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Der Ring des Nibelungen: composition of the text

The evolution of Richard Wagner's epic operatic tetralogy Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung) was a long and tortuous process, and the precise sequence of events which led the composer to embark upon such a vast undertaking is still unclear. The composition of the text took place between 1848 and 1853, when all four libretti were privately printed; but the closing scene of the final opera, Götterdämmerung, was revised a number of times between 1856 and 1872. The names of the last two Ring operas, Siegfried and Götterdämmerung, were probably not definitively settled until 1856.

Richard Wagner (1861)

Conception of the Ring edit

 
The Wagner memorial in the Liebethaler Grund near Dresden. Wagner probably conceived Siegfried's Tod during long walks in this picturesque valley.

According to the composer's own account – as related in his autobiography Mein Leben – it was after the February Revolution that he began to sketch a play on the life of the Hohenstaufen Holy Roman Emperor Friedrich Barbarossa. While researching this work, he came to see Friedrich as "a historical rebirth of the old, pagan Siegfried".[1] Then, in the summer of 1848, he wrote the essay Die Wibelungen: Weltgeschichte aus der Saga (The Wibelungs: World History as Told in Saga), in which he noted some historical links (spurious, as it happens) between the Hohenstaufens and the legendary Nibelungs.[2] This led him to consider Siegfried as a possible subject for a new opera, and by October 1848 the entire Ring cycle had been conceived.[3]

This rather straightforward account of the Ring's origins, however, has been disputed by a number of authorities, who accuse Wagner of deliberately distorting the facts so as to bring them into harmony with his own private version of history. The actual sequence of events, it seems, was not nearly as clear-cut as he would have us believe. It was in October 1846 – some sixteen months before the February Revolution – that he first drew up a plan for a five-act drama based on the life of Friedrich Barbarossa. He may even have considered writing an opera on Siegfried as early as 1843, when he read Jacob Grimm's Deutsche Mythologie (German Mythology), or possibly in 1844, when he borrowed several works on the Nibelungs from the Royal Library in Dresden. As for Die Wibelungen, it would appear that he only started work on this essay in December 1848 at the earliest, finishing it sometime before 22 February 1849, when he read it to his friend Eduard Devrient.[4]

Whatever the truth, Wagner was certainly contemplating an opera on Siegfried by 1 April 1848, when he informed Devrient of his plans.[5]

Wagner was probably encouraged in these endeavours by a number of German intellectuals who believed that contemporary artists should seek inspiration in the pages of the Nibelungenlied, a 12th-century epic poem in Middle High German which, since its rediscovery in 1755, had been hailed by the German Romantics as their country's "national epic". In 1844 the philosopher Friedrich Theodor Vischer suggested that the Nibelungenlied would make a suitable subject for German opera;[6] and in 1845 and 1846 Louise Otto-Peters and Franz Brendel penned a series of articles in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik inviting composers to write a "national opera" based on the epic. Otto-Peters even wrote a libretto for such an opera.

Wagner, as it happened, was already familiar with the Nibelungenlied. He had even drawn upon it for one of the scenes in an earlier opera, Lohengrin, the text of which was written between July and November 1845. Act II, Scene 4, in which Ortrud interrupts the procession to the minster and confronts Elsa, is based on Chapter 14 of the Nibelungenlied, "How the Queens Railed at Each Other"; in the corresponding scene of Götterdämmerung (also Act II, Scene 4), it is Brünnhilde who interrupts a stately procession and provokes a quarrel.

Wagner the writer edit

Wagner's libretti, which he invariably wrote himself, usually passed through four stages; with one or two minor qualifications, the libretti of the four Ring operas were no different. These stages are as follows:[7]

  • Prose Sketch (Prosaskizze) – a brief outline of the dramatic action. Typically these sketches consisted of no more than a few paragraphs of prose, though Wagner sometimes added to them or modified them before proceeding to the next stage. This was the case with the sketches for the first three parts of the tetralogy. Exceptionally, however, Wagner (for reasons which will be explained later) never drafted a prose sketch for Götterdämmerung (or Siegfried's Tod, as it was originally called). The prose sketch for Act III of Die Walküre has disappeared.
  • Prose Draft (Prosaentwurf) – an elaborate prose treatment of the opera, describing the action in great detail. These drafts were usually ten or more pages in length. They included a considerable amount of dialogue. Prose drafts survive for all four Ring operas.
  • Verse Draft (Erstschrift des Textbuches) – a first draft of the final libretto, written in an archaic form of German alliterative verse known as Stabreim. Wagner created his verse drafts by versifying the dialogue already contained in his prose drafts – turning prose into poetry – or by creating new verse to replace those sections of the prose drafts for which he had not yet sketched any dialogue. He also added new elements not present in the prose drafts. For instance, the symbolic use of Wotan's spear and its engraved runes to embody the rule of law is not present in the prose draft of Das Rheingold: this idea only came to Wagner while he was working on the verse draft of Die Walküre. It was also while developing the latter that he first thought of making Loge a god of fire: in the prose draft of Das Rheingold he is merely a trickster and teller of unwelcome truths. While writing his verse drafts, Wagner also greatly expanded his stage directions (which, of course, were always in prose).
  • Fair Copy (Reinschrift des Textbuches) – a clean, carefully written verse libretto (or Dichtung, "poem", as Wagner liked to call his finished libretti), usually free of corrections and alterations. Punctuation and capitalization were regularized at this stage. The fair copies generally incorporated the final version of any passage of the corresponding verse draft for which Wagner had sketched two or more competing versions; in a few cases the fair copy has an entirely new variant. The fair copies, however, were not necessarily the final versions of the libretti, as Wagner frequently made slight – but sometimes telling – alterations to the text during the composition of the music. Furthermore, he sometimes made two, three, or even four fair copies, incorporating revisions as he did so, in which case the fair copies are called respectively Zweitschrift (des Textbuches), Drittschrift, Viertschrift, and Fünftschrift.

Siegfried's Tod edit

 
The opening page of the Nibelungenlied

As part of his preparations for the projected opera on Siegfried, Wagner first drafted a preliminary study of the relevant German and Nordic myths, Die Nibelungensage (Mythus) (The Nibelung Saga (Myth)). This lengthy prose scenario, which was completed by 4 October 1848, contains an outline of the entire Ring cycle from start to finish, though there is no evidence that Wagner was contemplating anything more at this point than a single opera on the death of Siegfried. When he made a fair copy of this text on 8 October, he renamed it Die Sage von den Nibelungen (The Saga of the Nibelungs). In the collected edition of his works (Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen) it is entitled Der Nibelungen-Mythus: als Entwurf zu einem Drama (The Nibelung Myth: as Sketch for a Drama).

In drafting this prose scenario, Wagner drew upon numerous works of German and Scandinavian mythology, both primary texts (usually in contemporary German translations, though Wagner had some knowledge of Old Norse and Middle German) and commentaries on them. The most important of the former were the Völsunga Saga, the Poetic Edda, the Prose Edda, the Nibelungenlied and Thidriks saga af Bern, while the most important of the latter were Jacob Grimm's German Mythology and Wilhelm Grimm's The German Hero-Saga. In addition to these, however, Wagner picked up various details from at least twenty-two other sources, including a number of key philosophical texts that informed the symbolism of the Ring. Wagner contradicts his sources on various points – necessarily so as the sources don’t always agree with one another – conflates disparate stories into continuous narratives, creates some new, memorable characters by combining minor characters from different sources, etc. The final scenario is as much a unique recreation of the original myths as the Nibelungenlied was in its day.

Because Die Sage von den Nibelungen already contained a detailed account of the dramatic action of the proposed opera, Wagner neglected to make any prose sketches according to his usual practice. Instead, he immediately wrote a prose draft of the new work, which was to be called Siegfried's Tod (Siegfried's Death), complete with "English" apostrophe. This apostrophe, incidentally, appears in all the textual manuscripts of the work and in the private imprint of 1853, but was dropped from the title in the Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen of 1871–1873.[8]

On 28 October 1848, Wagner read the prose draft of Siegfried's Tod to Eduard Devrient, and following some critical comments by the latter on the obscurity of the subject, he drafted a two-scene prologue which filled in some of the background story.[9] This new prose draft was cast almost entirely in dialogue, much of it already very close to the final verse form it would take. By 12 November the revised draft of Siegfried's Tod was completed, and by 28 November it had been turned into alliterative verse, becoming in the process a fully fledged libretto for a three-act opera with a two-scene prologue. The following month (presumably) Wagner prepared the first fair copy (Zweitschrift des Textbuches), but almost immediately the work was extensively revised and a second fair copy (Drittschrift des Textbuches) was drawn up to reflect these revisions. It was at this stage that the episode known as "Hagen's Watch" (the final section of Act I Scene 2) made its first appearance.

