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Subject: [humanities.music.composers.wagner] Wagner General FAQ
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Summary: General FAQ concerning composer Richard Wagner (1813-83). 
 Information about the hmcw newsgroup and posting guidelines.
URL: http://home.c2i.net/monsalvat/wagnerfaq.htm
Version: 2.16

------------------------------

Subject: General FAQ for humanities.music.composers.wagner

The list of frequently asked questions (and their answers) for the news-
group humanities.music.composers.wagner (hmcw), with pointers to other
sources of information.  This version supersedes all previous versions.

The current plain-text version of this FAQ can be found in the FAQ archive 
at < http://www.faqs.org/faqs/music/wagner/general-faq/ >.  

The bibliographical supplement to this FAQ ("Wagner Books FAQ") can be
found at  < http://www.home.no/derrick/booksfaq.htm >.


Table of Contents

I. Welcome to humanities.music.composers.wagner!          
  A. Charter
  B. How should I read and contribute to this newsgroup?
  C. How do I read this FAQ?

II. Who was Richard Wagner?
  A. Wagner's life, work and ideas
* B. Wagner's political and racial ideas
  C. Wagner's philosophy and spirituality
  D. Biographical references
  E. Musical works
  F. Prose and poetry
* G. Abandoned operas

III. Frequently asked questions         
  A. How can I get tickets to the Bayreuth Festival?
  B. Where can I obtain the Ring Disc?
* C. Was Wagner a personal friend of Adolf Hitler?
  D. Wasn't Wagner anti-Semitic?
  E. Why does Siegmund sing the renunciation motif as he draws the sword 
     from the tree?
  F. Why didn't Alberich use his ring to escape when he was captured by 
     Wotan and Loge?
  G. Why is Valhall set on fire at the end of the 'Ring' cycle?
  H. Why didn't Wagner kill off Alberich?
  I. Who are the Wagner family and how are they related to each other?
  J. Does anybody know the title of the helicopter tune in 'Apocalypse 
     Now'?
  K. What about Wagner's women?
  L. What is the name of the mortal woman who is mother to Siegmund and
     Sieglinde?
* M. Which recording of the 'Ring'/ 'Dutchman'/ 'Lohengrin'/ 'Tristan'/ 
     'Parsifal' should I get as my first version?
  N. How can I get inside the Palazzo Vendramin in Venice?
  O. What is the difference between the 'Liebestod' and 'Isolde's
     Transfiguration'?
  P. When can I applaud at a performance of 'Parsifal'?
  Q. What new productions are planned for the Bayreuth Festival?
  R. Who were the Herodias and Gundryggia referred to in 'Parsifal'?
  S. Was Beckmesser based on Eduard Hanslick?

IV. Where can I find more information?
  A. Offline sources
    i.    What books should every Wagner fan have on their bookshelves?
    ii.   Wagner's writings
    iii.  Wagner's musical compositions
    iv.   Diaries of Richard and Cosima Wagner
    v.    Letters to and from Richard Wagner
    vi.   Wagner-related periodicals
    vii.  Sources for Wagner's texts
    viii. The Bayreuth Festival

  B. On-line sources
    i.    A few good, general online sites about Richard Wagner
    ii.   Web sites, synopses and online discographies 
    iii.  Web sites related to the Bayreuth Festival
    iv.   Wagner Societies
    v.    On-line libretti and scores
    vi.   Related newsgroups and message boards 
    vii.  Museums
  
V. Acknowledgements and Copyright


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Subject: I. Welcome to humanities.music.composers.wagner! 
               
Welcome to humanities.music.composers.wagner! In this newsgroup we discuss
Richard Wagner, his life, works and influence.  Steve Milne started this
group back in December 1995. His charter for the newsgroup provides general
guidelines for the scope of discussions here.

The humanities.* placement of the group is intended to reflect the academic
orientation of much of the discussion. 


------------------------------

Subject:  A. Charter for humanities.music.composers.wagner

The newsgroup humanities.music.composers.wagner is intended to provide a
forum for mature discussion of all aspects of Richard Wagner. Subjects
discussed in the newsgroup might include (but are not limited to): 

* The music dramas, their meanings and contemporary relevance. 

* Recordings of Wagner's music. Recommendations of recordings. News of
  forthcoming releases. 

* Discussions about performances of Wagner's work - both reviews of current
  opera productions and information about forthcoming productions. 

* Discussions about the history of the Bayreuth Festival, along with 
  information about ticket availability, strategies for procuring tickets 
  for the festival. 

* Debates about Wagner's artistic and theoretical ideas 

* Wagner's contemporaries their influence on Wagner and vice-versa 

* Wagner's influence on art and the theatre. 


------------------------------

Subject:  B. How should I read and contribute to this newsgroup?

 i. If you haven't already done so, now is as good a time as any to read 
  the guide to net etiquette (or "netiquette") regularly posted to the news-
  group news.announce.newusers.  There is an HTML version of the guide at
  < http://www.faqs.org/faqs/usenet/emily-postnews/part1/ >

 ii. If you are new to Usenet, then you should read the rules for posting
  regularly posted both to news.announce.newusers and to news.answers.  You 
  can find an HTML version of the posting rules at
  < http://www.faqs.org/faqs/usenet/posting-rules/part1/ >
     
 iii. DO NOT POST IN UPPER CASE. Submissions in a single case (all upper or 
  all lower) are difficult to read.

 iv. Do not flame. A "flame" is an angry post. Sometimes you will find
  angry posts in follow-up to your own. The temptation may then be to make
  an angry post in response. Think first. Just because somebody calls you a
  bad name, doesn't mean you have to respond in kind. Just because someone
  disagrees with you, it does not mean that he or she is a moron. 

 v. It is advisable to lurk for a few days (or even weeks) without posting,
  before you post a message.

 vi. Keep your postings to Wagner-related topics.

 vii. We may have discussed the topic before - check the Dejanews archive 
  < http://groups.google.com/advanced_group_search > to see if past threads 
  might hold the answers to your questions.  Before asking a "basic" 
  question, please read the latest "frequently asked questions" posting.

 viii. Specific questions are more likely to get useful answers than are
  general ones. For general information, you should try to obtain reference
  books from the lists provided in the Wagner Books FAQ (see introduction).
                                       
 ix. Avoid crossposting - ensure that your article is posted only to news-
  groups where its content is appropriate.  Don't spam. Spammers will be 
  reported to their ISPs. If you don't already know about spamming, then 
  you should read the SPAM FAQ: 
  < http://www.uiuc.edu/ph/www/tskirvin/faqs/spam.html >.

 x. Do not post binaries (pictures, sound files, etc.) to this newsgroup.
  Not everyone can handle those relatively large files and binaries in non-
  binary groups have been known to get those newsgroups removed from some
  ISP's. Instead put them on a web page or post them to an alt.binaries.*
  group and post a notice to their location on this group.

 xi. Do not post in HTML or any other format that uses styles.  Some news- 
  readers can only handle plain text.

 xii. The language of the hmcw newsgroup is English.  Posting in other 
  languages is discouraged. 

 xiii. Many of the postings to the hmcw group will contain quotes in German
  and will occasionally quote in other European languages. It is therefore
  recommended that you set the options in your newsreader for 8-bit
  characters, Western European encoding and the ISO Latin 1 character set
  (ISO-8859-1).

 xiv. Keep line lengths to less than 80 columns. 72 is suggested, to allow 
  for indentation of quoted text in replies.

 xv. When replying to a posting do not quote more of the original than is
  necessary. It is seldom necessary to quote a whole message. Some posting
  software automatically quotes the whole message when you respond but you 
  should delete the portions of the message that are not relevant to your 
  response.  Use ellipses ("...").  Do not quote .signatures.  Do not leave 
  the entire earlier posting at the end of your own posting.

 xvi. If you are not familiar with logic but want to make a convincing case,
  then you should read the following introduction to logic and fallacies: 
  < http://www.infidels.org/news/atheism/logic.html >.

 xvii. You will find that keeping your sense of humour will help you to get 
  the most out of any newsgroup.


------------------------------

Subject:  C. How do I read this FAQ?

Each question/section begins with 'Subject:' on a line of its own. If you
have a suitably equipped newsreader then you can automatically skip to the
next 'Subject:' heading, e.g. "trn" will display the start of the section
when you press ^G (control-G). 

Recently updated or new questions are marked with a * at the beginning of 
the line in the table of contents.


------------------------------

Subject: II. Who was Richard Wagner?

This section provides only general background information. To find out
more about Richard Wagner (RW), you could consult one of the many
biographies; see subsection C below. There is a chronological table of
RW's life and works at < http://home.c2i.net/monsalvat/wagnerlife.htm >.


------------------------------

Subject:  A. Wagner's life, work and ideas

Richard Wagner (1813-1883) started out as a conductor and composer of
operas, but he soon reacted against the 'whole clinking, twinkling,
glittering, glistening show, Grand Opera!' Wagner (RW) concluded that what
was wrong with the operas of the early 19th century was that drama had
become nothing more than an excuse for the performance of music. He
intended to reverse this, and to create 'music-dramas' (not a term 
introduced by RW but one that has often been applied to his later dramas) 
in which music would serve the purposes of drama. Therefore ideally the 
orchestra would be invisible and the action on stage would be 'deeds of 
music made visible'. In order to achieve a closer unity between poetry 
and music, RW became one of the first operatic composers to write their 
own texts.

RW is perhaps best known for his cycle, 'The Nibelung's Ring', a massive
work that took him almost 27 years to write. During the composition of
this work, RW realized that there was no stage in Europe suitable for the
'Ring'. He set about raising money to build his own 'Festival Theater' in
the small German town of Bayreuth. Although the first festival was a
financial disaster, the Bayreuth Festival, which was the begetter of the
whole festival idea, survives to this day. 

In addition to his talent for musical composition on the largest of
scales, RW was a man of the theatre. His theories, innovations and
experiments had a profound effect on the staging of opera and attitudes to
opera everywhere. 

