If you are a fan of film music such as Star Wars or the Lord of the Rings; if you like the experience of watching theater in a darkened theater; if you think it makes sense that the orchestra is in a pit and the conductor faces the musicians to conduct; if you are glad that late-comers aren’t seated; if you appreciate the artistry of conductors in general; if you are a member of or enjoy modern orchestras; if you like the music of Richard Strauss, Mahler, Debussy, Bruckner, Elgar, or Schoenberg; if you are glad about the rise of the first gay rights movement and feminism in the 19th century; if you appreciate music or opera that is highly sensual; if you are relieved that our sexual mores are not based on female repression any more (or, at least, as much); if you think the central symbol of The Lords of the Ring is compelling; if you are a enthusiast of Joyce, Mann, D.H Lawrence, Willa Cather, Virginia Woolf or G.B. Shaw; if you like T.S Eliot or the French symbolist poets like Baudelaire or Mallermé; if you love Cézanne, Renoir, or Gauguin; if you appreciate the “decadents” of Great Britain like Wilde and Beardsley; if you are into Nietzsche’s philosophy; if you work as a fund-raiser or promoter, or have hired a promoter or fund-raiser; if you have enjoyed a summer music festival; if you are intrigued—if not convinced—by Freud’s dream theory; and, yes, if you are a Zionist; then tip your hat to Richard Wagner, as he had a vast influence on all this, and much more.2
Wagner was without peers. Those who want to reduce him to just a composer are closing their eyes to history, to reality. There was and is nobody else remotely like him in the modern era; he was the most important cultural figure in the 19th century, launching a movement known as Wagnerism that had a profound affect on all the arts, and a number of social movements, with reverberations that are still obvious to this day. And, yet, most people don’t know this because his influence is generally unacknowledged, or under-acknowledged, in modern times. I agree with Bryan Magee who says, “The extent to which this [influence] has been willfully ignored is almost incredible.”3
The average educated person probably knows only that he had influence on the history of music, particularly opera and movie music, and also that he is thought to have influenced the rise of Nazi Germany. The latter is well “known” because most articles put his anti-Semitism and Hitler’s admiration of him in the heart of the piece, even though the facts are often botched. I googled “Wagner Biography” and the top link is this one.
The opening of the article:
Born in Germany on May 22, 1813,
Richard Wagner went on to become one of the world’s most
influential—and controversial—composers. He is famous for
both his epic operas, including the four-part, 18-hour Ring Cycle, as
well as for his anti-Semitic writing, which, posthumously, made him a
favorite of Adolf Hitler. There is evidence that Wagner’s
music was played at the Dachau concentration camp to “re-educate”
the prisoners.
The biography above is the sort of tripe which I recounted in this series of posts on the character assassination of Wagner, that has have drowned out virtually everything that I am writing about in this post. We seem, collectively, to be embarrassed, perhaps shamed, to the point of massive denial that a man who was loved by Hitler and was anti-Semitic was that influential.
Yet, extraordinarily influential he was. What I mean by this can be put in three categories. The first is his own creative invention—that is, he was the first to do the particular thing—and society followed (see below for some examples); the second category is all the people who explicitly fell under the sway of Wagnerism—most of those I listed above fall into this category—and tried to emulate his example within their own artistic vision and craft, whether they were poets, painters, writers or musicians; the third category consists of those for whom it is easy to trace the influence of Wagner, though the person may have tried to minimize a connection or, even, deny it. This last category I won’t be addressing at all, beyond this post on Tolkien written by my wife Leslie in September, which gives an illustration of this sort of influence.
