Storieta
English
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About this book

This work is a comprehensive, non‑critical study that aims to give Wagner enthusiasts a single source for both biographical detail and artistic analysis. The author begins by outlining his purpose: to tell the story of Wagner’s life, explain his artistic aims, and provide histories of each major drama, complete with examinations of literary sources, musical plans, and the meaning of principal ideas. The opening pages list the extensive research behind the book, consultation of leading biographies, direct input from Cosima Wagner, revisions by the New York Tribune critic Henry Edward Krehbiel, and contributions from conductors and archivists, while also noting the painstaking reconstruction of first‑performance casts and dates. The table of contents shows a three‑part structure: a chronological life narrative, a discussion of Wagner’s artistic reforms, and detailed introductions to each of his great music dramas, supplemented by appendices on early symphonies and ballet.

Written in the scholarly yet accessible prose of the late nineteenth century, the book reflects the era’s reverence for exhaustive documentation and a didactic tone. Its style is expository rather than argumentative, relying on extensive footnotes, quotations, and a steady, measured voice that assumes a reader already interested in Wagner’s oeuvre. This volume will appeal to students of music history, opera lovers, and general readers who seek a thorough, fact‑based portrait of Wagner’s life and works without the polemics of more contemporary criticism.

Who appears in this book

  • Richard WagnerMiddle‑aged German composer, dark hair, full moustache, high‑collar frock coat, solemn expression
  • Cosima WagnerElegant late‑19th‑century aristocratic woman, dark hair in updo, refined dress, dignified gaze
  • Henry Edward KrehbielAmerican literary critic, mid‑40s, beard, round spectacles, tweed jacket, thoughtful demeanor

The opening · free to read

The purpose of this book is to supply Wagner lovers with a single work which shall meet all their needs. The author has told the story of Wagner's life, explained his artistic aims, given the history of each of his great works, examined its literary sources, shown how Wagner utilised them, surveyed the musical plan of each drama, and set forth the meaning and purpose of its principal ideas. The work is not intended to be critical, but is designed to be expository. It aims to help the Wagner lover to a thorough knowledge and understanding of the man and his works.

The author has consulted all the leading biographies, and for guidance in the direction of absolute trustworthiness he is directly indebted to Mme. Cosima Wagner, whose suggestions have been carefully observed. He is also under a large, but not heavy, burden of obligation to Mr. Henry Edward Krehbiel, musical critic of The New York Tribune, who carefully read the manuscript of this work and pointed out its errors. The value of Mr. Krehbiel's revision and his hints cannot be over-estimated. Thanks are also due to Mr. Emil Paur, conductor of the Philharmonic Society, of New York, for certain inquiries made in Europe.

The records of first performances have been prepared with great care and with no little labour. For the dates of those at most of the European cities the author is indebted to an elaborate article by E. Kastner, published in the Allgemeine Musik. Zeitung, of Berlin, for July and August, 1896. The original casts have been secured, as far as possible, from the programmes. For that of the "Flying Dutchman" at Dresden--incorrectly given in many books on Wagner--the author is indebted to Hofkapellmeister Ernst von Schuch, who obtained it from the records of the Hoftheater. The name of the singer of the Herald in the first cast of "Lohengrin," missing in all the published histories, was supplied by Hermann Wolff, of Berlin, from the records of Weimar. The casts of first performances in this country are not quite complete, simply because the journalists of twenty-five years ago did not realise their obligations to posterity. The casts were not published in full. The records have disappeared. The theatres in some cases--as in that of the Stadt--have long ago gone out of existence and nothing can be done. As far as given the casts are, the author believes, perfectly correct.

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