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Richard STRAUSS (1864-1949) Salome First the historical background surrounding the Salome story. The area of Palestine was incorporated into the Roman...
Richard STRAUSS (1864-1949)
Salome
First the historical background surrounding the Salome
story. The area of Palestine was incorporated into the
Roman Empire in 64BC. The new rulers, anxious not to
offend existing local religious sensibilities, decided that
the Herod family should rule as client kings. Herod the
Great, who ruled from 37BC to 4BC, had three sons,
Archelaus, Philip, and Herod Antipas. On their father's
death the kingdom was split to enable the three
offspring to rule. The middle son was married to
Herodias with whom Antipas was infatuated. Forced by
Herodias to divorce his first wife, a Nabatean princess,
Herod Antipas then married her. The prophet John the
Baptist denounced the king for marrying his brother's
wife. Herod, outraged by such criticism, had John
imprisoned. Then the ruler, at a drunken party held to
mark his birthday, made a rash promise to his sixteenyear-
old stepdaughter Salome that he would grant her
whatever she might ask. Her reply, after consulting with
her mother, came: 'Give me the head of John the Baptist
here on a platter'. Unable to retract his pledge, Herod
had the prophet John beheaded, his head then presented
to Salome, who in turn offers the 'trophy' to her mother.
The account is taken from the Gospels of St Mark and
St Matthew in the New Testament.
Salome was possibly the most important event in
German opera since those of Wagner. Its creation
marked a new development in operatic art with its
concentrated power, its eerie and sinister harmonies and
its extraordinarily exotic and colourful orchestration.
This, allied to the subject matter and story line, caused
a storm of controversy following the opera's première
in Dresden on 9th December 1905. The critics after this
event were totally perplexed by what they had heard and
forecast that the piece would soon disappear from the
repertory. The conservative public at the beginning of
the twentieth century was outraged and shocked by the
raw and cruel plot. The closing twenty minutes of the
opera were deemed as depraved and beyond the bounds
of common decency, so much so that in New York the
opera was withdrawn after a single performance. Time
and greater tolerance have prevailed, however, so that
the work is now recognised as an extraordinary
masterpiece.
Recalling the events surrounding its composition
Richard Strauss remarked many years later in a book
entitled Recollections and Reflections, published in
1949: "Once in Berlin I went to see ... Oscar Wilde's
play Salome. After the play I met Heinrich Grünfeld,
who said to me: 'My dear Strauss, surely you could
make an opera of this!' I replied: 'I am busy composing
it'." In the course of the recollection, Strauss also
commented: "I had long been criticising the fact that
[earlier] operas based on oriental and Jewish subjects
lacked true oriental colours and scorching sun. The
needs of the moment inspired me with truly exotic
harmonies. ... The wish to characterise the dramatis
personae as clearly as possible led me to bitonality ...
to express the antithesis between Herod and the
Nazarene". On the portrayal of the infamous heroine the
composer remarked: "Anyone who has been in the east
and has observed the decorum with which women there
behave, will appreciate that Salome, being a chaste
virgin and an oriental princess, must be played with the
simplest and most restrained gestures".
The vocal demands of the sixteen-year-old Salome
are such that she must have a dramatic soprano voice in
addition to looking her age and also be able to dance.
Then the character of the decadent and lusting Herod is
one of the most vivid portrayals of the medical
condition know as neurasthenia, typified by the signs of
lassitude, inertia, fatigue, loss of initiative, restless
fidgeting, over-sensitivity and undue irritability.
Contrasted with this is the honest nobility of John the
Baptist. Then there are the Jews and the Nazarenes.
Strauss and his librettist Hoffmansthal brilliantly
capture all the nervous instability, the sense of
suffocation and the feeling of suppressed lust with
uncanny skill.
For the rôle of Salome Decca selected Christel
Glotz. She was born in Dortmund, Germany in 1912
and began her studies in piano, dancing and singing
with Ornelli-Leeb in Munich in 1930. Five years later
she joined the Chorus of Furth Opera, making her solo
debut as Agathe in Der Freischütz later that season. She
then sang in Plauen, which led to to her first appearance
at the Staatsoper Dresden as Reiza in Weber's Oberon.
She would remain with this company until 1950. In
1947 she also became a member of both Staatsoper and
Stadtische Oper in Berlin. Her London debut at Covent
Garden was as Salome, followed by Marie in the British
stage première of Berg's Wozzeck under Erich Kleiber.
