Rounding Wagner's mountain : Richard Strauss and modern German opera
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Bibliographic Information
Rounding Wagner's mountain : Richard Strauss and modern German opera
(Cambridge studies in opera)
Cambridge University Press, 2014
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Note
Bibliography: p. 316-332
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Richard Strauss' fifteen operas, which span the years 1893 to 1941, make up the largest German operatic legacy since Wagner's operas of the nineteenth century. Many of Strauss's works were based on texts by Europe's finest writers: Oscar Wilde, Hugo von Hofmannsthal and Stefan Zweig, among others, and they also overlap some of the most important and tumultuous stretches of German history, such as the founding and demise of a German empire, the rise and fall of the Weimar Republic, the period of National Socialism, and the post-war years, which saw a divided East and West Germany. In the first book to discuss all Strauss's operas, Bryan Gilliam sets each work in its historical, aesthetic, philosophical, and literary context to reveal what made the composer's legacy unique. Addressing Wagner's cultural influence upon this legacy, Gilliam also offers new insights into the thematic and harmonic features that recur in Strauss's compositions.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- A musical-analytical postscript
- 1. Guntram and the crisis of German musical metaphysics
- 2. Elan vital: Feuersnot, Salome, and radical individualism
- 3. The way to the social: Elektra and Der Rosenkavalier
- 4. Intermezzo: Ariadne and her transformations
- 5. The marriage operas: Die Frau ohne Schatten, Intermezzo, and Die agyptische Helena
- 6. Composing without Hofmannsthal: Arabella and Die schweigsame Frau
- 7. The politics of peace: Friedenstag and Daphne
- 8. Opera in time of war: Die Liebe der Danae and Capriccio.
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