Operas Wagner example essay topic
Granted we were both a bit drunk at the time, but even so, you may get a bit of an idea how much respect and love Matthew has for the various works of Richard W. Nonetheless, I stand by both of those statements. There's no point denying the proto-Nazi thing, since handsome Adolf said it himself: "whoever wants to understand National Socialist Germany must first understand Wagner". Michael Tanner tries to minimise Wagner's effect on the development of Nazi Germany by saying Hitler was the only one in the Nazi hierarchy who actually liked Wagner, and all the others had to be dragged to Wagner productions under protest, but even so I don't think he denies Wagner's influence outright. And even if anti-Semitic views were less unfashionable in the earlier part of this century than they are these days (certain quarters like the notwithstanding) so that Hitler could really have picked them up from anywhere, he himself speci finally referred to Wagner as his source. So let's stop quibbling on this point. I'm also going to stand by my other statement about Wagner not really doing it for me.
I don't have problems with 19th century Romanticism. (of which Wagner became by common consent one of the greatest exemplars and proponents) per se, and I'd rather have that than the stiffly formal and correct classicism of the 18th century more often than not. But even so, I'm not blind to its shortcomings, and there are times when the Romantic fits and seizures become too much. Wagner, to me, represents Romantic excess. There was a great moment once in the TV series Blackadder where Blackadder describes just how evil the Germans are: they have no word for "fluffy" and their operas last three or four days. The first example is slightly exaggerated perhaps (say hi to the word flaumig, Edmund), but in the case of Wagner's Ring der Nibelungen, the gibe is cruelly true. The whole thing really does last for four days (or evenings, at least).
This is what I mean by excessive. Granted that the Ring is of course a series of four operas, not one, it's still too much. I've written before about how I don't like Mozart much, and one of the things I said then is that the sheer volume of young Wolfgang's output is one of the things that defeats me when I approach it. Wagner's excesses are in the opposite direction; he wrote relatively few operas but they were almost all mind- and arse-numbingly long. I don't think any of them (other than perhaps The Flying Dutchman) clock in below three hours and most go over four. Way too much to handle for me.
Still, I've actually made an effort to get a handle of Wagner. A semi-proper effort too, not the half-arsed surface scratch job I did on Mozart. In preparation for this here bit of writing, I've done a bit of reading and also some more listening notably, finally listening to the whole of the Ring for the first time. Way back when I did music at UNSW in 1993 I heard the first two operas in the cycle, Das Rheingold and Die Walkre, then never heard them again for nearly six years (except for an old Bruno Walter recording of Walkre Act I at Bowen Library) until I picked them up again a few weeks ago, and I'd never heard the other two Siegfried and Gtterdmmerungat all before now. This naturally had a rather grievous effect on my perception of the whole work, and really it wasn't until I started preparation for this thing here that I even realised really what the story was. So I think I've come to a better appreciation of what Wagner was trying to achieve with the Ring, and these days I'm prepared to give him more credit than I've been in the past.
Wagner's source for his exhausting epic was the old German poem the Nibelungenlied, which was probably given its final form around the same time as the stories of Parzival and Tristan and Isolde were taking shape, i.e. about the end of the 12th / start of the 13th century. Those other medieval stories were the source of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde and his final opera Parsifal. However, having heard the latter and having also read Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parzival, which was Wagner's specific source text in that case, I know just what liberties Wagner took with his source to come up with his own text. I haven't read any of the Tristan stories other than Malory's version of it in his Chronicle of King Arthur and I don't know what particular version Wagner used for Tristan und Isolde, but I suppose he did something similar. And he certainly played about with the Nibelungenlied. Even if you look no further than the table of contents, you realise how much he left out.
The whole second half of the story, to be precise, in which Siegfried's death is avenged with a little help from Attila the Hun. Brunnhilde's position in the original is entirely different, and the gods have only the smallest of bit parts in the poem. Arguably Wagner's filleting of Parzival was a lot worse than that, but that's heavy enough. Fritz Lang's 1920's films of the story, Siegfried and Kriemhild's Revenge, are much more faithful to the Nibelungenlied than Wagner's operas. (And just as Wagner's Ring cycle was Hitler's favourite opera [or operas], Lang's Nibelungen films were apparently his favourite films.) An advantage the Lang films have over the Wagner operas, apart from their greater textual fidelity, is their brevity compared to the duration of the Ring. They " re still fairly long the versions I have on video occupy about 3 hours of your time between them but Wagner is four or five times as long.