In 1954 she appeared at the Salzburg Festival and then
her United States debut at the Metropolitan Opera in
New York with six performances of Salome. She also
appeared in Buenos Aires and sang regularly in Munich,
Vienna and Berlin until 1970. A fine actress and
performer of great intensity, her voice was both brilliant
and clear over a range of three octaves. She appeared in
the premières of Carl Orff's Antigone and Liebermann's
Penelope. She was particularly admired as Salome, a
rôle she recorded three times, in 1950, 1954 and 1963,
as Marie and as Elektra.
The role of her stepfather Herod was sung by the
Viennese-born tenor Julis Patzak (1898-1974). He first
studied conducting with Franz Schmidt but then turned
to singing, being largely self-taught. After his debut in
1926 at Reichenberg in Bohemia as Radames in Verdi's
Aida, he joined the opera at Brno for the 1927-28
season, before moving to the Staatsoper in Munich
where he would remain until 1945. In the latter year he
became a member of the Vienna State Opera, where he
remained until 1960. His first London appearance was
as Tamino in Die Zauberflote in 1938, returning in 1947
with the Vienna Company when he sang Herod and
Florestan. He would appear regularly in the years 1951-
54, again as Florestan, and also as Hoffmann. He
appeared at the Salzburg Festival in the post-war years
1948-50, being especially remembered for his
memorable Florestan, Herod and the title-rôle in
Pfitzner's Palestrina. In addition he created rôles in
Orff's Der Mond and Pfitzner's Das Herz. Patzak was a
highly intelligent and stylistic interpreter, equally at
home in Lieder and oratorio. He is also remembered as
the tenor in Kathleen Ferrier's celebrated Das Lied von
der Erde (Naxos 8.1108871).
The rôle of Herodias, Herod's wife and Salome's
mother, was taken by the mezzo-soprano Margareta
Kenney (born it is thought in 1918). Little is known
about her early life except that she was brought up in
Argentina where she studied before making her debut as
one of the Valkyries in Die Walküre at the Teatro Colon
in Buenos Aires. She came to Vienna in 1950 and
remained with the State Opera for the next decade. Her
rôles there included Eboli, Herodias, Amneris,
Brangane and Azucena. In 1954 she sang in Florence
and Perugia, before singing Lady Macbeth in Rome in
1956. She also appeared in Naples and Lisbon. Her
other recordings include D'Albert's Tiefland and
Stravinsky's Les Noces.
The Viennese-born baritone Hans Braun (born
1917) sings Jochanaan. As a child he sang in the Vienna
Boys' Choir, before studying with two famous
Viennese singers Hermann Gallos and Hans Duhan. His
debut took place in early 1938 in Konigsberg as the
Count in Figaro. This was followed by engagements in
Bremerhaven, Saarbrücken and the Deutsches
Opernhaus, Berlin. His first Viennese appearance was
as a guest at the State Opera in 1939. It was not until
1945, however, that he joined the company, singing
German and Italian rôles in addition to Tarquinius in
Britten's The Rape of Lucretia and John Sorel in
Menotti's The Consul. In 1947 Braun was a member of
the Vienna Company which visited Covent Garden in
London, and he returned as a guest in 1948-49 to sing
the Count in Figaro and Melot in Tristan, and again in
1953, as Orest in Elektra under Erich Kleiber. He also
appeared in Italy and Spain, and in 1953 sang the
Herald in Lohengrin at the Bayreuth Festival.
The Yugoslav-born tenor Anton Dermota (born
1910) first studied piano and composition in Ljubljana
before beginning vocal studies with Marie Rado in
Vienna. Following his debut in Cluj in 1934, he was
engaged by Bruno Walter for the Vienna State Opera
two years later, singing the rôle of the First Armed Man
in Die Zauberflote. He sang Mozart's Requiem and
Bruckner's Te Deum under Walter in November 1937
and made his first appearance at the Salzburg Festival as
Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni the following summer. A
decade later he visited London with the Vienna
Company, singing Ottavio, Ferrando in Così fan tutte
and Narraboth in Salome. He sang Florestan at the reopening
of the State Opera in the autumn of 1955. From
1966 he taught singing at the Vienna Academy of
Music. Dermota was a greatly admired Mozartian, in
the line of Tauber and Patzak. He also enjoyed a
distinguished career in the concert hall as a Lieder and
oratorio singer.
The Page is sung by German-born contralto Else
Schuroff (1898-1961), who was born in Wuppertal.
First studying in Berlin she made her professional debut
in 1928 and the following year joined Hanover Opera,
moving to the Vienna State Opera in 1941, where she
remained until 1953, before working in Hamburg until
her retirement. Her career was primarily based in
German-speaking countries.
