his innovative Tannhäuser und der Sängerkrieg auf Wartburg and Lohengrin.

In May 1849, having taken part in the revolt in Saxony, with whose cause he at the time identified (see Revolutionen 1848-9), Wagner had to flee abroad, settling in Zurich until 1859. In 1855 he made a successful visit to London, where he conducted concerts. While in Zurich he published various theoretical writings, and developed his theory of opera as a ‘Gesamtkunstwerk’ in which the perfect synthesis of the musical, dramatic, and visual elements is all-important. He introduced his new ideas in his tract Die Kunst und die Revolution (1849) and expounded them in the essays Das Kunstwerk der Zukunft (1850) and Oper und Drama (1851-2), his principal theoretical work, which also includes a historical survey of opera; he particularly admired the view of Gluck (1714-87) that music should be brought into direct rapport with action. But already in his creative work of the 1850s his intuitive grasp of the autonomy of music begins to prevail; this he expressed in his Beethoven essay of 1870. While working on the Ring cycle, Wagner had fallen in love with Mathilde Wesendonck, the gifted wife of a wealthy patron, and shifted his interest to a new subject, the love tragedy Tristan und Isolde. In an untenable situation he moved first to Venice, then to Lucerne. The composition of five poems by Frau Wesendonck was a further outcome of his passion. In 1861 he was in Paris for a carefully prepared and lavish production of Tannhäuser, which, however, met with organized opposition in the opera house.

A political amnesty made it possible for Wagner to return to the territories of the German Confederation. After a stay in Vienna he was invited by the young King Ludwig II of Bavaria, a passionate admirer of his works, to establish himself in Munich. However, local opposition obliged him to leave the city in 1865, and he set up house at Triebschen (or Tribschen) near Lucerne, where he completed Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg. Wagner's wife Minna died in 1866 and in 1868 Cosima von Bülow, the wife of Wagner's friend the conductor Hans von Bülow (1830-94), and daughter of the composer Liszt, a loyal supporter, settled with him in Triebschen, where they were married in 1870. The Siegfried Idyll (1870) was written in celebration of their son Siegfried (b. 1869). A new opera house specially for Wagner's works was projected at Bayreuth, and Wagner himself laid the foundation-stone in 1872, when he moved to Bayreuth, living from 1874 in the Villa Wahnfried, which he had built for himself. In 1876 the Festspielhaus was opened with the first performance of the Ring cycle, at which the German Emperor was present. The philosophy of Schopenhauer was a major influence; a friendship with Nietzsche, begun in 1869, ended in 1878 in a complete breach. In 1882 Wagner completed his last work, Parsifal.

Wagner's reputation was nurtured and the Bayreuth Festival perpetuated by his gifted family, for the first 25 years by his widow Cosima (1837-1930), and from 1909 until his death in 1930 by their son Siegfried. From then until 1945 Siegfried's English-born widow Winifred, known for her close association with Hitler and his regime, succeeded him as Festival director. In 1951 Siegfried's son Wieland (1917-66), assisted by his brother Wolfgang, opened a new era at Bayreuth with his innovative modern style of production and stage design.

The originality of Wagner's music aroused widespread controversy and opposition which have persisted into the 20th c. and are linked with his German nationalism and the exaltation of strength; these features, together with his anti-Semitism (shared by his wife Cosima), first expressed in his virulent pamphlet Das Judenthum in der Musik (1850), were to be much used by the National Socialists. Among critics hostile to Wagner was the notable Viennese musicologist Eduard Hanslick (1825-1904), an influential contributor to the Neue Freie Presse and the author of important works on musical aesthetics. He is satirized by Wagner in the figure of Beckmesser (Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg). Wagner pursued his own far-reaching ideas on the role and character of music drama with an intransigence bordering on megalomania. With his self-indulgent personality he could also be outspoken and intolerant towards his supporters, including his most loyal friends. His dramatic texts revive Old High German and Middle High German metres and affect archaic vocabulary; when read on their own they may now sometimes appear derivative or pretentious, but when carried on his eloquent and persuasive music their defects disappear and even his detractors are obliged to admit their extraordinary power.

His influence not only on music but on literature and the visual arts radiated far beyond Germany, but is most prominent in the work of Th. Mann.

The first authentic edition of Wagner's autobiography Mein Leben, ed. M. Gregor-Dellin, appeared in 1963 (2nd edn. 1976), Sämtliche Briefe, ed. G. Strobel et al., 1967 ff., Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen, supervised by Wagner himself, 1871-3 (9 vols.) and 1883 (vol. 10), numerous times reissued and extended to 16 vols. The critical edition, Sämtliche Werke (planned in 31 vols.), ed. C. Dahlhaus and E. Voss et al., began to appear in 1970. Cosima Wagner's diaries, Die Tagebücher 1869-1833, ed. M. Gregor-Dellin and D. Mack, appeared 1976-7 (reissued 1982).

Columbia Encyclopedia:

Richard Wagner

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Wagner, Richard, 1813-83, German composer, b. Leipzig.

Life and Work

Wagner was reared in a theatrical family, had a classical education, and began composing at 17. He studied harmony and the works of Beethoven and in 1833 became chorus master of the theater at Würzburg, the first of a series of theatrical positions. Die Feen (composed 1833), his first opera, was in the German romantic tradition begun by Weber; Das Liebesverbot (1835-36) demonstrated his assimilation of the Italian style. In Paris he completed Rienzi (1838-40) but was unable to have it performed there. Its production in Dresden in 1842 was highly successful, and in 1843 Wagner was made musical director of the Dresden theater.

Der Fliegende Holländer (1841) was less successful. It was based on Heine's version of the legend of the Flying Dutchman, a legendary phantom ship, and it foreshadows the idea, developed in Tannhäuser (1843-44) and prevalent in later works, of redemption by love. Tannhäuser, based in part on the actual life of Tannhäuser, and Lohengrin (1846-48) brought the German romantic opera to culmination. In Lohengrin, Wagner for the first time is more interested in his characters as symbols than as actual personages in a drama.

Wagner participated in the Revolution of 1848, fled Dresden, and with the help of Liszt escaped to Switzerland, where he stayed eight years. There he wrote essays, including Oper und Drama (1851), in which he began to articulate aesthetic principles that would guide his subsequent work.

Der Ring des Nibelungen (1853-74), his tetralogy based on the Nibelungenlied (see under Nibelungen), embodies the most complete adherence to his stated principles. In 1857, having completed the composition of the first two works of the cycle, Das Rheingold (1853-54) and Die Walküre (1854-56), and two acts of Siegfried (1856-69), Wagner laid the Ring aside without hope of ever seeing it performed and composed Tristan und Isolde (1857-59) and Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (1862-67), his only comic opera. Tristan, based on the legend of Tristram and Isolde, was so utterly in opposition to the operatic conventions of the day that it required the intercession and support of Louis II of Bavaria to have it produced (1865) in Munich.

In 1872 Wagner moved to Bayreuth, where in 1874 he completed the third act of Siegfried and all of Götterdämmerung, the last work of the Ring cycle. There he was able to build a theater, Das Festspielhaus, adequate for the proper performance of his works, in which the complete Ring was presented in 1876. At Bayreuth, Wagner entertained the great musicians of his day. Parsifal (1877-82) was his last work.

Wagner indulged in much financial foolishness and in the end enjoyed considerable critical success. Although during his lifetime opposition to him and to his ideas went to fantastic lengths, Wagner's operas held a position of complete dominance in the next generation, retaining their enormous popularity in the 20th cent.

Assessment

Wagner's operas represent the fullest musical and theatrical expression of German romanticism. His ideas exerted a profound influence on the work of later composers. For the principle of sharply differentiated recitative and aria, Wagner substituted his "endless melody" and his Sprechgesang [sung speech], calling his operas music-dramas to signify the complete union of music and drama that he sought to achieve. He thought that music could not develop further with the resources it had employed since Beethoven's time, and he maintained that the music of the future must be part of a synthesis of the arts.

Adapting German mythology to his dramatic requirements, Wagner applied to it an increased emotional intensity, derived from the harmonic complexity and power of Beethoven's music, to produce what he termed a "complete art work." He achieved a remarkable dramatic unity due in part to his development of the leitmotif, a brief passage or fragment of music used to characterize an episode or person and brought in at will to recall it to the audience. At the same time, Wagner greatly increased the flexibility and variety of his orchestral accompaniments. He was responsible for the productions of his works from libretti to details of sets and costumes.

Family Members

Wagner's second wife, Cosima Wagner, 1837-1930, was the daughter of Liszt and the comtesse d'Agoult. From 1857 to 1870 she was the wife of Hans von Bülow. In 1870 she married Wagner. After his death she was largely responsible for the continuing fame of the Bayreuth festivals.

Their son, Siegfried Wagner, 1869-1930, composed 11 operas, orchestral and chamber music, and some vocal pieces, but was known chiefly as a conductor. With his wife, Winifred Williams Klindworth, he directed the Bayreuth festivals, a tradition carried on by their sons Wieland and Wolfgang from 1951 until 2008 (jointly until Wieland's death in 1967) and Wolfgang's daughters, Eva Wagner-Pasquier and Katharina Wagner, from 2008.

Bibliography

See Wagner's prose works (8 vol., tr. 1892-99); his letters (ed. by J. N. Burk, 1950, repr. 1972); his autobiography, My Life (tr. 1911, repr. 1974); biography by E. Newman (4 vol., 1933-46); studies by G. Skelton (1976, repr. 1982) and B. Millington (rev. ed. 1992, repr. 1999). See also biographies of C. Wagner by R. M. F. du Moulin-Eckart (2 vol., tr. 1930) and A. H. Sokoloff (1969); W. Wagner, Acts (1994); G. Wagner, Twilight of the Wagners: The Unveiling of a Family's Legacy (1999); N. Wagner, The Wagners: The Dramas of a Musical Dynasty (2001); J. Carr, The Wagner Clan (2008).