The author David Large writes about this phenomenon:
We speak of ‘Wagnerism’ but not
Mozartism, Beethovenism, or Brahmsism. Wagner’s influence,
especially during the peak period of Wagnerism in the late 19th
and early 20th centuries, reached far beyond the world of
music and theatre, embracing most the other arts, as well as
philosophy, social theory and politics…. It is astounding how many
fin-de-siècle artists and
intellectuals believed that Wagner’s multifaceted legacy could be
of use in enhancing their work, not to mention their lives.5
Creative Invention
In the first category—his creative invention—all of it flowed from his views about drama, much of which he articulated at length in his essays, particularly "Opera and Drama" and "The Artwork of the Future." Wagner believed that music was the most effective means to dramatic expression, but his music was always in service to the drama and not the other way around. Essentially, he wanted the audience's attention to be riveted on the work, therefore he advocated, among other things, applause only at the end of the act, no late-comer seating, the orchestra hidden in a pit, and the hall being dark.6 It isn’t as if someone else wouldn’t have come up with these things sooner or later—they seem rather “duh” to us today—it is just that he was the one who did it first, because he was so focused on dramatic reform. He was obviously right: good job, Richard!
The interior of the Festspielhaus at Bayreuth, the site of the first orchestra pit, among other innovations. |
Wagner amazed everyone at the
beginning by standing in front of the orchestra. Before that
time, conductors in Russian, as in the rest of Europe, used to stand
in the first row of the orchestra facing the audience, but Wagner
stood in front of the orchestra, turning his back to the auditorium,
and it seemed so natural and sensible that everyone has done the same
since.7
The whole enterprise of building the Bayreuth Festspielhaus was,
of course, another creative invention of Wagner’s. It was the
first summer music festival and remains one of the most famous.
Now, of course, there are hundreds of festivals, some also devoted to
the music of one composer (though few do so exclusively, as Bayreuth
continues to do with rare exceptions). Its impact is hard to
imagine, but it was enormous. David Large and William Weber
write in the introduction to Wagnerism in European Culture and
Politics:
The Wagnerian movement was unique in
its time in endowing one artist with such stature and respect that a
special institution was built to perform his art according to his
wishes. Artists of all kinds looked in wonder at the festival,
at the independence and power it afforded Wagner, as well as at the
movement that had grown up around him by the time.8
Some Thoughts About Art, Influence, Culpability and Credit
Umberto Eco argues in “The Poetics of the Open Work”:
A work of art is a complete and closed
form in its uniqueness as a balanced organic whole, while at the same
time constituting an open product on account of its susceptibility to
countless different interpretations which do not impinge on its
unadulterated specificity. Hence, every reception of a work is both
an interpretation and performance of it, because in every reception
the work takes on a fresh perspective for itself.10
If Wagner’s name has been
increasingly associated with Nazism and the Third Reich, our survey
shows some quite different tendencies. Among the national
movements we have seen, a tendency toward the Left was if anything
more common than one towards the Right.11
To me, I can’t hear anything proto-fascist at all in Wagner’s works—quite the opposite in fact—but others can. Neither of us is “wrong” per se; we have both “closed” his works, but in vastly different ways. I believe the explanation for this is that the emotional content of Wagner’s music is so strong that it, essentially, creates a fairly rigid confirmation bias.We hear what we want to hear; we close it in a way that confirms our deeply held beliefs.
If Hitler was in fact influenced by Wagner’s music to do what he did, that is because he closed the work in a way that is unavailable to me and, thankfully, virtually anyone else. (There is very little evidence, by the way, that Hitler did any such thing but if that were the case, then it would be very similar to Charles Manson, who closed the Beatle’s White Album—including infamously the song “Helter Skelter”—in a way that somehow justified slaughtering a number of people he did not know.)
If Wagner had not been anti-Semitic but Hitler still had done what he did, I don’t think anyone would think Wagner was culpable. Because Wagner was publicly anti-Semitic, however, many people do think he was culpable for Hitler’s actions since he was a big fan. This is exactly what Joachim Kohler argues in the book Wagner’s Hitler. Yet we know that Wagner grew up in a society that was thoroughly anti-Semitic. It wasn’t just the common folks who had these opinions, but most of his intellectual influences—Kant, Heinrich Laube, Bruno Bauer, Schopenhauer, Proudon, Johann Fichte, Mikhail Bakunin, and Hegel—were anti-Semitic. In the blame game, they then must be also culpable, as were those who came before them. And, thus, we must go back in time to the original sin of Jew-hating as I wrote about here.
