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Feuersnot

Feuersnot (Need for (or lack of) fire),[1] Op. 50, is a Singgedicht (sung poem) or opera in one act by Richard Strauss. The German libretto was written by Ernst von Wolzogen, based on J. Ketel's report "Das erloschene Feuer zu Audenaerde".[2] It was Strauss' second opera.

Feuersnot
Opera by Richard Strauss
Cover of a 1901 music score
LibrettistErnst von Wolzogen
LanguageGerman
Based onJ. Ketel's "Das erloschene Feuer zu Audenaerde"
Premiere
21 November 1901 (1901-11-21)

Thematically, the opera has been interpreted as a parody of Richard Wagner's idea of "redemption through love", with the character of Kunrad representing Strauss himself.[3] The conceptual framework for the opera stems from the Nietzschean perspective that had inspired Strauss in his tone poems Till Eulenspiegel and Also sprach Zarathustra.[4] Strauss and von Wolzogen shared the view that the source of inspiration was material not transcendental: in Feuersnot it is "redemption through sex" which relights the creative fire.

Performance history

 
Post card of Strauss from 1900
 
Ernst von Wolzogen

The librettist for the opera was Ernst von Wolzogen, who in 1901 founded the Überbrettl venue (German for "over cabaret, super-cabaret"), the start of the German Kabarett movement which was later to blossom in the Weimar Republic. The mood matched Strauss's desire for something irreverent and cynical, with much word-play (including the names of Wagner and Strauss), and a children's chorus singing "stanzas of quasi folk-song in broad dialect".[5]

What struck the contemporary audiences most was the bawdiness and innuendo. There was much pressure on the composer to tone it down, but Strauss and the conductor of the premiere in Dresden, Ernst von Schuch, stuck to the original. At this time, the sexual and erotic subtexts and psychology were disturbing to audiences, as well as the perceived "advanced" nature of the music itself to more conservative-minded musicians.[6]

The premiere at the Königliches Opernhaus on 21 November 1901 was a great success: Gustav and Alma Mahler attended and she recalls in her diary that Strauss was elated "after endless curtains".[7] The success in Dresden led to Feuersnot being staged in many theaters across Germany, including a performance in Frankfurt conducted by Strauss himself.[8] Mounting the opera in Vienna proved more problematic for Gustav Mahler because of the need to satisfy the uncooperative censor. Mahler wrote to Strauss in mid 1901: "Concerning Feuersnot, the censor seems, horribile dictu, to be making difficulties, since the work has not yet been passed, so that I am not in a position to send the contracts to Fuerstner. I fear you may have to accept changes ... Alas, there is no placating these powers."[9]

The Viennese premiere finally took place on 29 January 1902 with Strauss attending. He wrote to Mahler "to send you my heartfelt thanks for the incomparably beautiful rendition you gave of my work last week" (letter 4 February 1902). The Viennese public and critics were less enthusiastic than the German; Max Graf wrote: "The critics have unanimously rejected the work".[10] Mahler wrote to Strauss on 18 February: "I am so disgusted at the attitude of the Viennese press, and most of all by the public's total acquiescence to them, that I cannot get over it!" He took the work off after four disappointing turn-outs, although he did put on one further performance that year on 14 March (with a "popular ballet").

Strauss took the opera to Berlin where it was more of a success with seven performances, the premiere being on 28 October 1902.[11] However, the Empress (Kaiserin) took a dislike to the bawdiness and Emperor (Kaiser) Wilhelm had the opera banned. Strauss continued to include the music from the love scene in his orchestral concerts.

The opera was revived twice at Vienna, first in 1905 by Mahler with a new production running for 7 performances[12][13][14] and in 1922 by Strauss himself with 6 performances.[15] Strauss wrote towards the end of his life "in nearly all of the biographical articles I read I miss the correct attitude towards Feuersnot. One forgets that this certainly far from perfect work still introduces into the nature of the old opera a new subjective style at just the very beginning of the century. It is in its way a sort of upbeat."[16]

In London it was presented on 9 July 1910,[17] while the US premiere was not given until 1 December 1927 by the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company at Philadelphia's Metropolitan Opera House with George Rasely as Gundelfingen and Alexander Smallens conducting.[18] The Zürich premiere did not take place until 1953.[19] The New York City premiere took place in 1985, at the Manhattan School of Music.[20] It was presented by The Santa Fe Opera during its summer 1988 festival season. In the UK, Chelsea Opera Group presented a concert performance in 2000.[21]