"A man with a genius for many arts has brought those arts, in his own
work, more intimately into union than they have ever before been brought;
and he has delighted the world with this combination of arts as few men of
special genius have ever delighted the world with their work in any of
these arts." (Arthur Symons, 1905) 


------------------------------

Subject:  B. Wagner's political and racial ideas

Wagner tends to generate rather fierce, lively and often bad-tempered
debate between 'Wagnerites' and 'Anti-Wagnerites', not least where his
political and racial ideas are concerned.  Dieter Borchmeyer has
written: "The merest glance at writings on Wagner, including the most
recent ones on the composer's life and works, is enough to convince the
most casual reader that he or she has wandered into a madhouse.  Even
serious scholars take leave of their senses when writing about Wagner
and start to rant.  There are transcendental Wagnerians with their heads
in the clouds, phallo-Wagnerians whose sights are set somewhat lower,
meekly feminist 'Wagnériennes' and brashly political 'Wagnerianer' --
and in every case there are their polemical opposite numbers, busily
condemning and unmasking Wagner in the name of the very same values and
on the strength of the very same evidence, their desire to unmask Wagner
driving them to the very brink of scientific and psychological flagell-
antism and persuading them to see a causal link between 'Parsifal' and
Auschwitz." (From the preface to 'Drama and the World of Richard Wagner', 
Princeton, 2003).

Wagner was Hitler's favorite composer; this coupled with his own anti-
Semitism (as expressed most clearly in his essay, 'Judaism in Music',
concerning which see below under 'Frequently asked questions') has made
RW a controversial figure even today. His music is still widely
boycotted in Israel; although a recent performance of the 'Siegfried
Idyll' by the Rishon Lezion SO attracted, among a large audience, only
one protester. It needs to be added that RW never advocated violence
against the Jews, nor against any racial or ethnic minority.

During RW's early career, he associated with radicals and revolutionaries
(such as the anarchist Bakunin, whom some people regard as the model for
Siegfried). For his part in the Dresden Uprising of 1849, from which he
made a narrow escape, RW was outlawed in most of Germany and he went into
exile in Switzerland. In his later career, under the sponsorship of the
King of Bavaria, RW became more conservative (although he never renounced
his utopian socialism) and nationalistic. 

He was particularly negative about the French, especially after the
failure of his opera 'Tannhäuser' at the Paris Opera in 1861 (hence RW's
'A Capitulation' of 1870, in which he obviously enjoys the idea of the
besieged Parisians eating rats). According to RW (in 'German Art and
German Policy', 1867) the Germans were capable of developing a culture
superior to the civilisation of the despised French -- a culture in which
German art, not least Wagner's art, would occupy centre stage.


------------------------------

Subject:  C. Wagner's philosophy and spirituality

Wagner's study of philosophy and spirituality gave his music-dramas a
depth and universality that sets them apart from most other works for the
musical theatre. Although RW lost interest in institutional religion
during his teens, he developed a lasting interest both in mysticism (both
in western mystics such as the Dominican Meister Eckhart, and in eastern
ones such as the Sufi poet Hafiz) and in that part of philosophy closest
to theology. He dedicated his essay, 'The Art-Work of the Future' (1849)
to Ludwig Feuerbach, the philosopher and author of 'The Essence of
Christianity'.  Commentators have seen the influences of Feuerbach's 
philosophy of religion and of Hegel's philosophy of history in the 'Ring'.

Five years later, a friend introduced him to the writings of another
philosopher, Arthur Schopenhauer, whose 'The World as Will and
Representation' he read four times in less than a year. This book not only
revealed to RW the meaning of his own 'Ring' poems, but led him to write
new texts (notably 'Tristan und Isolde') that deal with human existence in
terms of this philosophy. Infected by Schopenhauer's interest in Indian
religions, RW began to study books on this subject recommended by
Schopenhauer. These studies led him to begin a work that he never
completed, the Buddhist drama 'Die Sieger', and to another which he did,
'Parsifal'.


------------------------------

Subject:  D. Biographical sources

It is sometimes claimed (inaccurately) that more books have been written
about RW than anyone who has ever lived, with the exceptions of Jesus
Christ and Napoleon Buonaparte. In fact there have been thousands of books
and articles published about RW and his works, ranging from the scholarly
to the totally wacko. 

A selection of the biographies of Richard and Cosima Wagner can be found
in the Wagner Books FAQ, Section II.


------------------------------

Subject:  E. Musical works

The complete catalogue of Wagner's musical works is the 'Wagner-Werk-
Verzeichnis'. It lists 113 works, although it is reasonably certain that
no music was written for a handful of them.

Here is a shorter list of the major works among them, grouped by category,
with the dates of their completion and of their first performance: 

* Completed Operas and Music Dramas

  T= date of completion of text (with the exception of any small changes
  made later), M= date of completion of music, P= date and location of first
  performance.

  _'Die Feen'_ (The Fairies), grand romantic opera, WWV 32. This work is in 
  a mixture of German and Italian styles.  T: February 1833.  M: Spring 1834.
  P: 29 June 1888, Munich.

  _'Das Liebesverbot, oder Die Novize von Palermo'_ (Forbidden Love), grand
  comic opera, WWV 38. This German comedy was completed in 1836 and
  performed only once - the second performance had to be abandoned before the
  curtain rose and the bankruptcy of the opera company prevented any further 
  performances that season. The music is clearly influenced by Bellini, as 
  well as by Donizetti, Rossini, Marschner and Auber. T: December 1835. 
  M: March 1836, revised Spring 1840. P: 29 March 1836, Magdeburg.

  _'Rienzi, der Letzte der Tribunen'_ (Rienzi, Last of the Tribunes), grand
  tragic opera, WWV 49. This was Wagner's attempt to create a French Grand
  Opera in imitation of Meyerbeer. Wagner also acknowledged the influence of
  Halévy. T: early 1840. M: September 1840. P: 20 October 1842, Dresden.

  _'Der fliegende Holländer'_ (The Flying Dutchman), romantic opera, WWV 63.
  This is the first work in the 'Bayreuth canon', i.e. the works that are
  regularly staged at the Bayreuth Festival. It is a German opera on
  supernatural themes, showing the influences both of Weber and of Marschner
  (in particular, of his 'Der Vampyr'). T: May 1841. M: October 1841. P: 2
  January 1843, Dresden.

  _'Tannhäuser und der Sängerkrieg auf Wartburg'_ (Tannhäuser and the Song
  Contest on the Wartburg), grand romantic opera, WWV 70. Completed in 
  1845, but substantially revised at least three times:
  * Version 1.  T: April 1843.  M: October 1845.  P: 19 October 1845, 
                Dresden.
  * Version 2.  T: Spring 1847. M: May 1847, revised September 1851,
                not published until June 1860.  P: 1 August 1847.
  * Version 3.  T: March 1861.  M: March 1861.  P: 13 March 1861, Paris.
  * Version 4.  T: September 1861, revised Spring 1865.  M: Autumn 1861.
                P: 1 August 1867, Munich.
  
  _'Lohengrin'_ , romantic opera, WWV 75. After completing this opera in
  1848, Wagner became mixed up in politics, with the consequence that he had
  to leave Germany. As an exile, he was unable to arrange for it to be
  performed or to supervise the first performance, conducted by Franz Liszt.
  T: November 1845. M: April 1848. P: 28 August 1850, Weimar.

  _'Der Ring des Nibelungen'_ (The Nibelung's Ring), a 'stage festival
  play', WWV 86. Wagner's original intention, which was shared by a number
  of other composers at the time, was to write an opera based on the
  'Nibelungenlied', to be called 'Siegfried's Tod' (The Death of Siegfried).
  Wagner actually got as far as writing the music for the first two scenes
  before he abandoned it, in favour of a cycle of four dramas. Once the text
  of all four had been completed (except for revisions later), Wagner
  composed the music to the first and shortest of the dramas in his cycle. 

  _'Das Rheingold'_ (The Rhine Gold), preliminary evening of the 'Ring' 
  cycle,  WWV 86a.  T: November 1852. M: September 1854. P: 22 September 
  1869, Munich.

  _'Die Walküre'_ (The Valkyrie), first day of the 'Ring' cycle, WWV 86b. 
  T: July 1852.  M: March 1856.  P: 26 June 1870, Munich.

  _'Siegfried'_ (originally 'Der junge Siegfried'), second day of the 'Ring'
  cycle, WWV 86c, was well under way before Wagner, despairing of ever
  getting this hugely expensive project staged, put it on hold. Wagner
  needed to find something more practical, if not profitable. He would not
  finish the music until 1871, and staging would have to wait until after a
  new theatre had been built for the 'Ring'. T: December 1852 (but then
  substantial changes during composition). M: February 1871. P: 16 August
  1876, Bayreuth.

  _'Tristan und Isolde'_ , WWV 90, was intended to be a small, practical
  opera that Wagner could get staged. Interrupted by a marital crisis, it
  was completed in Venice and Paris in 1859. After King Ludwig put the
  resources of the Munich Court Theatre at Wagner's disposal, his
  revolutionary work was staged there in 1865. 'Tristan-fever' has continued
  to this day. T: September 1857. M: August 1859. P: 10 June 1865, Munich.

  _'Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg'_ (The Mastersingers of Nuremburg), WWV
  96. For the first time since 'Das Liebesverbot', Wagner returned to comedy
  (again of a rather heavy, Germanic kind). T: January 1862, revised January 
  1867. M: October 1867. P: 21 June 1868, Munich.

  _'Götterdämmerung'_ (The Twilight of the Gods, or Night Falls on the
  Gods), third day of the 'Ring' cycle, WWV 86d. The 1848 text of what had
  been 'Siegfrieds Tod' was substantially rewritten in 1852 and revised in
  1856. It then gathered dust until Wagner had returned to and completed
  'Siegfried', when he was able to compose the music for the final part of
  his cycle. T: December 1852 (revised May 1856 and 1872). M: November 1874.
  P: 17 August 1876, Bayreuth.

  _'Parsifal'_ , sacred stage festival play (Bühnenweihfestspiel), WWV 111.
  Inspired, according to 'Mein Leben', on and by Good Friday 1857, this
  drama too had a long gestation. A detailed prose draft was written in
  August 1865, but the libretto was not completed until 1877. After it was
  first performed in Bayreuth in 1882, the Wagner family lawyers ensured
  that it was not staged anywhere else for the next twenty years. The
  Metropolitan Opera in New York was the first to defy Bayreuth, by staging
  this drama in 1903. T: April 1877. M: January 1882. P: 26 July 1882,
  Bayreuth.

* Orchestral Works 

  The young Wagner had ambitions as a symphonist. His first attempt was the
  Symphony in C of 1832 (WWV 29) an imitation of Beethoven. Although there
  were a few false starts, Wagner never completed another symphony. Despite
  the dismal failure of his youthful 'Drum-beat Overture' (WWV 10) in 1830,
  he persevered in composing overtures; the best example being the 'Faust
  Overture' (originally intended as the first movement of a symphony) in d
  minor (WWV 59) of 1840/1855. He also wrote a few marches, including one
  for the American Centennial (Grosser Festmarsch, WWV 110), written in
  1876. 