(vahg-nuhr)

A nineteenth-century German composer known for his operas, many of which dramatize myths and legends. The four-opera group The Ring of the Nibelung and the single opera Tristan und Isolde are among his best-known compositions.

Quotes By:

Richard Wagner

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Quotes:

"Joy is not in things, it is in us."

AMG AllMovie Guide:

Richard Wagner

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Biography

The music of this controversial composer has been quoted in approximately 215 films, discounting numerous newsreels and documentaries. Wagner's music has been appreciated for its transcendentally romantic and noble textures, its innovative orchestration, harmonic and melodic originality, and the Gesamtkunstwerk concept (an artistic effort coordinating all the arts, the very definition of a motion picture), yet his opera plots have been criticized for "paganism," absurdity, and proto-Fascist tendencies.

The Ride of the Valkyrie from Die Walküre has occurred in at least 27 films, one of the earliest being D.W. Griffith's controversial The Birth of a Nation (1915) (aka The Clansman), admired for its epic brilliance and innovative techniques, and infamous for its racism. This music underscores other breast-beating heroism (pro and con) in Coppola's Apocalypse Now (1979) and Apocalypse Now Redux (2001), and Education for Death (1943). The theme comically chimes in as the Chicago police force racing after bluesmen Jake and Elwood are joined by local neo-Nazis in a hilarious car chase in The Blues Brothers (1980). In the cartoon What's Opera, Doc? (1957), Ride of the Valkyrie appears at the onset as Elmer Fudd, in Viking outfit, casts a huge shadow while conducting a storm scene. He finds a rabbit hole and stabs at it with his spear singing, "Kill the wabbit! Kill the wabbit!" Bugs Bunny inquires, to the tune of Siegfried's Horn Call, "Oh mighty warrior of great fighting stock, might I inquire to ask, eh, what's up, doc?" Bugs later appears as dashing blonde Brunhilde riding a white horse to the tune of the Pilgrim's Chorus from Tannhäuser.

The thrilling overture to The Flying Dutchman has accompanied television's Young Indiana Jones and the Attack of the Hawkmen (1995), Captain Video and His Video Rangers (1949), The Lone Ranger (1949), and the background of a Navy recruitment commercial. The subtle and lovely Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde has graced 18 films (including Romeo and Juliet [1996] and L'Age d'Or [1930]), and the complete opera has received several television productions. The Bridal Chorus (Here Comes the Bride) from Act III of Lohengrin are found in almost any wedding scene, for example, in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) and Andy Hardy's Dilemma (1938).

Wagner's last and most controversial opera, Parsifal, a Grail story mixed with eroticism, was brilliantly interpreted in Hans-Jürgen Syberberg's insightful 1982 production that introduces extra historical and psychological imagery through background and magic lantern-type projections, puppets, scale models, otherworldly lighting, a cavernous set (eventually seen to be a giant death mask of Wagner), alternate male and female Parsifals (with the same voice), and militaristic Christian knights. Wagner's lines concerning the cessation of time and space that Parsifal experiences could describe the viewer's sensations during the film's hypnotic stronghold.

Wagner's opera Tannhaüser is heard in The Gold Rush (1925) and Warhol's Flesh for Frankenstein (1974); Rienzi and Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg in Riefenstahl's notorious Triumph of the Will (1934); Götterdammerung (Twilight of the Gods) in Le Bassin de J.W. (John Wayne's Pelvis, 1997); Das Rheingold and Siegfried have also received many full television and film treatments. Visconti's Ludwig (1972), The Architecture of Doom (1989), The Scarlet Empress (1934), Buñuel's Cet obscur objet du désir (1977), Ken Russell's Lisztomania (1975) depicting Wagner as a satanic revolutionary, Markoupoulos' Ming Green (1966), and The Testament of Orpheus (1960) are but a few significant films employing this influential genius' inspirations. ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny, Rovi
Richard Wagner
  • Genres: Band Music, Choral Music, Keyboard Music, Opera, Orchestral Music, Symphony, Vocal Music

Biography

Richard Wagner was one of the most revolutionary figures in the history of music, a composer who made pivotal contributions to the development of harmony and musical drama that reverberate even today. Indeed, though Wagner occasionally produced successful music written on a relatively modest scale, opera -- the bigger, the better -- was clearly his milieu, and his aesthetic is perhaps the most grandiose that Western music has ever known. Early in his career, Wagner learned both the elements and the practical, political realities of his craft by writing a handful of operas which were unenthusiastically, even angrily, received. Beginning with Rienzi (1838-40) and The Flying Dutchman (1841), however, he enjoyed a string of successes that propelled him to immortality and changed the face of music. His monumental Ring cycle of four operas -- Das Rheingold (1853-54), Die Walküre (1854-56), Siegfried (1856-71) and Götterdämmerung (1869-74) -- remains the most ambitious and influential contribution by any composer to the opera literature. Tristan and Isolde (1857-59) is perhaps the most representative example of Wagner's musical style, which is characterized by a high degree of chromaticism, a restless, searching tonal instability, lush harmonies, and the association of specific musical elements (known as leitmotifs, the flexible manipulation of which is one of the glories of Wagner's music) with certain characters and plot points. Wagner wrote text as well as music for all his operas, which he preferred to call "music dramas."

Wagner's life matched his music for sheer drama. Born in Leipzig on May 22, 1813, he began in the early 1830s to write prolifically on music and the arts in general; over his whole career, his music would to some degree serve to demonstrate his aesthetic theories. He often worked as a conductor in his early years; a conducting engagement took him to Riga, Latvia, in 1837, but he fled the country in the middle of the night two years later to elude creditors. Wagner as a young man had some sympathy with the revolutionary movements of the middle nineteenth century (and even the Ring cycle contains a distinct anti-materialist and vaguely socialist drift); in the Dresden uprisings of 1849 he apparently took up arms, and he had to leave Germany when the police restored order. Settling in Zurich, Switzerland, he wrote little for some years but evolved the intellectual framework for his towering mature masterpieces. Wagner returned to Germany in 1864 under the protection and patronage of King Ludwig II of Bavaria; it was in Bayreuth, near Munich, that he undertook the construction of an opera house (completed in 1876) built to his personal specifications and suited to the massive fusion of music, staging, text, and scene design that his later operas entailed. Bayreuth became something of a shrine for the fanatical Wagnerites who carried the torch after his death; it remains the goal of many a pilgrimage today. His attitude toward Jews was deeply ambivalent (he believed, mistakenly, that his stepfather was Jewish), but some of his writings contain anti-Semitic elements that have aroused considerable controversy among opera lovers, especially in view of Adolf Hitler's apparent predilection for the composer's music. ~ All Music Guide, Rovi

Discography

Wagner: Der fliegende Holländer (Highlights)

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Der Fliegende Holländer (Opernquerschnitt)

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Richard Wagner

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The face and upper torso of a white man in his 60s are shown. Long sideburns frame a clean shaven face. He wears a frock coat with cravat.
Richard Wagner in 1871
signature written in ink in a flowing script

Wilhelm Richard Wagner (play /ˈvɑːɡnər/; German pronunciation: [ˈʁiçaʁt ˈvaːɡnɐ]; 22 May 1813  – 13 February 1883) was a German composer, conductor, theatre director and polemicist primarily known for his operas (or "music dramas", as they were later called). Wagner's compositions, particularly those of his later period, are notable for their complex texture, rich harmonies and orchestration, and the elaborate use of leitmotifs: musical themes associated with individual characters, places, ideas or plot elements. Unlike most other opera composers, Wagner wrote both the music and libretto for every one of his stage works. Perhaps the two best-known extracts from his works are the Ride of the Valkyries from the opera Die Walküre, and the Wedding March (Bridal Chorus) from the opera Lohengrin.

Initially establishing his reputation as a composer of works such as The Flying Dutchman and Tannhäuser which were in the romantic traditions of Weber and Meyerbeer, Wagner transformed operatic thought through his concept of the Gesamtkunstwerk ("total work of art"). This would achieve the synthesis of all the poetic, visual, musical and dramatic arts and was announced in a series of essays between 1849 and 1852. Wagner realized this concept most fully in the first half of the monumental four-opera cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen. However, his thoughts on the relative importance of music and drama were to change again, and he reintroduced some traditional operatic forms into his last few stage works, including Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg.

Wagner pioneered advances in musical language, such as extreme chromaticism and quickly shifting tonal centres, which greatly influenced the development of European classical music. His Tristan und Isolde is sometimes described as marking the start of modern music. Wagner's influence spread beyond music into philosophy, literature, the visual arts and theatre. He had his own opera house built, the Bayreuth Festspielhaus, which contained many novel design features. It was here that the Ring and Parsifal received their premieres and where his most important stage works continue to be performed today in an annual festival run by his descendants. Wagner's views on conducting were also highly influential. His extensive writings on music, drama and politics have all attracted extensive comment in recent decades, especially where they have antisemitic content.

Wagner achieved all of this despite a life characterized, until his last decades, by political exile, turbulent love affairs, poverty and repeated flight from his creditors. His pugnacious personality and often outspoken views on music, politics and society made him a controversial figure during his life, which he remains to this day. The impact of his ideas can be traced in many of the arts throughout the twentieth century.