With its two-scene prologue and three-act structure, Siegfried's Tod was to all intents and purposes a draft text for what would eventually be the final part of the tetralogy, Götterdämmerung (Twilight of the Gods).

At this point, however, Wagner, it seems, began to doubt the wisdom of writing an opera on such an obscure subject. Even in Germany the Nibelungenlied was not very well known, and several of the other sources that he consulted were even more recondite. Whatever the reason, the fact of the matter is that having completed the libretto of Siegfried's Tod, Wagner then put the work aside and turned his attention to other matters. Between December 1848 and March 1850, he wrote several influential essays, some of them quite lengthy. He also spent much of this time working out detailed scenarios for several other operas on a variety of historical and mythical figures: Jesus Christ, Achilles, Friedrich Barbarossa and Wieland der Schmied. None of these operas ever saw the light of day, though one musical sketch survives for Jesus von Nazareth.[10]

Politics edit

It was also around this time that Wagner was most actively engaged in German politics. Dresden had long been known as a cultural centre for liberals and democrats; the anarchist newspaper Dresdner Zeitung was partly edited by the music director August Röckel, and contained articles by Mikhail Bakunin, who came to Dresden in March 1849. Röckel also published the popular democratic newspaper Volksblätter. The activities of these radicals culminated in the May Uprising of 1849. Wagner, who had been inspired with the revolutionary spirit since 1848, cultivated Röckel's friendship and through him became acquainted with Bakunin. He wrote passionate articles in the Volksblätter inciting the people to revolt, and when the fighting broke out he played a small though significant role in it, possibly ordering hand grenades and certainly standing as a look out at the top of the Kreuzkirche.

The revolution was quickly crushed by Saxon and Prussian troops, and warrants were issued for the arrest of the leading revolutionaries, including Wagner. Röckel and Bakunin were captured and sentenced to lengthy terms of imprisonment. Wagner, however, made good his escape, and with the help of Franz Liszt he fled to Switzerland, from where he eventually made his way to Paris. In July he returned to Switzerland and settled in Zürich, which was to be his home for the greater part of the next nine years.[11]

There, in May 1850, he once again took up Siegfried's Tod. He prepared a third fair copy of the libretto (Viertschrift des Textbuches) for publication, which, however, did not take place,[12] and by July he had even begun to compose music for the prologue. Of this music a sheet of preliminary sketches survives and a more detailed composition draft, which extends about one quarter of the way into the duet between Brünnhilde and Siegfried. Having reached this point, however, Wagner abandoned the work.

Trilogy edit

The earliest mention we have of a festival theatre being specially constructed for a performance of Siegfried's Tod is in a letter to the artist Ernst Benedikt Kietz, dated 14 September 1850. A week later in a letter to his friend Theodor Uhlig, dated 22 September, Wagner elaborated on this idea: now he was hoping to stage three performances of Siegfried's Tod in a specially constructed festival theatre, after which both the theatre and the score were to be destroyed: "If everything is arranged satisfactorily, I will allow three performances of Siegfried [i.e. Siegfried's Tod] to be given in one week under these circumstances: after the third performance the theatre is to be torn down and my score burned...."

Gradually the notion of a trilogy of operas culminating with Siegfried's Tod was beginning to form in Wagner's mind. The idea was not a new one. In 1847 he had read and been deeply impressed by Aeschylus's Greek trilogy the Oresteia in a German translation by Johann Gustav Droysen; and in 1849, after his flight from Dresden, he had read Droysen's reconstruction of the same playwright's trilogy the Prometheia, which includes the well-known tragedy Prometheus Bound.[13] It seemed only right that a similar trilogy of German tragedies, written by a latter-day Aeschylus, should be performed in its own dedicated theatre and as part of a "specially-appointed festival".[14]

The idea of expanding Siegfried's Tod into a series of two or more operas would have been particularly appealing to Wagner, as he had now come to realize that it would be impossible to say all that he wanted to in a single opera without an inordinate number of digressions. The political events of the past few years and his recent discovery of the philosophy of Ludwig Feuerbach had greatly enlarged the scope of ideas which he hoped to explore in his new opera. He also wished to incorporate various ideas that he had been mulling over in the works on Jesus, Frederick, Achilles and Wieland (all four of which had been effectively abandoned by now). These ideas ranged over the politics of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and Mikhail Bakunin and the philosophy of Hegel and the Young Hegelians.

In the winter of 1850–1851, while he was working on Opera and Drama, Wagner toyed with the idea of writing a comic opera based on a well-known folk-tale, Vor einem, der auszug, das Fürchten zu lernen (The Boy Who Set Out to Learn Fear), which he had come across in Grimms' Fairy Tales. "Imagine my surprise," he later wrote to his friend the violinist Theodor Uhlig, "when I suddenly realized that this youth was none other than young Siegfried!"

Within a week, in May 1851, he had drawn up some fragmentary prose sketches for a prequel, or "comic counterpart", to Siegfried's Tod, which he called Jung-Siegfried (Young Siegfried), later altering the title to Der junge Siegfried (The Young Siegfried).[15] A more extensive prose draft was completed by 1 June, and by 24 June this had been transformed into a verse draft. By August the fair copy of this verse libretto was finished and Wagner had even begun to set it to music.[16] These efforts, however, never amounted to anything more than a handful of sketches, which were later used in the composition of Siegfried.

The earliest mention we have of a festival of three operas based on the Nibelungenlied is in the autobiographical work Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde (A Communication to My Friends), which Wagner originally wrote in August 1851: "I propose to produce my myth in three complete dramas...."[17]

Der junge Siegfried and Siegfried's Tod were now clearly envisaged as the second and third dramas of a trilogy. By October, however, Wagner had decided that this trilogy required a prelude – was he thinking again of Aeschylus and the ancient Greeks, whose trilogies were usually accompanied by a satyr play?[18] – and the text of Eine Mittheilung was duly altered to reflect the change. To the sentence quoted above he added the words, "which will be preceded by a great prelude". Nevertheless, Wagner always referred to the Ring as a trilogy rather than a tetralogy. He envisaged it being performed as part of a three-day festival preceded by a preliminary evening. Thanks to Aeschylus and his contemporaries, the term trilogy had a certain cachet for Wagner which the term tetralogy never acquired.

In October 1851 Wagner drafted a short prose sketch for the preliminary opera which would precede the trilogy proper. He vacillated over the title of the work, trying out in turn, Der Raub: Vorspiel (The Theft: Prelude), Der Raub des Rheingoldes (The Theft of the Rhinegold) and Das Rheingold (Vorspiel) (The Rhinegold (Prelude)). The following month he drafted some prose sketches for the first of the three main dramas, Siegmund und Sieglinde: der Walküre Bestrafung (Siegmund and Sieglinde: the Valkyrie's Punishment). Between March and November 1852 he elaborated these short sketches after his usual practice, developing prose drafts from them, which he then proceeded to turn into verse drafts. By that time he had renamed the operas Das Rheingold and Die Walküre respectively.

Whereas the prose draft of Das Rheingold was written before that of Die Walküre, the verse draft of Die Walküre preceded that of Das Rheingold. So while there is some truth to the oft-quoted remark that the Ring cycle was conceived backwards, it is not completely accurate.[19]

The original prose sketch for Das Rheingold consisted of just three paragraphs, each prefaced by a Roman numeral. It would appear from this that Wagner originally conceived it as a three-act opera in its own right, and this is confirmed by a letter he wrote in October 1851 to his friend Theodor Uhlig: "Great plans for Siegfried: three dramas, with a three-act prelude.". By 1852, however, Das Rheingold had become a one-act opera in four scenes. Nevertheless, there are good reasons for regarding the opening scene of the opera as a prologue ("The Theft of the Gold") to the main part of the drama ("Valhalla"). Thus, both Das Rheingold and Götterdämmerung share the same prologue-plus-trilogy structure which characterises the Ring cycle as a whole.[20]

As for Die Walküre, the first act of this opera probably gave Wagner more trouble than any other act in the entire tetralogy. In his two prose sketches for it Wotan enters Hunding's house in his guise as Der Wanderer ("The Wanderer") and thrusts the sword into the ash tree, which Siegmund then withdraws only minutes later; the fully worked-out prose draft also brings Wotan onto the stage. It was only at a later stage in the evolution of the text that Wagner banished the Wanderer and his sword to the backstory which Sieglinde narrates to Siegmund. Now the sword is already embedded in the tree as the curtain goes up on Act 1 and Siegmund's withdrawal of it becomes a climactic piece of dramaturgy.[21]