  Two other orchestral works are noteworthy: the Funeral Music (Trauermusik,
  WWV 73), for the return of Weber's ashes to Dresden, is for an enormous
  wind band. The 'Siegfried Idyll' (WWV 103) which at one time bore the
  title 'Symphony', and which is for an orchestra of 13 players, Ernest
  Newman believed had begun life as a string quartet. It was first performed
  as a birthday surprise for Cosima in 1870. 

* Choral Works 

  Wagner composed a variety of choral music, of which the following pieces
  are the most noteworthy. 'Das Liebesmahl der Apostel' (The Love Feast of
  the Apostles, WWV 69) is a biblical scene for choir, first performed by
  massed choral societies in Dresden in 1843. It is a strikingly original
  work, despite its hurried composition. 

  'An Webers Grabe' (WWV 72) is another piece composed for the return of
  Weber's ashes to Dresden. It was performed at the reburial ceremony on 15
  December 1844. 

* Vocal Works 

  The young Wagner composed several arias for insertion into operas by other
  composers, including a bass aria for Bellini's 'Norma' (WWV 52). He also
  composed a number of songs for solo voice and piano, including (during his
  miserable existence in Paris) a setting of Heine's 'The Two Grenadiers'
  (WWV 60). The most important of his songs are the 'Five Songs for a Female
  Voice' (WWV 91), to texts of Mathilde Wesendonck (1857-58). These songs
  are closely connected to (or studies for) 'Tristan und Isolde'. 

* Piano Works 

  Wagner's piano music mainly consists of small pieces, such as the
  'Albumblatt für Frau Betty Schott' of 1875 (WWV 108), or the 'Ankunft bei
  den schwarzen Schwänen' (Arrival of the Black Swans) of 1861 (WWV 95).
  Three more substantial works were composed in 1831-32: the Fantasia in f#
  minor (WWV 22), Sonata in B flat (Wagner's official 'opus one', WWV 21)
  and the 'Grosse Sonate' in A major (WWV 26). In 1853 Wagner composed
  another piano sonata, in A flat: 'Eine Sonate für das Album von Frau MW'
  (WWV 85), which some consider to be the most important of these piano
  works. 

  Wagner also made a number of piano arrangements during his Paris years, of
  which the most substantial is the four-hands version -- it could even be
  called a rewriting of -- the 'Grande fantasie sur la Romanesca' by Henri
  Herz (WWV 62c, 1841).
    

------------------------------

Subject:  F. Prose and poetry

  Besides his activity as a composer and a librettist Wagner wrote an
  astonishing number of books, articles and poems: the list published in 
  the "Wagner Handbook" contains about 240 titles.  There are a number of
  minor writings that are not included in that list, however, so the total
  is probably over 300. The literary spectrum ranges from aesthetic theory 
  to political speeches. 


------------------------------

Subject:  G. Abandoned operas

  In addition to works that were published during his lifetime, Wagner's
  output included sketches and drafts for stage works that were never
  completed. His first attempt at writing opera, at the age of 17, was
  soon abandoned and neither text nor music from his "pastoral opera",
  based on a play by Goethe, 'Die Laune des Verliebten', has survived. 
  His next operatic project was 'Die Hochzeit', WWV 31, from which three
  numbers have survived, although he destroyed the libretto. 

  Shortly after completing 'Das Liebesverbot' (see above), he attempted to
  write a grand historical opera, 'Die hohe Braut oder Bianca und
  Giuseppe', WWV 40. He completed only the libretto, which among other
  influences showed that of Schiller and which he allowed his friend Jan
  Bedrich Kittl to set to music. Kittl took such liberties with the book,
  however, in particular diluting the revolutionary content of the work
  and making much of the plot confused and unmotivated, that Wagner asked
  that his name be removed from it. The libretto that appears in volume 11
  of Wagner's collected works is the one rewritten by Kittl; it is unclear
  how much of Wagner's text remains in it, although a comparison with his
  prose draft shows that Kittl made significant changes. At about the same
  time, Wagner drafted a comedy based on a tale from the Arabian Nights:
  'Die glückliche Bärenfamilie', WWV 49. Unfortunately he abandoned the
  project after sketching the first three numbers.

  Later unrealised opera projects included 'The Mines at Falun' (Die
  Bergwerke zu Falun) WWV 67, 'Friedrich Barbarossa' WWV 76, 'Wayland the
  Smith' (Wieland der Schmied) WWV 82 and 'The Victors' (Die Sieger) WWV
  89. Only for the last of these did Wagner sketch any music; see Osthoff,
  1983.


------------------------------

Subject: III. Frequently asked questions

The answers given below have been compiled from responses given to similar
questions when they have been posted in the newsgroup. These answers do
not necessarily reflect the views of the editor.

         
------------------------------

Subject:  A. How can I get tickets to the Bayreuth Festival?

1. You can try writing, in English, German or French, to the box office of
  the Bayreuth Festival, not later than the middle of September, at the
  following address:

       BAYREUTHER FESTSPIELE
       Kartenbüro
       Postfach 10 02 62
       D-95402 Bayreuth
       Germany

  Ask for a booking form. When this arrives, you will need to complete it
  and send it back, to arrive not later than the closing date (which seems
  to get moved earlier almost every year; last year it was October 15th). 

  Now for the bad news. You won't get tickets. All you get is a 'negative'
  registered in the box office computer-system. You have to repeat this
  process each year until you have enough 'negatives' to qualify for
  tickets. Currently the waiting list seems to be about 8 years. The reason
  for this is very simple. In any season there are no more than 60,000
  tickets available. Some of these are allocated to the Wagner Societies or
  to other organizations, and a few go to tour operators. The remainder are
  sold via the box office, which gets about 600,000 ticket applications each
  year.

  If you are not concerned about attending particular performances, or about
  particular parts of the house, you can write "EGAL" across the appropriate 
  column. In other words, "I'll take anything".  You might also improve your 
  odds, by asking for older rather than newer productions.

  Do not rely on getting an order form automatically each year. Make a note
  in your diary to write in July.

2. You can join your local Wagner Society (see the list of home pages
  below). Each society gets a small allocation of tickets, probably in
  proportion to their paid-up membership. These are then allocated, usually
  by a ballot for which only members can apply. Apparently non-European
  Wagner Societies are allocated more tickets in proportion to their
  membership, than are European Wagner Societies.

3. If that also fails, the last thing you can do is come to Bayreuth and
  queue in front of the box office from early in the morning (with your
  evening wear in a bag, just in case) until just before the performance
  (when, sometimes, returned tickets appear as if by a miracle). 

4. After giving up at the box office, you can sit in front of the
  Festspielhaus, in your best evening wear, holding up a sign that says
  "Suche Karte" and with a sad look on your face. Do not give up even after
  the performance has begun; sometimes patrons leave during one of the
  intervals and give their tickets to some of the pathetic creatures sitting
  on the pavement. At least you get to see the last act. 

5. If money is no problem, buy a package tour that includes travel, hotel
  and a ticket. There are various opera-travel specialists who advertise in
  magazines such as 'Opera'. Call them and ask about Bayreuth packages. Try
  'Carlson Wagonlit' or 'Thomas Cook'. 

6. If you are wealthy, buy a ticket on the black market. WARNING! In recent
  years the attitude of the Festival management has hardened not only
  towards the "scalpers" who trade in black-market tickets but also those
  who buy such tickets. A "scalper" is anyone who asks more for a ticket
  than its face value. The Festival management regard such tickets as void
  and invalid. There have been instances of individuals with black-market
  tickets being forcibly ejected from the Festspielhaus and in at least
  one case dragged from their seats. It is reported that offenders are
  advised to leave Bayreuth immediately and not to return. So if you use a 
  black-market ticket, you must be prepared to be black-listed for life.

7. If you are really wealthy, join the Friends of Bayreuth. At present the
  initial fee is DM 900, followed by an annual subscription of DM 450.
  Friends are usually allocated a limited number of tickets every second
  year.

8. If you are a writing person, then get a newspaper or a magazine to send
  you as their correspondent. You will have to write something for them, of
  course.


------------------------------

Subject:  B. Where can I obtain the Ring Disc?

The Ring Disc is available for $80 via paypal directly from the web site
< www.ringdisc.com >.  It contains the entire Solti-conducted 'Ring' in 
compressed but tolerable mono sound, linked to the score and libretto with 
translation. Requires a Pentium PC.


------------------------------

Subject:  C. Was Wagner a personal friend of Adolf Hitler?

Adolf Hitler was born after Richard Wagner died. Hitler was without
doubt a great admirer of RW. Opinions differ on whether there was any
kind of direct influence. The fundamental problem of the Hitler-Wagner
link is that no-one has ever been able to satisfactorily explain or
understand Hitler. This would imply that no definitive understanding of
his relationship with RW is available at present. Sources that suggest
that RW was an important influence on Hitler include Hermann Rauschning
('Gespräche mit Hitler', 1940; 'Hitler Speaks', 1939) and
August Kubizek ('Adolf Hitler, mein Jugendfreund', 1955; 'Young Hitler,
the Story of Our Friendship', 1953). 

* Hermann Rauschning's 'Hitler Speaks'

The widely-held belief that Wagner was an important influence on Hitler
has been formed by the association of these two figures in the media and 
popular literature.  Popular (i.e. non-scholarly) discussion of Hitler's
relationship with Wagner ultimately relies on a single source: Hermann
Rauschning's 'Hitler Speaks'.  With the exception of a
speech given by Hitler at the unveiling of a memorial to Wagner on the
50th anniversary of the composer's death, Hitler rarely mentioned Wagner 
in public.  In that speech Hitler spoke of Wagner only as an artist; he
said nothing to suggest that Wagner had been an ideological influence on
him.  Records and recollections of Hitler's private conversations reveal
that he often spoke with enthusiasm about Wagner's music but never made
any reference to Wagner's political ideas.  So Rauschning's book is the
only source that presents Hitler acknowledging Wagner as an ideological
influence.

In the early 1930s Hermann Rauschning was the leader of the Nazi party
in Danzig.  He fell out with Gauleiter Albert Forster over economic
issues and had to resign under pressure from Hitler.  Rauschning then
left the Nazi party and Germany for the United States, where he
reinvented himself as a Christian conservative, claimed to have been a
close personal friend of Hitler, and wrote (almost certainly with the
assistance of a Hungarian-American journalist called Emery Reeves) his
book. For accounts of the origins of Rauschning's 'Conversations' see:
'Why Hitler: The Genesis of the Nazi Reich' by S.W. Mitcham Jr.
(Praeger, Westport and London, 1996), p. 137; and '1933: The Legality of
Hitler's Rise to Power' by H.W. Koch, in 'Aspects of the Third Reich'
(St. Martin's Press, New York, 1985), p. 39.