The famous Solti recording adds up to near fifteen hours of playing time. I personally dread to think how many operas Wagner might have required if he had included all the events of the Nibelungenlied that happen after Siegfried gets done in. Given that these days people are supposed to have attention spans lasting no longer than a few minutes, if even that much, this obviously seems absurd. Fifteen hours, even over a number of nights, is a lot of time to devote to something. The sheer length of it all has admittedly been one of the things which has proved most daunting in any of my other attempts to get a grip on Wagner. To sit and listen to Parsifal continuously for four and a half hours proved extraordinarily difficult when I tried it, and the first time I listened to Tristan I just couldn't do it and had to spread it over three nights, one act each night.
This was also what I finally wound up doing with Siegfried and Gtterdmmerung, splitting each one up over a few days. The amount of mental preparation necessary even for that, to force myself to listen to them at all, was considerable. I say "listen" advisedly because I don't habitually watch operas. I've seen only one on a stage (an amateur production of Rigoletto) and seen a few more on TV. But normally I discover operas through recordings of them, and this is the case as well with the Ring (the recording in question being the 1958-65 Solti set mentioned above). Given what I've read about some of the more recent productions, especially some of the ones perpetrated at Bayreuth, I'm not sure that I even want to actually see a Ring production.
Anyway, I like listening to operas and trying to visualise them for myself by listening and reading the text. What bothers me about some of these productions is a tendency many seem to share to dislocate the text from its proper mythical point in time. Patrice Chereau's centenary production with the Rhine maidens in a hydro-electric dam and Fainer as a tank, for example. If the original text has a reasonably specific historical setting, then I don't see why producers can't stick to it. Obviously, being a work of "myth", the Ring doesn't really have a specific historical date attached, although the presence of Attila the Hun in the Nibelungenlied presumably places the action around the mid-5th century AD. I'd be wary of updating that setting too much in case the thing looked even more ridiculous than it already is in many ways.
(The 1957 Warner Bros cartoon What's Opera Doc showed just how easy it is to take the piss out of Wagner's pretensions, with Bugs Bunny in Brunnhilde drag and Elmer Fund singing "Kill the WAB-bit!" to the tune of the Ride of the Valkyries. The best joke, though, is that the Pilgrims' Chorus from Tannhuser actually provides most of the musical material for the cartoon.) This isn't to say we can't interpret the RingI'm not so literal-minded as to seriously think we can't take the cycle on anything other than face value just that I have reservations about how some people seem to interpret it. And I don't think we need to burrow too deeply to find meaning in this story of gods, giants, dwarfs, magical treasures and the occasional human being. The story gives us the passing of the gods and the rise of mankind, who are raised up by the power of those same gods they cast aside. One system is vanquished by another system with help from the first. If we accept the 5th century setting (which is admittedly extremely tenuous), we could further read it as the victory of Christianity over the pagan belief systems of whichever lands it filtered into.
Politically speaking this could be seen as revolutionary (i.e. the replacement of the old with the new is inevitable) or reactionary (i.e. there are ruling classes and lower classes, and good reasons why the former shouldn't let the latter get above their station), so whether you choose to see this victory as wonderful or lamentable is open to question. At any rate, though, I think this theme of the displacement of the old gods and beliefs is a profound and important one. But even so, I keep wondering: does the bloody thing really need to go on for as long as it does Does it need to go on for fifteen or sixteen hours A grand theme is a grand theme and obviously all themes should be given fitting treatment, but even so the Ring stretches one's tolerance. Tchaikovsky apparently said leaving the first production of the cycle at Bayreuth in 1876 was like being released from prison.
And I've always liked Edward Varse's comment on Parsifal, which can easily be extended to any of Wagner's other works: "Some of it is so grand, so strong, but it goes on and on". Don't know about anyone else, but it cost me a reasonable amount of effort to steel myself for the Ring, to force myself to even listen to the last two parts one disc at a time with a break in between each one. The slowness with which the drama proceeds is a good part of the problem as well for me. Other than Alberich and Mime in Siegfried, I don't think anyone else in the Ring gets to sing at a speed even approximating to normal conversation. Obviously opera is not designed to approximate conversation, of course, even I know that opera is about singing and not speaking. But Wagner's verse (not sure if it can be dignified with the name "poetry") reads to me like it has a sort of conversational quality, by which I mean it could be declaimed on stage as dialogue if you removed the music.
It reads like people speaking rather than singing songs. But when united with the music, however, things are slowed down immeasurably. At times I feel like it's taking ages for anything to happen, possibly because it is. Combine this sluggishness with the artifice inherent in all opera (and which occasionally becomes monstrous in Wagner's case), and all that grandeur and strength can become somewhat crushing.
