Speranza
The Most Desolate Music Ever Written
Prelude to Act 3
"We intend to go straight on
without a break to the third act, which promises me a blessed harvest after the
labours of the second act. But I must first introduce it with an orchestral
prelude to accompany Parsifal's effortful wanderings up to the point where he
rediscovers the realm of the Grail.
[Richard Wagner to King Ludwig II, 15
October 1878, tr. Spencer and Millington]
Most of
the material used in the third act prelude is reminiscence of the first act
(e.g. the Prophecy, no. 6 in the Guide) and second act (i.e. the music of
Klingsor's domain).
Furthermore, much of the music of the third act can be
derived from the music of Parsifal and Kundry respectively -- even though she
has only two words to sing, she is present in the music until her baptism, after
which she all but disappears from the score.
The third act prelude is dominated
by the music of these two characters but, strangely, Amfortas seems to absent
from this prelude.
Prelude to Act III (ogg format, mono, duration 5
minutes, conducted by Knappertsbusch in 1951)
Prelude to Act III (ogg
format, mono, duration 6 minutes, conducted by Siegfried Wagner in
1927)
Context
Left: Figure 1. One of Franz Stassen's
illustrations for Act III of Parsifal, showing the opening bars of the third act
prelude.
To understand what is happening, let's put the third act
prelude in its dramatic context.
At the end of the second act, the newly
enlightened hero has been miraculously saved from destruction by the stolen
spear cast at him by Klingsor.
Wielding the spear in the sign of the cross,
Parsifal destroys Klingsor's power, including his hold over Kundry, and his
magic garden with its Flower Maidens.
Between the second and third acts,
Parsifal, cursed by Kundry both to wander and denied paths that lead away from
her, wanders in search of the domain of the Grail.
It is there that he will find
the stricken Amfortas; whom the hero now understands, having experienced his
suffering himself.
Kundry, however, knows the way to the domain of the Grail,
and during this prelude she is sleeping, in the same spot where she fell asleep
at the end of the first act. I like to think of the prelude to act 3 as Kundry's
Dream, in which she recalls the events of the previous act and sees the
wandering of Parsifal, who is bringing healing in the form of the Spear. She
knows that Parsifal will find a way back to her and therefore to the domain of
the Grail.
Let us examine the prelude to the third
act in detail. The second act ended in the black key of b minor. The prelude
begins with a tension between B major and b flat minor.
Figure 2.
Nature theme of the flower maidens (no. 16 in the Guide), "Ich sah das Kind" and
Serving or Desolation (no. 19 in the Guide).
The first four notes in the
top line (3) we call the Serving motif (although it's not the same as the notes
to which Kundry sings her "dienen") and it ends with a falling tritone, b flat -
e, the characteristic interval associated with Kundry. This falling tritone is a
feature of the Laughter idea that was introduced in the first act and associated
with Kundry and her accursed laughter. This is followed by six notes from the
Nature music of the flower maidens (1) and also weakly reminiscent of Ich sah
das Kind (2).
Figure 3. Straying and Waking
bar 5 we come
to a three-note idea that I call Waking (2), no. 20 in the Guide, which will be
developed later in the prelude. The music now has a flavour of Kundry's
material, e.g. the rocking arpeggios in the bass line in bars 11 to 13, perhaps,
like Kundry's motif, suggesting the eternal cycle of rebirth.
When we hear
the wandering Parsifal, in an idea that Newman called Straying (1).
This is
developed by the insertion of more notes, we hear Kundry at bar 20 as the music
slows down, and then the chromatic Straying, no. 32 in the Guide, turning into
the diatonic Dresden Amen (i.e. Grail), proclaiming the domain of the Grail (bar
22). This is easily transformed into the related motif of the Spear (with its
three emphasized, rising notes), at which Kundry laughs in her sleep (bar 24),
in a longer version of Kundry's Laughter over the Spear motif in the
bass.
"new" idea appears at bar 25, which on closer inspection turns out to
be the Prophecy motif in diminution, leading into the fully developed form of
Waking. As Kundry stirs in her sleep, these three themes are woven together with
that of the Spear and the rocking arpeggios (eternal cycle). The Prophecy idea
is developed into an insistent figure with a double-dotted rhythm and shortened
notes; the key is now e flat minor. As Gurnemanz emerges from his hut, we hear
the Serving motif and then the music of the waking Kundry.
The first scene
begins at bar 49, in tonal ambiguity around Gurnemanz's d minor.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
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