Biography

Early years

A postcard of a five-story building with shops on the ground floor and garret windows in the roof. A round inset has a picture of Wagner in middle age.
Wagner's birthplace, Brühl (Leipzig)

Richard Wagner was born at No. 3 ('The House of the Red and White Lions'), the Brühl, in the Jewish quarter of Leipzig, the ninth child of Carl Friedrich Wagner, who was a clerk in the Leipzig police service,[1] and his wife Johanna Rosine (née Paetz), the daughter of a baker.[2] Wagner's father died of typhus six months after Richard's birth, following which Wagner's mother began living with the actor and playwright Ludwig Geyer, a friend of Richard's father.[3] In August 1814 Johanna and Geyer married. She and her family moved to his residence in Dresden. Until he was fourteen, Wagner was known as Wilhelm Richard Geyer. He almost certainly suspected that Geyer was his natural father.[4]

Geyer's love of the theatre was shared by his stepson, and Wagner took part in his performances. In his autobiography, Wagner recalled once playing the part of an angel.[5] The boy Wagner was also hugely impressed by the Gothic elements of Weber's Der Freischütz. In late 1820, Wagner was enrolled at Pastor Wetzel's school at Possendorf, near Dresden, where he received some piano instruction from his Latin teacher.[6] He could not manage a proper scale but preferred playing theatre overtures by ear. Geyer died in 1821, when Richard was eight. Subsequently, Wagner was sent to the Kreuz Grammar School in Dresden, paid for by Geyer's brother.[7] The young Wagner entertained ambitions as a playwright, his first creative effort (listed as 'WWV 1') being a tragedy, Leubald, begun at school in 1826, which was strongly influenced by Shakespeare and Goethe. Wagner was determined to set it to music; he persuaded his family to allow him music lessons.[8]

By 1827, the family had moved back to Leipzig. Wagner's first lessons in harmony were taken in 1828–1831 with Christian Gottlieb Müller.[9] In January 1828 he first heard Beethoven's 7th Symphony and then, in March, Beethoven's 9th Symphony performed in the Gewandhaus. Beethoven became his inspiration, and Wagner wrote a piano transcription of the 9th Symphony.[10] He was also greatly impressed by a performance of Mozart's Requiem.[11] From this period date Wagner's early piano sonatas and his first attempts at orchestral overtures.[12]

In 1829 he saw the dramatic soprano Wilhelmine Schröder-Devrient on stage, and she became his ideal of the fusion of drama and music in opera. In his autobiography, Wagner wrote, "If I look back on my life as a whole, I can find no event that produced so profound an impression upon me." Wagner claimed to have seen Schröder-Devrient in the title role of Fidelio; however, it seems more likely that he saw her performance as Romeo in Bellini's I Capuleti e i Montecchi.[13]

The head and upper torso of a young white woman with dark hair done in an elaborate style. She wears a small hat, a cloak and dress that expose her shoulders and pearl earrings. On her left hand that holds the edge of the cloak, two rings are visible.
Wilhelmine "Minna" Planer (1835), by Alexander von Otterstedt

He enrolled at the University of Leipzig in 1831 where he became a member of the Studentenverbindung Corps Saxonia Leipzig. He also took composition lessons with the cantor of Saint Thomas Church, Christian Theodor Weinlig.[14] Weinlig was so impressed with Wagner's musical ability that he refused any payment for his lessons, and arranged for Wagner's Piano Sonata in B flat (which was consequently dedicated to him) to be published as the composer's Op. 1. A year later, Wagner composed his Symphony in C major, a Beethovenesque work performed in Prague in 1832 [15] and at the Leipzig Gewandhaus in 1833.[16] He then began to work on an opera, Die Hochzeit (The Wedding), which he never completed.[17]

Early career

In 1833, Wagner's older brother Karl Albert managed to obtain for Richard a position as choir master in Würzburg.[18] In the same year, at the age of 20, Wagner composed his first complete opera, Die Feen (The Fairies). This opera, which clearly imitated the style of Carl Maria von Weber, would go unproduced until half a century later, when it was premiered in Munich shortly after the composer's death in 1883.[19]

Meanwhile, Wagner held a brief appointment as musical director at the opera house in Magdeburg[20] during which he wrote Das Liebesverbot (The Ban on Love), based on Shakespeare's Measure for Measure. This was staged at Magdeburg in 1836, but closed before the second performance, leaving the composer (not for the last time) in serious financial difficulties.[21] In 1834 Wagner had fallen for the actress Christine Wilhelmine "Minna" Planer. After the disaster of Das Liebesverbot he followed her to Königsberg where she helped him to get an engagement at the theatre.[22] The two married in Königsberg on 24 November 1836.[23] In June 1837 Wagner moved to Riga (then in the Russian Empire), where he became music director of the local opera.[24] Minna had recently left Wagner for another man[25] but Richard took her back;[26] this was but the first débâcle of a troubled marriage that would end in misery three decades later.

By 1839, the couple had amassed such large debts that they fled Riga to escape from creditors;[27] debt would plague Wagner for most of his life.[28] During their flight, they and their Newfoundland dog Robber took a stormy sea passage to London,[29] from which Wagner drew the inspiration for The Flying Dutchman (with a story based on a sketch by Heinrich Heine).[30]

The Wagners spent 1839 to 1842 in Paris, where Richard made a scant living writing articles and arranging operas by other composers, largely on behalf of the Schlesinger publishing house. However, he also completed his third and fourth operas Rienzi and The Flying Dutchman during this stay.[31] His relief on leaving Paris for Dresden was recorded in his "Autobiographic Sketch" of 1842, "For the first time I saw the Rhine  — with hot tears in my eyes, I, poor artist, swore eternal fidelity to my German fatherland."[32]

Dresden

Warrant for the arrest of Richard Wagner, issued on 16 May 1849

Wagner had completed writing Rienzi in 1840. Largely through the strong support of Giacomo Meyerbeer,[33] it was accepted for performance by the Dresden Court Theatre (Hofoper) in the German state of Saxony. In 1842, Wagner moved to Dresden, where Rienzi was staged to considerable acclaim on 20 October.[34] Wagner lived in Dresden for the next six years, eventually being appointed the Royal Saxon Court Conductor.[35] During this period, he staged there The Flying Dutchman (2 January 1843)[36] and Tannhäuser (19 October 1845),[37] the first two of his three middle-period operas. Wagner also mixed with artistic circles in Dresden, including the composer Ferdinand Hiller and the architect Gottfried Semper.[38]

The Wagners' stay at Dresden was brought to an end by Richard's involvement in leftist politics. A nationalist movement was gaining force in the states of the German Confederation, calling for constitutional freedoms and the unification of Germany as one nation state. Richard Wagner played an enthusiastic role in the socialist wing of this movement, regularly receiving guests who included the radical editor August Röckel, and the Russian anarchist Mikhail Bakunin. He was also influenced by the ideas of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon.[39] Widespread discontent in Dresden came to a head in April 1849, when King Frederick Augustus II of Saxony rejected a new constitution. The May Uprising broke out, in which Wagner played a minor supporting role. The incipient revolution was quickly crushed by an allied force of Saxon and Prussian troops, and warrants were issued for the arrest of the revolutionaries. Wagner had to flee, first visiting Paris and then settling in Zurich.[40]

Exile, Schopenhauer and Mathilde Wesendonck

Wagner spent the next twelve years in exile. He had completed Lohengrin, the last of his middle-period operas before the Dresden uprising, and now wrote desperately to his friend Franz Liszt to have it staged in his absence. Liszt, who proved to be a true friend, eventually conducted the premiere in Weimar in August 1850.[41]

Nevertheless, Wagner found himself in grim personal straits, isolated from the German musical world and without any income to speak of. Before leaving Dresden, he had drafted a scenario that would eventually become the four opera cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen. He initially wrote the libretto for a single opera, Siegfrieds Tod (Siegfried's Death) in 1848. After arriving in Zurich he expanded the story to include an opera Der junge Siegfried (Young Siegfried) exploring the hero's background. He completed the text of the cycle by writing the libretti for Die Walküre and Das Rheingold and revising the other libretti to agree with his new concept, completing them in 1852.[42] Meanwhile, his wife Minna, who had disliked the operas he had written after Rienzi, was falling into a deepening depression and then Wagner himself fell victim to ill-health, according to Ernest Newman "largely a matter of overwrought nerves", which made it difficult for him to continue writing.[43]

Wagner's primary published output during his first years in Zurich was a set of notable essays: "The Art-Work of the Future" (1849), in which he described a vision of opera as Gesamtkunstwerk, or "total work of art", in which the various arts such as music, song, dance, poetry, visual arts, and stagecraft were unified; "Judaism in Music" (1850), a tract directed against Jewish composers; and "Opera and Drama" (1851), which described the aesthetics of drama which he was using to create the Ring operas.

Wagner began composing Das Rheingold in November 1853, following it immediately with Die Walküre in 1854. He then began work on the third opera, now called Siegfried, in 1856 but finished only the first two acts before deciding to put the work aside to concentrate on a new idea: Tristan und Isolde.[44]

Wagner had two independent sources of inspiration for Tristan und Isolde. The first came to him in 1854, when his poet friend Georg Herwegh introduced him to the works of the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer. Wagner would later call this the most important event of his life.[45] His personal circumstances certainly made him an easy convert to what he understood to be Schopenhauer's philosophy, a deeply pessimistic view of the human condition. He would remain an adherent of Schopenhauer for the rest of his life, even after his fortunes improved.[46]

A photograph of a dark-haired white woman of about 40 sitting in an upright chair. She wears a long sleeved, collared dress with decorative material down the front and at the cuffs and neck.
Photograph of Cosima Wagner, 1877

One of Schopenhauer's doctrines was that music held a supreme role in the arts. He claimed that music is the direct expression of the world's essence, which is blind, impulsive will.[47] Wagner quickly embraced this claim, which must have resonated strongly despite its contradiction of his previous view, expressed in "Opera and Drama", that the music in opera had to be subservient to the drama. Wagner scholars have since argued that this Schopenhauerian influence caused Wagner to assign a more commanding role to music in his later operas, including the latter half of the Ring cycle, which he had yet to compose.[48] Many aspects of Schopenhauerian doctrine undoubtedly found their way into Wagner's subsequent libretti. For example, the self-renouncing cobbler-poet Hans Sachs in Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, generally considered Wagner's most sympathetic character, although based loosely on a historical person, is a quintessentially Schopenhauerian creation.[49]