Opera and Drama edit

 
The title page of Oper und Drama

Parallel to these renewed efforts on The Ring was Wagner's work on a lengthy essay entitled Oper und Drama ("Opera and Drama"), which musicologist Deryck Cooke (1979) has described as, "essentially a blueprint [for the Ring]". Wagner's principal theoretical work, Oper und Drama grew out of a draft of an essay on Das Wesen der Oper ("The Essence of Opera"), which, preparatory to the composition of Siegfried's Tod, he wrote in an attempt "to tidy up a whole life that now lay behind me, to articulate each half-formed intuition on a conscious level....".[22] First mentioned in a letter to Theodor Uhlig on 20 September 1850, the work was begun by 9 October. Wagner, it seems, anticipated that it would be no longer than the other essays he had recently completed; but over the winter of 1850–1851, it grew into a book of some considerable size. Completed by 20 January 1851, just four months after Wagner conceived it, it was first published in 1852 by J. J. Weber of Leipzig. It was in the pages of Opera and Drama that Wagner's nebulous or half-conscious ideas on artistic method and the relationship between music and drama were first given concrete expression.[23]

 
The title page of Das Kunstwerk der Zukunft

Appreciation of The Ring, and of the ideas which inform it, is assisted by placing it in the context of Wagner's wider literary and political endeavours of the period. Four of his prose works, the so-called "Zürich Manifestos", which helped to establish Wagner's reputation as a controversial writer) are particularly relevant:

Der Ring des Nibelungen edit

It was in 1852 that Wagner finally settled upon the name Der Ring des Nibelungen for the complete cycle. Other titles that were considered and rejected included: Das Gold des Nibelungen (The Gold of the Nibelung), which appeared on the title page of the verse draft of Die Walküre; and Der Reif des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung), which was mentioned in a letter to August Röckel, dated 12 September 1852. On 14 October 1852, however, Wagner informed Theodor Uhlig that he had finally decided that the title of the entire cycle would be Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung, or The Nibelung's Ring).

In November and December 1852, Wagner made extensive revisions to the libretti of Der junge Siegfried and Siegfried's Tod. This was partly to accommodate the expansion of the cycle and the growing significance of Wotan, the protagonist of the first two parts of the tetralogy, and partly to reflect Wagner's reading of the philosophy of Ludwig Feuerbach (see below).[24] The changes to Der junge Siegfried were entered into the first fair copy (Reinschrift des Textbuches), while those to Siegfried's Tod were entered into the third fair copy (Viertschrift des Textbuches). In each case several pages of the fair copy were replaced with newly written ones. The principal changes to Siegfried's Tod involved the opening scene of the prologue (the Norns scene), Brünnhilde's scene with Waltraute (which had originally included all nine Valkyries), and Brünnhilde's closing speech at the end of the opera.

Fair copies of Das Rheingold and Die Walküre and a fourth fair copy of Siegfried's Tod (Fünftschrift des Textbuches) were completed by 15 December 1852 and the entire text was privately published in February 1853.[25] Fifty copies were printed, most of which were given to Wagner’s friends. Over the course of four evenings (16–19 February 1853) Wagner gave a public reading of the complete text in Zürich's Hôtel Baur au Lac. This text, however, did not represent the final version, as Wagner often made changes to his libretti while he was setting them to music. In the case of the Ring such changes were duly entered into Wagner's personal copy of the 1853 printing; but not all of these emendations were incorporated in either the public printing of 1863 or the version in the Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen of 1872, a situation which has caused unending problems for scholars, translators and performers alike.

Furthermore, it was probably not until 1856 that Wagner definitively changed the titles of the third and fourth parts of the Ring to Siegfried and Götterdämmerung respectively.[26] In 1863 the texts of all four Ring operas were published for the first time under their present titles.[27]

The end of the Ring edit

The final scene of the Ring probably caused Wagner more trouble than any other. He rewrote the text for it several times and his final thoughts were never made absolutely clear. Six or seven different versions exist or can be reconstructed from Wagner's drafts:

  • Original Ending (early December 1848) – Wagner's first ending for the cycle was optimistic and confident. The ring is returned to the Rhine; Alberich and the Nibelungs, who were enslaved by the power of the ring, are liberated. In her closing speech, Brünnhilde declares that Wotan is all-powerful and everlasting; she gives up her own life and leads Siegfried to Valhalla, where he is reconciled with Wotan and order is restored. Siegfried and Brünnhilde are depicted rising above Siegfried's funeral pyre to Valhalla to cleanse Wotan of his crime and redeem the gods, rather as The Dutchman and Senta ascend above the clouds at the end of Der fliegende Holländer. A major difference between this draft and subsequent revisions is that there is no suggestion here that the Gods are destroyed. Brünnhilde's final oration stresses the cleansing effect of Siegfried's death:

"Hear then, you mighty Gods. Your guilt is abolished: the hero takes it upon himself. The Nibelungs’ slavery is at an end, and Alberich shall again be free. This Ring I give to you, wise sisters of the watery deeps. Melt it down and keep it free from harm."

  • First Revision (before 18 December 1848) – the second fair copy of the libretto for Siegfried's Tod (Drittschrift des Textbuches) was made almost immediately after the first. It incorporates several revisions, most of which are quite minor, and none of which affects the ending. The only major change, as noted above, was the addition of the Hagen's Watch episode to Act I. After completing this fair copy, however, Wagner made two marginal alterations to Brünnhilde's closing speech. In the first of these she declares that the gods have now atoned for their misrule of the world, and she urges them to accept Siegfried as a new member of the Norse pantheon. This was clearly an attempt by Wagner to restore Siegfried's role as Christlike redeemer of the gods, taking their guilt upon himself and by his death atoning for their sins. The second alteration, added later, is quite different. Brünnhilde now admonishes the gods to "depart powerless", leaving the world to mankind;

"Fade away in bliss before the deed of Man: the hero you created. I proclaim to you freedom from fear, through blessed redemption in death."

  • May 1850 Revision – in May 1850 Wagner made a third fair copy of the text (Viertschrift des Textbuches) in the hopes of having it published. Unfortunately this manuscript, which is presently in the Bayreuth Archives, is fragmentary, some of its pages having been discarded during the next revision, for which it was the source-text. Among the missing pages are the final few, so it is impossible to tell whether either of the marginal verses added to the final page of the second fair copy was incorporated into Brünnhilde's closing speech.
  • Feuerbach Ending (November and December 1852) – by the time Wagner had completed the libretti for Das Rheingold and Die Walküre, he had come to realize that the cycle must end with the destruction by fire of both Valhalla and the gods. This necessitated further and far-reaching revisions of both Der junge Siegfried and Siegfried's Tod. The new ending of the latter was influenced by Wagner's reading of Ludwig Feuerbach, whose writing suggested that Gods were the construction of human minds, and that love had primacy over all other human endeavours. In this Feuerbach ending Brünnhilde proclaims the destruction of the Gods and their replacement with a human society ruled by love:

"The holiest hoard of my wisdom I bequeath to the world. Not wealth, not gold, nor godly splendour; not house, not court, nor overbearing pomp; not troubled treaties’ deceiving union, nor the dissembling custom of harsh law: Rapture in joy and sorrow comes from love alone."

This ending was added by Wagner to the third fair copy (Viertschrift des Textbuches) of the work.[citation needed] Although the Feuerbachian lines were eventually dropped, the other significant change to the ending (viz. the substitution of the gods’ destruction for the liberation of the Nibelungs) was retained in all subsequent versions.
  • Schopenhauer Ending (1856) – following his discovery of the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer and his growing interest in Buddhist philosophy,[28] Wagner once again changed the ending of the Ring.[29] The Schopenhauer ending stressed self-overcoming, resignation and the illusory nature of human existence, in keeping with the notion of negation of the Will. Brünnhilde sees herself redeemed from the endless cycle of birth, suffering, death and rebirth; enlightened by love, she achieves the state of non-being, or Nirvana. Wagner wrote out a prose sketch of this new ending in 1856 (WWV 86D Text VIIIb), but he did not set it to verse until 1871 or 1872, adding the text and its fair copy to his personal copy of the 1853 printing of the Ring libretti. Brünnhilde's new verses (which were intended to precede the passage beginning, "Grane, mein Ross") close with the words:

"Were I no more to fare to Valhalla's fortress, do you know whither I fare? I depart from the home of desire, I flee forever the home of delusion; the open gates of eternal becoming I close behind me now: To the holiest chosen land, free from desire and delusion, the goal of the world's migration, redeemed from incarnation, the enlightened woman now goes. The blessed end of all things eternal, do you know how I attained it? Grieving love's profoundest suffering opened my eyes for me: I saw the world end."[30]

