



Under the patronage of his Royal Highness Franz, Duke of Bavaria
The king is a reader.
Ludwig
II went down in history as a builder of magnificent castles and a
passionate admirer of Richard Wagner. But he was also a great – and
surprisingly well-read - friend of literature. The poetic canon of his
era was at his sovereign command. His private performances featured five
classical or modern plays for every opera production. The works of
Edgar Allan Poe were his constant companions in the last few months of
his life. Literature pervaded his feeling and thinking. Small wonder
then that at times, the subtext of his letters and personal records
discloses itself only when perceived as a reflection of his reading
matter.
Thinking in text and tone.
Ludwig's literary
thinking was steeped in music. Even the wording of his most intimate
thoughts is inseparably linked with poetic-musical associations. On the
day he cancelled his engagement, he wrote: "Have written off Sophie. The
sombre picture is obliterated: freedom claims me, freedom I thirst for
...", thus giving an example of a worldview utterly conditioned by art.
"The sombre picture is obliterated" quite obviously pharaphrases
Lohengrin's "the sweet song dies away" in the bridal chamber while the
rest of the passage renders, almost word by word, Tannhäuser's rebellion
against the erotic shackles of Venus. Ludwig enlists the help of song
and poetry to get a grip on his own feelings.
The music of words.
Our
programme in 2012 uses the omnipresence of poetry and music in Ludwig's
emotional world to reflect on the relationship between literature and
music per se. We are, however, not concerned with the natural
relationship of the two in opera and lied, but with a specifically
literary moment that goes beyond this basic consensus. In Monteverdi's
L'Orfeo, the mythical poet and singer himself deliberately enters the
stage to point the way for the novel genre of musical theatre. In his
9th Symphony, Beethoven gave a new literary aspect to the symphonic
genre with Schiller's Ode to Joy. Robert Schumann, in Paradise and the
Peri, boldly set to music a best-selling text of poet Thomas Moore, thus
creating the literary oratorio as a new type. While Johannes Brahms, in
A German Requiem, threw overboard the traditional rite of the Latin
requiem mass and used Martin Luther's texts to initiate a new form.
Musical language and proclamation.
Beethoven's
Piano Concerto in G major at last opened the door wide to the genre of
"talking" instrumental music. The symphonies and concertos of lied
composers like Robert Schumann and Johannes Brahms incorporate vocal
building structures almost as a matter of course. Tchaikovsky quite
deliberately composed his 5th Symphony as a musical autobiography while
Shostakovich's first cello concerto harbours a highly encoded political
commentary. But our programme also attends to those who cross the
borders between music and language – be it Schönberg in his melodrama
Pierrot lunaire, or E.T.A. Hoffmann in his musical novella Ritter Gluck.
And when Johann Sebastian Bach, in accordance with the Gospel of St.
John, makes the word itself the central theme of his cantatas, music as a
means of proclamation truly comes into its own.

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