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Work

Richard Strauss

Richard Strauss Composer

Salome, Op.54, TrV215 (music drama)   

Performances: 38
Tracks: 298
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Musicology:
  • Salome, Op.54, TrV215 (music drama)
    Year: 1903-05
    Genre: Opera
    Pr. Instruments: Voice & Orchestra
    • Scene 1
      • 1.Wie schön is die Prinzessinn Salome heute nacht!
      • 2.Nach Mir Wird Einer Kommen
    • Scene 2
      • 1.Ich will nicht bleiben
      • 2.Siehe, Der Herr Ist Gekommen
      • 3.Jauchze Nicht, Du Land Palästina
      • 4.Du Wirst Das Für Mich Run
      • 4b.Laßt den Propheten herauskommen
    • Scene 3
      • 1.Wo Ist Er, Dessen Sündenbecher Jetzt Voll Ist?
      • 2.Er ist schrecklich. Er ist wirklich schrecklich!
      • 3.Wer ist dies Weib, das mich ansieht?
      • 3.Wer ist dies Weib, das mich ansieht?; 4.Jokanaan, Ich Bin Verliebt In Deinen Leib
      • 4.Jokanaan, Ich Bin Verliebt In Deinen Leib
      • 5.Dein Leib ist grauenvoll
      • 5.Dein Leib ist grauenvoll; 6.Zurück, Tochter Sodoms! Berühre mich nicht!
      • 6.Zurück, Tochter Sodoms! Berühre mich nicht!
      • 7.Niemals, Tochter Babylons, Tochter Sodoms,... Niemals!
      • 7.Niemals, Tochter Babylons, Tochter Sodoms,... Niemals!; 8.Wird Dir Nicht Bange, Tochter Der Herodias?; 9.Laß mich deinen Mund küssen, Jokanaan; 10.Du bist verflucht
      • 8.Wird Dir Nicht Bange, Tochter Der Herodias?
      • 9.Laß mich deinen Mund küssen, Jokanaan
      • 10.Du bist verflucht
    • Scene 4
      • Intermezzo
      • 1.Wo ist Salome? Wo ist die Prinzessin?
      • 1b.Es ist kalt hier
      • 2.Salome, komm, trink Wein mit mir
      • 2b.Sieh, die Zeit ist gekommen
      • 2c.Wahrhaftig, Herr, es wäre besser
      • 3.Siehe, der Tag ist nähe
      • 3b.Eine Menge, Menschen
      • 4.Tanz für mich, Salome
      • 5.Tanz der sieben Schleier (Dance of the Seven Veils)
      • 6.Ah! Herrlich! Wundervoll, wundervoll!
      • 6b.Still, sprich nicht zu mir!
      • 7.Salome, Bedenk, Was Du Tun Willst
      • 7b.Man Soll Ihr Geben, Was Sie Verlangt!
      • 8.Es Ist Kein Laut Zu Vernehmen
      • 9.Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund
      • 9.Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund; 10.Sie ist ein Ungeheuer, deine Tochter!
      • 10.Sie ist ein Ungeheuer, deine Tochter!
      • 10b.Ah! Ich Habe Deinen Mund Geküsst
Richard Strauss' third opera, Salome, burst like a meteor onto the early twentieth century musical scene and ushered in an era of musical modernism. When Salome premiered at Dresden in 1905, it was at once condemned by conservative critics for its moral decadence, and lauded by more adventuresome listeners, who heard in it signs of the avant-garde. Richard Wagner's son Siegfried emphasized Salome's "perversity" and categorized it among Strauss' "dangerous works." In 1948, however, archmodernist Arnold Schoenberg singled out passages from Salome as examples of extended tonality. Although near the end of the nineteenth century, Strauss' tone poems had earned him accolades as Zukunftsmusiker, neither their philosophical programs, nor their lushly chromatic late Romantic musical languages were any match for Salome's psychologically charged libretto and surprisingly dissonant score.

Strauss based his libretto for Salome on Hedwig Lachmann's German translation of Oscar Wilde's play, Salomé, of 1891. Wilde's play, written in French in and the evocative style of the symbolists, appeared in the later years of a long tradition of literary treatments of the New Testament story of Salome and John the Baptist. Mario Praz claims that Heinrich Heine's Atta Troll (1841) was the first literary work to portray Salome as a blatantly sexual being, an interpretation that was taken up repeatedly in later versions of the story. Indeed, the interpretation of Salome as a pathologically sexual female must have been particularly intriguing to fin de siècle writers and artists, given the contemporary fascination with the degenerate female and—influenced by the work of Sigmund Freud—with psychopathology in general. Wilde was also influenced by J.C. Heywood's dramatic poem "Salome," Mallarmé's poem "Hérodiade," and by Joris-Karl Huysmans' À Rebours, which portrayed Salome as the epitome of female sexual depravity.

Strauss uses orchestration, motives, key areas, and distinctions among musical languages to convey meaning in Salome. Strauss expands the palette of the orchestra, already fertile with timbral possibilities, giving extended solo passages to unusual instruments, and joining groups of instruments in novel and evocative combinations. The lengthy contrabassoon solo at the end of the second orchestral interlude is perhaps a singular occurrence in Western art music, and the combination of two harps playing harmonics, celesta, cymbals, and hushed woodwinds that accompany the aroused Herod after Salome's Dance of the Seven Veils paint an eerie picture of his demented world. Strauss continually weaves the clarinet's opening ascending motive (associated with the title character) into the opera's orchestral tapestry and features it as the principal musical material of Salome's frenzied, pseudo-oriental dance.

Each of the principal personages sings in a musical style that reveals aspects of his or her character: the young princess Salome sings with a flirtatious declamation style supported by delicate orchestration favoring high-pitched instruments such as flutes, violins, and celesta; later, the orchestra accompanies her final monologue with its full registral, dynamic, and timbral capabilities. Jochanaan's (John the Baptist's) music is devoutly tonal, generally favoring flat key areas—including A flat major, the key in Strauss' "system" of tonal symbolism that represents religion, and through which Strauss illustrates Jochanaan's steadfast piety. Herod's musical language is inflected with whole-tone scales; lacking a solidly tonal perfect fifth, but having instead the disorienting and dissonant tritone at its structural core, these passages conveys a sense of instability appropriate for the perverse Galilean tetrarch.

© All Music Guide

Scene 4 - 5.Tanz der sieben Schleier (Dance of the Seven Veils)

Richard Strauss' opera Salome stirred wide controversy when it was premiered in 1905, both for the advanced nature of its music and for its decadent story line. Salome's seductive dance was certainly one of the more notorious scenes from this convention-shattering work. In the opera it comes after Salome, stepdaughter of King Herod, is rebuffed by John the Baptist, who is held in the King's dungeons. Angered by the rejection, Salome agrees to dance for Herod on the condition that he grant her wish, which turns out to be the presentation to her of John the Baptist's head on a silver platter. After her dance she is granted her wish, but is later sentenced to death by Herod.

The dance opens in a frenzied mood, the music propelled by anxious drums and tambourine, but the tempo slows quickly and a sinister waltz rhythm is presented. The mood is exotic, the oboe singing Eastern-flavored music, with the strings and tambourine soon joining in to impart a dreamy, yet seductive character. Gradually, the music becomes more animated, more sensual, and more sinister, the whole writhing in a colorful decadence, in a deliciously twisted sense of festivity. The music turns frenzied and utterly fanatical in its driving rhythms as it reaches its powerful climax, after which it relaxes for a brief moment, before rushing toward an ambivalent though colorful ending.

© All Music Guide
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