Wagner's second source of inspiration was the poet-writer Mathilde Wesendonck, the wife of the silk merchant Otto Wesendonck. Wagner met the Wesendoncks in Zurich in 1852. Otto, a fan of Wagner's music, placed a cottage on his estate at Wagner's disposal.[50] During the course of the next five years, the composer was eventually to become infatuated with his patron's wife. Though Mathilde seems to have returned some of his affections, she had no intention of jeopardizing her marriage. Nevertheless, the affair inspired Wagner to put aside his work on the Ring cycle (which would not be resumed for the next twelve years) and began work on Tristan,[51] based on the Arthurian love story Tristan and Iseult. While planning the opera, Wagner composed the Wesendonck Lieder, five songs for voice and piano setting poems by Mathilde. Two of these settings are explicitly subtitled by Wagner as 'studies for Tristan und Isolde '.[52]

The uneasy affair collapsed in 1858, when Minna intercepted a letter from Wagner to Mathilde.[53] However, Wagner continued his correspondence with Mathilde and his friendship with (and support by) her husband Otto. After the resulting confrontation, Wagner left Zurich alone, bound for Venice, where he sojourned in the Palazzo Giustinian.[54] The following year, he once again moved to Paris to oversee production of a new revision of Tannhäuser, staged thanks to the efforts of his patron Princess Pauline von Metternich, whose husband was the Austrian ambassador in Paris. The performances of the Paris Tannhäuser in 1861 were famously a fiasco, brought about not only by the conservative tastes of the Jockey Club, but also by people of influence who wanted to use the occasion as a veiled political protest against the pro-Austrian policies of Napoleon III.[55] The work was withdrawn after the third performance and Wagner left Paris soon after.[56]

The political ban which had been placed on Wagner in Germany after he had fled Dresden was lifted in 1861. The composer settled in Biebrich in Prussia,[57] where he began work on Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, the idea for which had come during a visit he had made to Venice with the Wesendoncks.[58] Despite the failure of Tannhäuser in Paris, the possibility that Der Ring des Nibelungen would never be finished, and Wagner's unhappy personal life at the time of writing it, this opera is his only mature comedy.

Between 1861 and 1864 Wagner tried to have Tristan und Isolde produced in Vienna.[59] Despite numerous rehearsals, the opera remained unperformed, and gained a reputation as being "impossible", which further added to Wagner's financial woes.[60]

In 1862, Wagner finally parted from Minna,[61] though he (or at least his creditors) continued to support her financially until her death in 1866. He claimed to be unable to travel to her funeral due to an "inflamed finger".[62]

Patronage of King Ludwig II

A young man in a dark military jacket, jodhpurs, long boots, and a voluminous ermine robe. He wears a sword at his side, a sash, a chain and a large star. Mainly hidden by his robe is a throne and behind that is a curtain with a crest with Ludwig's name and title in Latin. To one side a cushion holding a crown sits on a table.
Portrait of Ludwig II of Bavaria about the time when he first met Wagner, by Ferdinand von Piloty, 1865

Wagner's fortunes took a dramatic upturn in 1864, when King Ludwig II succeeded to the throne of Bavaria at the age of 18. The young king, an ardent admirer of Wagner's operas since childhood, had the composer brought to Munich.[63] He settled Wagner's considerable debts,[64] and proposed to stage Tristan, Die Meistersinger, the Ring, and the other operas Wagner planned.[65] Wagner also began to dictate his autobiography, Mein Leben, at the King's request.[66] To Wagner, it seemed significant that his rescue by Ludwig coincided with his learning the news of the death of his supposed enemy Giacomo Meyerbeer, noting ungratefully that "this operatic master, who had done me so much harm, should not have lived to see this day".[67]

After grave difficulties in rehearsal, Tristan und Isolde premiered at the National Theatre in Munich on 10 June 1865, the first Wagner premiere in almost 15 years. (The premiere had been scheduled for 15 May, but had been delayed by bailiffs acting for Wagner's creditors;[68] and also because the Isolde, Malvina Schnorr von Carolsfeld, was hoarse and needed time to recover). The conductor of this premiere was Hans von Bülow, whose wife Cosima had given birth in April that year to a daughter, named Isolde, the child not of von Bülow but of Wagner.[69]

Cosima was 24 years younger than Wagner and was herself illegitimate, the daughter of the Countess Marie d'Agoult, who had left her husband for Franz Liszt.[70] Liszt disapproved of his daughter seeing Wagner, though the two men were friends.[71] The indiscreet affair scandalized Munich, and to make matters worse, Wagner fell into disfavour among members of the court, who were suspicious of his influence on the king. In December 1865, Ludwig was finally forced to ask the composer to leave Munich.[72] He apparently also toyed with the idea of abdicating in order to follow his hero into exile, but Wagner quickly dissuaded him.[73]

Ludwig installed Wagner at the Villa Tribschen, beside Switzerland's Lake Lucerne.[74] Die Meistersinger was completed at Tribschen in 1867, and premièred in Munich on 21 June the following year.[75] In October, Cosima finally convinced Hans von Bülow to grant her a divorce, but this did not materialize until after she had two more children with Wagner; another daughter, named Eva, after the heroine of Meistersinger, and a son Siegfried, named for the hero of the Ring. Minna Wagner had died the previous year and so Richard and Cosima were now able to marry. The wedding took place on 25 August 1870.[76] On Christmas Day of that year, Wagner arranged a surprise performance of the Siegfried Idyll for Cosima's birthday.[77] The marriage to Cosima lasted to the end of Wagner's life.

Bayreuth

A print showing sixteen people in a large room with paintings and a large bookcase against the wall. A man with long white hair plays a grand piano as several others look on. Wagner, wearing a cap and leaning on the arm of a chair, follows the music in a score.
Richard Wagner at Bayreuth. Liszt, who was also his father-in-law, can be seen at the piano.

Wagner, settled into his newfound domesticity, turned his energies toward completing the Ring cycle. At Ludwig's insistence, "special previews" of the first two works of the cycle, Das Rheingold and Die Walküre, were performed at Munich in 1869 and 1870,[78] but Wagner wanted the complete cycle to be performed in a new, specially designed opera house.

In 1871, he decided on the small town of Bayreuth as the location of his new opera house.[79] The Wagners moved there the following year, and the foundation stone for the Bayreuth Festspielhaus ("Festival Theatre") was laid.[80] In order to raise funds for the construction, "Wagner Societies" were formed in several cities,[81] and Wagner himself began touring Germany conducting concerts.[82] However, sufficient funds were raised only after King Ludwig stepped in with another large grant in 1874.[83] Later that year, the Wagners moved into their permanent home at Bayreuth, a villa that Richard dubbed Wahnfried ("Peace/freedom from delusion/madness", in German).[84] The expenses of Bayreuth and of Wahnfried, however, meant that Wagner still sought other sources of income by conducting or taking on commissions like the Centennial March for America.[85]

The Festspielhaus finally opened on 13 August 1876 with Das Rheingold, now taking its place as the first evening of the premiere of the complete Ring cycle,[86] and has continued to be the site of the Bayreuth Festival ever since; the Festival has been overseen since 1973 by the Richard-Wagner-Stiftung (Richard Wagner Foundation), the members of which include a number of Wagner's descendants.[87]

Last years

A grey slab, level with the ground framed by bushes and in the shade of the tree. In the background a fountain and a large two-storied house with a balcony.
Grave of Richard and Cosima Wagner in the garden of the Villa Wahnfried, Bayreuth

Following the first Bayreuth Festival, Wagner began work on Parsifal, his final opera. The composition took four years, much of which Wagner spent in Italy for health reasons.[88] During this period he also wrote a series of essays, including some reactionary writings on religion and art which recanted his earlier views. Many of these—including "Religion and Art" (1880) and "Hero-dom and Christendom" (1881)[89]—appeared in the journal Bayreuther Blätter,[90] founded in 1880 by Wagner and Hans von Wolzogen for Wagnerite visitors to Bayreuth.[91]

Wagner completed Parsifal in January 1882, and a second Bayreuth Festival was held for the new opera, which was premiered on 26 May.[92] Wagner was by this time extremely ill, having suffered through a series of increasingly severe angina attacks.[93] During the sixteenth and final performance of Parsifal on 29 August, he secretly entered the pit during Act III, took the baton from conductor Hermann Levi, and led the performance to its conclusion.[94]

After the Festival, the Wagner family journeyed to Venice for the winter. Wagner died of a heart attack at the age of 69 on 13 February 1883 at Ca' Vendramin Calergi, a 16th century palazzo on the Grand Canal.[95] Franz Liszt's two pieces for piano solo entitled La lugubre gondola evoke the passing of a black-shrouded funerary gondola bearing Richard Wagner's remains over the Grand Canal.[96] Wagner was buried in the garden of the Villa Wahnfried in Bayreuth.[97]

Works

Opera

Musical notation showing a theme in F and in 6/8 time on a treble clef.
Leitmotif associated with the hero of Wagner's opera Siegfried

Wagner's operatic works are his primary artistic legacy.

Unlike other opera composers, who generally left the task of writing the libretto (the text and lyrics) to others, Wagner wrote his own libretti, which he referred to as "poems".[98] Further, Wagner developed a compositional style in which the orchestra's role is equal to that of the singers. The orchestra's dramatic role, in the later operas, includes the use of leitmotivs, musical themes that can be interpreted as announcing specific characters, locales, and plot elements; their complex interweaving and evolution illuminates the progression of the drama.[99] Ultimately he urged a new concept of opera often referred to as "music drama", (although he did not use or sanction this term himself)[100] in which all musical poetic and dramatic elements were to be fused together—the Gesamtkunstwerk.[101]

Wagner's operas are typically characterized as belonging to three chronological periods.

