Visit our new topic page about Richard Strauss

Richard Strauss

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

Richard Strauss , 1864-1949, German composer. Strauss brought to a culmination the development of the 19th-century symphonic poem, and was a leading composer of romantic opera in the early 20th cent. Son of a celebrated horn player, he had extensive musical instruction and began composing as a child of six. His first major work, the symphony in D minor, was first performed in 1880. Strauss's early works, in classical forms, brought him instant acclaim. He succeeded Hans von Bülow as conductor at Meiningen (1885-86) and later as conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic concerts (1894-95). His friendship with the poet Alexander Ritter influenced him to adopt the romantic aesthetic philosophy and style of Liszt and Wagner . A group of songs, the symphonic fantasy Aus Italien (1886), and the symphonic poems Don Juan (1888) and Death and Transfiguration (1889) were the first works composed in his new romantic manner. These and the works that followed established him as a master of highly evocative, original, and richly orchestrated program music. These works—including Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche (1895); Thus Spake Zarathustra (1895), after Nietszche; Don Quixote (1898), a tone poem in the form of variations with a cello solo; and A Hero's Life (1898)—were violently both lauded and damned as the very essence of musical modernism.

Strauss also gained wide renown for his operas, including Salomé (1905), after Oscar Wilde's play; the brilliantly dramatic Electra (1909); the delightful comedy Der Rosenkavalier (1911); Ariadne auf Naxos (1912); and Die Frau ohne Schatten (1919). He wrote all but the first of these, as well as Die aegyptische Helena (1928) and Arabella (1933), in collaboration with the poet Hugo von Hofmannsthal . After Hofmannsthal died (1929) Strauss's librettists were Stefan Zweig for Die schweigsame Frau (1935) and Josef Gregor for Friedenstag (1938), Daphne (1938), and Die Liebe der Danaë (1938-40). Strauss's operas, carrying the Wagnerian leitmotif concept to its fullest development, went beyond Wagner in their intensity of drama and psychological treatment of character motivation. The operas display his music at its most sensuous and passionate. From 1919 until 1924 Strauss was codirector of the Vienna State Opera. During this period he made extended tours abroad, including a second trip to the United States (1922). Strauss served briefly as head of musical affairs (Reichsmusikkammer president) under the Nazis; he was officially exonerated of collaboration in 1948. Among Strauss's last major works are the sorrowful Metamorphosen (1946), for string instruments, and two pieces for voice and orchestra, 3 Gesänge and Im Abendrot (both 1948), considered the final musical expression of dying German romanticism.

Bibliography: See his correspondence ed. by R. Myers (1968); biographies by N. Del Mar (1962), W. S. Mann (1964), A. Jefferson (1963 and 1971), K. and R. Bailey (1985), and M. Boyden (1999); study by D. Puffett (1989).



Author not available, STRAUSS, RICHARD., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008