In 2014, the Strauss anniversary year, Feuersnot was revived by numerous opera houses worldwide.[22] The Teatro Massimo staged the opera in January 2014,[23][24] and there were concert performances the same year given by Bayerischer Rundfunk at Munich in February,[25] and in June by the Dresden Semperoper.[26][27] Eytan Pessen, former opera director of the Semperoper and artistic advisor to the Teatro Massimo Palermo, cast the opera twice for that season. Other 2014 performances included the Volksoper in Vienna, Theater Kaiserslautern, Theater am Gärtnerplatz in Munich, and Carnegie Hall.[28][22]

Roles

Roles Voice type Premiere cast, 21 November 1901
Conductor: Ernst von Schuch
Schweiker von Gundelfingen, the bailiff low tenor Franz Petter
Ortolf Sentlinger, the mayor low bass Franz Nebuschka
Diemut, his daughter high soprano Annie Krull
Elsbeth, her friend mezzo-soprano Auguste Lautenbacher
Wigelis, her friend low contralto Irene von Chavanne
Margret, her friend high soprano Minnie Nast
Kunrad, the alchemist high baritone Karl Scheidemantel
Jörg Pöschel, the Leitgeb low bass Ernst Wachter
Hämmerlein, the haberdasher baritone Josef Höpfl
Kofel, the blacksmith bass Friedrich Plaschke
Kunz Gilgenstock, the baker and brewer bass Hans Geißler
Ortlieb Tulbeck, the cooper high tenor Anton Erl
Ursula, his wife contralto Franziska Schäfer
Ruger Aspeck, the potter tenor Theodor Kruis
Walpurg, his wife high soprano Gisela Staudigl
Citizens, women, children, retainers

Synopsis

Place: Medieval Munich
Time: Midsummer Night

All warmth springs from woman, All light from love does flowTruly, only the heat of a virgin's body can ignite your fires.

During the Midsummer Solstice festival, lovers swear to be faithful by leaping through the flames of a bonfire (known traditionally as Johannisfeuer, St John's Eve Fire). Love is in the air and children are collecting firewood for the solstice fire.

A sorcerer, Kunrad, has appeared in the city, taking over the house of an old sorcerer. His presence disturbs the people and leads to much speculation. Much to everyone's surprise, he offers the children his house for the solstice fire. The Mayor's daughter Diemut and her three friends are intrigued by Kunrad, and the friends find him rather attractive. Diemut is less impressed. Kunrad himself is more attracted to Diemut.

To everyone's shock he approaches Diemut and kisses her in public. She rebuffs him, but plots her revenge for the insult. She promises to bring him up to her room in a basket. He agrees, but she leaves him hanging halfway up. In retaliation, he quenches all the festival bonfires and denounces the people as philistines. He lays down a condition: the only way to restore the fires is via "the body of a virgin in heat", which shocks the populace. However, after some thought they persuade Diemut to yield to Kunrad. She does so, and after she has her first-ever sexual experience (depicted in the orchestral "love scene"), with a light glowing in her room, the fires are restored and Diemut and Kunrad emerge singing a love song.

Recordings

Year Cast
(Diemut
Kunrad)
Conductor,
Opera house and orchestra
Label[29]
1958 Maud Cunitz,
Marcel Cordes
Rudolf Kempe
Bavarian State Opera Orchestra and Chorus
(Live recording)
Orfeo D'Or
Cat: 423962[30]
1978 Gundula Janowitz,
John Shirley-Quirk
Erich Leinsdorf
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin with Tölzer Knabenchor and RIAS Kammerchor
(Live recording)
CD: Deutsche Grammophon[31]
Cat:00289 479 2414.
1984 Júlia Várady,
Bernd Weikl
Heinz Fricke
Munich Radio Orchestra with Tölzer Knabenchor and Bavarian Radio Chorus
CD: Arts Music
Cat:
2013 (1965) Ingrid Bjoner,
Marcel Cordes
Joseph Keilberth
Cologne Radio Orchestra and Radio Chorus
CD: Gala
Cat: GL 100-540
2014 Simone Schneider,
Markus Eiche
Ulf Schirmer
Munich Radio Orchestra with Gärtnerplatz Theatre Children's choir and Bavarian Radio Chorus
CD: CPO
Cat: CPO: 777920-2
2015 Nikola Beller Carbone,
Dietrich Henschel
Gabriele Ferro
Orchestra, Chorus and youth chorus of Teatro Massimo
Arthaus Musik
Cat: Arthaus 109065 (DVD), 109066 (Blu-ray)

