A Study of Strauss PDF
A Study of Strauss PDF
A Study of Strauss PDF
A STUDY OF STRAUSS
By DANIEL GREGORY MASON
I.
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A Study of Strauss
173
to view life not only keenly, not only sympathetically, but also
wisely and as if from above, from that vantage point of a wider
insight than that of any of their subjects, so that in their summing
up of them they are able to set them in proper relation one to
another, and by so doing to get a true and calm picture of human
life as a whole. This power of philosophic or poetic vision, this
magnanimity, we instinctively demand of the artist. It satisfies
a fundamental human craving. The moral in the fable is a naive
embodiment of it; it comes even into the uncongenial atmosphere
of the light comedy of manners in the rhymed epilogue; its musical
incarnation we find in many of the quiet codas of Brahms, or in
the thoughtful "Der Dichter spricht" at the end of Schumann's
"Kinderscenen."
The object of the present essay is to show that Strauss has,
in unequal but high degree, these qualities of the dramatist:
observation, sympathy, and magnanimity. The first he has? in
almost unparalleled measure; the second somewhat fitfully,
sometimes inhibited by his ironic cynicism; the third in his most
genial moods, as for instance, in the epilogue to "Till Eulenspiegel,"
but not when misled by over-realistic aims. The evidence of his
possession of these qualities that we shall especially look for will
be not that afforded by his acts or his sayings, but rather the
irrefragible testimony of his musical works themselves.
II.
Since a man's temperament is what ultimately determines
the peculiar combination of qualities making up his artistic incharacteristic powers and shortcomings-the
dividuality-his
first questions we have to ask ourselves regarding any artist we
propose to study will always be: "What is his temperament?"
"To which of the two great types does it belong, the active or
the contemplative?" "Does its power lie primarily in observation
or in introspection?" "Does it impel him towards objective
characterization or toward the utterance of subjective feeling?"
Elsewhere, in studying these antitheses of temperament in
particular cases, such as those of Mendelssohn and Schumann1,
and of Saint-Saiens and Franck2, I have taken occasion to discuss
in some detail the rationale of their musical expression. At present
our interest is in finding in Strauss a rather extreme case of the
active temperament, a man of positively explosive nervous energy.
1See especially "The Romantic Composers."
2In the essays on these composers in "From Grieg to Brahms."
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The chief theme of the arch mischief-maker, "Till Eulenspiegel," is necessarily capricious, but it is doubtful if even for him
anyone but Strauss would have thought of those surprising jumps,
landing each time on an unexpected note. In the main theme of
"Don Juan" we have a good example of his rhythmic energy.
Note the variety of the figures: the sixteenth notes in the first
measure, swarming up to the high E; the still further ascending
triplet; the even more incisive dotted group leading to the emphatic
half notes. In similar general style is the chief theme of "Ein
Heldenleben,' depicting the hero, but less lithe, more burly and
almost awkwardly powerful. The theme of "great longing" from
"Also Sprach Zarathustra" conveys its impression through the
wide jumps, covering almost three octaves in two vigorous dashes.
The theme of "the Wife," from the "Symphonia Domestica,"
illustrates Strauss's love of turning the unexpected way. Notice
the downward jump of a ninth, and the cadence transferred to a
higher octave than we expect.
The same story of overflowing nervous energy is told by
two other characteristics of Strauss's melody. Like all sanguine
natures he has more rising than falling phrases. The buoyancy of
(b), (c), and (d) in Figure I is irrepressible; (a) has a falling
A Study of Strauss
175
curve, somewhat coy; (e) begins in the same wheedling vein, but
ends with a rise of self-confident energy. A canvass of all the
motives in the symphonic poems would probably demonstrate
that seventy-five per cent of them rise in pitch. The second
peculiarity is more subtle but even more significant-a preference
for "rising" or anacrustic rhythms, culminating in an accented
final note after several unaccented ones, to "falling" or thetic
The
rhythms beginning with the heavy part of the measure.
elasticity of the rising rhythm is clearly shown in all the excerpts
of Figure I except that from "Ein Heldenleben"; that, naturally,
begins doggedly on the down beat. Only a systematic study
can show the extent of Strauss's addiction to the rising rhythm.
These considerations, to which might perhaps be added his
preference for the major to the minor mode, and for the vigorous
duple to the more subtle triple meter, afford us quite ample
internal evidence of his belonging to the temperamental type of
the actives, like Mendelssohn and Saint-Sains (however he may
differ from them musically) rather than to that of the contemSchumanns and the Francks. To these positive
platives,-the
points we might add negative ones, dealing with his emotional
shortcomings. This, indeed, we shall have to do later, in the
interest of a just critical estimate; but for the present it will
be better worth while to examine the positive results, in the way
of keen observation and masterly characterization, of this activeminded interest of Strauss in what lies about him.
III.
Strauss's characterization is consummate. Superlatives are
dangerous, but probably no other musician has ever carried to
such a point the power of music to depict, or at least, to suggest,
varieties of character, both in human beings and in inanimate
objects. Strauss's reported remark that music was becoming so
definite that we should soon be able to portray a tablespoon so
unmistakably that it could be told from the rest of the silverware
is probably an instance of his sardonic delight in hoaxing the
public; but if anyone is going to subject the art of tones to this
curious test, we are all agreed, doubtless, that it should be Strauss
himself. Meanwhile, failing a tablespoon, we have a sufficiently
varied collection of portraits in his gallery, each sketched with a
Sargent-like penetration.
We have seen, for example, in Figure Ia, Till Eulenspiegel
the arch mischief-maker, irrepressible, incorrigible. Here, on the
176
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VI.