The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Introduction: Leo Strauss.
Perspectives on Political Science; 9/22/2004; Lenzner, Steven J.; 508 words ; For more than a year now, there has been an international frenzy--journalistic, academic, and political--swirling around the name of the political philosopher Leo Strauss and the scholars in and out of the academy who identify with his thought, the Straussians. This frenzy is, in one way, welcome: Read more
Leo Strauss and history: the philosopher as conspirator.(Who Is Leo Strauss?)
Humanitas; 3/22/2005; Ryn, Claes G.; 10638 words ; Those wishing to understand political and intellectual developments in today's America do well to familiarize themselves with the German-American political theorist Leo Strauss (1899-1973), who was a professor at the University of Chicago. Strauss's influence extends far beyond academia, where it Read more
Smith, Steven B. Reading Leo Strauss: Politics, Philosophy, Judaism.(Book review)
The Review of Metaphysics; 9/1/2007; Schall, James V.; 779 words ; SMITH, Steven B. Reading Leo Strauss: Politics, Philosophy, Judaism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006. 256 pp. Paper, $18.00-- The doctrine of the double truth remains the only way of preserving the viability of Judaism in a post-Nietzschean world that demands intellectual probity at all Read more
Leo Strauss, Willmoore Kendall, and the meaning of conservatism.(Who Is Leo Strauss?)
Humanitas; 3/22/2005; Havers, Grant; 8103 words ; Since the end of the Cold War, the meaning of conservatism has been the subject of intense debate. This debate has coincided with a revival of interest in the ideas of Leo Strauss, whose political philosophy has influenced American conservatism in particular. Yet the conservative credentials of Read more
Leo Strauss on "German Nihilism": learning the art of writing.
Journal of the History of Ideas; 10/1/2007; Altman, William H.F.; 9689 words ; In February 1941, Irwin Rommel took command of the Afrika Korps and began his daring drive on Suez. Neither the U.S.A. nor the U.S.S.R. had been added to the list of the Reich's enemies: Britain stood alone. Meanwhile, in neutral New York, an intellectual encounter between two German emigres proved Read more
Strauss and the Straussians.(Who Is Leo Strauss?)
Humanitas; 3/22/2005; Gottfried, Paul; 1763 words ; Professor Havers's defense of Leo Strauss against his historicist critics offers considerable food for thought. Although Havers says nothing here that has not already been aired, his words are sufficiently provocative to warrant examination. We are told that Strauss's historically minded critics, Read more
Leo Strauss: the sphinx's secret? Or how we learnt to stop worrying and believe through the 'Hoi Poloi'.(Biography)
Arena Journal; 9/22/2006; Sharpe, Matthew; 15183 words ; Just who was Leo Strauss anyway? Is there any chance that he will be born posthumously as himself? A different self than he seemed? Lawrence Lampert, Leo Strauss and Nietzsche. (1) When Zarathrustra was thirty years old, he left his home and the lake of his home and went into the mountains. Here he Read more
STRAUSS BATTLING TURN TO `THEOCRACY' CANDIDATE CONSIDERS HIMSELF CONSERVATIVE, OPPOSED TO EXTREMISM.(Local)
Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO); 10/13/1998; Kelly, Guy; 879 words ; Byline: Guy Kelly Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer Henry Strauss says he knows something about extremism ... to preserve the social status quo. By Steve Groer / Rocky Mountain News. CAPTION: Locator Map / District 6. By Rocky Mountain News. Read more
The problem of the Enlightenment: Strauss, Jacobi, and the Pantheism controversy.(Leo Strauss, Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi)
The Review of Metaphysics; 3/1/2003; Janssens, David; 11102 words ; Denn was die Philosophen sogar ein wenig nachsehend und parteiisch gegen Enthusiasten und Schwarmer macht, ist, dass sie, die Philosophen, am allermeisten dabei verlieren wurden, wenn es gar keine Enthusiasten und Schwarmer mehr gabe. Lessing, Uber eine zeitige Aufgabe I IN HIS FIRST BOOK, LEO Read more
Premium programmer: HBO's Carolyn Strauss rides herd over cable's hottest lineup.(Company Profile)(Biography)
Multichannel News; 1/27/2003; Reynolds, Mike; 912 words ; Carolyn Strauss figures to be quite busy in 2003. And beyond. Home Box Office's executive vice president of original programming--who, along with network chairman and CEO Chris Albrecht, has built the premium channel into an original on-air powerhouse--rides herd over the development and production Read more

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Richard Strauss
Encyclopedia of World Biography Richard Strauss Richard Strauss (1864-1949), the German composer ... post-Wagnerian tastes and techniques. Richard Strauss was born in Munich to a mother ... studies are George R. Marek, Richard Strauss: Life of a Non-hero (1967 ... Read more
Strauss, Richard
World Encyclopedia Strauss, Richard (1864–1949) German composer and conductor. Strauss' symphonic poems , such as Don Juan (1888), Till Eulenspiegel (1895), and Also sprach Zarathustra (1896), use brilliantly coloured ... Read more
Richard (Georg) Strauss
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia ... Orchestra, Hans von Bulow , made Strauss his successor. Strongly influenced by the work of Richard Wagner , he began to write ... the Four Last Songs (1948). Richard (Georg) Strauss Richard (Georg) Strauss Richard (Georg) Strauss Read more
David Friedrich Strauss
Encyclopedia of World Biography David Friedrich Strauss David Friedrich Strauss (1808-1874), the German historian and the most controversial Protestant theologian of his time ... distinction between Jesus the historical figure and Jesus the subject of Christian belief. David Strauss was a highly intelligent student at the famous T ü ... Read more
Richard Rorty
Encyclopedia of World Biography Richard Rorty American philosopher and man of letters Richard Rorty (born 1931) gave new life to ... discussion of democracy and liberalism. Richard Rorty had a major impact on American ... atmosphere where such thinkers as Leo Strauss and Richard McKeon wielded great influence. At ... Machan, ... Read more

Related research topics

Online videos

Richard Strauss( Also sprach Zarathustra ) - humanity