To me these things are not mutually exclusive. Perhaps you are referring to values and ideologies in the text - and this is still a matter of reception and understanding. Can you explain exactly what you mean?
"Der Rosenkavalier"
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post... in Rosenkavalier traditional feudal values and pecking orders are reestablished in the end when Baron Ochs is sent back to the sticks where he belongs, having been humiliated by the "sophisticated" Viennese.
Rosenkavalier is unique amongst Strauss' operas for the prominent use of "slapstick"/"bedroom farce" comedy. If Strauss is treating himself to profiteroles, it was an indulgence he never allowed himself again - and after Salome and Elektra, he needed the break in language in order to move onto Ariadne and Die Frau Ohne Schatten. Composer and librettist wanted to write a comedy; and there's some very bitter dark chocolate on these profiteroles (I'd previously thought of it as the lemon with the meringue) that's at the real heart and soul of the opera. I've never met Conchis, but I love every semiquaver of this work (just as I do Salome, Elektra, and Die Frau - never got on with the sound of Ariadne) and have never thought it "over-long".
Best Kleiber recording? Erich's, of course![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut Baron Ochs is humiliated not because he's a country bumpkin, but because he is a sort of mix between Boris Johnson and Eric Pickles - with a penchant for young girls from the lower end of the "pecking order". His treatment (by Hoffmannsthal and Strauss) is much "kinder" than that received by Malvolio or Beckmesser - and for much worse behaviour.
Rosenkavalier is unique amongst Strauss' operas for the prominent use of "slapstick"/"bedroom farce" comedy. If Strauss is treating himself to profiteroles, it was an indulgence he never allowed himself again - and after Salome and Elektra, he needed the break in language in order to move onto Ariadne and Die Frau Ohne Schatten. Composer and librettist wanted to write a comedy; and there's some very bitter dark chocolate on these profiteroles (I'd previously thought of it as the lemon with the meringue) that's at the real heart and soul of the opera. I've never met Conchis, but I love every semiquaver of this work (just as I do Salome, Elektra, and Die Frau - never got on with the sound of Ariadne) and have never thought it "over-long".
Best Kleiber recording? Erich's, of course!
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Posthe needed the break in language
(as for Beckmesser, his song ought to have won!)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI don't understand what that means.
For me there is still considerable musical interest in Rosenkavalier but still a lot of it sounds to me as if it was written on autopilot, and I think its enormous success with the public had an adverse effect on Strauss' subsequent work, with its thinning of inspiration, sometimes more or less to zero (Die schweigsame Frau for example).
Baron Ochs behaves the way he does because he doesn't know any better
(as for Beckmesser, his song ought to have won!)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostFor me there is still considerable musical interest in Rosenkavalier but still a lot of it sounds to me as if it was written on autopilot, and I think its enormous success with the public had an adverse effect on Strauss' subsequent work, with its thinning of inspiration, sometimes more or less to zero (Die schweigsame Frau for example).
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post(as for Beckmesser, his song ought to have won!)Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostAgreed - let's start a petition
Oops, sorry; wrong thread!
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI don't think that any sense of writing on autopliot on Strauss's part manifested itself until some time after Rosenkavalier - certainly not during it; between the two World Wars, perhaps, but by no means always during that time either (and I don't hear much evidence of it in (Die schweigsame Frau). Norman del Mar, in his valuable three-volume study of Strauss, makes observations about those inter-War years as including a certain amount of "vamp till ready" (my phrase, not his!) work from the composer, made possible in part, perhaps, by a consummate technique that enabled him to find so much to be so easy to do. That said, there are still gems from those years, even if he finally raised his game a little more consistently from Capriccio onwards (especially to the despairing, resigned depths of Metamorphosen and the heights of Vier Letzte Lieder).[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI don't think he would have behaved differently if he had been taught to behave better.
I can't get to grips with Frau ohne Schatten - this is an opposite sort of situation to my mind, where Hoffmannsthal provided Strauss with a much less straightforward scenario full of the kind of arcane symbolism that Strauss's virtuoso way with glittering illustrative surfaces was ill-equipped to deal with, although like almost all his operas I'll admit it has its moments too.
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI meant that having spent five years dealing with necrophiliac teenage girls and matricidal women, he wanted to lighten up!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostOktavian also uses his social position to take advantage of young (and not quite so young) women, although I imagine he would see it in more idealistic terms.
The problem is he lightened up and stayed lightened! Imagine if he had died in 1911 rather than Mahler - there would have been no end of speculation about what complex, decadent, modernistic music theatre he might have gone on to write, instead of becoming the kind of cosily retrogressive Kapellmeister that the cultural arbiters of the Third Reich could regard as one of their own (whether or not he thought of himself that way).
I'm more in tune with ahinton's (and Del Mar's) summary that it is the work of the interwar years that can be so described - the immediate successors to Rosenkavalier are more complicated.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Postwe see only two of his relationships (he's not the serial screwer that Ochs is)
I agree with you about FrOSch being more of a kind with the other works you mention, but IMO the first two at least show it up as rather disjointed and uninspired in comparison (Schreker's Die Gezeichneten too, a masterpiece of decadence).
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