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Appendix 1 - The “poetic-musical period” (from Opera and Drama, Part III, section 3)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Thomas S. Grey
Affiliation:
Stanford University, California
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Summary

The “poetic-musical period” (from Opera and Drama, Part III, section 3)

[152] Alliterative verse [Stabreim], as we have seen, already connects speech roots of varied or contrasted expression (such as Lust and Leid, Wohl and Weh) so as to make the connection audible to our sense of hearing, and in this way also presents these roots to the feeling as generically related. Imagine, then, to what greater degree of expression these connections can be made sensually perceptible to our feeling with the help of musical modulation. Let us take for example a line of Stabreim containing a perfectly unified range of expression: Liebe gibt Lust zum Leben [love gives pleasure to life]. Since the alliteration of accented syllables in this line is matched by a perfect congruity of emotional content, the musician would have no occasion to depart from his initially chosen tonality in setting these words; a fully adequate musical setting would need to take account only of the strong and weak syllables, while remaining within a single key, appropriate to the emotional unity of the text. If, on the other hand, we take a line of mixed emotional significance, such as die Liebe bringt Lust und Leid [love brings pleasure and sorrow], the musician would need to match the contrasting emotions of the alliterated words by modulating from his original tonality into a contrasting, related one appropriate to the contrasting sense of the final word.

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Chapter
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Wagner's Musical Prose
Texts and Contexts
, pp. 375 - 377
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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