What are your views on this extraordinary man?
I have found that people either love him or hate him. I fall into the former category ... I have totally fallen under the spell of the 'Wizard of Bayreuth'! His music is so powerful, it gets into your veins and is intoxicating like a strong drug. I would even rank him higher than Beethoven (although only by a whisker) on my list of greatest composers.
He is criticised, primarly because of the Nazi connection. There are two points I would like to make about that
1)He died about 50 years before National Socialism emerged, and before Hitler was even born. We can't hold him responsible for the fact that the Nazis enjoyed his music when he was dead! And the fact that Hitler liked him doesn't automatically condemn him - Hitler was a vegetarian too, so is vegetarianism wrong?
2)I don't condone his antisemitism - on the contrary I am a PRO-semite (I have Jewish friends and am biased towards the Israel in the Arab-Israeli conflict). But EVERYBODY, every human being, has character flaws, nobody is perfect. Wagner had his personal faults just like everybody, but that doesn't stop his music being great. We are not worshipping him as a saint, after all. He was a human being with faults and predjudices like everybody but his music is magnificent.
I find of particular interest his incorporation of the philosophy of Shopenhauer into his music, especially the later works like Der Ring des Nibelungen. The buddhist idea of all life consisting of suffering caused by human desires that are inexhaustable and can never be satisfied. Wagner's music takes the audience up into a stage of unreasolved anxiety and tension, and rarely lets them down. Note also the intense sexual tension that permeates the whole of Tristian und Isolde, possibly the most brilliant depiction of erotica ever translated into the language of music.
Perhaps one day, like Nietzche, I will become dissolusioned with Wagner, but for now I am enjoying the ride!
[This message has been edited by Steppenwolf (edited January 20, 2003).]
I have found that people either love him or hate him. I fall into the former category ... I have totally fallen under the spell of the 'Wizard of Bayreuth'! His music is so powerful, it gets into your veins and is intoxicating like a strong drug. I would even rank him higher than Beethoven (although only by a whisker) on my list of greatest composers.
He is criticised, primarly because of the Nazi connection. There are two points I would like to make about that
1)He died about 50 years before National Socialism emerged, and before Hitler was even born. We can't hold him responsible for the fact that the Nazis enjoyed his music when he was dead! And the fact that Hitler liked him doesn't automatically condemn him - Hitler was a vegetarian too, so is vegetarianism wrong?
2)I don't condone his antisemitism - on the contrary I am a PRO-semite (I have Jewish friends and am biased towards the Israel in the Arab-Israeli conflict). But EVERYBODY, every human being, has character flaws, nobody is perfect. Wagner had his personal faults just like everybody, but that doesn't stop his music being great. We are not worshipping him as a saint, after all. He was a human being with faults and predjudices like everybody but his music is magnificent.
I find of particular interest his incorporation of the philosophy of Shopenhauer into his music, especially the later works like Der Ring des Nibelungen. The buddhist idea of all life consisting of suffering caused by human desires that are inexhaustable and can never be satisfied. Wagner's music takes the audience up into a stage of unreasolved anxiety and tension, and rarely lets them down. Note also the intense sexual tension that permeates the whole of Tristian und Isolde, possibly the most brilliant depiction of erotica ever translated into the language of music.
Perhaps one day, like Nietzche, I will become dissolusioned with Wagner, but for now I am enjoying the ride!
[This message has been edited by Steppenwolf (edited January 20, 2003).]
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