This document provides an overview of Richard Wagner and his opera Die Walküre. It discusses Wagner's career and influence, as well as characteristics of German opera. For Die Walküre, it describes the plot of Act III, where Wotan says goodbye to Brünnhilde and places her in a magical sleep surrounded by fire. It explains Wagner's use of leitmotifs and how the voices are more integrated with the orchestra compared to Verdi. In the closing scene of Act III, leitmotifs represent slumber, magic sleep, magic fire and Siegfried.
4. German Opera: Characteristics
• German composers began to compose
in German: Mozart (The Magic Flute),
von Weber--Der Freischütz (The
Freeshooter).
• Librettos involved magic, mysticism, the
supernatural, distant and exotic lands
and cultures, love, and heroes.
• Rejected the stories of court intrigues
and farces.
5. German Opera
• Very different from Italian
• Language more guttural, music
heavier, less light-hearted
• Nordic gods instead of Greeks
• Carl Maria von Weber-Der Freischutz
– Based on German folklore
– Offers mysticism, rustic scenes,
etc.
7. Richard Wagner (1813 - 1883)
• The most controversial composer who ever
lived--some love him; some hate him.
• Controversial figure--had very questionable
character to achieve goals; an anti-Semite
who may have influenced Hitler
• Operas are full of social and political ideas.
• Rienzi-1st success
• Born in Leipzig, son of police officer.
• Studied music of Beethoven.
• Held a series of positions as conductor.
• Career in Dresden
8. Richard Wagner (1813 - 1883)
• Fled Germany in 1848; first to house of Liszt, then to
Switzerland; lived there for 10 years.
• Failed revolution in 1849
• Second wife: Cosima Liszt
• King Ludwig II of Bavaria supported him and his art.
• Built a large opera house in Bayreuth--called
Festspielhaus (“a festival drama house”).
• 1876-1st Bayreuth Festival, continues today
• Oversaw the building of the opera house and all the
performances there
• Died at age 70, buried at opera house
9. Richard Wagner
Other Operas
• The Flying Dutchman
• Tannhäuser
• Lohengrin (Wedding Precessional)
– Wedding March (6:18)
• Tristan und Isolde
• Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
• Parsifal
10. Wagner’s Music Dramas
Romantic Opera in The Extreme
Gesamtkunstwerk
Elaborate Staging,
Sets, Costumes
Extremely Long,
Complex
Lietmotif
Music Drama Unification of drama & music
Musical theme represents person,
place, idea
As long as 5 hours-intermissions
long enough to go to dinner and
return
Expensive and sometimes garish
The idea: a total asthetic
experience in one
11. Wagner
• Created “Grand Opera”, or
Music Drama
• Wrote own libretto
• Mythological topics, appealed
best to emotions
• Philosophical overtones: good
vs. evil, contest between
physical & spiritual,
redemption through love
• Characters pawns of
uncontrollable forces
12. Wagner
• Grand Opera
– Longer, more instruments, more
characters
– Doubled winds, added percussion
– Not accepted at time, more after
Wagner’s death
– Full of emotion
– Eliminated recitative, aria, chorus
to achieve unending melody
– More chromatic harmony, no idea
for tonic
– Orchestra more important, bigger
and louder
13. Der Ring des Nibelungen
• Greatest musical achievement
• Opera Cycle
• An opera with outstanding
orchestration and blending of
the voices with the orchestra
• Ring of the Nibelungs
– Das Rhiengold
– Die Walküre
– Siegfried
– Götterdammerung
• “It ain’t over till the fat lady
sings.”
14. Richard Wagner
The Leitmotif
• Leitmotif--a brief musical
phrase or idea that is
connected dramatically to
some person, event, or
idea in the drama
– When the leitmotif is
heard, it causes the
audience to recognize
the person, event or
idea.
– Similar to the “shark
theme” in Jaws.
15. Wagner and Tolkien:
The Ring and Lord of the Rings
• Both contain 4 works; the first is a prelude to the rest of the
story; based on Nordic myths.
• Both emphasize the power of the ring and the grief it brings
the owner who covets the power.
• The plots center on people’s efforts to own and control the
ring.
• Both start with a state of purity that is corrupted later and
then restored.
• Both feature giants, dragons, dwarves, a riddling match, and a
shattered sword recast to be more powerful.
18. Richard Wagner The Valkyrie, Act
III
• Story: In The Valkyrie, the main characters are Wotan
(chief of the gods), his daughter Brünnhilde (a
warrior-like Valkyrie). Brünnhilde has intervened on
behalf of a human couple, and Wotan condemns her
to death. She pleads for a lesser sentence and is
stripped of her godlike powers, put into a deep sleep,
and surrounded with a ring of fire that can be crossed
only by someone who isn’t afraid of Wotan’s spear. In
this scene Wotan is saying goodbye to his beloved
daughter and summons Loge to create the circle of
fire.
19. Richard Wagner The Valkyrie, Act
III
• Texture--Wagner’s composition uses the voice very differently
than it is used in Verdi’s La Traviata. In Verdi’s opera, the
singer stands out above the orchestra. In Wagner’s opera, the
singer and the orchestra have more equal parts.
• Wagner wanted the music and the drama to have equal
importance.
• Vocal writing is more syllabic than in Italian opera with little
repetition of the text.
• Melodies are fluid and avoid periodic phrase structure.
20. Act III (Finale) of
Die Walküre
• Leitmotifs:
– slumber
– magic sleep
– magic fire
– Siegfried
Wagner: Die Walküre
(Listening Guide)