180
working as he does with many more than two voices and with
the vast fund of harmonic possibilities accumulated since Bach's
day to draw upon. And he is not the man to use his resources
timidly, or to make any concessions to laziness or inexperience in
his listeners. Here is a reduction of a passage from "Ein Heldenleben" to its essential elements:
Figure VHIand Woodwind
Strings
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181
A Study of Strauss
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182
as
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asa whole shows
possible
in the mind of so many modern composers all keys are the same,
as the Germans say that at night all cows are black, is not one
That he has the keenest possible sense of the
of his failings.
individual qualities of the different keys, and of the structural
importance of their interrelationships, each one of his long series
of symphonic poems has by its masterly design shown afresh.
How remarkable, for example, is the antitheses of C, minor and
major, and B, minor and major, which is the constructive principle
of "Also Sprach Zarathustra!" How interesting is the choice
of F major for the easy-going husband in the "Symphonia Domestica," and of the keener, more brilliant B major for the wife! And
'Vocal score, page 35.
2"Elektra,"vocal score, page 21.
3Ibid. Page 23.
4Ibid. Page 20, the first line.
A Study of Strauss
183
how this strong tonal sense not only guides the design as a whole,
but suggests endless charming and imaginative details! At the
end of the lullaby, in the same work, when the child has fallen
asleep and the music has sunk to a tranquil G minor chord, this
quietude is irradiated by a flash of B major and three notes of
the wife-theme,--the loving tenderness of the waking and watching mother over the sleeping infant. Twice this happens, and
each time the somnolent G minor returns. Thus does genius use
tonality.
Being thus brought back to consider how Strauss uses all
the elements of music, even this subtlest one of contrasting
tonalities, in the interest of characterization, I must cite from a
friend one final interpretation which might seem over-ingenious
had we not the example of Mr. Klatte to spur our critical imaginations. Why is it that we so seldom hear the four tones of Till
Eulenspiegel's main theme on any other degrees of the scale than
A, F, B, C? Why is it that, in spite of the constant movement from
key to key of the music, this theme is hardly ever carried also
into the new key?1 Why does Strauss so insist on this A, F, B,
C, not only when the music is in F major, but when, as at Till's
anger, it is in D minor, when, as in the procession of the burghers,
it is in A minor, and when, just before the return of the main
theme, it is in C major? Why always A, F, B, C, whatever the
key? Is it not because Till, half-witted, perverse, self-imprisoned,
is not subject to social influences, and remains unplastically
himself, whatever his environment? To transpose a theme into
the key prevailing at the moment is to make order-but Till
represents disorder. . . . Such at least is the ingenious explanation of a woman who understands character as well as Strauss
understands keys.
IV.
All that we have been saying so far has concerned itself
primarily with Strauss's powers of observation and characterization; we have noted how broad a field of human character he
covers, and what varied artistic resources he brings to its
depiction; we have seen how peculiarly fitted he is for this part
of his work by his active temperament, with its accompanying
intellectual alertness and freedom from self-consciousness. But we
saw that the great dramatist needs not only observation but
sympathy, in order that his work may be as moving as it is vivid;
It is transposed into B flat in the episode wherein Till dons the vestments of
a priest.
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and in this power of emotion we may at first be inclined to consider Strauss deficient. There is undoubtedly a popular superstition which puts him among the intellectuals. The clean-cut
efficiency of his personality, his businesslike habits, his mordant
wit, both in words and in notes (was there ever anything so witty
as "Till Eulenspiegel"?), even questionably relevant details like
his exquisitely neat hand writing and his well-groomed and not
in the least long-haired appearance,-all these create the impression
of a personality by no means schwirmerisch, far removed indeed
from the rapt dreamer who is the school-girl's ideal composer.
There is, I think, a measure of truth in this picture. Many of
Strauss's most characteristic merits, as well as defects, may be
traced to his lack of the introspective tendency which has been
so fundamental in most of the other great German musicians,
from Bach to Wagner, and which is seen perhaps at its purest
and best in Schumann. Strauss is at the other pole from Schumann
-and music is wide! Mr. Ernest Newman, in the ablest studies
of Strauss yet published in English,' points to the internal evidence
of this lack in his earliest and therefore least sophisticated compositions. "The general impression one gets from all these works,"
writes Mr. Newman, "is that of a head full to overflowing with
music, a temperament that is energetic and forthright rather than
warm. . . , and a general lack not only of young mannish sentimentality, but of sentiment. There is often a good deal of
ardour in the writing, but it is the ardour of the intellect rather
than of the emotions."And again: "Wherever the youthful Strauss
has to sing rather than declaim, when he has to be emotional
rather than intellectual, as in his slow movements, he almost
invariably fails. . . . He feels it hard to squeeze a tear out of
his unclouded young eyes, to make those taut, whip-cord young
nerves of his quiver with emotion."2
Now, although Mr. Newman would not accept his own
description of Strauss the youth as a fair account of the mature
composer, although, indeed, he specifically insists, in a later
passage, that Strauss's musical imagination lost, at adolescence,
its "first metallic hardness" and "softened into something more
purely emotional," yet I think his vivid phrases give us a picture
of Strauss that is in essentials as true at fifty as it was at fifteen.
"A temperament that is energetic and forthright rather than
warm," "an ardour of the intellect rather than of the emotions"x"RichardStrauss," in the Living Masters of Music Series, and "RichardStrauss
and the Music of the Future," in "Musical Studies."
2"RichardStrauss," page 30-32.
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."
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