  • Final Ending (1874) – when Wagner finally came to set the ending to music in 1874, he reverted to the 1852 revision, but shorn of its closing Feuerbachian lines. Although Wagner never set either the Schopenhauerian or the Feuerbachian lines, he did include them as footnotes in the final printed edition of the text, together with a note to the effect that while he preferred the Schopenhauerian lines, he declined to set them because their meaning was better expressed by the music alone. In other words, the ending he finally set to music is Schopenhauerian in its intention even though this is never stated explicitly in the libretto.[31]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ A Communication to My Friends (Sämtliche Schriften und Dichtungen, vol. IV, p. 359).
  2. ^ See Guelphs and Ghibellines for the association of the term Waiblingen with the Hohenstaufens.
  3. ^ Wagner, Mein Leben
  4. ^ For a more detailed discussion of the disputed origins of the Ring, see John Deathridge's essay The Ring: an Introduction, which accompanies the 1991 recording of Siegfried by the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra conducted by James Levine (Deutsche Grammophon 429 407-2). See also the same author's essay "Cataloguing Wagner" in The Richard Wagner Centenary in Australia, ed. Peter Dennison (Adelaide, 1985), pp. 185–199.
  5. ^ Eduard Devrient's diary for 1 April 1848 reads: "Er [Wagner] erzählte mir einen neuen Opernplan aus der Siegfriedsage." ("He told me of a new plan for an opera on the Siegfried saga.") Two months later, Wagner discussed a similar project with the composer Robert Schumann; an entry in Schumann's notebook (Haushaltbuch), dated 2 June 1848, reads: "Abends Spazierg[ang] m[it] Wagner – sein Nibelungtext." ("Evening walk w[ith] Wagner – his text on the Nibelungs.")
  6. ^ Friedrich Theodor Vischer, Vorschlag zu einer Oper ("Suggestion for an Opera") Kritische Gänge, Volume II, Aesthetike (Tübingen, 1844). His scenario consisted of a five-act grand opera to be given on two consecutive evenings – the first dealing with the events of the Nibelungenlied from Siegfried's arrival in Gunther's court to his death, and the second with Kriemhild's revenge. Vischer's treatment of the epic bears little relation to Wagner's, though it may have suggested to Wagner the idea of a series of operas on the Nibelungenlied to be presented on consecutive evenings.
  7. ^ The English terms used here are taken from The Wagner Compendium: A Guide to Wagner's Life and Music (see references for details). The corresponding German terms, which are given in parentheses, are taken from the official catalog of Wagner's musical works and their textual sources, Verzeichnis der musikalischen Werke Richard Wagners und ihrer Quellen, which is generally abbreviated to Wagner-Werk-Verzeichnis, or WWV.
  8. ^ In his correspondence and autobiography, Wagner often refers to Siegfried's Tod as simply Siegfried, which can lead to confusion with the later opera of that name.
  9. ^ "[Devrient] showed me, for instance, that before Siegfried and Brünnhilde are displayed in a position of bitter hostility towards each other, they ought first to have been presented in their true and calmer relationship. I had, in fact, opened the poem of Siegfried's Tod with those scenes which now form the first act of Götterdämmerung. The details of Siegfried's relation to Brünnhilde had been merely outlined to the listeners in a lyrico-episodical dialogue between the hero's wife, whom he had left behind in solitude, and a crowd of Valkyries passing before her rock." (Wagner, Mein Leben)
  10. ^ Millington et al. (1992), p. 321.
  11. ^ On arriving in Zürich Wagner and his first wife Minna took lodgings in the so-called "Hintern Escherhäuser" in the Zeltweg. In January 1850 they moved to a house in the parish of Enge, "a good fifteen minutes’ walk outside Zürich". Finally, in December 1851, they moved back to the Zeltweg and rented an apartment on the ground floor of the so-called "Vordern Escherhäuser". It was here, for the most part, that Wagner composed Das Rheingold, Die Walküre and the first two acts of Siegfried.
  12. ^ "I wrote a short preface dedicating [the libretto of Siegfried's Tod] to my friends as a relic of the time when I had hoped to devote myself entirely to art, and especially to the composition of music. I sent this manuscript to Herr Wigand in Leipzig, who returned it to me after some time with the remark, that if I insisted on its being printed in Latin characters he would not be able to sell a single copy of it." (Wagner, Mein Leben.) On 18 December 1848 Wagner had abandoned the old Gothic script in favour of modern Roman script.
  13. ^ The attribution of this trilogy to Aeschylus has been questioned recently, but it was widely accepted in Wagner's day.
  14. ^ Wagner, Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde.
  15. ^ "I now [May 1851] conceived the idea of the poem of Junger Siegfried, which I proposed to issue as a heroic comedy by way of prelude and complement to the tragedy of Siegfried's Tod." (Mein Leben.) There is no evidence at this stage that Wagner intended this new opera to be the second part of a trilogy of operas.
  16. ^ Strobel (1930) contains the German text of Der junge Siegfried.
  17. ^ Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde was the lengthy preface Wagner wrote for the 1851 publication of three of his earlier libretti, Der fliegende Holländer, Tannhäuser and Lohengrin.
  18. ^ In Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde Wagner had described Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg as "a comic piece which well might form a Satyr-play as pendant to my Sängerkrieg auf Wartburg [i.e. Tannhäuser]". He never explicitly referred to Das Rheingold as a satyr play, but such a description is a commonplace amongst contemporary critics. See, for example, Hugh Canning's review in the Sunday Times of Simon Rattle's 2006 production of the opera at Aix [1]
  19. ^ The prose draft of Das Rheingold was written between 21 March and 23 March 1852, while that of Die Walküre was written between 17 May and 26 May of the same year. The verse draft of Die Walküre was written between 1 June and 1 July, and that of Das Rheingold between 15 September and 3 November. Both drafts of Die Walküre were written at the Pension Rinderknecht, a pied-à-terre on the Zürichberg (now Hochstrasse 56–58 in Zürich) which the Wagners rented in the summer of 1852.
  20. ^ Warren Darcy (1993), p. 31.
  21. ^ Deryck Cooke (1979), pp. 292-294.
  22. ^ Eine Skizze zu "Oper und Drama" (August 1850).
  23. ^ Richard Wagner, Das Wesen der Oper, opening paragraph.
  24. ^ These revisions also coincided with the composer's increasing disillusionment with the world and the possibility of social progress. Between 1852 and 1857 Wagner was frequently depressed and even contemplated suicide.
  25. ^ For reasons unknown, Wagner neglected to make a second fair copy of the extensively revised Der junge Siegfried.
  26. ^ William F. Aphorp dates the change from Siegfried's Tod to Götterdämmerung to "before 1855". (Some of Wagner's Heroes and Heroines, 1889, Online text 2018-04-03 at the Wayback Machine.)
  27. ^ They were published by J. J. Weber of Leipzig.
  28. ^ On 16 May 1856 Wagner drafted a brief prose sketch (WWV 89) for a Buddhist opera, Die Sieger (The Victors).
  29. ^ It was possibly at this point that he changed the titles of Der junge Siegfried and Siegfried's Tod to Siegfried and Götterdämmerung respectively.
  30. ^ In a letter to Liszt, dated 11 February 1853, Wagner had written: "Mark well my new poem – it contains the beginning and end of the world!" Wagner-Liszt Correspondence 2002-08-29 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ Darcy (1993), p. 30 and footnote.

Bibliography edit

  • Burbidge, Peter (1979). Sutton, Richard (ed.). The Wagner Companion. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-10471-0.
  • Cooke, Deryck (1979). I Saw the World End. London: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-315318-9.
  • Dahlhaus, Carl (1971). Über den Schluss der Götterdämmerung. Regensburg.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Darcy, Warren (1993). Wagner's Das Rheingold. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816603-0.
  • Deathridge, John (1985). "Cataloguing Wagner". The Richard Wagner Centenary in Australia. Adelaide. pp. 185–199.
  • Deathridge, John (1986). Geck, Martin; Voss, Egon (eds.). Verzeichnis der musikalischen Werke Richard Wagners und ihrer Quellen. Mainz: Schott. ISBN 978-3-7957-2201-2.
  • Deathridge, John (1991). The Ring: An Introduction. Program notes to Siegfried, performed by the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, conductor James Levine (Deutsche Grammophon CD 429 407-2).
  • Donington, Robert (1963). Wagner's Ring and Its Symbols: The Music and the Myth. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-04818-2.
  • Magee, Elizabeth (1991). Richard Wagner and the Nibelungs. London: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816190-5.
  • May, Thomas (2004). Decoding Wagner. Milwaukee: Amadeus Press. ISBN 978-1-57467-097-4.
  • McCreless, Patrick (1982). Wagner's Siegfried: Its Drama, History and Music. Michigan: Ann Arbor. ISBN 978-0-8357-1361-0.
  • Millington, Barry, ed. (1992). The Wagner Compendium: A Guide to Wagner's Life and Music. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-333-60800-5.
  • Newman, Ernest (1949). Wagner Nights. London: Putnam. ASIN B0000CHKMY.
  • Newman, Ernest (1976). The Life of Richard Wagner, Vol. II: 1848–1860. London: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-29095-1.
  • Porges, Heinrich (1983). Wagner Rehearsing the Ring. Jacobs, Robert L. (trans.). New York: Cambridge. ISBN 978-0-521-23722-2.
  • Sadie, Stanley, ed. (2001). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-60800-5.
  • Strobel, Otto, ed. (1930). Richard Wagner: Skizzen und Entwürfe zur Ring-Dichtung. Munich.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Wagner, Richard (1983). My Life. Gray, Andrew L.; Whittall, Mary (Eng trans.). New York: Cambridge. ISBN 978-0-521-22929-6.