As was often the case with defectors of later decades, Rauschning tried
to satisfy the curiosity of his new masters even when his information
was very limited; and like other defectors, he exaggerated his own
importance and the extent of his high-level contacts. In recent years it
has been shown that passages in his book were compiled, by Rauschning
and his ghost-writer, from Hitler's speeches or other identifiable
sources (such as the writings of Nietzsche!); and so not recalled from
"conversations with Hitler". It has been established that Rauschning only
met Hitler on about four occasions, at Nazi party functions, where their
conversations consisted of small-talk. The balance of probability is
that those sections of the book that were not copied from already
published sources, were invented by Rauschning and Reeves. "The research
of the Swiss educator Wolfgang Hänel has made it clear that the
'Conversations' were mostly free inventions." ('Encyclopedia of the
Third Reich', ed Christian Zentner and Friedemann Bedürftig, tr. Amy
Hackert, MacMillan Publishing, 1991, volume 2, page 757). Hänel's
research, published in 1983, put the last nails in the coffin of
Rauschning's reputation.

In his acclaimed biography of Hitler, Ian Kershaw wrote: "I have on no
single occasion cited Hermann Rauschning's 'Hitler Speaks', a work now
regarded to have so little authenticity that it is best to disregard it
altogether." The leading German historian Hans Mommsen has written: "The
authenticity of Rauschning’s book, moreover, is no longer accepted
today". ('From Weimar to Auschwitz: Essays in German History', Hans
Mommsen, tr. Philip O'Connor, Oxford University Press, 1991, note 67.)
Except by a few writers who have drawn heavily on Rauschning for
inspiration (notably Robert Gutman and Joachim Köhler). They have been
reluctant to acknowledge their discredited source, which is only obvious
to readers who are familiar with the relevant passages in Rauschning's
book. 

Those who cling to the belief that Wagner was Hitler's ideological
forerunner and therefore (as their only support) to the authenticity of
Rauschning's 'Conversations' point to other historians, lawyers and
journalists who have accepted Rauschning's account without question.
Although this was common up to about 1975, Rauschning then became
regarded with increasing scepticism and his book eventually discredited
by the research summarised above, which revealed that the book was a
worthless hoax. 

* August Kubizek's 'Young Hitler'

Kubizek's recollections of his boyhood friend are a different matter,
although also here there are grounds for suspicion that material has
been elaborated if not invented. This book has long been popular with
Hitler's apologists and sympathisers, for its unusually rose-coloured
portrait of the Führer as a young man. The Hitler described in 'Young
Hitler' is no vicious madman, hardly even an anti-Semite, but rather
an intelligent aesthete and visionary, a patriot who showed unusual
leadership qualities from a young age.

Kubizek's 'Young Hitler' made three significant contributions to the 
myth of Hitler's inspiration by Wagner:
 1. He claimed that Hitler read at least some of Wagner's essays;
 2. He claimed that Hitler made an attempt to write an opera based on
Wagner's draft for 'Wayland the Smith'; and
 3. The story that Hitler attended a performance of 'Rienzi' with Kubizek, 
that after that performance Hitler decided to become the leader of a 
revitalised Germany, and that when Kubizek met Hitler again in 1938 and 
reminded him of that night, Hitler supposedly replied, "In that hour it 
began."

In his recent book 'Hitler and the Power of Aesthetics' (Overlook,
Woodstock and New York, 2003), Frederic Spotts is sceptical concerning
Kubizek's claim that the young Hitler read Wagner's prose writings and
letters. Even more so concerning Joachim Fest's claim (1973) that
Wagner's prose was Hitler's favourite reading matter. "There is no
corroborative evidence for either of these claims. Hitler never ascribed
any of his views to Wagner, not in 'Mein Kampf', his speeches, articles
or recorded private conversations... Indeed, there is no evidence that
Hitler ever read Wagner's collected writings, much less that they were
'his favourite reading'. The origin of the myth is probably Kubizek's
book, where the youthful Hitler was said to have read every biography,
letter, essay, diary and other scrap by and about his hero that he could
lay his hands on. But Kubizek himself contradicted that story in his
wartime 'Reminiscences', which he later expanded into the more
marketable, post-war book 'Young Hitler'."

A comparison of the two books is instructive. They were written for
different audiences: 'Reminiscences' in 1944-45 for the Nazi faithful
and the more polished 'Young Hitler' for a post-war readership. The
evidence of the 'Reminiscences' is that young Hitler had been impressed
by a performance of Wagner's 'Rienzi', and that Kubizek and Hitler
wandered round the "dark, cold and foggy streets of Linz" after the
show, and that it was a "memorable night". But Kubizek did not say, as
he would do later in 'Young Hitler', that on that night Hitler had
declared an intention to unite Germany. Or that, when Kubizek met Hitler
again in 1939 and reminded him of that night in Linz, Hitler had said,
"In that hour it began"; perhaps because those passages were written by
Kubizek's ghost-writer?

Apart from being popular with neo-Nazis, Kubizek's 'Young Hitler' has
been a key resource for those who have portrayed Wagner as a proto-Nazi
and as a source of Nazi ideology, such as Paul Rose, Marc Weiner and
Joachim Köhler.

------------------------------

Subject:  D. Wasn't Wagner anti-Semitic?

Wagner was an anti-Semite from, at the latest, 1850, when he wrote
'Judaism in Music' (Das Judenthum in der Musik). This essay was first
published anonymously in the 'Neue Zeitschrift für Musik' in two
instalments in September that year. RW took as his starting point earlier
articles in which Theodor Uhlig had attacked Meyerbeer's 'Les Huguenots'.
RW reprinted his article practically unchanged in 1869, thereby provoking
demonstrations at the first performances of 'Die Meistersinger'. It
includes the following assertions (page references are to Wm Ashton Ellis'
English translation of the Prose Works, which follows the 1869 revision):

  1. Jews are hateful (passim)
  2. Judaism is rotten at the core; a religion of hatred (PW3 p90-1)
  3. Jewish composers are comparable to worms feeding on the body of art 
     (PW3 p99)
  4. Jews are hostile to European civilisation (PW3 p84-5)
  5. The Jew rules the world through money (PW3 p81)
  6. The cultured Jew is "the most heartless of all human beings" (PW3 p87) 
  7. The Jews should, like Ahasuerus, "go under" (PW3 p100)
 
RW, however, did not explicitly advocate anything like extermination; and
in his private life had close Jewish friends who appear to have regarded
him with considerable affection. Nonetheless, his second wife Cosima held
strongly anti-Semitic views. 

After RW's death, Bayreuth became a focal point for anti-Semitic and
right-wing individuals, encouraged by Cosima. This culminated in the
marriage of her daughter Eva to the right-wing ideologue, Houston Stewart
Chamberlain, who saw world history in terms of conflict between races. The
son of Richard and Cosima, Siegfried, was more balanced, ruling out racial
exclusivity at Bayreuth, but he died in 1930. His English-born widow
Winifred developed a close friendship with Hitler when he was still a
young unknown, and was largely responsible for Bayreuth's Nazi links. 

A good starting point for reading about RW's anti-Semitism is the book by
Jacob Katz, 'The Darker Side of Genius'. A number of recent books have
taken a fresh look at this subject, including:

* 'Wagner: Race and Revolution' by Paul Lawrence Rose, who presented a
  view in which racial and anti-Semitic ideas were the driving force behind
  Wagner's creativity, even in 'Der fliegende Holländer'. Many Wagner
  scholars vehemently oppose this view, in particular harshly criticising
  Rose's scholarship; see for example Stewart Spencer's review ('Wagner',
  January 1995, pages 46-48). 

* 'Wagner and the Anti-Semitic Imagination' by Marc Weiner, is a study of
  Wagner's anti-Semitism that has been met with hostility by many
  Wagnerians, although other Wagnerians, including the author of this FAQ
  and also Anthony Arblaster in his review ('Wagner', January 1996, pages
  44-47), think that Weiner sheds light on some dark corners of Wagner's
  character.

These two books refer to earlier articles by Hartmut Zelinsky which
ignited a heated controversy in Germany. Zelinsky interpreted RW as a
proto-Nazi, and attempted to demonstrate that racial and anti-Semitic
schemes lay beneath the surface of RW's music-dramas. Hartmut Zelinsky's
published writings include: 

* In 'Musik-Konzepte 5: Richard Wagner: wie antisemitisch darf ein
  Künstler sein?', ed. H-K. Metger and R. Riehn. Article entitled: 'Die
  Feuerkur des Richard Wagner oder die neue Religion der Erlösung durch
  Vernichtung', Munich 1978. 

* 'Richard Wagner: ein deutsches Thema: Eine Dokumentation zur
  Wirkungsgeschichte Richard Wagners 1876-1976', Frankfurt am Main 1976,
  Vienna 1983. 

* In 'Parsifal: Texte, Materialen, Kommentare', ed. A. Csampai and D.
  Holland. Articles entitled: 'Richard Wagners letzte Karte', 'Der
  verschwiegene Gehalt des Parsifal'. Hamburg 1984.

Although himself a critic of Zelinsky, Barry Millington has presented
arguments for an anti-Semitic theme in 'Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg'.
The relevant articles are: 

* 'Nuremberg Trial: Is There Anti-Semitism in Die Meistersinger?', in
  'Cambridge Opera Journal', volume iii, 1991. Reprinted in 'The Wagner
  Compendium', London 1992 and in 'Wagner in Performance', New Haven 1992. 

* 'Richard Wagner's Anti-Semitism', in the 'Musical Times', December 1996.
  Reprinted in 'Wagner', May 1997, vol. 18 no.2.

Other sources that discuss Wagner's anti-Semitism include 'Aspects of
Wagner' by Bryan Magee (who has also written an interesting article on the
subject, included as an appendix to his 'Wagner and Philosophy'), 'Richard
Wagner: the Terrible Man and his Truthful Art' by M. Owen Lee, and Dieter
Borchmeyer in chapter 5 of the 'Wagner Handbook', in an appendix to his
'Richard Wagner: Theory and Theatre' and, at greater length, in his recent
book on this subject (proceedings of a seminar held in Bayreuth). 

Hmcw participant Simon Weil has written a study, 'Wagner and the Jews'.  
It can be found online at < http://members.aol.com/wagnerbuch/intro.htm >.

