Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

Seán
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Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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This article was published in today's Guardian newspaper:
Ahead of Strauss' Voice, a season of concerts to mark his 150th-anniversary year, we ask musicians to weigh up the work of the controversial composer

Richard Strauss. He's the firebrand composer who revolutionised the technical and expressive possibilities of the orchestra before the end of the 19th century in his tone-poems such as Also Sprach Zarathustra – 2001: A Space Odyssey's signature tune – or Ein Heldenleben. He shocked and awed early-20th-century audiences with his blood-drenched settings of Salome and Elektra. And at the end of his life, his beloved Germany in ruins after the second world war, he wrote some of the most devastatingly moving music ever composed: Metamorphosen, for strings, or the Four Last Songs. But in his 150th anniversary year, he's controversial: is he a fabulously gifted entertainer rather than a musical deep thinker? What was his real relationship with the Third Reich? Is his description of himself – "I may not be a first-rate composer, but I am a first-class second-rate composer" – mere modesty or the simple truth? Tom Service

Mark Elder, conductor
t's difficult to be objective about Strauss. Like all good love affairs, my relationship with him started without any sense of proportion. I'd never heard any of his music before playing in a university production of Ariadne auf Naxos. I was flabbergasted. I had no idea music could do the things he was doing with harmony and melody. And the sounds of those female voices sent shivers down my spine. I set about playing and hearing and seeing anything of his I could, from orchestral music to the songs, and as many of his operas as I could find. As time has gone by, I'm a bit more selective, and today I'm fascinated by the fundamental question of how much profundity there really is in his music, as opposed to incredibly enjoyable and skilful entertainment. But I just love his musical imagination.
From a conductor's point of view, his scores are brilliantly conceived. The challenge is getting an orchestra to do exactly what he writes in them: but if they do, his music – no matter how dense or rich or complex – just works.

Susan Gritton, soprano
It is always a glorious treat to sing Strauss. He knew instinctively how to write for the soprano voice; you feel this particularly strongly in those songs he wrote for his wife, Pauline de Ahna. The richness of the orchestral texture is actually where the beauty lies for the voice because, with a sensitive conductor, it becomes a sumptuous wave for the voice to surf, with wonderful opportunities for timbre and line. The lieder written later for Elisabeth Schumann have a deeper, more thoughtful quality; you can feel they were composed for a different voice. My own favourite Strauss role is Capriccio's Countess Madeleine – it is rich with sparkle and lyrical elegance – and fits me like a glove.

Steven Isserlis, cellist
can't say that I like Strauss, as a rule. I saw Salome once, and never need to see it again. His natural language is post-Wagnerian hothouse romanticism that I'm just not into – I long for a bath of Mozart after hearing it! But I do love Don Quixote, the piece based on Cervantes's novel, for solo cello and orchestra. The first time I heard it I couldn't make head nor tail of it, but the more you understand the story Strauss is telling, the more you get out of it. It's a brilliant piece of painting in music. It has such beauty and such colours – the section when Quixote explains his philosophy to Sancho Panza, or its ecstatic finish. There has never been another composer who had the skill and the genius of depiction that he did. He even said he wanted to be able to depict in music the difference between two kinds of beer. And I hope that this year, there will be some lesser-known works of his that will be played and will turn out to be masterpieces.

Roderick Williams, baritone
My favourite opera of his is Capriccio, in which he wrestles with the question of music and text – which comes first? It's an serious attempt to solve that riddle in operatic form while also being a witty and charming music drama. I always think it's like a Radio 4 Play for Today in its conversational texture, until the last 20 minutes, which is then sheer ravishing beauty. It's almost as if in this last scene Strauss finally relented, stopped thinking about music and text, and gave in to his melodic urge. There's this amazing horn solo, and Strauss just lets the Countess sing. I was in a production of it at Grange Park three years ago and every night I used to stand in the wings during this final scene and watch Susan Gritton sing. It was hairs on the back of the neck stuff.
Not only was Strauss married to a soprano but he was an opera conductor, so he understood orchestras and orchestration particularly well. Strauss's wife wasn't backwards in coming forwards and would have told him what worked. If he wasn't an intuitive writer before he married her, he certainly was after!
I was at a performance of the Alpine symphony in the US recently – and, hearing it live with 100-plus people on stage, Wagner tubas, quadruple winds, a kitchen sink, even a bass oboe – a heckelphone – for the duration of that piece I was right up there! Strauss took Programme Music about as far as it could go before cinema added visuals to it. After this is John Williams and Korngold.