References

Notes

  1. ^ The use of Feuersnot as title for this work where it indicates a lack of fire is a reversal of the word's normal meaning, blaze, conflagration.
  2. ^ F. A. Brockhaus, (ed.) Johann Wilhelm Wolf [de], "Das erloschene Feuer zu Audenaerde" in Niederländische Sagen, Leipzig, 1843, pp. 492—495
  3. ^ Morten Kristiansen, , The Musical Quarterly, 86, 689–749 (2002).
  4. ^ Bryan Gilliam, "Strauss and the sexual body: the erotics of humour, philosophy and ego-assertion", The Cambridge companion to Richard Strauss, (Ed. Charles Youmans), Cambridge University Press, 2010 ISBN 978-0-521-72815-7, p. 271.
  5. ^ Norman Del Mar, Richard Strauss: a critical commentary on his life and works, Volume 1, Faber and Faber, London 1986, ISBN 978 0 571 25096 7, p. 207
  6. ^ Julie Dorn Morrison, "Mahler, Strauss, and Feuersnot: Emblems of Modernity at the Vienna Court Opera". The Opera Quarterly, 15, 377–389 (1999).
  7. ^ Alma Mahler (1990), Gustav Mahler: memories and letters, London: Cardinal, London. ISBN 0 7474 0317 1, p. 27
  8. ^ Kurt Wilhelm, Richard Strauss: An Intimate Portrait, (translated by Mary Whittall), Thames and Hudson, 1989. [German first edition 1984], London, ISBN 0-500-01459-0. pp. 80—81.
  9. ^ Herta Blaukopf (ed.), Gustav Mahler Richard Strauss: Correspondence 1888–1911 (translated by Edmund Jephcott) London: Faber and Faber, 1984, ISBN 0-571-13344-4, p. 53.
  10. ^ Gustav Mahler Richard Strauss: Correspondence, p. 67.
  11. ^ A. K. (1 December 1902). "Richard Strauss's Feuersnot in Berlin". The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular. 43 (718): 808–809. doi:10.2307/3369497. JSTOR 3369497.
  12. ^ Gustav Mahler Richard Strauss: Correspondence, pp. 80—81
  13. ^ de La Grange, Henry-Louis (1995). Gustav Mahler Volume 2: Vienna: The Years of Challenge (1897-1904). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-315159-6.
  14. ^ de La Grange, Henry-Louis (2000). Gustav Mahler Volume 3: Vienna: Triumph and Disillusion (1904-1907). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-315160-X.
  15. ^ Raymond Holden, Richard Strauss: a musical life. Yale University Press, New Haven and London 2014, ISBN 978-0-300-12642-6, p. 208
  16. ^ Norman Del Mar, Richard Strauss: a critical commentary on his life and works, Volume 1, Faber and Faber, London 1986, ISBN 978 0 571 25096 7, p. 234.
  17. ^ Holden, Amanda (Ed.), The New Penguin Opera Guide, New York: Penguin Putnam, 2001. ISBN 0-14-029312-4, p. 888
  18. ^ Olin Downes, "Strauss Opera has American Premiere; Feuersnoth, in One Act, Is Sung by the Philadelphia Civic Company. Laid In Twelfth Century Die Maienkönigin, a Pretty Pastoral Work by Gluck, Also Given Before Brilliant Audience", The New York Times, 1 December 1927
  19. ^ Willi Schuh, "Richard Strauss and Zürich", Tempo (New Ser.), 29, pp. 10–13 (Autumn, 1953).
  20. ^ Donal Henahan, "Feuersnot, Strauss One-Act", The New York Times, 13 December 1985
  21. ^ Tim Ashley, "Feuersnot (review)", The Guardian (London), 30 November 2000
  22. ^ a b http://www.richardstrauss.eu/tabpdf/08_feu.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  23. ^ Feuersnot, performance details, photographs, video trailer, synopsis (in Italian)
  24. ^ "Liebesgrüße aus Sizilien". Der Tagesspiegel Online.
  25. ^ "Richard Strauss' Feuersnot", conducted by Ulf Schirmer, video recording, 26 January 2014
  26. ^ Feuersnot 14 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine, performance details, Semperoper
  27. ^ José Mª Irurzun, "Strauss's Feuersnot: A Strong Performance All Around", on Seen and Heard International, 10 June 2014
  28. ^ Fonseca-Wollheim, Corinna da (18 December 2013). "A Rare View of Strauss in a Very Devilish Mood (Published 2013)". The New York Times.
  29. ^ "CLSTFEUE.HTM". www.operadis-opera-discography.org.uk.
  30. ^ George Jellinek, "Feuersnot (1901)" The Opera Quarterly, 15, 464–465, 1999 (Recording review)
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 11 June 2014.