------------------------------

Subject:  E. Why does Siegmund sing the renunciation motif as he draws the   
          sword from the tree?

Several explanations have been offered. The simplest explanation is that
the leitmotiven are not as closely tied to non-musical ideas as many
people have thought; in other words the reason for Wagner using this
melody at this point could be purely musical. Other explanations try to
find a link between Alberich's renunciation of love, and later appearances
of this motif: Fricka's condemnation of Wotan's treatment of Freia,
Siegmund's drawing of the sword, Wotan's farewell to Brünnhilde and her
refusal to yield the ring. 

The occurrence in 'Die Walküre' act one has been regarded as problematic,
for example by Cooke in his book 'I Saw the World End'. It was suggested
that this is an example of dramatic irony: the sword-redemption is an
ironic moment, not only because of events in the immediate future, but
because for the first time, on a human level, Wagner reveals and
celebrates the protagonistic force (love) that will overcome worldly and
godly power. 

Discussion of what this motif might signify usually results in alternative
names being suggested for a motif that von Wolzogen called,
'Renunciation'. The names suggested by participants in hmcw have included
'Acceptance of Destiny', and 'Power of Love'. Another suggestion was that
since Siegmund's words are "Holiest Love's Deepest Distress", Wagner is
attempting to draw our attention not to Siegmund's distress, but rather to
the more far reaching distress of love itself, as it is threatened by the
loveless machinations of Alberich. 

Monte Stone, an occasional participant in hmcw, has included commentary on
this motif on his 'Ring-disc' (see B above). Stone notes that in one of
Wagner's drafts for 'Das Rheingold', he appears to refer to this motif as
'Love-Curse' (Liebesfluch), which is the name used by Darcy in his book
about this drama. Stone observes that Alberich goes beyond the
renunciation of love -- Alberich curses love itself. Later, "during
Siegmund's passionate affirmation of love, we are reminded of the curse
under which love labors, and we are given a brief but grim foreshadowing
of the fate in store for these lovers".


------------------------------

Subject:  F. Why didn't Alberich use his ring to escape when he was captured 
          by Wotan and Loge?

Perhaps because, from the moment Alberich's caught, his hands are tied, so
he cannot reach the ring, as he seems to need to. Only when he agrees to
the ransom, and sends his command to the Nibelungs, is he allowed to get
at it again. So that, one guesses, would be the time to use its power. In
productions by Scottish Opera and ENO, among others, Alberich was
thoroughly trussed up as Wagner intended, with only one hand freed to
wield the ring, and Wotan had his spearpoint at Alberich's throat
throughout. 

Or, for the same reason it couldn't protect Brunnhilde in 'Götterdämmerung',
Act I. The ring never had that kind of power. Deryck Cooke's, in 'I Saw
the World End', asserts that the Ring was only good for finding wealth,
i.e. gold. Alberich uses it for that purpose in 'Das Rheingold', and that is 
the reason Wotan wants it so badly. The power of the ring isn't a direct,
blow-them-away kind of power, although obviously it can help him create
such things. It cannot destroy rope or chains, or make them come loose. 

Finally, it might be that the ring does not have any power, except over
those who fear it. Therefore it does not have any effect on the disguised
Siegfried, who never learned (or has forgotten that he had learned) fear.
If Brünnhilde had been a little smarter, she would have realised from this
that her captor was Siegfried in disguise. 


------------------------------

Subject:  G. Why is Valhall set on fire at the end of the 'Ring' cycle?

Wagner said that Wotan had ended up by willing his own destruction. Wotan
loses part of himself, a part that continues to live in his daughter
Brünnhilde. She learns, and teaches Wotan, that love wins over power, in
the end. Not only is Valhall destroyed, but the Earth is purified by fire
and water. Perhaps Valhall burns for the same reason Manderly burns in
'Rebecca' and Atlanta burns in 'Gone with the Wind': to symbolize the end
of the old and the beginning of the new. 


------------------------------

Subject:  H. Why didn't Wagner kill off Alberich?
 
Some argue that Alberich *is* killed in the final apocalypse, we just
don't get to see it on stage. In a recent production in Stuttgart,
Alberich was killed on stage. But it has become fashionable in many recent
performances to speculate that Alberich *is* the only survivor, and that
he is plotting to steal the gold yet again...in other words, the stealing
of the gold is a sort of 'eternal recurrence' in which events are doomed
to repeat themselves throughout eternity. 

In the Barenboim/Kupfer 'Ring', before the music starts, the curtain opens
on a full stage, and Alberich is lying on the stage in the forefront. The
other characters soundlessly depart, then the music begins, and when it is
time for Alberich to enter the scene, he simply stands up rather than
entering from offstage. When we reach the conclusion of 'Götterdämmerung',
Alberich arrives on stage just as the gold is returned to the
Rhinemaidens, and then he ends up in the exact same spot where he is at
the beginning. Presumably the figures on stage at the beginning of 'Das
Rheingold' were the participants in some earlier 'Ring' cycle. In other
words, Alberich is the linking element between an infinite series of
dramas in which Alberich fights to obtain the gold. The Chicago 'Ring'
also used this idea, as the last image on stage is of Alberich and a group
of Nibelungs under his control manipulating some sort of ring-shaped
device. 


------------------------------

Subject:  I. Who are the Wagner family and how are they related to each 
other?

The following members of the Wagner family often are mentioned in the 
newsgroup:

 i. Wolfgang Wagner (b. 1919) is the present head of the family and chief 
 administrator of the Bayreuth Festival.  Wolfgang and his brother Wieland 
 were the prime movers in the revival of the Festival after WW2 and in the 
 development of the "New Bayreuth" style of production that was first 
 presented at the 1951 Festival.  The English edition of his autobiography
 'Acts' appeared in 1994.

 ii. Wieland Wagner (1917-1966) has been widely regarded as one of the most
 gifted directors in the history of the theatre.  Inspired by the theories
 of Adolphe Appia, Wieland designed and produced minimalist stagings of
 his grandfather's works in Bayreuth and elsewhere.  These productions 
 emphasised the epic and universal in the Wagner dramas and explored the 
 texts from a viewpoint of  depth psychology.  See Penelope Turing's book 
 'New Bayreuth' (1969).

 iii. Nike Wagner (b. 1945) is a daughter of Wieland Wagner and Gertrud
 Reissiger.  Nike has been openly critical of Wolfgang Wagner and of the
 current administration of the Bayreuth Festival.  Her latest book has
 appeared in English translation as 'The Wagners: The Dramas of a Musical 
 Dynasty' (2001).

 iv. Eva Wagner-Pasquier (b. 1945) is the daughter of Wolfgang Wagner and
 his first wife Ellen Drexel.  Eva has been named to succeed her father as
 chief administrator of the Bayreuth Festival by its Board of Directors.

 v. Gottfried Wagner (b. 1947) is the estranged son of Wolfgang Wagner and
 Ellen Drexel.  Over recent years Gottfried has moved from a position in
 which he criticised Richard Wagner's life and works, the achievements of
 his own family and the Bayreuth Festival as it exists, to a position of
 active hostility.  His autobiography has appeared under various titles 
 including 'He who does not howl with the wolf' (1998).  Adolf Hitler was 
 known to the young Wolfgang Wagner as "Uncle Wolf".

 vi. Katharina Wagner (b. 1978) is the daughter of Wolfgang and Gudrun 
 Wagner.  She will make her debut as opera producer in September 2002
 with "Der fliegende Holländer" at Mainfrankentheater in Würzburg.

There is a fairly complete family tree showing the descendants of Richard
and Cosima Wagner on the Web < http://home.c2i.net/monsalvat/wagtree.gif >
(produced by Joseph Erbacher). 


------------------------------

Subject:  J. Does anybody know the title of the helicopter tune in 
'Apocalypse Now'?

The 'Ride of the Valkyries' (Der Ritt der Walküren) from the music-drama,
'The Valkyrie' (Die Walküre). It is played at the start of the third act.


------------------------------

Subject:  K. What about Wagner's women?

RW's posthumous reputation as a womaniser is not justified by what is known
of his liaisons. Wagner's more significant, intimate relationships with
members of the female sex involved: 

i. Wilhelmine (Minna) Wagner née Planer (1809-1866) 

  RW's biographers are critical of his treatment of Minna, perhaps more so
  than the facts support. The young Wagner married a woman who was in no way
  suitable for him, given that her intellect and interests were no match for
  Richard's own. She had been seduced at the age of 15, and had a daughter,
  Nathalie, who was always passed off as her little sister. It was later
  discovered that Minna would not be able to have any more children, and the
  Wagners considered adopting a child. 

  Within a few weeks of their wedding in 1836, Minna ran off with another
  man. Richard accepted her back, and she stuck by him during the turbulence
  and hardship of their years in Riga, London, Paris and Dresden. Finally
  she followed him into exile in Switzerland, where their marriage was
  wrecked on the rocks of 'Tristan und Isolde'. Richard, to his credit,
  continued to support Minna financially (or at least, his creditors did
  so!) until her death; although at one time he considered seeking a
  divorce. 

ii. Jessie Laussot née Taylor (1829-1905) 

  The musical, English-born wife of a Bordeaux wine merchant. Richard and
  Jessie had a brief but passionate affair there in 1850, but plans to elope
  to Greece were prevented by the intervention of her husband. Jessie left
  him soon after and moved to Florence, where she lived with and later
  married the essayist Karl Hillebrand. Jessie was also a friend to Liszt,
  von Bülow and Julie Ritter, mother of Karl Ritter and a benefactor of
  Wagner; before the Bordeaux affair, Jessie and Julie had plans to set up a
  fund for Wagner's financial support. 

iii. Mathilde Wesendonck née Luckemeyer (1828-1902) 

  Poet and author. Richard and Mathilde exchanged voluminous correspondence
  over more than a decade. Otto and Mathilde Wesendonck helped the Wagners
  financially and provided a home for them, in the form of 'Der Asyl', a
  cottage in the grounds of their Zurich mansion. RW's friendship for
  Mathilde developed into love, and she became the muse to the poet as he
  wrote the text and music of 'Tristan und Isolde'. Eventually, Minna could
  tolerate the intimacy of Mathilde and her husband no longer; there was a
  crisis, after which Richard left Zurich for Venice, where he resumed work
  on his music-drama in relative calm.

iv. Friederike Meyer (?-?) 