Juanjo Mena, conductor
n 1896's Also Sprach Zarathustra, Strauss abandoned what he found to be the restrictive classical form, developing it to reveal a new structure that took the shape of a great symphonic work, but in one single movement. The process culminated in 1915's Alpine Symphony. In both works, Strauss was clearly conscious of presenting art as a form of expression, stressing that music should have poetic elements to it, as well as the most imaginative representations of living phenomena – those of man, life and nature. He channelled all this incredible optimistic energy into his scores in a masterly way, and his instrumentation, with its inexhaustible wealth of orchestral colour, is intoxicating.

Soile Isokoski, soprano
Every Strauss song and opera part I have sung feel as if they were written for my voice – they are like balsam in the throat. I really love his songs but my favourite of his works is Der Rosenkavalier, a dear challenge every time. It is such a perfect harmony between music and text, the terzet at the end being the crown. Just amazing.

William Dazeley, baritone
Strauss is a very personal thing. I know many people who either love or hate his music. I'm probably one of the rare breed who don't feel strongly either way – it depends what sort of a mood I'm in! Sometimes I find, particularly the late work, too much of an assault, emotionally and physically. The vocal lines of his pre-first-world-war songs have a beautiful romantic sweep but in later years he got more experimental and conversational. The song I'm performing on the 23 January's concert, Nächtlicher Gang, is a huge challenge. Written in 1899, there are hints of the kind of style he was to move on to in later years. It's wild and fiery – the marking at the beginning means literally "moving violently". It's got a crazy repeated refrain – "I must get to my beloved" – that comes seven times, each time a semitone higher, as if the singer is battling his way through the storm. You can imagine by the time you get to the end there's a high-pitched ecstasy of determination to beat the odds and make it through.

Anne Schwanewilms, soprano
Strauss's marriage of text and music demands the portrayal of genuine psychological and emotional depths. A perfect symbiosis developed over time between Strauss and his preferred librettist, Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Their correspondence reveals that they were often at odds regarding questions of interpretation, but this discord enriched their creative relationship, and allows the singer a variety of interpretative possibilities. Sometimes, a certain cynicism in the text may colour the phrase; other times, the instrumentation or use of a specific musical motif inspires the interpretation of a particular dramatic moment.

Inger Dam-Jensen, soprano
Strauss understood the female voice intuitively. His music has always suited my voice naturally, in every way. Technically it's demanding but it's also very natural to sing for a soprano - there's something about the melody but also about the vowels and where they are placed. But we should always reappraise people, and some do find Strauss difficult - my father, for example! It partly depends on which Strauss you're talking about. Salome is a very complex and quite modern work, and for some it still does feel "modern", but if you give it a chance you find melodies and great beauty in there even if the harmonies can be demanding.

Steve Davislim, tenor
I think Strauss's affinity for sopranos (and their voices) was so strong that it led him to try to actively kill his tenors – pick just about any of his operatic tenor roles! (Might this be the stuff of an upcoming mini-series?)
Strauss, as with all his contemporaries – Korngold, Schrecker, Zemlinsky – seems to have thought largely in terms of textures rather than volume. Who wouldn't want to include all those exquisite colours available within the late-romantic arsenal? He was pre-cinematic – look how his younger Nazi-deemed "degenerate" late-romantic colleagues were hounded to Hollywood sound stages in the late 30s.
But there is psychological and emotional depth crafted into his music albeit often well buried beneath a luxurious multi-overlay of lavishness sometimes verging on musical extravagance that apart from being his chosen individual musical style was also a reflection of the late 19th/early-20th-century decadence he saw around him. But who could hear the Four Last Songs and not feel eternity?

Hillevi Martinpelto, soprano
Both his music and his texts convey deeply human feelings, an awareness of the finiteness of life. Songs such as Im Abendtrot or Befreit feel almost too powerful. Much of it is technically very challenging to sing – you certainly have to be on your toes. My own favourite role is the Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier. I love interpreting her thoughts and feelings on the passage of time and how nothing lasts for ever. I'm going to sing as much Strauss as I can this anniversary year. It's a fantastic opportunity!

• Strauss' Voice featuring the BBC Philharmonic, the Hallé, Manchester Camerata and The Bridgewater Hall begins on 18 January and runs until 8 March. Details: http://www.straussvoice.com
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/j ... y-composer
"To appreciate the greatness of the Masters is to keep faith in the greatness of humanity." - Wilhelm Furtwängler
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Peter
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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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What is your opinion of Strauss? I was considering to give his operas a bit more attention. Any recommendations on great dvd versions of Strauss's operas?

