Greeting from Amazon.com Delivers Classical 101

Editor, Ted Libbey

With Classical 101, Amazon.com's expert editors introduce music fans
to key composers and performers, important stylistic movements, and
milestone recordings in the history of classical music. In this
mailing, contributor Ted Libbey introduces the revolutionary music of
Richard Wagner (1813-1883), who decisively changed the course of
musical evolution in the 19th century and beyond. (Note: a separate
introduction to Wagner's epic "Ring" cycle will appear in a later
issue.)



And you can find an audio tour and essay on Wagner's
preludes and overtures at
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=entertainmentsit&path=tg/feature/-/12734




Titan of the 19th Century

As Beethoven was the dominant musical figure in the first
half of the 19th century, so Richard Wagner (1813-1883) was
in the second. His operas (or "music dramas," as they were
often called to describe their synthesis of music and
stagecraft) tapped into the very essence of romanticism,
celebrating love, myth, heroism, and humanity's
transcendence of nature in ways that were singularly
provocative and profound. His music was immense, powerful,
compelling: it inflamed the imagination of an era in which
even the bourgeoisie craved extreme feelings and worshipped
the sublime. Indeed, so great was Wagner's impact that it
extended beyond the sphere of music to literature and
philosophy. By the 1870s, and for some time after his death
in 1883, he bestrode the world of European (and American)
culture "like a colossus."

Wagner was viewed by his contemporaries as a great
progressive. At a time when the work of Darwin and Wallace
had brought the concept of evolution to the forefront of
intellectual debate, Wagner was seen as a kind of
culmination. His emotionally charged idiom was often
referred to as the "Music of the Future," suggesting there
was nothing beyond what he already had reached. Even today,
knowing what did come after Wagner, legions of music lovers
are willing to say that nothing yet has gone beyond him.


Visionary Artist

As a man, Wagner had plenty of flaws. He was vain,
prejudiced, and egocentric. But as an artist, he was
governed by a visionary insight into human character and
emotion, as well as by an unerring instinct for what could
be achieved on the stage and in musical sound. His early
works carried forward the precepts of German romanticism and
Parisian grand opera while boldly breaking new ground. His
mature works, from the 1850s on, achieved an entirely new
synthesis of musical and dramatic elements. Wagner developed
a hauntingly sensuous musical language, advanced harmony and
orchestration into new realms, and exerted a compelling
influence on the course of music history.

The overtures and preludes to Wagner's operas are among the
most brilliant and accomplished pieces of orchestral music
written in the 19th century and afford a spectacular
introduction to his work as a whole. One can find there, in
concentrated form, the same incandescent expression and
dramatic urgency as in the operas themselves. One can revel
in the power of Wagner's scoring. There's a gloriously rich
alchemy--utilizing large numbers of wind and brass
instruments--that gives the orchestra an unprecedented
opulence and depth of sonority, yet produces uncanny
transparency, as well. In these essays, drawn from the
richest vein of romanticism, Wagner created the modern
orchestra and set the standard all subsequent composers have
had to live up to.

Overtures and Preludes, performed by the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra, conducted by Daniel Barenboim
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000000SS2/entertainmentsit

Orchestral Music, performed by the Columbia Symphony
Orchestra, conducted by Bruno Walter
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000002A7M/entertainmentsit

Orchestral Music, Vol. 1, performed by the Philharmonia
Orchestra, conducted by Otto Klemperer
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000AF4M/entertainmentsit

Orchestral Music, Vol. 2, performed by the Philharmonia
Orchestra, conducted by Otto Klemperer
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000AF4N/entertainmentsit

Overtures and Preludes, performed by the London Philharmonic
Orchestra et al., conducted by Sir Adrian Boult
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000002S08/entertainmentsit


Early Works

The first truly distinctive work to come from Wagner's pen
was "Der fliegende Hollaender" ("The Flying Dutchman"), a
revolutionary score in which the sweep of Wagner's musical
ideas and the Teutonic power of his orchestration collided
head-on with the Franco-Italian trappings of grand opera.
The overture to "The Flying Dutchman" depicts a storm at sea
much like one Wagner himself experienced a few years before
he wrote the piece. The surging, heaving passages in the
strings suggest the towering swells of a storm-tossed sea,
while the urgent, echoing proclamations in horns and
trumpets sound like calls of alarm from a ship in distress.

Like the Dutchman, the hero of Wagner's next opera,
"Tannhaeuser," is a doomed man who can be redeemed only by
the self-sacrificing love of a woman. The conflict at the
heart of the opera is that between carnal love and spiritual
love, and the music of the overture evokes these two poles
with majestic force.

The opera "Lohengrin" marks a turning point in Wagner's
development, a decisive step away from the conventions of
grand opera toward the continuous music drama of "Tristan
und Isolde" and the "Ring." The opera's luminous orchestral
prelude, which makes groundbreaking use of divided strings,
is richly romantic in feeling and has an emotive power quite
new to the operatic sphere. The extraordinary prelude to Act
III is a tour de force of a different color, depicting the
exhilaration that follows the wedding of Lohengrin and Elsa.

"Der fliegende Hollaender," conducted by Christoph von
Dohnanyi
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000420S/entertainmentsit

"Tannhaeuser," conducted by Sir Georg Solti
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000041QQ/entertainmentsit

"Lohengrin," conducted by Rudolf Kempe
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000002RPK/entertainmentsit


The Most Tragic of Love Stories and a Warm, Human Comedy

Between 1857 and 1867, while he set aside the mammoth task
of composing his "Ring" cycle (which would last a quarter of
a century), Wagner turned his energies to two extraordinary
projects--a love story of towering intensity based on a
medieval epic by Gottfried von Strassburg, and a touchingly
human comedy set in 16th-century Nuremberg. The love story
was "Tristan und Isolde," the comedy "Die Meistersinger von
Nuernberg." Wagner coined a new musical language when he
wrote "Tristan" and entrusted the orchestra with a more
important and more taxing part in the proceedings than it
had ever had before. The music of the prelude to Act I of
"Tristan" is perhaps the most potent evocation of elemental
desire ever penned, while the opera's final scene is
certainly the most powerful expression of rapture in all of
music. Frequently joined as a concert offering, these two
portions of the music drama are among the finest orchestral
pages in the repertory.

If there's a flip side to the stormy and ultimately fatal
passions of "Tristan und Isolde," it's the sunlit, if also
bittersweet, celebration of love that comes in "Die
Meistersinger," Wagner's only mature comedy. There is
nothing more glorious in the orchestral repertory than the
prelude to Act I, a rousing C-major joyride that delivers 10
minutes of pure exuberance and stirring lyricism, and sets
the stage for the most warmly human of all Wagner's dramas.

"Tristan und Isolde," conducted by Karl Boehm
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001GXS/entertainmentsit

"Tristan und Isolde," conducted by Wilhelm Furtwaengler
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000002RXM/entertainmentsit

"Tannhaeuser," "Tristan und Isolde" (excerpts), "Siegfried-Idyll,"
conducted by Herbert von Karajan
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001G9H/entertainmentsit

"Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg," conducted by Herbert von
Karajan
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000K4GK/entertainmentsit

"Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg," conducted by Hans
Knappertsbusch
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001ZOO/entertainmentsit




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