Sources

  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Feuersnot". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).

External links

feuersnot, need, lack, fire, singgedicht, sung, poem, opera, richard, strauss, german, libretto, written, ernst, wolzogen, based, ketel, report, erloschene, feuer, audenaerde, strauss, second, opera, opera, richard, strausscover, 1901, music, scorelibrettister. Feuersnot Need for or lack of fire 1 Op 50 is a Singgedicht sung poem or opera in one act by Richard Strauss The German libretto was written by Ernst von Wolzogen based on J Ketel s report Das erloschene Feuer zu Audenaerde 2 It was Strauss second opera FeuersnotOpera by Richard StraussCover of a 1901 music scoreLibrettistErnst von WolzogenLanguageGermanBased onJ Ketel s Das erloschene Feuer zu Audenaerde Premiere21 November 1901 1901 11 21 Konigliches Opernhaus DresdenThematically the opera has been interpreted as a parody of Richard Wagner s idea of redemption through love with the character of Kunrad representing Strauss himself 3 The conceptual framework for the opera stems from the Nietzschean perspective that had inspired Strauss in his tone poems Till Eulenspiegel and Also sprach Zarathustra 4 Strauss and von Wolzogen shared the view that the source of inspiration was material not transcendental in Feuersnot it is redemption through sex which relights the creative fire Contents 1 Performance history 2 Roles 3 Synopsis 4 Recordings 5 References 6 External linksPerformance history Edit Post card of Strauss from 1900 Ernst von Wolzogen The librettist for the opera was Ernst von Wolzogen who in 1901 founded the Uberbrettl venue German for over cabaret super cabaret the start of the German Kabarett movement which was later to blossom in the Weimar Republic The mood matched Strauss s desire for something irreverent and cynical with much word play including the names of Wagner and Strauss and a children s chorus singing stanzas of quasi folk song in broad dialect 5 What struck the contemporary audiences most was the bawdiness and innuendo There was much pressure on the composer to tone it down but Strauss and the conductor of the premiere in Dresden Ernst von Schuch stuck to the original At this time the sexual and erotic subtexts and psychology were disturbing to audiences as well as the perceived advanced nature of the music itself to more conservative minded musicians 6 The premiere at the Konigliches Opernhaus on 21 November 1901 was a great success Gustav and Alma Mahler attended and she recalls in her diary that Strauss was elated after endless curtains 7 The success in Dresden led to Feuersnot being staged in many theaters across Germany including a performance in Frankfurt conducted by Strauss himself 8 Mounting the opera in Vienna proved more problematic for Gustav Mahler because of the need to satisfy the uncooperative censor Mahler wrote to Strauss in mid 1901 Concerning Feuersnot the censor seems horribile dictu to be making difficulties since the work has not yet been passed so that I am not in a position to send the contracts to Fuerstner I fear you may have to accept changes Alas there is no placating these powers 9 The Viennese premiere finally took place on 29 January 1902 with Strauss attending He wrote to Mahler to send you my heartfelt thanks for the incomparably beautiful rendition you gave of my work last week letter 4 February 1902 The Viennese public and critics were less enthusiastic than the German Max Graf wrote The critics have unanimously rejected the work 10 Mahler wrote to Strauss on 18 February I am so disgusted at the attitude of the Viennese press and most of all by the public s total acquiescence to them that I cannot get over it He took the work off after four disappointing turn outs although he did put on one further performance that year on 14 March with a popular ballet Strauss took the opera to Berlin where it was more of a success with seven performances the premiere being on 28 October 1902 11 However the Empress Kaiserin took a dislike to the bawdiness and Emperor Kaiser Wilhelm had the opera banned Strauss continued to include the music from the love scene in his orchestral concerts The opera was revived twice at Vienna first in 1905 by Mahler with a new production running for 7 performances 12 13 14 and in 1922 by Strauss himself with 6 performances 15 Strauss wrote towards the end of his life in nearly all of the biographical articles I read I miss the