In overall charge in his last-ever recording, before
his untimely death in May 1954 in Mexico City, was the
Viennese-born conductor Clemens Krauss (born
1893). As a boy he was a member of the Vienna Boys'
Choir, later studying conducting with Graedener and
Heuberger. In 1913 he was appointed chorus-master in
Brno, making his debut as a conductor with Lortzing's
Zar und Zimmermann later that season. Then followed
years in Riga (1913-4), Nuremberg (1915-6), Stettin
(1916-22) and Vienna (1922-4, as assistant to Franz
Schalk). In 1924 Krauss was appointed
Generalmusikdirector of Frankfurt Opera, before taking
up a similar post at the Vienna State Opera in 1929 for
a period of six years. In 1937 he moved to Munich,
remaining there until 1942. His Bayreuth debut
occurred in 1953, when he conducted a much-acclaimed
Ring cycle in addition to Parsifal. His London debut
took place in 1934 and he returned there with the
Vienna Company in 1947 to conduct Salome and
Fidelio. Other London appearances were to conduct
Falstaff and Tosca at the Stoll Theatre in 1949, and
three seasons at Covent Garden between 1951 and
1953, conducting Tristan, Fidelio and Die
Meistersinger. Krauss was a close friend of Richard
Strauss, conducting premières of Arabella (1933),
Friedenstag (1938), Capriccio (1942) and Die Liebe
der Danae (1952). He also began the annual New
Year's Days concerts in Vienna, being recognised as a
peerless interpreter of the music of the Strauss family.
The great merit of this recording is the magnificent
playing of the Vienna Philharmonic under Krauss: it is
a model of clarity and the balance he achieves between
voices and orchestra reveals his vast experience in the
opera house. The interpretations of both Patzak and
Dermota have always been deemed a major asset of the
recording, and the smaller rôles were without exception
well sung. Braun's Jochanaan was also commented
upon favourably. The choice of Goltz was controversial
in that the quality of her voice was difficult to record but
she was greatly admired at the time for her portrayal on
stage.
The producer of this recording, Victor Olof (1898-
1976) later wrote in his unpublished autobiography that
he considered he learnt more about the craft of
conducting from working with Clemens Krauss than
anyone else. The conductor's early death in May 1954
was one of the contributory reasons for Olof's departure
from Decca two years later.
Malcolm Walker
Salome, Op. 54, TrV 215 (more info)
Performed by:
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Pasdeloup Orchestra
Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra
New York Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra
Boston Symphony Orchestra
Berlin State Opera Orchestra
Dresden Staatskapelle
Studio orchestra
Composed by:
Richard Strauss
Conducted by:
Clemens Krauss
Fritz Reiner
Piero Coppola
Zdenek Kosler
Michael Schonwandt
Joseph Keilberth
Leo Blech
Bruno Seidler-Winkler
Inger Karen, alto
Anders Jakobsson, bass
Robert Hale,
Gota Ljungberg, soprano
Julius Patzak, tenor
Anton Dermota, tenor
Marjorie Lawrence, soprano
Ludwig Weber, bass
Mogens Gert Hansen, tenor
Deon van der Walt, tenor
Per Hoyer, baritone
Emmy Destinn, soprano
Morten Frank Larsen, baritone
Bent Norup, bass
Reiner Goldberg, tenor
Michael Kristensen, tenor
Stephen Milling, bass
Marianne Rorholm, mezzo-soprano
Peter Gronlund, tenor
Bernd Aldenhoff, tenor
Else Schurhoff, soprano
Murray Dickie, tenor
Walter Berry, bass
Harald Proglhof, baritone
Franz Bierbach, bass
Christel Goltz, soprano
Margareta Kenney, mezzo-soprano
Hans Braun, baritone
Rudolf Christ, tenor
Hugo Meyer-Welfung, tenor
Kurt Preger, tenor
Herbert Alsen, bass
Ljubomir Pantscheff, bass
Hermann Gallos, tenor
Ljuba Welitsch, soprano
Anja Silja, soprano
Henriette Bonde-Hansen, soprano
Gert Henning-Jensen, tenor
Sten Byriel, baritone
Inga Nielsen, soprano
Recording date: 11 - 12 April and 12 June 1934
-
