Introduction
(born Leipzig, 22 May 1813; died Venice, 13 February 1883).
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 premiere. 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 von Bülow (she was Liszt's daughter);
Bülow (who condoned it) directed the Tristan premiere 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 pattem 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 retumed 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.
Extracted with permission from
The Grove Concise Dictionary of Music
edited by Stanley Sadie
© Macmillan Press Ltd., London. |
Detailed Information about
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Operas
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"Die Feen"
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"Das Liebesverbot"
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"Rienzi"
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"Der fliegende Holländer" (Flying Dutchman)
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"Tannhäuser"
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"Lohengrin"
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"Der Ring des Nibelungen"
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"Das Rheingold"
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"Die Walküre"
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"Siegfried"
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"Götterdämmerung"(Twilight of the Gods)
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"Tristan und Isolde"
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"Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg"
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"Parsifal"
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Other Works
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Picture Gallery
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List of Works
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Bibliography
can be found on the internet on:
Classical Music Pages:  |
This project was created by Matt Boynick.
© 1 February 1996
Last Revision - 25 August 1999
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