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Richard Wagner

Wagner: Tannhäuser, WWV 70

$51.95
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Breitkopf & Härtel  |  SKU: EB4503  |  Código de barras: 9790004163023
  • Composer: Richard Wagner (1813-1883)
  • Format: Vocal Score
  • Instrumentation: Opera
  • Work: Tannhäuser, WWV 70
  • ISMN: 9790004163023
  • Size: 7.5 x 10.6 inches
  • Pages: 400

Description

  1. Original version based on the autograph and the Dresden premiere of 1845
  2. Dresden version of 1847
  3. Paris version of 1860

Text by the composer; english translation by E. Newman

Wagner was never entirely satisfied with his "Tannhäuser", which is why he kept revising it, the last time for a Vienna production in 1875, when he staged the work for the third time. in the overture, the abrupt transition to the Bacchanal – he had composed this especially for Paris – now occurs directly after the Venusberg motifs. Wagner was no longer able to eliminate the musical inconsistencies between the Dresden version and the newly written scene involving Venus and Tannhäuser in the Paris version, which was scored in a style reminiscent of "Tristan". This is why Wagner, according to an entry in Cosima's diary, still felt on the day of his death that he "owed the world a proper ‘Tannhäuser'".

Breitkopf & Härtel

Wagner: Tannhäuser, WWV 70

$51.95

Description

  1. Original version based on the autograph and the Dresden premiere of 1845
  2. Dresden version of 1847
  3. Paris version of 1860

Text by the composer; english translation by E. Newman

Wagner was never entirely satisfied with his "Tannhäuser", which is why he kept revising it, the last time for a Vienna production in 1875, when he staged the work for the third time. in the overture, the abrupt transition to the Bacchanal – he had composed this especially for Paris – now occurs directly after the Venusberg motifs. Wagner was no longer able to eliminate the musical inconsistencies between the Dresden version and the newly written scene involving Venus and Tannhäuser in the Paris version, which was scored in a style reminiscent of "Tristan". This is why Wagner, according to an entry in Cosima's diary, still felt on the day of his death that he "owed the world a proper ‘Tannhäuser'".

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