External links edit

  • Wagner's Prose Works 2006-10-30 at the Wayback Machine
  • Mein Leben: Volume 1 of Wagner’s autobiography from Project Gutenberg
  • Mein Leben: Volume 2 of Wagner’s autobiography from Project Gutenberg
  • Volume 1 of the Correspondence of Wagner and Liszt from Project Gutenberg
  • Volume 2 of the Correspondence of Wagner and Liszt from Project Gutenberg
  • (in German) Complete libretto

ring, nibelungen, composition, text, evolution, richard, wagner, epic, operatic, tetralogy, ring, nibelungen, ring, nibelung, long, tortuous, process, precise, sequence, events, which, composer, embark, upon, such, vast, undertaking, still, unclear, compositio. The evolution of Richard Wagner s epic operatic tetralogy Der Ring des Nibelungen The Ring of the Nibelung was a long and tortuous process and the precise sequence of events which led the composer to embark upon such a vast undertaking is still unclear The composition of the text took place between 1848 and 1853 when all four libretti were privately printed but the closing scene of the final opera Gotterdammerung was revised a number of times between 1856 and 1872 The names of the last two Ring operas Siegfried and Gotterdammerung were probably not definitively settled until 1856 Richard Wagner 1861 Contents 1 Conception of the Ring 2 Wagner the writer 3 Siegfried s Tod 4 Politics 5 Trilogy 6 Opera and Drama 7 Der Ring des Nibelungen 8 The end of the Ring 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksConception of the Ring edit nbsp The Wagner memorial in the Liebethaler Grund near Dresden Wagner probably conceived Siegfried s Tod during long walks in this picturesque valley According to the composer s own account as related in his autobiography Mein Leben it was after the February Revolution that he began to sketch a play on the life of the Hohenstaufen Holy Roman Emperor Friedrich Barbarossa While researching this work he came to see Friedrich as a historical rebirth of the old pagan Siegfried 1 Then in the summer of 1848 he wrote the essay Die Wibelungen Weltgeschichte aus der Saga The Wibelungs World History as Told in Saga in which he noted some historical links spurious as it happens between the Hohenstaufens and the legendary Nibelungs 2 This led him to consider Siegfried as a possible subject for a new opera and by October 1848 the entire Ring cycle had been conceived 3 This rather straightforward account of the Ring s origins however has been disputed by a number of authorities who accuse Wagner of deliberately distorting the facts so as to bring them into harmony with his own private version of history The actual sequence of events it seems was not nearly as clear cut as he would have us believe It was in October 1846 some sixteen months before the February Revolution that he first drew up a plan for a five act drama based on the life of Friedrich Barbarossa He may even have considered writing an opera on Siegfried as early as 1843 when he read Jacob Grimm s Deutsche Mythologie German Mythology or possibly in 1844 when he borrowed several works on the Nibelungs from the Royal Library in Dresden As for Die Wibelungen it would appear that he only started work on this essay in December 1848 at the earliest finishing it sometime before 22 February 1849 when he read it to his friend Eduard Devrient 4 Whatever the truth Wagner was certainly contemplating an opera on Siegfried by 1 April 1848 when he informed Devrient of his plans 5 Wagner was probably encouraged in these endeavours by a number of German intellectuals who believed that contemporary artists should seek inspiration in the pages of the Nibelungenlied a 12th century epic poem in Middle High German which since its rediscovery in 1755 had been hailed by the German Romantics as their country s national epic In 1844 the philosopher Friedrich Theodor Vischer suggested that the Nibelungenlied would make a suitable subject for German opera 6 and in 1845 and 1846 Louise Otto Peters and Franz Brendel penned a series of articles in the Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik inviting composers to write a national opera based on the epic Otto Peters even wrote a libretto for such an opera Wagner as it happened was already familiar with the Nibelungenlied He had even drawn upon it for one of the scenes in an earlier opera Lohengrin the text of which was written between July and November 1845 Act II Scene 4 in which Ortrud interrupts the procession to the minster and confronts Elsa is based on Chapter 14 of the Nibelungenlied How the Queens Railed at Each Other in the corresponding scene of Gotterdammerung also Act II Scene 4 it is Brunnhilde who interrupts a stately procession and provokes a quarrel Wagner the writer editWagner s libretti which he invariably wrote himself usually passed through four stages with one or two minor qualifications the libretti of the four Ring operas were no different These stages are as follows 7 Prose Sketch Prosaskizze a brief outline of the dramatic action Typically these sketches consisted of no more than a few paragraphs of prose though Wagner sometimes added to them or modified them before proceeding to the next stage This was the case with the sketches for the first three parts of the tetralogy Exceptionally however Wagner for reasons which will be explained later never drafted a prose sketch for Gotterdammerung or Siegfried s Tod as it was originally called The prose sketch for Act III of Die Walkure has disappeared Prose Draft Prosaentwurf an elaborate prose treatment of the opera describing the action in great detail These drafts were usually ten or more pages in length They included a considerable amount of dialogue Prose drafts survive for all four Ring operas Verse Draft Erstschrift des Textbuches a first draft of the final libretto written in an archaic form of German alliterative verse known as Stabreim Wagner created his verse drafts by versifying the dialogue already contained in his prose drafts turning prose into poetry or by creating new verse to replace those sections of the prose drafts for which he had not yet sketched any dialogue He also added new elements not present in the prose drafts For instance the symbolic use of Wotan s spear and its engraved runes to embody the rule of law is not present in the prose draft of Das Rheingold this idea only came to Wagner while he was working on the verse draft of Die Walkure It was also while developing the latter that he first thought of making Loge a god of fire in the prose draft of Das Rheingold he is merely a trickster and teller of unwelcome truths While writing his verse drafts Wagner also greatly expanded his stage directions which of course were always in prose Fair Copy Reinschrift des Textbuches a clean carefully written verse libretto or Dichtung poem as Wagner liked to call his finished libretti usually free of corrections and alterations Punctuation and capitalization were regularized at this stage The fair copies generally incorporated the final version of any passage of the corresponding verse draft for which Wagner had sketched two or more competing versions in a few cases the fair copy has an entirely new variant The fair copies however were not necessarily the final versions of the libretti as Wagner frequently made slight but sometimes telling alterations to the text during the composition of the music Furthermore he sometimes made two three or even four fair copies incorporating revisions as he did so in which case the fair copies are called respectively Zweitschrift des Textbuches Drittschrift Viertschrift and Funftschrift Siegfried s Tod edit nbsp The opening page of the Nibelungenlied As part of his preparations for the projected opera on Siegfried Wagner first drafted a preliminary study of the relevant German and Nordic myths Die Nibelungensage Mythus The Nibelung Saga Myth This lengthy prose scenario which was completed by 4 October 1848 contains an outline of the entire Ring cycle from start to finish though there is no evidence that Wagner was contemplating anything more at this point than a single opera on the death of Siegfried When he made a fair copy of this text on 8 October he renamed it Die Sage von den Nibelungen The Saga of the Nibelungs In the collected edition of his works Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen it is entitled Der Nibelungen Mythus als Entwurf zu einem Drama The Nibelung Myth as Sketch for a Drama In drafting this prose scenario Wagner drew upon numerous works of German and Scandinavian mythology both primary texts usually in contemporary German translations though Wagner had some knowledge of Old Norse and Middle German and commentaries on them The most important of the former were the Volsunga Saga the Poetic Edda the Prose Edda the Nibelungenlied and Thidriks saga af Bern while the most important of the latter were Jacob Grimm s German Mythology and Wilhelm Grimm s The German Hero Saga In addition to these however Wagner picked up various details from at least twenty two other sources including a number of key philosophical texts that informed the symbolism of the Ring Wagner contradicts his sources on various points necessarily so as the sources don t always agree with one another conflates disparate stories into continuous narratives creates some new memorable characters by combining minor characters from different sources etc The final scenario is as much a unique recreation of the original myths as the Nibelungenlied was in its day Because Die Sage von den Nibelungen already contained a detailed account of the dramatic action of the proposed opera Wagner neglected to make any prose sketches according to his usual practice Instead he immediately wrote a prose draft of the new work which was to be called Siegfried s Tod Siegfried s Death complete with English apostrophe This apostrophe incidentally appears in all the textual manuscripts of the work and in the private imprint of 1853 but was dropped from the title in the Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen of 1871 1873 8 On 28 October 1848 Wagner read the prose draft of Siegfried s Tod to Eduard Devrient and following some critical comments by the latter on the obscurity of the subject he drafted a