  Actress, sister of Frau Meyer-Dustmann of the Vienna Opera. It seems that
  Friederike had a brief affair with Wagner in 1862, after he had separated
  from Minna. As a result of the affair, Wagner had difficulties in getting
  'Tristan und Isolde' staged at the Vienna Opera. 

v. Mathilde Maier (1833-1910) 

  Mathilde seems to have been a sweet-natured young woman, whose heart went
  out to the unhappy composer she met at Schott's house in Mainz in 1862. It
  is almost certain that Wagner considered marrying her; he might even have
  proposed. Unlike some of Wagner's other women, she is mentioned in his
  autobiography. 

vi. Cosima von Bülow née Liszt (1837-1930) 

  Cosima was the illegitimate daughter of the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt
  and the French aristocrat, the Countess Marie d'Agoult. As a result of
  this parentage, no doubt, she became an ardent German nationalist. She
  married the composer and pianist Hans von Bülow, and it was as the
  Baroness von Bülow that she first met RW; the occasion was a visit to
  Zurich, during which Wagner read the poem of his 'Tristan und Isolde' to a
  small gathering that included Minna, Cosima and Mathilde. Later, with her
  marriage under strain, she began an affair with Wagner. Their conduct
  scandalised the Munich public. Wagner had told King Ludwig that he and
  Cosima were just good friends, but this relationship was put to a test
  when Malwida Schnorr von Carolsfeld (the first Isolde) revealed to Ludwig
  that Cosima was Richard's mistress. The only person who seems to have
  taken the whole affair calmly was Hans, who remained a faithful friend and
  supporter to the Wagners for the rest of his life. After the death of
  Minna Wagner and the completion of divorce proceedings, Cosima and Richard
  were able to marry. 

  Cosima remained at Wagner's side for the rest of his life. Apart from
  running the Wagner household, Cosima acted as her husband's secretary. She
  also recorded Richard's life in deeds and words, in the diary entries that
  she made almost every day. They were inseparable in life and in death. On
  13 February 1883, Richard died in Cosima's arms; she then held onto his
  body for the next 24 hours. After the funeral, Cosima began to take charge
  of the Bayreuth Festival, which remained under her administration and
  artistic control until a series of strokes incapacitated her in December
  1906. After her death in 1930, Cosima was buried beside Richard in the
  garden of Haus Wahnfried. 

vii. Judith Mendès Gautier (1845-1917) 

  French novelist and writer on music, who first visited the Wagners at
  'Tribschen' in 1869. Judith had an affair with Wagner during the 1876
  Festival, but how far it went is uncertain. At that time she was separated
  from her husband Catulle Mendès, but had arrived in Bayreuth with Louis
  Benedictus. Wagner was infatuated with her during his last years, although
  she was relatively cool to him. They kept up a secret correspondence
  during the late 1870's; Judith's letters being sent to Wagner's barber.
  Eventually Cosima put a stop to it, and burned a number of her letters.
  Judith also helped Wagner with the procurement of the silks, satins and
  rose-water that he needed for his work-room at 'Wahnfried', while he wrote
  'Parsifal'. Judith translated the libretto into French. 

viii. Carrie Pringle (?-?) 

  English soprano, one of the 1882 flowermaidens. It was the announcement of
  an impending visit by Carrie to Wagner in Venice, that is thought to have
  prompted the argument between Cosima and Richard that precipitated his
  fatal heart- attack. Only two days earlier, he had told Cosima that he had
  dreamt about Schröder-Devrient (the first Adriano, Senta and Venus): "All
  my women are now passing before my eyes".
      

------------------------------

Subject:  L. What is the name of the mortal woman who is mother to Siegmund
             and Sieglinde?
       
Mrs. Wälse is not named. Fricka refers to the mother of Siegmund and
Sieglinde as a she-wolf: "jetzt dem Wurfe der Wölfin wirfst du zu Füssen
dein Weib?" (Walküre act 2) 

Here Wagner is mixing his main Siegmund source, the Volsungasaga, with the
story of the Wölfings. (Siegmund to Hunding: "Ein Wölfing kündet dir das,
den als Wölfing mancher wohl kennt", Walküre act 1). The main sources for
this clan were the saga of Dietrich von Bern (Thikdrek af Berns Saga) and
the Hugdietrich-Wolfdietrich poems. 

Returning to Volsungasaga, however, we read that Sigmund and his sister
were twins, among the children (ten boys, of whom Sigmund was the eldest,
and one daughter, Signy) of Volsung and his wife, Hljód. Interestingly,
Hjlód was not a "mortal woman", but the daughter of Hrimnir the giant. It
is possible that Hjlód was the daughter of Hrimnir who was described as
one of Odin's wishmaidens, earlier in the saga. Volsung is the third of
his line, his grandfather Sigi being "reportedly" the son of Odin. So both
Sigmund's mother and father had connections with Odin. 

But that's all in one of Wagner's sources for the 'Ring', not in the
'Ring' poems themselves. Strictly speaking, Mrs. Wälse does not have a
name. If you want to give her a name, then Hljód (huh-l-yöd) is as good as
any. This Old Norse name translates as "howling", which seems singularly
appropriate for a she-wolf!


------------------------------

Subject: M. Which recording of the 'Ring'/ 'Dutchman'/ 'Lohengrin'/ 'Tristan'
/ 'Parsifal' should I get as my first version?

It is extremely difficult to answer these questions. Firstly, because
responses to recordings (and for that matter, to performances) vary
greatly. Secondly, because there is no *definitive* recording of any of
Wagner's stage works. It is possible to give some suggestions, however,
based on the following assumptions:

 i.  A beginner usually wants a recording in excellent sound, therefore we
 should first consider modern, stereo, possibly digital recordings.  The 
 beginner might wish to explore historical recordings later on, but not 
 first.
 ii. A beginner would prefer to avoid recordings with distracting stage 
 sounds or audience noise.  Therefore many live recordings can be ruled
 out.
 iii. All listeners prefer great singers over good singers, and would
 prefer not to listen to recordings with less good singers.
 iv. If one begins with a recording that employs either unusually fast or
 unusually slow tempi, all subsequent recordings heard will sound either
 too slow or too fast in relation to one's first impression of the work.
 v. A beginner might not want to spend too much money, so we should
 consider recordings that might be available at a discount.  Unfortunately
 this mitigates against recommending the very latest recordings.
 vi. It would also be helpful if the first recording was packaged with a 
 libretto, which the cheapest recordings usually lack.

Taking both the above and newsgroup discussions into consideration, the 
editor of this FAQ makes so bold as to suggest the following as first
recordings.

* _Der Ring des Nibelungen_, studio recording, DECCA/London, 1964.
  Conductor: Sir Georg Solti. Vienna State Opera Chorus and Vienna
  Philharmonic. With Hans Hotter (R,S), George London (W), Birgit Nilsson,
  James King, Régine Crespin and Wolfgang Windgassen. Some consider the
  _Götterdämmerung_ of this cycle to be not only the best Wagner recording
  ever, but the best recording of the 20th century. The Penguin Opera Guide
  comments, "There is not a single weak link in the cast". Recently reissued
  after remastering. See the Wagner Books FAQ for books by John Culshaw, the
  producer of this recording. A beginner might also find useful the CD set,
  'An Introduction to Der Ring des Nibelungen', in which Deryck Cooke
  introduces the leitmotives of this work, using musical examples from the
  Solti/Culshaw recording.

* _Dutchman_, studio recording, Naxos, 1992. Conductor: Pinchas Steinberg.
  ORF Symphony Orchestra, Budapest Radio Chorus. With Alfred Muff, Ingrid
  Haubold, Erich Knodt and Peter Seiffert. A cheap and cheerful recording
  with libretto but no translation. Alternative also currently at budget
  price: Dorati on Decca/London, 1962, with London, Rysanek, Tozzi and
  Liebl, no libretto.

* _Lohengrin_, studio recording, EMI, 1964. Conductor: Rudolf Kempe.
  Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, Vienna State Opera Chorus. The Swan Knight
  is Jess Thomas. Also with Elisabeth Grümmer, Dietrich Fischer- Dieskau,
  Christa Ludwig (in a much-admired interpretation of Ortrud), Gottlob Frick
  and Otto Wiener. There are some imperfections in sound quality. Reissued
  on 3 CDs (and therefore usually cheaper than sets with 4 CDs).
  Alternative: Kubelik.

* _Tristan und Isolde_, live recording, DGG, 1966. Conductor: Karl Böhm.
  Chorus and Orchestra of the Bayreuth Festival. Recorded in RW's Festival
  Theatre. With Wolfgang Windgassen and Birgit Nilsson in the title roles.
  Also with Christa Ludwig, Eberhard Waechter and Martti Talvela. Although
  the tempi are a little faster than usual (which allows each act to fit on
  a single CD) and the orchestral playing is not always perfect, this is
  widely regarded as one of the best 'Tristan' recordings. There is no
  audience noise and very little stage noise. Recently reissued after
  remastering. For alternatives, see the new discography by J. Brown.

* _Parsifal_, studio recording, Teldec, 1991. Conductor: Daniel Barenboim.
  Berlin State Opera Chorus and the Berlin Philharmonic. Parsifal is
  Siegfried Jerusalem, Kundry is Waltraud Meier, Gurnemanz is Matthias
  Hölle. Amfortas is José van Dam.  Alternatively, the 1980 Bavarian Radio
  studio recording conducted by Rafael Kubelik.  Parsifal is James King,
  Kundry is Yvonne Minton, Gurnemanz is Kurt Moll, Amfortas is Bernd Weikl.  
  For other alternatives, see the online discography of complete recordings 
  at < http://home.c2i.net/monsalvat/discogra.htm >.


------------------------------

Subject: N. How can I get inside the Palazzo Vendramin in Venice?

Richard Wagner and his family moved into the Palazzo Vendramin-Calergi on
the Grand Canal on 18 September 1882.  It was there that Wagner died on 13 
February 1883.  

Palazzo Vendramin now houses the local Casino. Wagnerians visiting Venice
who wish to visit the "Wagner rooms" must make an appointment in advance.
The following are the visiting arrangements at present. They might be
changed at any time without notice.

You can only visit the rooms on Saturday at 10 a.m. precisely, if and only
if you have made an appointment prior to noon the Friday before. To do this
you must telephone (+39) (41) 52-32-544 and speak (in Italian) to Signora
Pugliese.

Note! You will not be admitted if you turn up on Saturday without an
appointment, nor will you be admitted if you arrive later than 10 a.m.

There is no information about visiting the Wagner rooms at the main door of
the Palazzo at the "calle larga Vendramin"; but outside the main door there
is a small sign with an arrow showing the way to the "staff entrance". This
is two minutes (one block) away at the "calle Vendramin". At the staff
entrance there should be a porter to assist visitors.