Early stage (to 1842)

Wagner's first attempt at an opera, at the age of 17, was Die Laune des Verliebten.[17] This was abandoned at an early stage of composition, as was Die Hochzeit (The Wedding), on which Wagner worked in 1832.[17] Wagner then completed Die Feen (The Fairies, 1833, unperformed in the composer's lifetime)[19] and Das Liebesverbot (The Ban on Love, 1836, taken off after its first performance),[21] before working on the aborted singspiel Männerlist grösser als Frauenlist (Men's cunning greater than women's).[17] This was followed by Rienzi (1842), Wagner's first opera to be successfully staged.[102] The compositional style of these early works was conventional—the relatively more sophisticated Rienzi showing the clear influence of Meyerbeerean Grand Opera—and did not exhibit the innovations that would mark Wagner's place in musical history. Later in life, Wagner said that he did not consider these immature works to be part of his oeuvre, and none of them have ever been performed at the Wagnerian Bayreuth Festival.[103] These works have been only rarely revived in the last hundred years, although the overture to Rienzi is an occasional concert piece.

Middle stage (1843 – 51)

Wagner's middle stage output begins to show the deepening of his powers as a dramatist and composer. This period began with Der fliegende Holländer (1843) (The Flying Dutchman), followed by Tannhäuser (1845) and Lohengrin (1850). These three operas reinforced the reputation among the public in Germany and beyond that Wagner had begun to establish for himself with Rienzi. However, during his exile following the 1849 May Uprising in Dresden he began to reconsider his entire concept of opera and eventually decided, as explained during a series of essays between 1849 and 1852, that these operas did not represent what he hoped to achieve.[104] In his essay A Communication to My Friends (1851), intended as a preface to the printed libretti of the Dutchman, Tannhäuser and Lohengrin, Wagner (to the confusion of many of his friends, since at that time Lohengrin had not even been staged) effectively disowned these operas and declared his intention to strike out in new directions.

I shall never write an Opera more. As I have no wish to invent an arbitrary title for my works, I will call them Dramas [...] I propose to produce my myth in three complete dramas, preceded by a lengthy Prelude (Vorspiel). [...] At a specially-appointed Festival, I propose, some future time, to produce those three Dramas with their Prelude, in the course of three days and a fore-evening. The object of this production I shall consider thoroughly attained, if I and my artistic comrades, the actual performers, shall within these four evenings succeed in artistically conveying my purpose to the true Emotional (not the Critical) Understanding of spectators who shall have gathered together expressly to learn it. [...][105]

Wagner later reconciled himself to the works of this period, though he reworked both Dutchman and Tannhäuser on several occasions.[106] The three operas are the earliest works included into the Bayreuth canon, the list of mature operas which Cosima put on at the Bayreuth Festival after Wagner's death in accordance with his wishes.[107] They continue to be regularly performed today and have been frequently recorded. They show increasing mastery in stagecraft, orchestration and atmosphere.[108]

Late stage (1851 – 1882)

Starting the Ring
A youthful valkyrie, wearing armour, cloak and winged helmet and holding a spear, stands with one foot on a rock and looks intently towards the right foreground. In the background are trees and mountains.
Brünnhilde the Valkyrie, as illustrated by Arthur Rackham (1910)

Main articles: Der Ring des Nibelungen, Der Ring des Nibelungen: Composition of the music and Der Ring des Nibelungen: Composition of the poem

Wagner's late dramas are considered his masterpieces. Der Ring des Nibelungen, commonly referred to as the Ring cycle, is a set of four operas based loosely on figures and elements of Germanic mythology—particularly from the later Norse mythology—notably the Old Norse Poetic Edda and Volsunga Saga, and the Middle High German Nibelungenlied.[109] They were also influenced by Wagner's concepts of ancient Greek drama, in which tetralogies were a component of Athenian festivals, and which he had amply discussed in his essay "Oper und Drama"[110]

The first two components of the Ring cycle were Das Rheingold (The Rhinegold) (completed 1854) and Die Walküre (The Valkyrie) (completed 1856). In Das Rheingold, with its "relentlessly talky "realism" [and] the absence of lyrical "numbers" ",[111] Wagner came very close to the pure musical ideals of his 1849 – 51 essays. Die Walküre, with Siegmund's almost full-blown aria (Winterstürme) in the first act, and the quasi-choral appearance of the Valkyries themselves, shows more 'operatic' traits, but has been assessed as "the music drama that most satisfactorily embodies the theoretical principles of "Oper und Drama". A thoroughgoing synthesis of poetry and music is achieved without any notable sacrifice in musical expression".[112]

Tristan und Isolde and Die Meistersinger

While still composing the Ring, (leaving the third Ring opera Siegfried uncompleted for the while), Wagner paused between 1857 and 1864 to compose the tragic love story Tristan und Isolde and his only mature comedy Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (The Mastersingers of Nuremberg), two works which are also part of the regular operatic canon.[113]

Tristan und Isolde uses a story line deriving from the poem Tristan und Isolt by the 13th century poet Gottfried von Strassburg. Wagner noted that "its all-pervading tragedy […] impressed me so deeply that I felt convinced it should stand out in bold relief, regardless of minor details." This impact, together with his discovery of the philosophy of Schopenhauer in October 1854, led Wagner to find himself in a "serious mood created by Schopenhauer, which was trying to find ecstatic expression. It was some such mood that inspired the conception of a Tristan und Isolde."[114] Wagner half-parodied the powerful erotic atmosphere of the opera in a letter to Mathilde Wesendonck:

Child! This Tristan is turning into something terrible. This final act!!!  – I fear the opera will be banned […] only mediocre performances can save me! Perfectly good ones will be bound to drive people mad.[115]

The work was first performed in Munich on 10 June 1865, conducted by Hans von Bülow.

Tristan is often granted a special place in musical history. It has been described as "fifty years ahead of its time" because of its chromaticism, long-held discords, unusual orchestral colouring and harmony, and use of polyphony.[116] Wagner himself felt that his musico-dramatical theories were most perfectly realised in this work with its use of "the art of transition" between dramatic elements and the balance achieved between vocal and orchestral lines.[116]

Die Meistersinger was originally conceived by Wagner in 1845 as a sort of comic pendant to Tannhäuser.[117] It was first performed in Munich, again under the baton of Bülow, on 21 June 1868, its accessibility making it an immediate success. It is "a rich, perceptive music drama widely admired for its warm humanity";[118] but because of its strong German nationalist overtones, it is also held up by some as an example of Wagner's reactionary politics and antisemitism.[119]

Completing the Ring

When Wagner returned, with the added experience of composing Tristan and Die Meistersinger, to write the music for the last act of Siegfried and for Götterdämmerung (Twilight of the Gods), as the final part of the Ring was eventually called, his style had changed once again to one more recognisable as 'operatic' (though thoroughly stamped with his own originality as a composer, and suffused with leitmotivs) than the aural world of Rheingold and Walküre.[120] This was in part because the libretti of the four 'Ring' operas had been written in reverse order, so that the book for Götterdämmerung was conceived more 'traditionally' than that of Rheingold;[121] still, the self-imposed strictures of the Gesamtkunstwerk had become relaxed. As George Bernard Shaw sardonically (and slightly unfairly)[122] noted,

And now, O Nibelungen Spectator, pluck up; for all allegories come to an end somewhere[...] The rest of what you are going to see is opera, and nothing but opera. Before many bars have been played, Siegfried and the wakened Brynhild, newly become tenor and soprano, will sing a concerted cadenza; plunge on from that to a magnificent love duet[...]The work which follows, entitled Night Falls On The Gods [Shaw's translation of Götterdämmerung], is a thorough grand opera.[123]

However, the differences are also because of Wagner's development as a composer during the period in which he composed Tristan, Meistersinger and also the Paris version of Tannhäuser.[124] From Act III of Siegfried onwards, the Ring becomes chromatic, and both harmonically more complex and more developmental in its treatment of leitmotifs.[125] Having taken 26 years from the first draft of a libretto in 1848 until the completion of Götterdämmerung in 1874, the Ring represents in all about 15 hours of performance, the only undertaking of such size to be regularly represented on the world's stages.[126]

Parsifal

Wagner's final opera, Parsifal (1882), which was his only work written especially for his Festspielhaus in Bayreuth and which is described in the score as a "Bühnenweihfestspiel" (festival play for the consecration of the stage), has a storyline suggested by elements of the legend of the Holy Grail. It also however carries elements of Buddhist renunciation suggested by Wagner's readings of Schopenhauer.[127] Wagner described it to Cosima as his "last card".[128] The composer's treatment of Christianity in the opera, its eroticism, and its supposed relationship to ideas of German nationalism (and of antisemitism) have continued to render it controversial for non-musical reasons.[129] However, musically it has been held to represent a continuing development of the composer's style, with "a diaphanous score of unearthly beauty and refinement".[130]

Non-operatic music

A cartoon showing a misshappen figure of a man with a tiny body below a head with prominent nose and chin standing on the lobe of a human ear. The figure is hammering the sharp end of a crochet symbol into the inner part of the ear and blood pours out.
André Gill suggesting that Wagner's music was ear-splitting. Cover of L'Eclipse 18 April 1869

Apart from his operas, Wagner composed relatively few pieces of music. These include a single symphony (written at the age of 19), a Faust Overture (the only completed part of an intended symphony on the subject), and some overtures, choral and piano pieces.[131] His most commonly performed work not drawn from an opera is the Siegfried Idyll, a piece for chamber orchestra written for the birthday of his second wife, Cosima. The Idyll draws on several motifs from the Ring cycle, though it is not part of the Ring.[132] Also performed are the Wesendonck Lieder for voice and piano, properly known as Five Songs for a Female Voice, which were composed for Mathilde Wesendonck while Wagner was working on Tristan.[52] An oddity is the American Centennial March of 1876, commissioned by the city of Philadelphia (on the recommendation of conductor Theodore Thomas, who was subsequently very disappointed with the work when it arrived) for the opening of the Centennial Exposition, for which Wagner was paid $5,000.[133]