two scene prologue which filled in some of the background story 9 This new prose draft was cast almost entirely in dialogue much of it already very close to the final verse form it would take By 12 November the revised draft of Siegfried s Tod was completed and by 28 November it had been turned into alliterative verse becoming in the process a fully fledged libretto for a three act opera with a two scene prologue The following month presumably Wagner prepared the first fair copy Zweitschrift des Textbuches but almost immediately the work was extensively revised and a second fair copy Drittschrift des Textbuches was drawn up to reflect these revisions It was at this stage that the episode known as Hagen s Watch the final section of Act I Scene 2 made its first appearance With its two scene prologue and three act structure Siegfried s Tod was to all intents and purposes a draft text for what would eventually be the final part of the tetralogy Gotterdammerung Twilight of the Gods At this point however Wagner it seems began to doubt the wisdom of writing an opera on such an obscure subject Even in Germany the Nibelungenlied was not very well known and several of the other sources that he consulted were even more recondite Whatever the reason the fact of the matter is that having completed the libretto of Siegfried s Tod Wagner then put the work aside and turned his attention to other matters Between December 1848 and March 1850 he wrote several influential essays some of them quite lengthy He also spent much of this time working out detailed scenarios for several other operas on a variety of historical and mythical figures Jesus Christ Achilles Friedrich Barbarossa and Wieland der Schmied None of these operas ever saw the light of day though one musical sketch survives for Jesus von Nazareth 10 Politics editIt was also around this time that Wagner was most actively engaged in German politics Dresden had long been known as a cultural centre for liberals and democrats the anarchist newspaper Dresdner Zeitung was partly edited by the music director August Rockel and contained articles by Mikhail Bakunin who came to Dresden in March 1849 Rockel also published the popular democratic newspaper Volksblatter The activities of these radicals culminated in the May Uprising of 1849 Wagner who had been inspired with the revolutionary spirit since 1848 cultivated Rockel s friendship and through him became acquainted with Bakunin He wrote passionate articles in the Volksblatter inciting the people to revolt and when the fighting broke out he played a small though significant role in it possibly ordering hand grenades and certainly standing as a look out at the top of the Kreuzkirche The revolution was quickly crushed by Saxon and Prussian troops and warrants were issued for the arrest of the leading revolutionaries including Wagner Rockel and Bakunin were captured and sentenced to lengthy terms of imprisonment Wagner however made good his escape and with the help of Franz Liszt he fled to Switzerland from where he eventually made his way to Paris In July he returned to Switzerland and settled in Zurich which was to be his home for the greater part of the next nine years 11 There in May 1850 he once again took up Siegfried s Tod He prepared a third fair copy of the libretto Viertschrift des Textbuches for publication which however did not take place 12 and by July he had even begun to compose music for the prologue Of this music a sheet of preliminary sketches survives and a more detailed composition draft which extends about one quarter of the way into the duet between Brunnhilde and Siegfried Having reached this point however Wagner abandoned the work Trilogy editThe earliest mention we have of a festival theatre being specially constructed for a performance of Siegfried s Tod is in a letter to the artist Ernst Benedikt Kietz dated 14 September 1850 A week later in a letter to his friend Theodor Uhlig dated 22 September Wagner elaborated on this idea now he was hoping to stage three performances of Siegfried s Tod in a specially constructed festival theatre after which both the theatre and the score were to be destroyed If everything is arranged satisfactorily I will allow three performances of Siegfried i e Siegfried s Tod to be given in one week under these circumstances after the third performance the theatre is to be torn down and my score burned Gradually the notion of a trilogy of operas culminating with Siegfried s Tod was beginning to form in Wagner s mind The idea was not a new one In 1847 he had read and been deeply impressed by Aeschylus s Greek trilogy the Oresteia in a German translation by Johann Gustav Droysen and in 1849 after his flight from Dresden he had read Droysen s reconstruction of the same playwright s trilogy the Prometheia which includes the well known tragedy Prometheus Bound 13 It seemed only right that a similar trilogy of German tragedies written by a latter day Aeschylus should be performed in its own dedicated theatre and as part of a specially appointed festival 14 The idea of expanding Siegfried s Tod into a series of two or more operas would have been particularly appealing to Wagner as he had now come to realize that it would be impossible to say all that he wanted to in a single opera without an inordinate number of digressions The political events of the past few years and his recent discovery of the philosophy of Ludwig Feuerbach had greatly enlarged the scope of ideas which he hoped to explore in his new opera He also wished to incorporate various ideas that he had been mulling over in the works on Jesus Frederick Achilles and Wieland all four of which had been effectively abandoned by now These ideas ranged over the politics of Pierre Joseph Proudhon and Mikhail Bakunin and the philosophy of Hegel and the Young Hegelians In the winter of 1850 1851 while he was working on Opera and Drama Wagner toyed with the idea of writing a comic opera based on a well known folk tale Vor einem der auszug das Furchten zu lernen The Boy Who Set Out to Learn Fear which he had come across in Grimms Fairy Tales Imagine my surprise he later wrote to his friend the violinist Theodor Uhlig when I suddenly realized that this youth was none other than young Siegfried Within a week in May 1851 he had drawn up some fragmentary prose sketches for a prequel or comic counterpart to Siegfried s Tod which he called Jung Siegfried Young Siegfried later altering the title to Der junge Siegfried The Young Siegfried 15 A more extensive prose draft was completed by 1 June and by 24 June this had been transformed into a verse draft By August the fair copy of this verse libretto was finished and Wagner had even begun to set it to music 16 These efforts however never amounted to anything more than a handful of sketches which were later used in the composition of Siegfried The earliest mention we have of a festival of three operas based on the Nibelungenlied is in the autobiographical work Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde A Communication to My Friends which Wagner originally wrote in August 1851 I propose to produce my myth in three complete dramas 17 Der junge Siegfried and Siegfried s Tod were now clearly envisaged as the second and third dramas of a trilogy By October however Wagner had decided that this trilogy required a prelude was he thinking again of Aeschylus and the ancient Greeks whose trilogies were usually accompanied by a satyr play 18 and the text of Eine Mittheilung was duly altered to reflect the change To the sentence quoted above he added the words which will be preceded by a great prelude Nevertheless Wagner always referred to the Ring as a trilogy rather than a tetralogy He envisaged it being performed as part of a three day festival preceded by a preliminary evening Thanks to Aeschylus and his contemporaries the term trilogy had a certain cachet for Wagner which the term tetralogy never acquired In October 1851 Wagner drafted a short prose sketch for the preliminary opera which would precede the trilogy proper He vacillated over the title of the work trying out in turn Der Raub Vorspiel The Theft Prelude Der Raub des Rheingoldes The Theft of the Rhinegold and Das Rheingold Vorspiel The Rhinegold Prelude The following month he drafted some prose sketches for the first of the three main dramas Siegmund und Sieglinde der Walkure Bestrafung Siegmund and Sieglinde the Valkyrie s Punishment Between March and November 1852 he elaborated these short sketches after his usual practice developing prose drafts from them which he then proceeded to turn into verse drafts By that time he had renamed the operas Das Rheingold and Die Walkure respectively Whereas the prose draft of Das Rheingold was written before that of Die Walkure the verse draft of Die Walkure preceded that of Das Rheingold So while there is some truth to the oft quoted remark that the Ring cycle was conceived backwards it is not completely accurate 19 The original prose sketch for Das Rheingold consisted of just three paragraphs each prefaced by a Roman numeral It would appear from this that Wagner originally conceived it as a three act opera in its own right and this is confirmed by a letter he wrote in October 1851 to his friend Theodor Uhlig Great plans for Siegfried three dramas with a three act prelude By 1852 however Das Rheingold had become a one act opera in four scenes Nevertheless there are good reasons for regarding the opening scene of the opera as a prologue The Theft of the Gold to the main part of the drama Valhalla Thus both Das Rheingold and Gotterdammerung share the same prologue plus trilogy structure which characterises the Ring cycle as a whole 20 As for Die Walkure the first act of this opera probably gave Wagner more trouble than any other act in the entire tetralogy In his two prose sketches for it Wotan enters Hunding s house in his guise as Der Wanderer The Wanderer and thrusts the sword into the ash tree which Siegmund then withdraws only minutes later the fully worked out prose draft also brings Wotan onto the stage It was only at a later stage in the evolution of the text that Wagner banished the Wanderer and his sword to the backstory which Sieglinde narrates to Siegmund