Scene 1: Wie schon ist die Prinzessin Salome (Narraboth, Page, Soldiers) - 2:42
-
Scene 1: Nach mir wird Einer kommen (Jochanaan, Soldiers, A Cappadocian) - 2:35
-
Scene 2: Ich will nicht bleiben (Salome, Page) - 1:43
-
Scene 2: Siehe, der Herr ist gekommen (Jochanaan, Salome, Soldiers, Page) - 1:36
-
Scene 2: Jauchze nicht, du Land Palastina (Jochanaan, Salome, Soldiers, Page) - 2:25
-
Scene 2: Du wirst das fur mich tun (Salome, Narraboth) - 3:14
-
Scene 3: Wo ist er, dessen Sundenbecher jetzt voll ist? (Jochanaan, Salome, Narraboth) - 9:38
-
Scene 3: Jochanaan! Ich bin verliebt in dienen Leib (Salome, Jochanaan) - 2:13
-
Scene 3: Dein Leib ist grauenvoll (Salome, Jochanaan, Narraboth) - 6:12
-
Scene 3: Wird dir nicht bange, Tochter der Herodias? (Jochanaan, Salome) - 8:14
-
Scene 4: Wo ist Salome? (Herod, Herodias, First Soldier) - 2:41
-
Scene 4: Es ist kalt hier? (Herod, Herodias) - 1:36
-
Scene 4: Salome, komm, trink Wein mit mir (Herod, Salome, Herodias) - 2:42
-
Scene 4: Sieh, die Zeit ist gekommen (Jochanaan, Herodias, Herod) - 0:46
-
Scene 4: Wahrhaftig, Herr, es ware besser (Jews, Herod, Herodias, First Nazarene) - 3:00
-
Scene 4: Siehe, der Tag ist nahe (Jochanaan, Herod, Nazarenes, Second Jew, Herodias) - 2:43
-
Scene 4: Eine Menge Menschen (Jochanaan, Herodias, Herod) - 2:22
-
Scene 4: Tanz fur mich, Salome (Herod, Herodias, Salome, Jochanaan) - 4:23
-
Scene 4: Salome's Dance of the Seven Veils (orchestra) - 9:25
-
Scene 4: Ah! Herrlich! Wundervoll! (Herod, Salome, Herodias) - 3:56
-
Scene 4: Still, sprich nicht zu mir! (Herod, Salome Herodias) - 3:30
Salome, Op. 54, TrV 215 (more info)
Performed by:
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Pasdeloup Orchestra
Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra
New York Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra
Boston Symphony Orchestra
Berlin State Opera Orchestra
Dresden Staatskapelle
Studio orchestra
Composed by:
Richard Strauss
Conducted by:
Clemens Krauss
Fritz Reiner
Piero Coppola
Zdenek Kosler
Michael Schonwandt
Joseph Keilberth
Leo Blech
Bruno Seidler-Winkler
Inger Karen, alto
Anders Jakobsson, bass
Robert Hale,
Gota Ljungberg, soprano
Julius Patzak, tenor
Anton Dermota, tenor
Marjorie Lawrence, soprano
Ludwig Weber, bass
Mogens Gert Hansen, tenor
Deon van der Walt, tenor
Per Hoyer, baritone
Emmy Destinn, soprano
Morten Frank Larsen, baritone
Bent Norup, bass
Reiner Goldberg, tenor
Michael Kristensen, tenor
Stephen Milling, bass
Marianne Rorholm, mezzo-soprano
Peter Gronlund, tenor
Bernd Aldenhoff, tenor
Else Schurhoff, soprano
Murray Dickie, tenor
Walter Berry, bass
Harald Proglhof, baritone
Franz Bierbach, bass
Christel Goltz, soprano
Margareta Kenney, mezzo-soprano
Hans Braun, baritone
Rudolf Christ, tenor
Hugo Meyer-Welfung, tenor
Kurt Preger, tenor
Herbert Alsen, bass
Ljubomir Pantscheff, bass
Hermann Gallos, tenor
Ljuba Welitsch, soprano
Anja Silja, soprano
Henriette Bonde-Hansen, soprano
Gert Henning-Jensen, tenor
Sten Byriel, baritone
Inga Nielsen, soprano
Recording date: 11 - 12 April and 12 June 1934
-
Scene 4: Salome, bedenk, was du tun willst (Herod, Salome, Jews) - 3:04
-
Scene 4: Man soll ihr geben, was sie verlangt (Herod, Herodias) - 1:44
-
Scene 4: Es ist kein Laut zu vernehmen (Salome) - 2:32
-
Scene 4: Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund kussen lassen, Jochanaan! (Salome) - 10:42
-
Scene 4: Sie ist ein Ungeheuer, deine Tochter (Herod, Herodias) - 1:04
-
Scene 4: Ah! Ich habe deinen Mund gekusst, Jochanaan (Salome, Herod) - 3:54
-
Salome: Jochanaan! Ich bin verliebt in dienen Leib - 1:52
-
Salome: Dein Leib ist grauenvoll - 1:57
-
Salome: Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund kussen lassen, Jochanaan! [abridged] - 8:25
-
Salome: Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund kussen lassen, Jochanaan! - 14:46
-
Salome: Dance of the Seven Veils - 9:33
-
Salome: Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund kussen lassen, Jochanaan! - 16:27