It takes an effort to resist it. It could be argued that my views on Wagner have been too strongly influenced by Nietzsche, but I'm not a hundred percent sure of that. I discovered both Wagner and Nietzsche in 1993, but didn't get much into Nietzsche until a couple of years after that started with Zarathustra, of course, but don't recall reading anything else by Nietzsche or exploring him any more deeply for some while afterwards by which time I'd made more progress with Wagner, heard half of the Ring as well as Tannhuser and a few other items, and hadn't really been swept away by them. I'm not even sure if I knew at that stage that Nietzsche was an anti-Wagnerian; if I did then I'd certainly never read any of his specifically anti-Wagner statements.
I think I'd probably concur with many things Nietzsche does say against Wagner, but whether he influenced my opinions or whether he just reflected something I already felt is certainly questionable. And yet, does the fact that I like Nietzsche mean I can't also like Wagner as well Of course not. Anyone who says otherwise is operating on an untenable idea, that a person's political, aesthetic, religious etc. opinions should all unite harmoniously and be of a coherent piece, so that the person becomes a coherent and easily classifiable unit. In other words, the idea that if you like something then by rights you should not like something else which is unlike that first thing. There are things which you are not allowed to like.
Wagner represented the way of the future to the nineteenth century's forward-thinkers, while Johannes Brahms became the figurehead for the more conservative element. Since the two were thus opposed, by rights I should not be allowed to like them both. But people aren't coherent in that way, or if they are then they must be exceedingly boring. Brahms doesn't usually pose a problem for me, I must say. I like most of what I've heard by him.
But I like Wagner as wella t least, for all my reservations, I think I like him more than I dislike him, even if I may prefer some of his progeny (Mahler, Bruckner, etc.) to Wagner himself. I have reservations about them at times as well, but their best moments can be very fine, and I'm willing to admit this is true of Wagner as well. It's perfectly possible to find both Wagner and Brahms acceptable, just as it is to find both Wagner and Nietzsche acceptable. After all, Michael Tanner has written books on both of them, and come out on both their sides.
(Interestingly, he finds Nietzsche's later anti-Wagner comments more instructive than his earlier pro-Wagner ones.) I think Nietzsche was more profoundly ambivalent towards Wagner than he was actually against him, though. His last book may have been called Nietzsche Contra Wagner, but let's not forget the first section of that is called "Where I Admire". He recognised what Wagner was good at, even if he did not find Wagner's art terribly healthy. My own ambivalence towards Wagner is rather less profound than Nietzsche's was, but it's still there. I don't deny those moments when Wagner really does it for me, but I find him somewhat problematic nonetheless. In short, I am neither particularly pro nor contra Wagner.
I am neither wholly for nor wholly against. And this is why Matthew wonders about me, because Wagner is an artist that you " re supposed to be either wholly for or wholly against; I don't feel a need to submit absolutely in raptures nor to hurl masses of invective against him. He's not supposed to inspire people to occupy a relative middle ground in relation to him as I do, hence Matthew has difficulty understanding my position. Wagner's personality was seemingly such that it virtually demanded you make that one-or-the-other-no-compromise-possible decision. Wagner took a particular view of art (especially his own) and its possibilities which I've seen described elsewhere as "messianic", which seems a fairly good word so I'll use it as well.
He demanded an almost unreasonable degree of loyalty from his supporters and followers, many of whom gave him it (even Has von Blow, when he found Wagner shacking up with little Co sima, stuck by him and all the performers at the first Bayreuth apparently performed free of charge), and his art is supposed to make similar demands upon its audience. Either give it all or not at all. Hence Nietzsche's characterisation of Wagner's art as decadent, and Wagner himself as the supreme decadent. Wagnerian opera he treated as a runner of spiritual health; for those to whom life is not enough it fills the void and makes up for whatever is lacking.
It latches onto a certain neurosis, feeds on it and keeps it going, and therefore Wagner's works and the man himself can be a literal health hazard. As Wagner himself wrote to a friend once, "if we had life, we should have no need of art. Art begins where life breaks off: where nothing more is present, we call out in art, 'I wish' is our 'art' therefore not simply a confession of our impotence" Tanner says all this theorising about decadence is speculative but even so, "it would be less than honest for people on either side to deny that something, maybe a large element, in their responses to Wagner is touched by it". Maybe it is in my case.
Maybe I try to resist being sucked in by Wagner and his works so as to affirm my own strength. But I doubt it. There's another possible reason why people perhaps resist the pull of Wagner which is rather less speculative: the taint of National Socialism. That Wagner's name and reputation have become tarnished by his having been co-opted by Hitler is not worth the effort of denying.
