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Symphony in C / Tristan und Isolde / Siegfried Idyll
Richard Wagner

Symphony in C / Tristan und Isolde / Siegfried Idyll

Edo de Waart / Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra

Label: Challenge Classics
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917264920
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Catalog number: CC 72649
Releasedate: 12-09-14
  • Edo de Waart is one of the best Wagner coductors of our time
  • This disc is focused on the early Symphony in C, a rarely recorded work
  • Written and published in 1832, the Symphony has a beethovenian touch and was ravishly praised by Robert Schumann
  • The release is completed by two most popular pieces: excerpts from Tristan und Isolde (including a Nachtgesang arranged for solo orchestra by composer Henk de Vlieger) and the sweetest Siegfried Idyll.
With Edo de Waarts, Henk de Vlieger and Otto Tausk, some of the Netherlands‘ best musicians and conductors have joined one of the country’s oldest and most prestigious orchestra. Together, they invite the listener into Wagner’s world of music theatre: Enjoy his Symphony in C major, revel in the Siegfried Idyll and suffer with the lovers Tristan and Isolde.

He admitted quite frankly that his first compositions showed leanings towards Beethoven; But nowhere is Beethoven as palpably present as in the Symphony in C, which Wagner wrote in the early summer of 1832, according to him in a period of six weeks. Just how thoroughly Wagner had studied the scores of his great predecessor is equally apparent from his mastery of counterpoint and his total grasp of the material. Moreover, the composer himself is already unmistakably present with a theatrical effect that more than once evokes associations with orchestral intermezzos in an opera. But nowhere in Wagner’s works are drama and things theatrical so integrated into the music as in Tristan und Isolde, a work that is at the same time the most symphonic of his operas. A special place in Wagner’s oeuvre is reserved for the Siegfried Idyll, the birthday present with which he surprised his wife Cosima, on 25 December 1870.Although the musical themes were largely borrowed from the opera Siegfried this Siegfried Idyll is the least theatrical and most elegiac work imaginable by the composer It is his ultimate musical declaration of love to the woman who had gladdened him a year and a half before with the birth of their son Siegfried. It is his name, and not that of the opera, that should be linked to the name
that Wagner actually only gave to this musical idyll when it was officially published 1877.