By the way - any thoughts on Solti's Strauss recordings?

http://www.amazon.co.uk/R-Strauss-Opera ... auss+solti
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Seán
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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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Pepe?
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Peter
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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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What is the best entry point to Strauss's operas? Elektra?
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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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Peter wrote:What is the best entry point to Strauss's operas? Elektra?

That really depends on what you are looking for Peter. There are two ends of a scale with Strauss' operas for me (absolutely not and expert!); the beautifully calm and serene end and the hedonistic and hysterical end. I personally can only accomodate the beautifully calm and serene end and therefore would recommend the beautiful Der Rosenkavalier as well as Arabella. However if you are asking about Elektra perhaps you should check out some YouTube videos first to see which type of music that you prefer. I would be interested to see which end of the spectrum that you go for!
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Peter
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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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fergus wrote:
Peter wrote:What is the best entry point to Strauss's operas? Elektra?

That really depends on what you are looking for Peter. There are two ends of a scale with Strauss' operas for me (absolutely not and expert!); the beautifully calm and serene end and the hedonistic and hysterical end. I personally can only accomodate the beautifully calm and serene end and therefore would recommend the beautiful Der Rosenkavalier as well as Arabella. However if you are asking about Elektra perhaps you should check out some YouTube videos first to see which type of music that you prefer. I would be interested to see which end of the spectrum that you go for!
Thanks for the advice Fergus. I suspect that I will end up more in the calm and serene portion of the sound spectrum. I watched a small portion of the beginning of Elektra which definitely was jarring. At the same time I can sense how Strauss weaves a spell of music around the situation as the singers blurt out their phrases in cacophony. It works in the situation as one is taking in the stage and singers, but I already have my doubts if I will enjoy this in the cd format. The sound web on its own can cause a very different impression.

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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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No problem Peter. Let me know how you get on. I really should not have used the very non PC term "hedonistic and hysterical" but those that know me know that I am a huge R Strauss fan so I was not denegrading the music. I should have been more gentile and used the term "challenging" but I think that you understood me perfectly LOL!! Anyway you may surprise yourself and enjoy the music!!
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Peter
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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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fergus wrote:No problem Peter. Let me know how you get on. I really should not have used the very non PC term "hedonistic and hysterical" but those that know me know that I am a huge R Strauss fan so I was not denegrading the music. I should have been more gentile and used the term "challenging" but I think that you understood me perfectly LOL!! Anyway you may surprise yourself and enjoy the music!!
I suspect it is a slightly acquired taste? It seems as much of classical music initially calls for that approach. I cannot believe there used to be a time when I did not enjoy opera. Do classical pieces become more harmonious to one's mind as the the music patterns become more and more familiar? That is my hypothesis....
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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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Peter wrote:
I suspect it is a slightly acquired taste? It seems as much of classical music initially calls for that approach. I cannot believe there used to be a time when I did not enjoy opera. Do classical pieces become more harmonious to one's mind as the the music patterns become more and more familiar? That is my hypothesis....

Many people find that to be the case Peter although some find it difficult to fully appreciate what is going on. The way that I look at it is that Music is like any other language; one has to get a basic understanding of how it is constructed to understand in a basic way what is going on. One does not need to get a BA in music but one learns to listen more astutely thereby gaining some of the basic concepts. Unfortunately there is a little more than trying to "pick out the tune" involved here. How is that tune introduced and ultimately handled i.e. what is the Form of the piece. There is also the issue of Harmony and how that enriches the tone or perhaps the composer uses Counterpoint to embelish the "tune".....I must stop before I end up boring people. However, like you I "grew" into Opera and it also took me a very long time to appreciate the language of Modern music. Patience is your great ally here as well as copious reading but above all - enjoy the journey!
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Seán
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Re: Richard Strauss: profound genius or gifted entertainer?

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Peter wrote:
fergus wrote:No problem Peter. Let me know how you get on. I really should not have used the very non PC term "hedonistic and hysterical" but those that know me know that I am a huge R Strauss fan so I was not denegrading the music. I should have been more gentile and used the term "challenging" but I think that you understood me perfectly LOL!! Anyway you may surprise yourself and enjoy the music!!
I suspect it is a slightly acquired taste? It seems as much of classical music initially calls for that approach. I cannot believe there used to be a time when I did not enjoy opera. Do classical pieces become more harmonious to one's mind as the the music patterns become more and more familiar? That is my hypothesis....
Yes, I believe that to be true and I think that a willingness to listen attentively alone for hours on end has a lot to do with it too, I have always done that, my peers have not.
"To appreciate the greatness of the Masters is to keep faith in the greatness of humanity." - Wilhelm Furtwängler
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