Further, for people to believe that Wagner was that influential to be responsible for a mass murder that happened more than 50 years after his death, then they also must logically get as much credit for the product of his other influences. With this mindset, for instance, since he directly and profoundly influenced the Zionism movement founder, Theodor Herzl, we must give Wagner credit for the existence of Israel. And if he is that influential, he must be given credit for everything that came out of Wagnerism—all the art works, all the music, and so forth.
But that is just silly. We know he isn’t directly responsible for any of that. Beyond his own creative inventions, he was just an influence, albeit a significant one for many. If he had not existed, the only thing that is certain is our lives would have been different, art would have been different. We can never know in what exact ways. In chaos theory, changing even little things can have a large effect on later developments. A famous theoretical example is that the effects of a butterfly flapping its wings could be part of a causal chain leading to a hurricane developing weeks later. If it is true that, at least theoretically, a small thing can lead to large change, what of a Wagner, who was not butterfly-like but instead juggernaut-like? In the film It’s A Wonderful Life, we are shown how different life would have been in one small town if one man, George, had not been in it. It’s a doable exercise because the variables are fairly small. A comparable film could not be made with Wagner as the protagonist; I believe to remove him from history is literally unimaginable.
I have no problem with people heaping an appropriate, and fair, level of scorn and finger-pointing at Wagner for his failings as a human being. But I do have a problem with those people ignoring his deep and positive contributions to our society, both his wonderful musical legacy and his influence in art and culture. It deserves acknowledgement. It deserves celebration. He deserves credit.
End Notes
1 Grey
ed., The
Cambridge Companion to Wagner. This is the first line of the article “ ‘Wagnerism’: responses
to Wagner in music and the arts” by Fauser, 221
2 Most
of the references in this paragraph I will give in more detail later
in this post or blog (or have done so earlier). There are two that won’t be covered other than this endnote. First, the Freud reference is summarized here. The author summarizes it thus: “Wagner offered a powerful dream theory that predated by a half a
century essential elements of Freud’s dream theory such as the
unconscious, condensation, and secondary revision. Díaz de
Chumaceiro shows that this theory was almost certainly used by Freud
in formulating his own interpretation of dreams.” The second is the
reference to the promoter, which comes from this book, in which he makes
the case that Wagner was the first modern promoter and that many of
the techniques he used would be a template for 20th
century promotion and fund-raising.
3 Bryan
Magee, Aspects of Wagner, 48
4 I wrote about Wagner’s influence on Hitler here, which post goes into this whole area in detail, but specifically shows that there is no direct evidence that Hitler ever read any Wagner prose and it wasn’t his anti-Semitism that inspired him. The
evidence for the Dachau reference is thin, and doesn’t relate to Jews in any case. It comes entirely from this one source, who describes that music was used to "reeducate" the political prisoners—such as communists, gays, Jehovah’s witnesses—in the first year of the camp, with Wagner as an example of the type of music played. The belief that Wagner was played in the death camps, however, has no evidence. It is pure urban legend. The reason this is relevant is that this so-called “fact” is used to continue the ban on Wagner’s music in Israel.
5 Millington, ed.,Wagner Compendium, 384
7 Spencer,
ed., Wagner Remembered, 146
8 Large
and Weber, Wagner in European Culture and Politics, 8
9 Dent,
128
10 Umberto
Eco, The Open Work, 3
11 Large
and Weber, 278-9
12 Ibid.,
read conclusion for more detail on this
You might be interested to know that Joachim Kohler changed his views on Wagner. Here is an article that appeared in Der Spiegel, Kohler statements are on pages 8 and 9.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.johnengalerie.de/fileadmin/Download/Press/Balkenhol/Balkenhol_SpiegelOnline_April2013.pdf
Thanks so much for that link. I had no idea he changed his mind, though I did know that his later book, The Last of the Titans, wasn't so unhinged, and that explains the difference.
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