It was Wagner's early opera Rienzi, with its tale (told by Edward Gibbon near the end of his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire) of the medieval Roman tribune who went about trying to restore the glories of ancient Rome and lift it out of the decadence into which it had fallen by the fourteenth century, that converted the 17 year old Adolf to Wagner ism and supposedly inspired him to purify the still fairly recently formed Germany and cleanse it of the taint of Judaism. (Parenthetically, Rienzi was Wagner's longest work, the premiere of it in 1842 lasting as it did some six hours. Hitler certainly had more staying power than me.) Of course, we shouldn't blame Wagner for this. In the same way that we shouldn't blame Jesus for the many idiots who followed him, we can't really hold Wagner responsible for things that happened decades after his death. William Shirer claims any influence Wagner had on the nascent Dri tte Reich was based upon a misinterpretation of his works. (Wagner is referred to on just six of the approximately 1300 pages of Shirer's history of the Third Reich.) This is also the claim made by advocates of Nietzsche, who is also viewed as an influence on Nazi Germany, that his words and ideas were taken and twisted by Nazi theorists and by Hitler; therefore in the interests of fairness at the very least we have to allow Wagner's advocates to state their case.
But if Nietzsche was not an anti-Semite, and his writings provide abundant evidence that he was not, Wagner certainly was an anti-Semite, and his writings provide abundant evidence that he was. It's this part of his character which probably does the most to set people against him these days, given how unfashionable anti-Semitism has become since World War 2. Michael Tanner is clearly fascinated by the way in Wagner's character is used as an excuse to question the value of his work, whereas someone like Beethoven also acted like a monstrous censored but no one questions his work. This is a fair call to a degree. I think the personality of a creative artist must in some way find expression in the art they make and that this is unavoidable. By the same token, however, I think that the evaluation of the artwork has to be made by removing the creator from the creation.
A person may be a complete arse hole but that shouldn't influence how we perceive their art. In Wagner's case (and perhaps in Han if Kureishi's case as well! ), however, people seem to find this separation too difficult to perform. And although Nietzsche has probably been rescued from Nazi distortion and so rendered as fit for consumption as he " ll ever be, there is still that anti-Semitic streak in Wagner's work which means the association with Nazi Germany will never quite go away. Not until 1993 was Wagner's music first performed in Israel, whereupon questions were asked in the Israeli parliament.
Perhaps the term I've used a couple of times, "unfashionable", might be viewed as somewhat inappropriate and / or flippant given the conclusion that anti-Semitism was pushed to in the middle parts of this tiresome century, but I'll stand by it. After all, I think political views and opinions are in many ways subject to certain fashions, especially with what we now call "political correctness" and just as a show of one's political correctness has been a fashion in itself for better and for worse, so too has political incorrectness been prized by some. It all depends where you stand. The dominant direction of political correctness in trendy European intellectual circles, at least for the past couple of centuries, has been leftwards, towards more liberal ideas. Germany by the early 20th century was a different matter; William Shirer claims that the nationalistic thinking of early 19th century German philosophers like Fichte and Hegel worked eventually to set German political fashion in a rightwards direction, thereby isolating it somewhat from the rest of Europe. Ironically, of course, Hegel's dialectical methods also inspired that ber-Left ie Karl Marx, who was also German by birth and also something of an anti-Semite.
At least that sort of thinking wasn't necessarily unique to Right-thinkers. (The greatest irony of all was that the virulently anti-socialist Nazi Party was in fact named the National Socialist Workers' Party of Germany though few people, least of all the Nazis, seem to have noticed this.) Because right-wing ideologies seem to have been traditionally less hip in the rest of Europe than left-wing ones (and also perhaps because the ber-Right policies of Nazi Germany led to such horrific conclusions which is not to deny similarly dreadful events in Communist Russia and China, although I'd argue those states were hardly leftist any more), we " ve had more trouble admitting that Nazi Germany could possibly have created any great art. When we do find something worthwhile, we hum and haw over whether or not we should admit to liking it. We seem to have little trouble admiring Sergei Eisenstein's Soviet films but Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will and Olympia are somehow more problematic. "Great films, yes, but" seems to be the way of it. We feel we have to qualify our admiration for some reason.
I have a set of Bruckner symphonies which were recorded in the 1930's and therefore are technically products of Nazi Germany (even if it is EMI who distributes them). Shouldn't I feel extremely wrong for harbouring these things To come up to date, but leaving Germany (and also classical music) for a moment, let's consider the black metal music scene in Norway. Alongside the Satanic imagery metal music has often decked itself out in to equally often silly effect, quite a few black metal bands have also adopted Nazi leanings as well. Norway, of course, was a notorious Nazi puppet state, and after the war right-wing ideologies fell distinctly from grace, hence the adoption of them by many black metal bands.