The rarely performed Das Liebesmahl der Apostel (The Love Feast of the Apostles) is a piece for male choruses and orchestra, composed in 1843. Wagner, who had been elected at the beginning of the year to the committee of a cultural association in the city of Dresden, received a commission to evoke the theme of Pentecost. The premiere took place at the Dresdner Frauenkirche on 6 July 1843, and was performed by around a hundred musicians and almost 1,200 singers. The concert was very well received.[134]

After completing Parsifal, Wagner expressed his intention to turn to the writing of symphonies,[135] and several sketches dating from the late 1870s and early 1880s have been identified as work toward this end.[136]

The overtures and orchestral passages from Wagner's middle and late-stage operas are commonly played as concert pieces. For most of these, Wagner wrote short passages to conclude the excerpt so that it does not end abruptly. Another familiar extract is the "Bridal Chorus" from Lohengrin, frequently played as the bride's processional wedding march in English-speaking countries.[137]

Writings

Wagner was an extremely prolific writer, authoring hundreds of books, poems, and articles, as well as voluminous correspondence, throughout his life. His writings covered a wide range of topics, including politics, philosophy, and detailed analyses of his own operas. Essays of note include "Art and Revolution" (1849), "Opera and Drama" (1851), an essay on the theory of opera, and "Das Judenthum in der Musik" ("Jewishness in Music", 1850), a polemic directed against Jewish composers in general, and Giacomo Meyerbeer in particular. He also wrote various autobiographical works, including "My Life" (1880). In his later years Wagner became a vociferous opponent of experimentation on animals and in 1879 he published an open letter, "Against Vivisection", in support of the animal rights activist Ernst von Weber.[138]

There have been several editions of Wagner's writings, including a centennial edition in German edited by Dieter Borchmeyer (which however omitted the essay "Das Judenthum in der Musik")[139] The English translations of Wagner's prose in 8 volumes by W. Ashton Ellis, (1892 – 99), are still in print and commonly used, despite their deficiencies.[140] A complete edition of Wagner's correspondence, (estimated to amount to between 10,000 and 12,000 surviving items), of which the first volume appeared in 1967, is still under way.[141]

Influence and legacy

The grey sculpture of a head of a man in his sixties on a plinth with trees in the background. The front of his face is clean shaven but sideburns run under his chin.
Wagner's bust by Arno Breker in "Festspielpark Bayreuth"

Influence on music

Wagner's later musical style, with its unprecedented exploration of emotional expression, introduced new ideas in harmony, melodic process (leitmotiv) and operatic structure. Notably from Tristan und Isolde onwards, he explored the limits of the traditional tonal system that gave keys and chords their identity, pointing the way to atonality in the 20th century. Some music historians date the beginning of modern classical music to the first notes of Tristan, the so-called Tristan chord.[142][143]

In his lifetime, and for some years after, Wagner inspired fanatical devotion. For a long period, many composers were inclined to align themselves with or against Wagner's music. Anton Bruckner and Hugo Wolf were indebted to him especially, as were César Franck, Henri Duparc, Ernest Chausson, Jules Massenet, Alexander von Zemlinsky, Hans Pfitzner and dozens of others.[144] Gustav Mahler said, "There was only Beethoven and Richard [Wagner]  – and after them, nobody". The twentieth century harmonic revolutions of Claude Debussy and Arnold Schoenberg (tonal and atonal modernism, respectively) have often been traced back to Tristan and Parsifal.[145] The Italian form of operatic realism known as verismo owed much to Wagnerian reconstruction of musical form.[146]

Wagner made a major contribution to the principles and practice of conducting. His essay "About Conducting" (1869)[147] advanced the earlier work of Hector Berlioz and proposed that conducting was a means by which a musical work could be re-interpreted, rather than simply a mechanism for achieving orchestral unison. He exemplified this approach in his own conducting, which was significantly more flexible than the disciplined approach of Mendelssohn; in his view this also justified practices which would today be frowned upon, such as the rewriting of scores.[148] Wilhelm Furtwängler felt that Wagner and von Bülow, through their interpretative approach, inspired a whole new generation of conductors (including Furtwängler himself).[149]

Influence on literature, philosophy and the visual arts

A white bust on a square stand that bears Wagner's name. There are trees behind it.
Memorial bust of Richard Wagner in Venice

Wagner's influence on literature and philosophy is significant.

[Wagner's] protean abundance meant that he could inspire the use of literary motif in many a novel employing interior monologue; [...] the Symbolists saw him as a mystic hierophant; the Decadents found many a frisson in his work.[150]

Friedrich Nietzsche was part of Wagner's inner circle during the early 1870s, and his first published work The Birth of Tragedy proposed Wagner's music as the Dionysian rebirth of European culture in opposition to Apollonian rationalist decadence. Nietzsche broke with Wagner following the first Bayreuth Festival, believing that Wagner's final phase represented a pandering to Christian pieties and a surrender to the new German Reich. Nietzsche expressed his displeasure with the later Wagner in "The Case of Wagner" and "Nietzsche contra Wagner".[151]

Charles Baudelaire, Stéphane Mallarmé and Paul Verlaine worshipped Wagner.[152] Edouard Dujardin, whose influential novel Les lauriers sont coupés is in the form of an interior monologue inspired by Wagnerian music, founded a journal dedicated to Wagner, La Revue Wagnérienne, to which J. K. Huysmans and Téodor de Wyzewa contributed.[153]

In the twentieth century, W. H. Auden once called Wagner "perhaps the greatest genius that ever lived",[154] while Thomas Mann[151] and Marcel Proust[155] were heavily influenced by him and discussed Wagner in their novels. He is discussed in some of the works of James Joyce.[156] Wagnerian themes inhabit T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land, which contains lines from Tristan und Isolde and Götterdämmerung and Verlaine's poem on Parsifal.[157] Many of the Wagner's concepts, including his speculation about dreams, predated their investigation by Sigmund Freud.[158] In a long list of other major cultural figures influenced by Wagner, Bryan Magee includes D. H. Lawrence, Aubrey Beardsley, Romain Rolland, Gérard de Nerval, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Rainer Maria Rilke and numerous others.[159]

Opponents and supporters

Not all reaction to Wagner was positive. For a time, German musical life divided into two factions, Wagner's supporters and those of Johannes Brahms; the latter, with the support of the powerful critic Eduard Hanslick (of whom Beckmesser in Meistersinger is in part a caricature) championed traditional forms and led the conservative front against Wagnerian innovations.[160] They were supported by the conservative leanings of some German music schools, including the Conservatory at Leipzig under Ignaz Moscheles and that at Cologne under the direction of Ferdinand Hiller.[161] Even those who, like Debussy, opposed him ("that old poisoner") could not deny Wagner's influence. Indeed, Debussy was one of many composers, including Tchaikovsky, who felt the need to break with Wagner precisely because his influence was so unmistakable and overwhelming. 'Golliwogg's Cakewalk' from Debussy's Children's Corner piano suite contains a deliberately tongue-in-cheek quotation from the opening bars of Tristan. Others who resisted Wagner's attraction included Gioachino Rossini ("Wagner has wonderful moments, and dreadful quarters of an hour").[162] In the 20th century Wagner's music was parodied by, among others Paul Hindemith and Hans Eisler.[163]

Wagner's followers (known as Wagnerians or Wagnerites)[164] have formed many Societies dedicated to the life, works, and operas of Wagner. Societies include: The Toronto Wagner Society, the Wagner Society of New York, the Wagner Society of the United Kingdom, The Wagner Society of New Zealand, The Wagner Society of Northern California, etc.

Theatre design and practice

A building stands beyond a part-ploughed field and a row of trees. It has five sections. Farthest away, the tallest part with a v-shaped roof contains the stage. Adjoining it is the auditorium section built of patterned brick. Nearest is the royal entrance, made of stone and brick with arched windows and a portico. Two wings adjoin the auditorium.
The Bayreuth Festspielhaus, venue for the first complete performances of the Ring and Parsifal.

Wagner was responsible for several theatrical innovations developed at the Bayreuth Festspielhaus (for the design of which he appropriated some of the ideas of his former colleague, Gottfried Semper, which he had solicited for a proposed new opera house at Munich).[165] These innovations include darkening the auditorium during performances, and placing the orchestra in a pit out of view of the audience.[166]

Influence on film

Wagner's concept of the use of leitmotifs and integrated musical expression has been an influence on many 20th and 21st century film scores, most notably in the score for Hollywood's own "Ring Cycle", The Lord of the Rings. The critic Theodor Adorno has noted that the Wagnerian leitmotiv "leads directly to cinema music where the sole function of the leitmotiv is to announce heroes or situations so as to allow the audience to orient itself more easily".[167] Some film scores have used Wagnerian themes (e.g. Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now which features a version of the Ride of the Valkyrie). Most of Trevor Jones's soundtrack to John Boorman's Arthurian film Excalibur is from Wagner's operas.[168]

Wagner has also been the subject of many biographical films. (See article List of films about Richard Wagner).

Influence on popular music

The rock composer Jim Steinman created what he called Wagnerian Rock. Heavy metal music is also said by some to show the influence of Wagner (as well as other classical composers). In Germany Rammstein and Joachim Witt who has named three of his albums Bayreuth, claim inspiration from Wagner's music. German electronic composer Klaus Schulze dedicated his 1975 album Timewind to Wagner's death (two 30-min tracks, "Bayreuth Return" and "Wahnfried 1883"). He also used the alias Richard Wahnfried for a part of his discography. Slovenian avant-garde group Laibach created the sonic suite VolksWagner in 2009 in collaboration with the Slovenian Radio Symphony Orchestra and composer-conductor Izidor Leitinger, using material from Tannhäuser, the Siegfried Idyll and The Ride of the Valkyries. Phil Spector's wall of sound recording technique was heavily influenced by Wagner.[169]

Film and stage portrayals

There have been a number of film portrayals of Richard Wagner, including:

Jonathan Harvey's opera, Wagner Dream (2007), interwines the events surrounding Wagner's death with the story of Wagner's uncompleted opera sketch Die Sieger (The Victors).