------------------------------

Subject: O. What is the difference between the 'Liebestod' and 'Isolde's
     Transfiguration'?

The ending of 'Tristan und Isolde' is often, wrongly, called the 'Liebestod'
(Love-death). Wagner himself referred to it as 'Isolde's Transfiguration'
and he applied the term 'Liebestod' not to the end of the drama, but to the
prelude to the first act. See Wagner's letter to Weissheimer of 5 October
1862, in which he proposed to make a concert-piece from the 'Liebestod'
followed by the 'Transfiguration'.


------------------------------

Subject: P. When can I applaud at a performance of 'Parsifal'?

When 'Parsifal' was first performed at Bayreuth in 1882 there was some
confusion about when to applaud.  At the end of the second act there was
much applause and shouting, at which Wagner got up in his box and called
out to the audience that he had asked for no curtain calls until the end
of the performance.  At the end there was silence until Wagner got up and
said that he had not meant that they could not applaud, after which there
was enthusiastic applause and confused curtain calls.  By the second 
performance various accounts of what he had said were circulating.  Many 
thought that Wagner had asked for no applause until the end of each 
performance and therefore the first two acts were received in silence 
(except for Wagner himself shouting "bravo" at the departing Magic Maidens, 
for which he was hissed).  At the third and subsequent performances there
was no applause at the end of the first act but applause after the second
and third acts.  This became a Bayreuth tradition that continues to this
day.  Wagner gave the custom his approval, saying that applause was not
appropriate after the quiet ending of the first act, but the claim that it
was his idea is untrue.

The tradition of not applauding at the end of the first act of 'Parsifal'
is a Bayreuth Festival tradition. Therefore it does not apply in ordinary
opera houses. Sometimes, in some houses, there is a note in the programme
asking for no applause at the end of the first act; but in the absence of
any such request it is entirely up to each member of the audience whether
to applaud at the end of the first or subsequent acts. Please do not hiss
or "shush" those who choose to applaud.   Above all, please do not follow
Wagner's example and shout "bravo" at the end of the scene with the Flower
Maidens!


------------------------------

Subject: Q. What new productions are planned for the Bayreuth Festival?

The following productions have been announced:

 2004 Parsifal
 Conductor: 	Pierre Boulez
 Production: 	Christoph Schlingensief 
 Stage design: 	Thomas Goerge and Daniel Angermayr 
 Costumes: 	Tabea Braun.

 2005 Tristan und Isolde
 Conductor: 	Eiji Oue
 Production: 	Christoph Marthaler
 Stage design and costumes: Anna Viebrock.

 2006 Der Ring des Nibelungen
 Conductor: 	Christian Thielemann; 
 Production: 	Lars von Trier; 
 Stage design: 	Karl Juliusson.

Existing productions are phased out as new ones are introduced.  


------------------------------

Subject: R. Who were the Herodias and Gundryggia referred to in 'Parsifal'?

At the beginning of the second act of 'Parsifal' the sorcerer Klingsor
conjures Kundry out of her death-like sleep, recalling that she has been
both Herodias and Gundryggia.  This is a reference to earlier lives in
Kundry's cycle of existence.

The historical Herodias was the wife of the tetrarch Philip and later of
his brother Herod Antipas. She is mentioned in the New Testament as the
cause of the death of John the Baptist. Herodias and her daughter became
the subject of several poetic and dramatic treatments during the
nineteenth century, including Heine's poem "Atta Troll", Flaubert's
novella "Herodias" and later Wilde's play "Salome". Herodias was
infamous for her incestuous marriage and her contempt for religion, as
Wagner knew from reading Renan's "Life of Jesus". Although she belonged
to the ruling family of Judea, Herodias was neither Jewish by race or by
religion.

The name Gundryggia most likely was invented by Wagner. It is a play on
the name of Gunn, one of the favourite valkyries of Odin (=Wotan). The
connection between Herodias and Gunn is that in different versions of
the same folk tradition, they ride with the Wild Hunt. In Germanic folk
legend Herodias became identified with Frau Holda, who was variously
equated to the goddesses Diana or Venus. The identification with Diana
was recalled by Heine in his "Atta Troll".

------------------------------

Subject: S. Was Beckmesser based on Eduard Hanslick?

The simple answer to this question is "no". Hanslick was not known to
Wagner when he wrote his first Prose Draft of "Die Meistersinger" in
July 1845. The character who in the libretto (of 1862) would be given
the name of Sextus Beckmesser is a caricature of music-critics in
general and it is beyond doubt that one of the music-critics whom Wagner
had in mind when he wrote the libretto was Eduard Hanslick. 

It is widely believed, however, that Beckmesser was a caricature of
Hanslick alone. There are two reasons for this widespread but erroneous
belief. The first of them is that, in the second Prose Draft of October-
November 1861, Wagner gave the name Veit Hanslich to the Marker and Town
Clerk. This was a private joke of which he soon tired, however, and in
the poem or libretto written in January 1862 he gave this character the
name of Beckmesser. The second reason is Wagner's account of a reading
of his poem in Vienna in November 1862 ("My Life" pages 703-4).
According to this autobiographical account, Wagner believed that
Hanslick was in some discomfort at this reading and friends of Wagner
who were present got the impression (according to Wagner; his account
is not corroborated) that Hanslick had seen himself as Wagner's target. 

In late 1846 there appeared in the "Allgemeine Wiener Musikzeitung" a
number of references to Richard Wagner by a young music critic, Eduard
Hanslick. The young man hailed Wagner as "the greatest living dramatic
talent". He sent Wagner his enthusiastic review of "Tannhäuser", for
which Wagner thanked him in a long letter of 1 January 1847. This was
the beginning of a friendship that eventually collapsed under the weight
of differences of opinion about musical aesthetics. Hanslick became
increasingly critical of Wagner, who began to regard the critic if not
as an enemy at least as no longer a friend. Hence the joking renaming of
the Marker as "Veit Hanslich" in the second Prose Draft of "Die
Meistersinger". 

On closer examination there is no reason to believe that Hanslick saw
the poem of "Die Meistersinger" (in which the character was called
Beckmesser, of course) as a personal attack. Indeed there is nothing to
indicate that he knew about "Veit Hanslich". Not even in the account of
the Viennese incident in Hanslick's memoirs (see Spencer's compilation,
"Wagner Remembered", pages 135-138). His supposed reaction to the poem
is a myth of Wagner's invention. 

The myth has been given a new lease of life by Barry Millington, who has
argued that Beckmesser is an anti-Semitic caricature.  The reason for
Wagner to introduce the anti-Semitic references that Millington has
ingeniously decoded is, we are told, that Beckmesser is a caricature of
Hanslick, whom Wagner believed to be of Jewish descent. Those who wish
to read more about this complicated theory are referred to the articles
listed under the answer to Question D above. 



------------------------------

Subject: IV. Where can I find more information?


------------------------------

Subject:  A. Offline sources

The following sources of information can be found in libraries and bookstores.

------------------------------

Subject:    i. What books should every Wagner fan have on their bookshelves?

We suggest the following: 

* At least one of the biographies, such as Millington's (in one volume) or
  Newman's (in four volumes).  None of Wagner's biographers are infallible.
  Both Millington and Newman have their particular angles and prejudices.

* 'Wagner Nights' (UK title) or 'The Wagner Operas' (US title) by Ernest
  Newman.  Useful for information on the sources, text and music of the
  canonical works, but of limited assistance in understanding them.

* Of Wagner's own writings, his 'Opera and Drama' (Oper und Drama) of 1851
  -- online in German at 
  < http://www.gutenberg.aol.de/wagner/operdram/operdram.htm >
  -- and 'The Art-Work of the Future' (Das Kunstwerk der Zukunft) of 1849
  -- online in English at 
  < http://users.belgacom.net/wagnerlibrary/prose/wagartfut.htm >.

* Either Schopenhauer's 'The World as Will and Representation' (Die Welt
  als Wille und Vorstellung), or any introductory text on Schopenhauer's
  philosophy (such as Michael Tanner's 54 page 'Schopenhauer' in the 
  series 'The Great Philosophers' from Phoenix Paperbacks).


------------------------------

Subject:    ii. Wagner's writings

There have been two major editions of Wagner's writings, in German, as
follows: 

* 'Gesammelte Schriften und Dichtungen', 10 volumes, Leipzig 1871-83. The
  first edition of Collected Writings, prepared under RW's direct super-
  vision. 

* 'Sämtliche Schriften und Dichtungen', 16 volumes, Leipzig 1911-1916.
  Currently it is the most complete edition of Wagner's prose and poetry. 

The nearest thing to a complete edition available in English is 'Richard 
Wagner's Prose Works' in 8 volumes. For details, see the Wagner Books FAQ.

English translations of some of Wagner's shorter prose works, together with
letters and articles by Wagner and his close associates, can be found online
at the 'Wagner Library': < http://users.belgacom.net/wagnerlibrary/ >, an
ongoing project of Patrick Swinkels.



------------------------------

Subject:    iii. Wagner's musical compositions

The critical edition of Wagner's musical and dramatic works is:

* 'Sämtliche Werke', 31 volumes, Mainz 1970-.  Editor: Dr. Egon Voss. 

The planned content of this at present incomplete edition is as follows:
  Vol. I:	Die Feen
  Vol. II:	Das Liebesverbot
  Vol. III:	Rienzi
  Vol. IV:	Der fliegende Holländer
  Vol. V:	Tannhäuser (1845-1860)
  Vol. VI:	Tannhäuser (1861-1875)
  Vol. VII:	Lohengrin
  Vol. VIII:	Tristan und Isolde
  Vol. IX:	Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
  Vol. X:	Das Rheingold	
  Vol. XI:	Die Walküre
  Vol. XII:	Siegfried
  Vol. XIII:	Götterdämmerung
  Vol. XIV:	Parsifal
  Vol. XV:	Unfinished stage works and insertion numbers
  Vol. XVI:	Choral works
  Vol. XVII:	Songs with piano accompaniment
  Vol. XVIII:	Orchestral works
  Vol. XIX:	Keyboard works
  Vol. XX:	Arrangements
  Vol. XXI:	Supplement (diverse)
  Vol. XXII:	Text and documents: Die Feen, Das Liebesverbot
  Vol. XXIII:	Text and documents: Rienzi
  Vol. XXIV:	Text and documents: Der fliegende Holländer
  Vol. XXV:	Text and documents: Tannhäuser
  Vol. XXVI:	Text and documents: Lohengrin
  Vol. XXVII:	Text and documents: Tristan und Isolde
  Vol. XXVIII:	Text and documents: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
  Vol. XXIX:	Text and documents: Der Ring des Nibelungen
  Vol. XXX:	Text and documents: Parsifal
  Vol. XXXI:	Stage works without music

For books about Wagner's works, see the Wagner Books FAQ, section IV.