Now the sword is already embedded in the tree as the curtain goes up on Act 1 and Siegmund s withdrawal of it becomes a climactic piece of dramaturgy 21 Opera and Drama edit nbsp The title page of Oper und Drama Parallel to these renewed efforts on The Ring was Wagner s work on a lengthy essay entitled Oper und Drama Opera and Drama which musicologist Deryck Cooke 1979 has described as essentially a blueprint for the Ring Wagner s principal theoretical work Oper und Drama grew out of a draft of an essay on Das Wesen der Oper The Essence of Opera which preparatory to the composition of Siegfried s Tod he wrote in an attempt to tidy up a whole life that now lay behind me to articulate each half formed intuition on a conscious level 22 First mentioned in a letter to Theodor Uhlig on 20 September 1850 the work was begun by 9 October Wagner it seems anticipated that it would be no longer than the other essays he had recently completed but over the winter of 1850 1851 it grew into a book of some considerable size Completed by 20 January 1851 just four months after Wagner conceived it it was first published in 1852 by J J Weber of Leipzig It was in the pages of Opera and Drama that Wagner s nebulous or half conscious ideas on artistic method and the relationship between music and drama were first given concrete expression 23 nbsp The title page of Das Kunstwerk der Zukunft Appreciation of The Ring and of the ideas which inform it is assisted by placing it in the context of Wagner s wider literary and political endeavours of the period Four of his prose works the so called Zurich Manifestos which helped to establish Wagner s reputation as a controversial writer are particularly relevant Die Kunst und die Revolution Art and Revolution July 1849 Das Kunstwerk der Zukunft The Art Work of the Future November 1849 Kunst und Klima Art and Climate March 1850 Oper und Drama Opera and Drama January 1851 Der Ring des Nibelungen editIt was in 1852 that Wagner finally settled upon the name Der Ring des Nibelungen for the complete cycle Other titles that were considered and rejected included Das Gold des Nibelungen The Gold of the Nibelung which appeared on the title page of the verse draft of Die Walkure and Der Reif des Nibelungen The Ring of the Nibelung which was mentioned in a letter to August Rockel dated 12 September 1852 On 14 October 1852 however Wagner informed Theodor Uhlig that he had finally decided that the title of the entire cycle would be Der Ring des Nibelungen The Ring of the Nibelung or The Nibelung s Ring In November and December 1852 Wagner made extensive revisions to the libretti of Der junge Siegfried and Siegfried s Tod This was partly to accommodate the expansion of the cycle and the growing significance of Wotan the protagonist of the first two parts of the tetralogy and partly to reflect Wagner s reading of the philosophy of Ludwig Feuerbach see below 24 The changes to Der junge Siegfried were entered into the first fair copy Reinschrift des Textbuches while those to Siegfried s Tod were entered into the third fair copy Viertschrift des Textbuches In each case several pages of the fair copy were replaced with newly written ones The principal changes to Siegfried s Tod involved the opening scene of the prologue the Norns scene Brunnhilde s scene with Waltraute which had originally included all nine Valkyries and Brunnhilde s closing speech at the end of the opera Fair copies of Das Rheingold and Die Walkure and a fourth fair copy of Siegfried s Tod Funftschrift des Textbuches were completed by 15 December 1852 and the entire text was privately published in February 1853 25 Fifty copies were printed most of which were given to Wagner s friends Over the course of four evenings 16 19 February 1853 Wagner gave a public reading of the complete text in Zurich s Hotel Baur au Lac This text however did not represent the final version as Wagner often made changes to his libretti while he was setting them to music In the case of the Ring such changes were duly entered into Wagner s personal copy of the 1853 printing but not all of these emendations were incorporated in either the public printing of 1863 or the version in the Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen of 1872 a situation which has caused unending problems for scholars translators and performers alike Furthermore it was probably not until 1856 that Wagner definitively changed the titles of the third and fourth parts of the Ring to Siegfried and Gotterdammerung respectively 26 In 1863 the texts of all four Ring operas were published for the first time under their present titles 27 The end of the Ring editThe final scene of the Ring probably caused Wagner more trouble than any other He rewrote the text for it several times and his final thoughts were never made absolutely clear Six or seven different versions exist or can be reconstructed from Wagner s drafts Original Ending early December 1848 Wagner s first ending for the cycle was optimistic and confident The ring is returned to the Rhine Alberich and the Nibelungs who were enslaved by the power of the ring are liberated In her closing speech Brunnhilde declares that Wotan is all powerful and everlasting she gives up her own life and leads Siegfried to Valhalla where he is reconciled with Wotan and order is restored Siegfried and Brunnhilde are depicted rising above Siegfried s funeral pyre to Valhalla to cleanse Wotan of his crime and redeem the gods rather as The Dutchman and Senta ascend above the clouds at the end of Der fliegende Hollander A major difference between this draft and subsequent revisions is that there is no suggestion here that the Gods are destroyed Brunnhilde s final oration stresses the cleansing effect of Siegfried s death Hear then you mighty Gods Your guilt is abolished the hero takes it upon himself The Nibelungs slavery is at an end and Alberich shall again be free This Ring I give to you wise sisters of the watery deeps Melt it down and keep it free from harm First Revision before 18 December 1848 the second fair copy of the libretto for Siegfried s Tod Drittschrift des Textbuches was made almost immediately after the first It incorporates several revisions most of which are quite minor and none of which affects the ending The only major change as noted above was the addition of the Hagen s Watch episode to Act I After completing this fair copy however Wagner made two marginal alterations to Brunnhilde s closing speech In the first of these she declares that the gods have now atoned for their misrule of the world and she urges them to accept Siegfried as a new member of the Norse pantheon This was clearly an attempt by Wagner to restore Siegfried s role as Christlike redeemer of the gods taking their guilt upon himself and by his death atoning for their sins The second alteration added later is quite different Brunnhilde now admonishes the gods to depart powerless leaving the world to mankind Fade away in bliss before the deed of Man the hero you created I proclaim to you freedom from fear through blessed redemption in death May 1850 Revision in May 1850 Wagner made a third fair copy of the text Viertschrift des Textbuches in the hopes of having it published Unfortunately this manuscript which is presently in the Bayreuth Archives is fragmentary some of its pages having been discarded during the next revision for which it was the source text Among the missing pages are the final few so it is impossible to tell whether either of the marginal verses added to the final page of the second fair copy was incorporated into Brunnhilde s closing speech Feuerbach Ending November and December 1852 by the time Wagner had completed the libretti for Das Rheingold and Die Walkure he had come to realize that the cycle must end with the destruction by fire of both Valhalla and the gods This necessitated further and far reaching revisions of both Der junge Siegfried and Siegfried s Tod The new ending of the latter was influenced by Wagner s reading of Ludwig Feuerbach whose writing suggested that Gods were the construction of human minds and that love had primacy over all other human endeavours In this Feuerbach ending Brunnhilde proclaims the destruction of the Gods and their replacement with a human society ruled by love The holiest hoard of my wisdom I bequeath to the world Not wealth not gold nor godly splendour not house not court nor overbearing pomp not troubled treaties deceiving union nor the dissembling custom of harsh law Rapture in joy and sorrow comes from love alone This ending was added by Wagner to the third fair copy Viertschrift des Textbuches of the work citation needed Although the Feuerbachian lines were eventually dropped the other significant change to the ending viz the substitution of the gods destruction for the liberation of the Nibelungs was retained in all subsequent versions Schopenhauer Ending 1856 following his discovery of the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer and his growing interest in Buddhist philosophy 28 Wagner once again changed the ending of the Ring 29 The Schopenhauer ending stressed self overcoming resignation and the illusory nature of human existence in keeping with the notion of negation of the Will Brunnhilde sees herself redeemed from the endless cycle of birth suffering death and rebirth enlightened by love she achieves the state of non being or Nirvana Wagner wrote out a prose sketch of this new ending in 1856 WWV 86D Text VIIIb but he did not set it to verse until 1871 or 1872 adding the text and its fair copy to his personal copy of the 1853 printing of the Ring libretti Brunnhilde s new verses which were intended to precede the passage beginning Grane mein Ross close with the words Were I no more to fare to Valhalla s fortress do you know whither I fare I depart from the home of desire I flee forever the home of delusion the open gates of eternal becoming I close behind me now To the holiest chosen land free from desire and delusion the goal of the world s migration redeemed from incarnation the enlightened woman now goes The blessed end of all things eternal do you know how I attained it Grieving love s profoundest suffering opened my eyes for me I saw the world end 30 Final