My favourite example is probably an album by Darkthrone with the words "Norsk A risk Black Metal" emblazoned on the back cover where you couldn't miss them, which forced the band's distributor Peaceville Records to issue a statement distancing themselves from the band's politics. I bet they wouldn't have bothered doing that had the band explicitly aligned itself with communism rather than Nazism. In the case of Varg Viernes, the one-man band behind Burzum, politics are the least of the problems he poses. The lovely Varg is a convicted arsonist and murderer, after all two things we can't pin on Wagner, though some might like to try and I have a couple of Burzum albums. By purchasing these, am I perhaps showing some form of private support for a criminal Admittedly, as with the Bruckner symphonies mentioned above, these are things I've thought about, but they don't really bother me much. I think that if you stop for too long to question all your motives and whether or not you should do a thing, then you will soon wind up doing nothing.
(And Peaceville Records evidently didn't feel strongly enough about Darkthrone's dubious politics to refuse to make money from them.) But a vague feeling of what might be called guilt by association does kind of linger in the background. By venturing into the muddy waters of black metal I may have wandered a bit from Wagner and in musical terms I certainly have, though many of the bands may be accused of having similar pretensions to pomp and grandeur if on a cheaper scale but even so, I think all of that ties in with things I've said earlier about how there are things you " re supposedly not allowed to like and also Wagner's posthumous association with Nazi Germany. My own political leanings do not incline towards Nazism, but I don't think that means I can't find Burzum interesting. And yet, perhaps that's why some people are wary of Wagner. Whether or not the Third Reich was his fault, the association's still there and perhaps people are afraid to commit firmly to Wagner because of it. Maybe they think that if they side with Wagner, in some way they " re also siding with the Reich.
Guilt by association, as I said. Can you let yourself like Wagner Can you allow yourself Maybe, maybe not. This is all speculative, of course, just as Michael Tanner rightly notes Nietzsche's theory of Wagner as artist of decadence is also speculative. But I think the possible ethical reason I consider for why people have problems with Wagner are a bit less tenuous than the psychoanalytic fields Nietzsche and Tanner ponder. Anyway, I don't think my own reservations are rooted in any ethical issues probably because I haven't really done a vast amount of study into Wagner's works. There are times when I'm faced with a supposed masterpiece of art, be it pictorial musical cinematic or literary, and I'll automatically respond to it, and there are times when someone has to explain to me why it is a masterpiece before I'll necessarily agree.
Wagner fits the latter case. I feel instinctively that yes, something great is indeed going on here, but until I know what it is I don't think I fully appreciate it. Obviously I understand Wagner's historical importance, and I do appreciate the skill needed to write a piece of music lasting 15 hours yet remaining coherent all the way through. But I think I'd appreciate it more if I knew more about all what's going on for those 15 hours.
Still, I don't know if I'd actually enjoy Wagner then or not. In smaller doses he doesn't pose a vast problem. I've enjoyed a record of piano transcriptions made by Glenn Gould which also features his orchestral Siegfried-Idyll, and have given serious consideration to buying a collection of historic performances of "bleeding chunks". Smaller doses are fine (remember Nietzsche's characterisation of him as a miniaturist).
It's just the big slabs of raw meat from which the bleeding chunks are ripped that pose problems for me. Thus far of all the operas I've heard Siegfried is probably the only one I could say I somewhat enjoyed. This is interesting, given that Michael Tanner says that's probably the least popular member of the Ring family. Die Walkre usually comes out on top in popularity terms, yet listening to it this time round I don't recall feeling especially moved by it. Then again, maybe it's a matter of what version you get. I seem to remember liking Bruno Walter's 1935 Walkre Act I when I heard it.
At present, therefore, I don't dislike Wagner but I'm not exactly a fan either. There's still obstacles in the way of my greater enjoyment of Wagner's work. Still, despite the difficulty, I'm willing to make an effort to understand him better. Having finished with the Ring, I'll now give Tristan and Parsifal another go, and make an attempt on Die Meistersinger. And perhaps one day I will indeed learn to love the Tristan prelude, as Matthew has ordered me to do.
Meanwhile, Karl heinz Stockhausen is pressing ahead with his Licht series of seven operas, due for completion in 2002, whereupon even the Ring will be dwarfed in time scale the four parts currently available already fill more CDs than any Ring cycle I know, and there are still three more parts to be written and / or recorded. Wonder if anyone will ever hold Stockhausen responsible for a war I'm sure Wagner would never have expected that honour either.