correct attitude towards Feuersnot One forgets that this certainly far from perfect work still introduces into the nature of the old opera a new subjective style at just the very beginning of the century It is in its way a sort of upbeat 16 In London it was presented on 9 July 1910 17 while the US premiere was not given until 1 December 1927 by the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company at Philadelphia s Metropolitan Opera House with George Rasely as Gundelfingen and Alexander Smallens conducting 18 The Zurich premiere did not take place until 1953 19 The New York City premiere took place in 1985 at the Manhattan School of Music 20 It was presented by The Santa Fe Opera during its summer 1988 festival season In the UK Chelsea Opera Group presented a concert performance in 2000 21 In 2014 the Strauss anniversary year Feuersnot was revived by numerous opera houses worldwide 22 The Teatro Massimo staged the opera in January 2014 23 24 and there were concert performances the same year given by Bayerischer Rundfunk at Munich in February 25 and in June by the Dresden Semperoper 26 27 Eytan Pessen former opera director of the Semperoper and artistic advisor to the Teatro Massimo Palermo cast the opera twice for that season Other 2014 performances included the Volksoper in Vienna Theater Kaiserslautern Theater am Gartnerplatz in Munich and Carnegie Hall 28 22 Roles EditRoles Voice type Premiere cast 21 November 1901Conductor Ernst von SchuchSchweiker von Gundelfingen the bailiff low tenor Franz PetterOrtolf Sentlinger the mayor low bass Franz NebuschkaDiemut his daughter high soprano Annie KrullElsbeth her friend mezzo soprano Auguste LautenbacherWigelis her friend low contralto Irene von ChavanneMargret her friend high soprano Minnie NastKunrad the alchemist high baritone Karl ScheidemantelJorg Poschel the Leitgeb low bass Ernst WachterHammerlein the haberdasher baritone Josef HopflKofel the blacksmith bass Friedrich PlaschkeKunz Gilgenstock the baker and brewer bass Hans GeisslerOrtlieb Tulbeck the cooper high tenor Anton ErlUrsula his wife contralto Franziska SchaferRuger Aspeck the potter tenor Theodor KruisWalpurg his wife high soprano Gisela StaudiglCitizens women children retainersSynopsis EditPlace Medieval Munich Time Midsummer NightAll warmth springs from woman All light from love does flow Truly only the heat of a virgin s body can ignite your fires During the Midsummer Solstice festival lovers swear to be faithful by leaping through the flames of a bonfire known traditionally as Johannisfeuer St John s Eve Fire Love is in the air and children are collecting firewood for the solstice fire A sorcerer Kunrad has appeared in the city taking over the house of an old sorcerer His presence disturbs the people and leads to much speculation Much to everyone s surprise he offers the children his house for the solstice fire The Mayor s daughter Diemut and her three friends are intrigued by Kunrad and the friends find him rather attractive Diemut is less impressed Kunrad himself is more attracted to Diemut To everyone s shock he approaches Diemut and kisses her in public She rebuffs him but plots her revenge for the insult She promises to bring him up to her room in a basket He agrees but she leaves him hanging halfway up In retaliation he quenches all the festival bonfires and denounces the people as philistines He lays down a condition the only way to restore the fires is via the body of a virgin in heat which shocks the populace However after some thought they persuade Diemut to yield to Kunrad She does so and after she has her first ever sexual experience depicted in the orchestral love scene with a light glowing in her room the fires are restored and Diemut and Kunrad emerge singing a love song Recordings EditYear Cast DiemutKunrad Conductor Opera house and orchestra Label 29 1958 Maud Cunitz Marcel Cordes Rudolf KempeBavarian State Opera Orchestra and Chorus Live recording Orfeo D OrCat 423962 30 1978 Gundula Janowitz John Shirley Quirk Erich LeinsdorfDeutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin with Tolzer Knabenchor and RIAS Kammerchor Live recording CD Deutsche Grammophon 31 Cat 00289 479 2414 1984 Julia Varady Bernd Weikl Heinz FrickeMunich Radio Orchestra with Tolzer Knabenchor and Bavarian Radio Chorus CD Arts MusicCat 2013 1965 Ingrid Bjoner Marcel Cordes Joseph KeilberthCologne Radio Orchestra and Radio Chorus CD GalaCat GL 100 5402014 Simone Schneider Markus Eiche