Ending 1874 when Wagner finally came to set the ending to music in 1874 he reverted to the 1852 revision but shorn of its closing Feuerbachian lines Although Wagner never set either the Schopenhauerian or the Feuerbachian lines he did include them as footnotes in the final printed edition of the text together with a note to the effect that while he preferred the Schopenhauerian lines he declined to set them because their meaning was better expressed by the music alone In other words the ending he finally set to music is Schopenhauerian in its intention even though this is never stated explicitly in the libretto 31 See also editDer Ring des Nibelungen Composition of the musicReferences editNotes edit A Communication to My Friends Samtliche Schriften und Dichtungen vol IV p 359 See Guelphs and Ghibellines for the association of the term Waiblingen with the Hohenstaufens Wagner Mein Leben For a more detailed discussion of the disputed origins of the Ring see John Deathridge s essay The Ring an Introduction which accompanies the 1991 recording of Siegfried by the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra conducted by James Levine Deutsche Grammophon 429 407 2 See also the same author s essay Cataloguing Wagner in The Richard Wagner Centenary in Australia ed Peter Dennison Adelaide 1985 pp 185 199 Eduard Devrient s diary for 1 April 1848 reads Er Wagner erzahlte mir einen neuen Opernplan aus der Siegfriedsage He told me of a new plan for an opera on the Siegfried saga Two months later Wagner discussed a similar project with the composer Robert Schumann an entry in Schumann s notebook Haushaltbuch dated 2 June 1848 reads Abends Spazierg ang m it Wagner sein Nibelungtext Evening walk w ith Wagner his text on the Nibelungs Friedrich Theodor Vischer Vorschlag zu einer Oper Suggestion for an Opera Kritische Gange Volume II Aesthetike Tubingen 1844 His scenario consisted of a five act grand opera to be given on two consecutive evenings the first dealing with the events of the Nibelungenlied from Siegfried s arrival in Gunther s court to his death and the second with Kriemhild s revenge Vischer s treatment of the epic bears little relation to Wagner s though it may have suggested to Wagner the idea of a series of operas on the Nibelungenlied to be presented on consecutive evenings The English terms used here are taken from The Wagner Compendium A Guide to Wagner s Life and Music see references for details The corresponding German terms which are given in parentheses are taken from the official catalog of Wagner s musical works and their textual sources Verzeichnis der musikalischen Werke Richard Wagners und ihrer Quellen which is generally abbreviated to Wagner Werk Verzeichnis or WWV In his correspondence and autobiography Wagner often refers to Siegfried s Tod as simply Siegfried which can lead to confusion with the later opera of that name Devrient showed me for instance that before Siegfried and Brunnhilde are displayed in a position of bitter hostility towards each other they ought first to have been presented in their true and calmer relationship I had in fact opened the poem of Siegfried s Tod with those scenes which now form the first act of Gotterdammerung The details of Siegfried s relation to Brunnhilde had been merely outlined to the listeners in a lyrico episodical dialogue between the hero s wife whom he had left behind in solitude and a crowd of Valkyries passing before her rock Wagner Mein Leben Millington et al 1992 p 321 On arriving in Zurich Wagner and his first wife Minna took lodgings in the so called Hintern Escherhauser in the Zeltweg In January 1850 they moved to a house in the parish of Enge a good fifteen minutes walk outside Zurich Finally in December 1851 they moved back to the Zeltweg and rented an apartment on the ground floor of the so called Vordern Escherhauser It was here for the most part that Wagner composed Das Rheingold Die Walkure and the first two acts of Siegfried I wrote a short preface dedicating the libretto of Siegfried s Tod to my friends as a relic of the time when I had hoped to devote myself entirely to art and especially to the composition of music I sent this manuscript to Herr Wigand in Leipzig who returned it to me after some time with the remark that if I insisted on its being printed in Latin characters he would not be able to sell a single copy of it Wagner Mein Leben On 18 December 1848 Wagner had abandoned the old Gothic script in favour of modern Roman script The attribution of this trilogy to Aeschylus has been questioned recently but it was widely accepted in Wagner s day Wagner Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde I now May 1851 conceived the idea of the poem of Junger Siegfried which I proposed to issue as a heroic comedy by way of prelude and complement to the tragedy of Siegfried s Tod Mein Leben There is no evidence at this stage that Wagner intended this new opera to be the second part of a trilogy of operas Strobel 1930 contains the German text of Der junge Siegfried Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde was the lengthy preface Wagner wrote for the 1851 publication of three of his earlier libretti Der fliegende Hollander Tannhauser and Lohengrin In Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde Wagner had described Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg as a comic piece which well might form a Satyr play as pendant to my Sangerkrieg auf Wartburg i e Tannhauser He never explicitly referred to Das Rheingold as a satyr play but such a description is a commonplace amongst contemporary critics See for example Hugh Canning s review in the Sunday Times of Simon Rattle s 2006 production of the opera at Aix 1 The prose draft of Das Rheingold was written between 21 March and 23 March 1852 while that of Die Walkure was written between 17 May and 26 May of the same year The verse draft of Die Walkure was written between 1 June and 1 July and that of Das Rheingold between 15 September and 3 November Both drafts of Die Walkure were written at the Pension Rinderknecht a pied a terre on the Zurichberg now Hochstrasse 56 58 in Zurich which the Wagners rented in the summer of 1852 Warren Darcy 1993 p 31 Deryck Cooke 1979 pp 292 294 Eine Skizze zu Oper und Drama August 1850 Richard Wagner Das Wesen der Oper opening paragraph These revisions also coincided with the composer s increasing disillusionment with the world and the possibility of social progress Between 1852 and 1857 Wagner was frequently depressed and even contemplated suicide For reasons unknown Wagner neglected to make a second fair copy of the extensively revised Der junge Siegfried William F Aphorp dates the change from Siegfried s Tod to Gotterdammerung to before 1855 Some of Wagner s Heroes and Heroines 1889 Online text Archived 2018 04 03 at the Wayback Machine They were published by J J Weber of Leipzig On 16 May 1856 Wagner drafted a brief prose sketch WWV 89 for a Buddhist opera Die Sieger The Victors It was possibly at this point that he changed the titles of Der junge Siegfried and Siegfried s Tod to Siegfried and Gotterdammerung respectively In a letter to Liszt dated 11 February 1853 Wagner had written Mark well my new poem it contains the beginning and end of the world Wagner Liszt Correspondence Archived 2002 08 29 at the Wayback Machine Darcy 1993 p 30 and footnote Bibliography edit Burbidge Peter 1979 Sutton Richard ed The Wagner Companion London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 10471 0 Cooke Deryck 1979 I Saw the World End London Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 315318 9 Dahlhaus Carl 1971 Uber den Schluss der Gotterdammerung Regensburg a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Darcy Warren 1993 Wagner s Das Rheingold Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816603 0 Deathridge John 1985 Cataloguing Wagner The Richard Wagner Centenary in Australia Adelaide pp 185 199 Deathridge John 1986 Geck Martin Voss Egon eds Verzeichnis der musikalischen Werke Richard Wagners und ihrer Quellen Mainz Schott ISBN 978 3 7957 2201 2 Deathridge John 1991 The Ring An Introduction Program notes to Siegfried performed by the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra conductor James Levine Deutsche Grammophon CD 429 407 2 Donington Robert 1963 Wagner s Ring and Its Symbols The Music and the Myth London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 04818 2 Magee Elizabeth 1991 Richard Wagner and the Nibelungs London Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 816190 5 May Thomas 2004 Decoding Wagner Milwaukee Amadeus Press ISBN 978 1 57467 097 4 McCreless Patrick 1982 Wagner s Siegfried Its Drama History and Music Michigan Ann Arbor ISBN 978 0 8357 1361 0 Millington Barry ed 1992 The Wagner Compendium A Guide to Wagner s Life and Music London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 333 60800 5 Newman Ernest 1949 Wagner Nights London Putnam ASIN B0000CHKMY Newman Ernest 1976 The Life of Richard Wagner Vol II 1848 1860 London Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29095 1 Porges Heinrich 1983 Wagner Rehearsing the Ring Jacobs Robert L trans New York Cambridge ISBN 978 0 521 23722 2 Sadie Stanley ed 2001 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 60800 5 Strobel Otto ed 1930 Richard Wagner Skizzen und Entwurfe zur Ring Dichtung Munich a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wagner Richard 1983 My Life Gray Andrew L Whittall Mary Eng trans New York Cambridge ISBN 978 0 521 22929 6 External links editThe Richard Wagner Web Site Wagner s Prose Works Archived 2006 10 30 at the Wayback Machine Mein Leben Volume 1 of Wagner s autobiography from Project Gutenberg Mein Leben Volume 2 of Wagner s autobiography from Project Gutenberg Volume 1 of the Correspondence of Wagner and Liszt from Project Gutenberg Volume 2 of the Correspondence of Wagner and Liszt from Project Gutenberg in German Complete libretto Wagner s preliminary sketch of the complete Ring cycle Opera Today Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Der Ring des Nibelungen composition of the text amp oldid 1189600620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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