Controversies

Wagner's operas, writings, his politics, beliefs and unorthodox lifestyle made him a controversial figure during his lifetime. Following Wagner's death, the debate about his ideas and their interpretation, particularly in Germany during the 20th century, continued to make him politically and socially controversial in a way that other great composers are not. Much heat is generated by Wagner's comments on Jews, which continue to influence the way that his works are regarded, and by the essays he wrote on the nature of race from 1850 onwards, and their putative influence on the antisemitism of Adolf Hitler.

Racism and antisemitism

A cartoon figure holding a baton, stands next to a music stand in front of some musicians. The figure has a large nose and prominent forehead. His sideburns turn into a wispy beard under his chin.
Caricature of Wagner by Karl Clic in the Viennese satirical magazine, Humoristische Blätter (1873). The exaggerated features refer to rumours of Wagner's Jewish ancestry

Wagner's writings on race and his antisemitism[170] reflected some trends of thought in Germany during the 19th century.

Under a pseudonym in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, Wagner published the essay "Das Judenthum in der Musik" in 1850 (originally translated as "Judaism in Music", by which name it is still known, but better rendered as "Jewishness in Music.") The essay attacked Jewish contemporaries (and rivals) Felix Mendelssohn and Giacomo Meyerbeer, and accused Jews of being a harmful and alien element in German culture. Wagner stated the German people were repelled by Jews' alien appearance and behaviour: "with all our speaking and writing in favour of the Jews' emancipation, we always felt instinctively repelled by any actual, operative contact with them." He argued that because Jews had no connection to the German spirit, Jewish musicians were only capable of producing shallow and artificial music. They therefore composed music to achieve popularity and, thereby, financial success, as opposed to creating genuine works of art.[171] Wagner republished the pamphlet under his own name in 1869, with an extended introduction, leading to several public protests at the first performances of Die Meistersinger. He repeated similar views in later articles, such as "What is German?" (1878, but based on a draft written in the 1860s).[172]

Some biographers[173] have suggested that antisemitic stereotypes are also represented in Wagner's operas. The characters of Mime in the Ring, Sixtus Beckmesser in Die Meistersinger, and Klingsor in Parsifal are sometimes claimed as Jewish representations, though they are not explicitly identified as such in the libretto. Moreover, in all of Wagner's many writings about his works, there is no mention of an intention to caricature Jews in his operas; nor does any such notion appear in the diaries written by Cosima Wagner, which record his views on a daily basis over a period of eight years.[174]

Despite his very public views on Jews, throughout his life Wagner had Jewish friends, colleagues and supporters.[175] In his autobiography, Mein Leben, Wagner mentions many friendships with Jews, referring to that with Samuel Lehrs in Paris as "one of the most beautiful friendships of my life."[176]

The topic of Wagner and the Jews is further complicated by allegations, which may have been credited by Wagner himself, that he himself was of Jewish ancestry, via his supposed father Geyer.[177] In reality, Geyer was not of Jewish descent, nor were either of Wagner's official parents. References to Wagner's supposed 'Jewishness' were made frequently in cartoons of the composer in the 1870s and 1880s, and more explicitly by Friedrich Nietzsche in his essay "The Wagner Case", where he wrote "a Geyer (vulture) is almost an Adler (eagle)".[178] (Both 'Geyer' and 'Adler' were common Jewish surnames.)

Some biographers have asserted that Wagner in his final years came to believe in the racialist philosophy of Arthur de Gobineau, and according to Robert Gutman, this is reflected in the opera Parsifal.[179] Other biographers such as Lucy Beckett[180] believe that this is not true. Wagner showed no significant interest in Gobineau until 1880, when he read Gobineau's "An Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races".[181] Wagner had completed the libretto for Parsifal by 1877, and the original drafts of the story date back to 1857. Wagner's writings of his last years indicate some interest in Gobineau's idea that Western society was doomed because of miscegenation between "superior" and "inferior" races.[182]

Other interpretations

Wagner's ideas were amenable to socialist interpretations, which is not surprising given the composer's revolutionary inclinations in the 1840s, when many of his ideas on art were being formulated. Thus for example, George Bernard Shaw wrote in The Perfect Wagnerite (1883):

[Wagner's] picture of Niblunghome [Shaw's anglicization of Nibelheim, the empire of Alberich in the Ring Cycle] under the reign of Alberic is a poetic vision of unregulated industrial capitalism as it was made known in Germany in the middle of the nineteenth century by Engels's Condition of the Laboring Classes in England [183]

Left-wing interpretations of Wagner also inform the writings of Theodor Adorno amongst other Wagner critics.[184] Walter Benjamin gave Wagner as an example of "bourgeois false consciousness", alienating art from its social context.[185]

The writer Robert Donington has produced a detailed, if controversial, Jungian interpretation of the Ring cycle. Others have also applied psychoanalytical techniques to Wagner's life and works.[186]

Others have sought to place Wagner's work in a more generalised sociohistoric framework. For example, Ehrhard Bahr suggests that 'Wagner provided the middle class with a medium to transfer its familial and political conflicts into a myth of supposedly common Germanic past'.[187]

Nazi appropriation

Adolf Hitler was an admirer of Wagner's music and saw in his operas an embodiment of his own vision of the German nation. There continues to be debate about the extent to which Wagner's views might have influenced Nazi thinking.[188] The Nazis used those parts of Wagner's thought that were useful for propaganda and ignored or suppressed the rest.[189] Although Hitler himself was an ardent fan of "the Master", many in the Nazi hierarchy were not and, according to the historian Richard Carr, resented attending these lengthy epics at Hitler's insistence.[190]

There is evidence that music of Wagner was used at the Dachau concentration camp in 1933/4 to 'reeducate' political prisoners by exposure to 'national music'.[191] However there seems to be no evidence to support claims, sometimes made,[192] that his music was played at Nazi death camps during the Second World War.[193]

Because of the associations of Wagner with antisemitism and Nazism, the performance of his music in the State of Israel has been a source of controversy.[194]