------------------------------

Subject:    iv. Diaries of Richard and Cosima Wagner

The publication of diaries by Cosima Wagner, that had long been suppressed
by the Wagner family, has greatly increased our knowledge of Richard and
Cosima Wagner and their life together. Also Richard's own diaries/
notebooks are of interest. The Wagner diaries are the following: 

* 'Die Rote Brieftasche' in 'Sämtliche Briefe', ed. G. Strobel and W. Wolf,
  1967. Wagner's Red Pocketbook, containing his autobiographical notes for 
  the years 1835 to 1839. Notes from later years were included in the 
  'Brown Book' as the 'Annals'. 

* 'Das Braune Buch: Tagebuchaufzeichnungen, 1865 bis 1882', ed. Joachim
  Bergfeld, 1975. Wagner's diary and notebook, which he used at various 
  times between 1865 and 1882. English translation by George Bird, 1980, 
  as 'The Brown Book'. 

* 'Cosima Wagner: Die Tagebücher' 1869-1883, 2 vols. hardback, 4 vols.
  paperback. Edited by Martin Gregor-Dellin and Dietrich Mack, 1976-77. 
  English translation in 2 volumes by Geoffrey Skelton, 1978-1980; out of 
  print, but a condensed version is available in one volume. 

Details of English editions of the above are given in the Wagner Books FAQ.

------------------------------

Subject:    v. Letters to and from Richard Wagner

RW was an active correspondent, often writing several letters a day. It
has been estimated that he wrote over 10,000 letters during his lifetime.
Unfortunately, Cosima Wagner destroyed many unpublished letters, including
the originals of Richard's letters to Mathilde Wesendonck, Nietzsche's
letters to Cosima, Peter Cornelius' letters to Richard, and all of the
correspondence with Hans von Bülow in the period preceding and immediately
after their divorce. In 1909 she even burned many of Richard's letters to
herself.  Wagner himself destroyed letters from Judith Gautier.

Many of Wagner's letters have been published, usually in a separate volume
for each correspondent; for example, the letters between RW and Mathilde
Wesendonck (an important resource for students of 'Tristan', 'Die Sieger'
and 'Parsifal') were published in Berlin, 1904, with an English
translation (by Ellis) of them published in London, in 1905. Also
important is the collection of correspondence between RW and his patron,
King Ludwig II of Bavaria, 5 vols., edited by Otto Stroebel and published
1936-39, Karlsruhe.

In 1967, work began on a complete edition of the existing letters in their
original languages.  At that time, the editors anticipated an edition of
fifteen volumes, but in the introduction to volume 6, they revised their
estimate to 30 volumes, containing between 7000 and 7500 letters.  The 
project is now being led by Dr. Werner Breig.

More than 500 letters in English translation have been edited by Stewart
Spencer and Barry Millington. 


------------------------------

Subject:    vi. Wagner-related periodicals

There are few periodicals dedicated to Wagner studies. One of them is,
appropriately, entitled 'Wagner'. It is published three times each year by
the Wagner Society of the UK. Most Wagner Societies also publish their own
newsletter; that of the UK Society has the title, 'Wagner News'.


------------------------------

Subject:    vii. Sources for Wagner's texts

To save space in this FAQ, information about Wagner's sources has been 
moved to a new document: < http://home.c2i.net/monsalvat/srcdocs.htm >.


------------------------------

Subject:    viii. The Bayreuth Festival

A good general history of the Festival can be found in Frederick Spott's
book, 'Bayreuth: A History of the Wagner Festival', Yale 1994.  

The atmosphere of 19th century Bayreuth was captured in Colette's novel
'Claudine and Annie' (Claudine s'en va), which is included in 'The
Claudine Novels', Penguin USA, 1995. 

Other books about the history of the Bayreuth Festival and productions of
Wagner's stage works at the Festival, can be found in Section VII of the
Wagner Books FAQ.


------------------------------

Subject:  B. On-line sources


------------------------------

Subject:   i. A few good, general Web sites about Richard Wagner

* Richard Wagner Archive < http://users.utu.fi/hansalmi/wagner.spml >
  Hannu Salmi's web site is a comprehensive source of information about RW
  and his works. In English and German. 

* Richard Wagner Web Site < http://www.trell.org/wagner >
  Kristian Evensen's web site contains some fascinating articles. In 
  English, German and Norwegian. 

* Operas and music dramas < http://gla.ecoledoc.lip6.fr/~sarnikow/wagner/ >
  Gilles Sarnikowski's web site includes a short biography of RW, notes on
  the operas and music-dramas, and a discography. In English and French. 


------------------------------

Subject:   ii. Web sites, synopses and online discographies

* There is a general discography of Wagner's operas and dramas (by Jonas 
  Ericsson) at:  
< http://www20.brinkster.com/joentertainment/wagner_discography/welcome.htm >

* Geoffrey Riggs has a web site called 'The Collectors Guide to Opera 
  Recordings and Videos' which provides recommendations for eleven of
  Wagner's operas and dramas: 
  < http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/7023/index.html >

Other sources:

* 'Tristan und Isolde' < http://unchance.net/Liebestod/ >

* 'Ring' < http://allenbdunningmd.com/RingThemes.htm >

* 'Parsifal' < http://home.c2i.net/monsalvat/index.htm >

* There are synopses for several of Wagner's stage works at 
  < http://www.metopera.org/synopses/ >

* For other links, see under Composers - W in the Coordination Opera 
  Resource Pages at < http://www.operabase.com/corpus/ >.


------------------------------

Subject:   iii. Web sites related to the Bayreuth Festival

* Homepage of the Bayreuth Festival at
  < http://www.bayreuther-festspiele.de/fshome_dt.html >
  This is the official homepage with up-to-date information about the 
  Festival;  with booking information, performance dates and casts.

* Bayreuth Festival News at < http://www.festspiele.de/ >
  A lively site maintained by a Bayreuth-based newspaper.

* Bayreuth casts 1876-2001 can be found at
  < http://www.wagnermania.com/bayreuth/ >


------------------------------

Subject:    iv. Wagner Societies

A number of Wagner Societies (each affiliated to the international 
Richard-Wagner-Verband) have their own Web pages, including the following: 

* Finnish Wagner Society - 
  < http://www.utu.fi/~hansalmi/sws/sws.html >

* Richard-Wagner-Verband Berlin - 
  < http://www.wagnerverband-berlin.de/ >

* Richard-Wagner-Verband Frankfurt -
  < http://www.richard-wagner-verband.de/frankfurt.html >

* Richard-Wagner-Verband Hannover -
  < http://www.richard-wagner-verband-hannover.de/ >

* Richard-Wagner-Verband Münster -
  < http://www.richard-wagner-verband.de/muenster.html >

* Netherlands Wagner Society - 
  < http://huizen.dds.nl/~riwagner/ >

* Wagner Society in New South Wales - 
  < http://www.wagner-nsw.org.au/ >

* Wagner Society of New York - 
  < http://www.wagnersocietyny.com/ >

* Wagner Society of New Zealand -
  < http://www.wagnersociety.org.nz/ >

* Wagner Society of Northern California -
  < http://www.wagnersf.org/ > 

* Polish Wagner Society - Towarzystwo Wagnerowskie
  < http://free.art.pl/tw/ >

* Wagner Society of Scotland -
  < http://www.wagnerscotland.net/ >

* Richard Wagner Society of South Australia -
  < http://users.senet.com.au/~wagner/ >

* Swedish Wagner Society - 
  < http://home1.swipnet.se/~w-13826/sws/index.html >

* Swiss Wagner Society - 
  < http://www.desmeisterswerk.ch/srwg.htm >

* Toronto Wagner Society -
  < http://richard_wagner.tripod.com/ >

* Wagner Society of the United Kingdom -
  < http://www.gnomus.flyer.co.uk/index.html >

* Wagner Society of the Upper Midwest -
  < http://www.wagnertc.org/ >

* Richard Wagner Society of Washington, DC - 
  < http://www.wagner-dc.org/ > 

* Richard-Wagner-Verband Würzburg -
  < http://www.wagnerverband.de/ >

------------------------------

Subject:    v. On-line libretti and scores

For libretti (poems), see under the heading 'Richard Wagner' at
  < http://php.indiana.edu/~lneff/libretti.html >

Or at Opera Glass
  < http://opera.stanford.edu/opera/index.html#libretti > 

There are a few of Wagner's libretti (poems) at the German Gutenberg 
Project
  < http://www.gutenberg2000.de/autoren/wagner.htm >.

There are shareware editions of the 'Ring' libretti with Jameson's 
English translation at 
  < http://home.earthlink.net/~markdlew/shw/Ring.htm >.

The following vocal scores can be accessed through the Web:

Der fliegende Holländer: 	
  < http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/variations/scores/bhq6743/index.html >
Das Rheingold:		 	
  < http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/variations/scores/bhr5451/index.html >
Die Walküre:		
  < http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/variations/scores/bhr9607/index.html >		 
Götterdämmerung:	
  < http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/variations/scores/bhr1272/index.html >
Tristan und Isolde:		
  < http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/variations/scores/bhr3456/index.html >


------------------------------

Subject:    vi. Related newsgroups and message boards

Wagner-related postings often appear in rec.music.opera; but be warned
that this newsgroup is notorious for flames, abuse and cat-fights. To read
r.m.o. requires a strong stomach and to post there one needs a thick skin.


------------------------------

Subject:    vii. Museums

Richard Wagner Museum at Haus Wahnfried, Bayreuth, Germany:
< http://www.wahnfried.de/ >

Richard Wagner Museum at Triebschen, Luzern, Switzerland:
< http://www.kulturluzern.ch/wagner-museum/ >


------------------------------

Subject: V. Acknowledgements and Copyright

This FAQ was created by and is maintained by Derrick Everett (mimirswell
@hotmail.com). The editor would like to thank the following individuals
who have helped and contributed to this document: Joe Bernstein, Mike
Scott Rohan and Simon Weil. Also many others who have made helpful
comments and suggestions.

This compilation copyright (C) 2000-2004 by Derrick Everett. ALL RIGHTS
RESERVED. Permission is hereby granted for electronic distribution by non-
commercial services such as internet, provided that it is posted in its
entirety and includes this copyright statement. This document may not be
distributed for financial gain. Any other use, or any commercial use of
this document without permission is prohibited by law. 