Ulf SchirmerMunich Radio Orchestra with Gartnerplatz Theatre Children s choir and Bavarian Radio Chorus CD CPOCat CPO 777920 22015 Nikola Beller Carbone Dietrich Henschel Gabriele FerroOrchestra Chorus and youth chorus of Teatro Massimo Arthaus MusikCat Arthaus 109065 DVD 109066 Blu ray References EditNotes The use of Feuersnot as title for this work where it indicates a lack of fire is a reversal of the word s normal meaning blaze conflagration F A Brockhaus ed Johann Wilhelm Wolf de Das erloschene Feuer zu Audenaerde in Niederlandische Sagen Leipzig 1843 pp 492 495 Morten Kristiansen Richard Strauss Die Moderne and the Concept of Stilkunst The Musical Quarterly 86 689 749 2002 Bryan Gilliam Strauss and the sexual body the erotics of humour philosophy and ego assertion The Cambridge companion to Richard Strauss Ed Charles Youmans Cambridge University Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 521 72815 7 p 271 Norman Del Mar Richard Strauss a critical commentary on his life and works Volume 1 Faber and Faber London 1986 ISBN 978 0 571 25096 7 p 207 Julie Dorn Morrison Mahler Strauss and Feuersnot Emblems of Modernity at the Vienna Court Opera The Opera Quarterly 15 377 389 1999 Alma Mahler 1990 Gustav Mahler memories and letters London Cardinal London ISBN 0 7474 0317 1 p 27 Kurt Wilhelm Richard Strauss An Intimate Portrait translated by Mary Whittall Thames and Hudson 1989 German first edition 1984 London ISBN 0 500 01459 0 pp 80 81 Herta Blaukopf ed Gustav Mahler Richard Strauss Correspondence 1888 1911 translated by Edmund Jephcott London Faber and Faber 1984 ISBN 0 571 13344 4 p 53 Gustav Mahler Richard Strauss Correspondence p 67 A K 1 December 1902 Richard Strauss s Feuersnot in Berlin The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular 43 718 808 809 doi 10 2307 3369497 JSTOR 3369497 Gustav Mahler Richard Strauss Correspondence pp 80 81 de La Grange Henry Louis 1995 Gustav Mahler Volume 2 Vienna The Years of Challenge 1897 1904 Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 315159 6 de La Grange Henry Louis 2000 Gustav Mahler Volume 3 Vienna Triumph and Disillusion 1904 1907 Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 315160 X Raymond Holden Richard Strauss a musical life Yale University Press New Haven and London 2014 ISBN 978 0 300 12642 6 p 208 Norman Del Mar Richard Strauss a critical commentary on his life and works Volume 1 Faber and Faber London 1986 ISBN 978 0 571 25096 7 p 234 Holden Amanda Ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam 2001 ISBN 0 14 029312 4 p 888 Olin Downes Strauss Opera has American Premiere Feuersnoth in One Act Is Sung by the Philadelphia Civic Company Laid In Twelfth Century Die Maienkonigin a Pretty Pastoral Work by Gluck Also Given Before Brilliant Audience The New York Times 1 December 1927 Willi Schuh Richard Strauss and Zurich Tempo New Ser 29 pp 10 13 Autumn 1953 Donal Henahan Feuersnot Strauss One Act The New York Times 13 December 1985 Tim Ashley Feuersnot review The Guardian London 30 November 2000 a b http www richardstrauss eu tabpdf 08 feu pdf bare URL PDF Feuersnot performance details photographs video trailer synopsis in Italian Liebesgrusse aus Sizilien Der Tagesspiegel Online Richard Strauss Feuersnot conducted by Ulf Schirmer video recording 26 January 2014 Feuersnot Archived 14 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine performance details Semperoper Jose Mª Irurzun Strauss s Feuersnot A Strong Performance All Around on Seen and Heard International 10 June 2014 Fonseca Wollheim Corinna da 18 December 2013 A Rare View of Strauss in a Very Devilish Mood Published 2013 The New York Times CLSTFEUE HTM www operadis opera discography org uk George Jellinek Feuersnot 1901 The Opera Quarterly 15 464 465 1999 Recording review DG Catalogue Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 11 June 2014 Sources Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Feuersnot L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian External links EditFeuersnot Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Live broadcast on YouTube Bayerischer Rundfunk concert performance BBC Opera on 3 Strauss Feuersnot Opera Guide Piano reduction complete score Feuersnot piano vocal score Feuersnot details at Klassika Portal Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Feuersnot amp oldid 1142594389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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