References

Notes
  1. ^ Wagner (1992) 3
  2. ^ Newman (1976) I, 12
  3. ^ Newman (1976) I, 6
  4. ^ Newman (1976) I, 9
  5. ^ Wagner (1992) 5
  6. ^ Newman (1976) I, 32 – 33
  7. ^ Newman (1976) I, 45 – 55
  8. ^ Wagner (1992) 25 – 27. This sketch is referred to alternatively as Leubald und Adelaide.
  9. ^ Newman (1976) I, 63, 71
  10. ^ Wagner (1992) 35 – 36
  11. ^ Newman (1976) I, 62
  12. ^ Newman (1976) I, 76 – 77
  13. ^ Millington (1992) 133
  14. ^ Newman (1976) I, 85 – 86
  15. ^ Millington (1992) 309
  16. ^ Newman (1976) I, 95
  17. ^ a b c d Millington (1992) 321
  18. ^ Newman (1976) I, 98
  19. ^ a b Millington (1992) 271 – 273
  20. ^ Newman (1976) I, 173
  21. ^ a b Millington (1992) 273 – 274
  22. ^ Newman (1976) I, 212
  23. ^ Newman (1976) I, 214
  24. ^ Newman (1976) I, 226 – 227
  25. ^ Newman (1976) I, 217
  26. ^ Newman (1976) I, 229
  27. ^ Newman (1976) I, 242 – 243
  28. ^ Millington (1992) 116 – 118
  29. ^ Newamn (1976) I, 249 – 250
  30. ^ Millington (1992) 277
  31. ^ Newman (1976) I, 268 – 324
  32. ^ Wagner (1994c) 19
  33. ^ Newman (1976) I, 316
  34. ^ Millington (1992) 274
  35. ^ Newman (1976) I, 325 – 509
  36. ^ Millington (1992) 276
  37. ^ Millington (1992) 279
  38. ^ Millington (1992) 31
  39. ^ Millington (1992) 140
  40. ^ Wagner (1992) 417 – 420. Röckel and Bakunin failed to escape and endured long terms of imprisonment.
  41. ^ Wagner (1987) 199 Letter of 21 April 1850
  42. ^ Millington (1992) 297
  43. ^ Newman (1976) II, 137 – 138. Gutman records him as suffering from constipation and shingles (Gutman (1990) 142).
  44. ^ Millington (1992) 289, 294, 300
  45. ^ Wagner (1992) 508 – 510. Others agree on the profound importance of this work to Wagner  – see Magee (2000) 133 – 134.
  46. ^ See e.g. Magee (2000) 276 – 278.
  47. ^ Magee (1988) 77 – 78
  48. ^ See e.g. Dahlhaus (1979).
  49. ^ Magee (2000) 251 – 253. Schopenhauer asserted that goodness and salvation result from renunciation of the world and turning against and denying one's own will.
  50. ^ Gutman (1990) 168 – 169
  51. ^ Millington (undated a)
  52. ^ a b Millington (1992) 318
  53. ^ Newman (1976) II, 540 – 542.
  54. ^ Newman (1976) II, 559 – 567
  55. ^ Deathridge (1984)
  56. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 315 – 320
  57. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 293 – 303
  58. ^ Wagner (1992) 667
  59. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 321 – 330
  60. ^ Newman (1976) III, 147 – 148
  61. ^ Gutman (1990) 215 – 216
  62. ^ Gutman (1990) 262
  63. ^ Newman (1976) III, 212 – 220
  64. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 339
  65. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 346
  66. ^ Wagner (1992) 741
  67. ^ Wagner (1992) 739
  68. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 354
  69. ^ Newman (1976) III, 366
  70. ^ Millington (1992) 32 – 33
  71. ^ Newman (1976) III, 530
  72. ^ Newman (1976) III, 499 – 501
  73. ^ Newman (1976) III, 538 – 539
  74. ^ Newman (1976) III, 518 – 519
  75. ^ Millington (1992) 301
  76. ^ Millington (1992) 17
  77. ^ Millington (1992) 311; Cosima's birthday was 24 December, but she usually celebrated it on Christmas Day
  78. ^ Millington (1992) 287, 290
  79. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 400
  80. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 411
  81. ^ Newman (1976) IV, 392 – 393
  82. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 409 – 418
  83. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 418 – 419
  84. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 419
  85. ^ Gregor-Dellin (1983) 422
  86. ^ Millington (1992) 287
  87. ^ Statutes of the Foundation (in German) at Bayreuth Festival website.
  88. ^ Millington (1992) 18
  89. ^ Wagner (1994a) 211 – 273, 274 – 284
  90. ^ Millington (1992) 331 – 332
  91. ^ Millington (1992) 409
  92. ^ Millington (1992) 19
  93. ^ Gutman (1990) 414 – 417
  94. ^ Newman (1976) IV, 692
  95. ^ Newman (1976) IV, 697, 711 – 712
  96. ^ Walker (1996) 496 – 498
  97. ^ Newman (1976) IV, 714 – 716
  98. ^ Millington (1992) 264 – 268
  99. ^ Millington (1992) 234 – 235
  100. ^ Millington (1992) 236 – 237
  101. ^ In his 1872 essay 'On the Designation 'Music Drama', he criticizes the term "music drama" suggesting instead the phrase "deeds of music made visible" (Wagner (1995b) 299 – 304).
  102. ^ Millington (1992) 274 – 276
  103. ^ Magee (1988) 26
  104. ^ Westernhagen (1980) 111
  105. ^ Wagner (1994c) 391 and n.
  106. ^ For the reworking of Dutchman, see Deathridge (1982) 13, 25; for that of Tannhäuser, see Ashman (1988) 7–8.
  107. ^ Skelton (2002)
  108. ^ Westernhagen (1980) 106 – 107
  109. ^ See Millington (1992) 286; Donnington (1979) 128 – 130, 141, 210 – 212.
  110. ^ Millington (2008) 74
  111. ^ Grey (2008) 86
  112. ^ Millington (undated b)
  113. ^ Millington (1992) 294, 300, 304
  114. ^ Wagner (2004) Vol.2 Part III: 1850 – 1861 (no page numbers)
  115. ^ Letter of April 1859, quoted Daverio (208) 116
  116. ^ a b Rose (1981) 15
  117. ^ McClatchie (2008) 134
  118. ^ Millington (undated c)
  119. ^ See e.g. Weiner (1997) 66 – 72.
  120. ^ Millington (1992) 294 – 295
  121. ^ Millington (1992) 286
  122. ^ Millington (2008) 80
  123. ^ Shaw (1898) section: "Back to Opera Again"
  124. ^ Puffett (1984) 43
  125. ^ Puffett (1984) 48 – 49
  126. ^ Millington (1982) 285
  127. ^ Millington (1992) 308
  128. ^ Cosima Wagner, 28 March 1881
  129. ^ Stanley (2008) 169 – 175
  130. ^ Millington (undated d)
  131. ^ von Westernhagen (1980) 138
  132. ^ Millington (1992) 311 – 312
  133. ^ Overvold (1976) 179 – 180, 183
  134. ^ Millington (1992) 314
  135. ^ von Westernhagen (1980) 111
  136. ^ Deathridge (2008) 189-205
  137. ^ Kennedy (1980) 701, Wedding March
  138. ^ Millington (1992) 174–177
  139. ^ Wagner (1983)
  140. ^ Treadwell (2008), 191
  141. ^ Millington (1982) 190, 412
  142. ^ Deathridge (2008) 114
  143. ^ Magee (2000) 208-209
  144. ^ See articles on these composers in Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians; also Grey (2008) 222 – 229 and Deathridge (2008) 231 – 232.
  145. ^ Magee (1988) 54; Grey (2008) 228 – 229
  146. ^ Grey (2008) 226
  147. ^ Wagner (1995a) 289 – 364
  148. ^ Westrup (1980) 645. See for example Wagner's proposals for the rescoring of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony in his essay on that work (Wagner (1995b) 231 – 253).
  149. ^ von Westernhagen (1980) 113
  150. ^ Millington (1992) 396
  151. ^ a b Magee (1988) 52
  152. ^ Magee (1988) 49 – 50
  153. ^ Grey (2009) 372 – 387
  154. ^ Cited in Magee (1988) 48. Magee however does not cite Auden's further reference to Wagner as 'an absolute shit' (Ross (1998)).
  155. ^ Painter (1983) 163
  156. ^ Martin (1992) passim
  157. ^ Magee (1988) 47
  158. ^ Horton (1999)
  159. ^ Magee (1988) 47 – 56
  160. ^ Millington (1992) 26. See also New German School and War of the Romantics
  161. ^ Sietz & Wiegandt (undated)
  162. ^ Letter to Emile Naumann, April 1867, quoted in E. Naumann, Italienische Tondichter (1883) IV, 5.
  163. ^ Deathridge (2008) 228
  164. ^ cf. Shaw (1898)
  165. ^ Spotts (1994) 40
  166. ^ Spotts (1994) 11
  167. ^ Adorno (205), 34–36
  168. ^ Grant (1999)
  169. ^ Michael Long, Beautiful monsters: imagining the classic in musical media, University of California Press, 2008. p.114.
  170. ^ See e.g. Katz (1986) and Rose (1996) passim. See also article Wagner controversies.
  171. ^ Wagner (1894)
  172. ^ Wagner (1995a) 149 – 170
  173. ^ Gutman, Robert (1990)
  174. ^ See, however, Weiner (1997) for very detailed allegations of anti-Semitism in Wagner's music and characterisations.
  175. ^ Millington, Barry (Ed.) (1992) 164
  176. ^ Wagner (1992) 171
  177. ^ Conway (2002)
  178. ^ Nietzsche (1967) 182
  179. ^ Gutman, Robert (1990) 418 ff
  180. ^ Beckett (1981)
  181. ^ Gutman (1990) 406
  182. ^ Everett (2008)
  183. ^ Shaw (1998) Introduction
  184. ^ See Žižek (2009) viii: '[In this book] for the first time the Marxist reading of a musical work of art [...] was combined with the highest musicological analysis'.
  185. ^ Millington (2008) 81
  186. ^ Donington (1979); Millington (2008) 82 – 83
  187. ^ [1] Bahr, Ehrhard. "Art and Society in Mann's early novellas" in A companion to the works of Thomas Mann, ed. Prof. Herbert Lehnert, Prof. Eva Wessell: p. 55
  188. ^ The story that Hitler claimed that, after seeing a performance as a young man of Rienzi, "it all began", has been exposed as "fanciful". See Kershaw (1999) 610.
  189. ^ However, the story that the Nazis banned Parsifal because of its supposed pacifist qualities is completely without foundation. See Deathridge (2008) 173 – 174.
  190. ^ "According to Jonathan Carr, author of the forthcoming book The Wagner Clan, Hitler himself was obsessed by "the Master". But the party faithful were not and had to be dragged to performances at Hitler's insistence" (Higgins (2007)).
  191. ^ Fackler (2007). See also the Music and the Holocaust website.
  192. ^ For example, in Walsh (1992).
  193. ^ See e.g. John (2004) for a detailed essay on music in the Nazi death camps, which however nowhere mentions Wagner. See also Potter (2008) 244: "We know from testimonies that concentration camp orchestras played [all sorts of] music [...] but that Wagner was explicitly off-limits. However, after the war, unsubstantiated claims that Wagner's music accompanied Jews to their death took on momentum".
  194. ^ See Bruen (1993).

Sources and further reading

Prose works by Wagner

  • Wagner, Richard, (ed. Dieter Borchmeyer) (1983) Richard Wagner Dichtungen und Schriften, 10 vols. Frankfurt am Main.
  • Wagner, Richard (ed. and trans. Stewart Spencer and Barry Millington) (1987) Selected Letters of Richard Wagner, Dent. ISBN 0460046438; W. W. Norton and Company ISBN 978-0393025002.
  • Wagner, Richard (trans. Andrew Gray) (1992) My Life, Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0306804816 Wagner's sometimes unreliable autobiography, covering his life to 1864, written between 1865 and 1880 and first published privately in German in a small edition between 1870 and 1880. The first (edited) public edition appeared in 1911. Gray's translation is the most comprehensive available.
  • Wagner, Richard: Collected Prose Works. tr. W. Ashton Ellis
Wagner, Richard (1994c) Vol. 1 The Artwork of the Future and Other Works, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London. ISBN 9780803297524
Wagner, Richard (1995d) Vol. 2 Opera and Drama, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London. 1995. ISBN 0803297653
Wagner, Richard (1995c) Vol. 3 Judaism in Music and Other Essays, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London. ISBN 9780803297661
Wagner, Richard (1995a) Vol. 4 Art and Politics, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London. ISBN 9780803297746
Wagner, Richard (1995b) Vol. 5 Actors and Singers, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London. ISBN 9780803297739
Wagner, Richard (1994a) Vol. 6 Religion and Art , University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London. ISBN 9780803297645
Wagner, Richard (1994b) Vol. 7 Pilgrimage to Beethoven and Other Essays, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London. ISBN 9780803297630
Wagner, Richard (1995c) Vol. 8 Jesus of Nazareth and Other Writings, University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln and London. ISBN 9780803297807

Other sources

External links

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