Speranza
This music which is in perpetual
evolution is probably the most highly personal musical invention of Wagner - it
places the emphasis for the first time on uncertainty, on indetermination. It
represents a rejection of immutability, an aversion to definiteness in musical
phrases as long as they have not exhausted their potential for evolution and
renewal.
[Pierre Boulez on Parsifal]
Since the thematic material
of Parsifal is the subject of a separate article it will not be discussed at
length here. A few important points are worth noting, however. There are
thematic elements in the music of Parsifal that might be regarded as
Leitmotives, i.e. recurring musical ideas that are encountered as presentiments
of events in the future, or as reminiscences of events in the past. (It is
possible for the occurrence of a motif to be both at once: as when Gurnemanz
tells the recruits about the seduction of Amfortas, we hear the teasing motif
associated with the Kiss, that will be heard again when it is Parsifal's turn to
be seduced. ). Many of the extended Leitmotives to be found in the score turn
out, on closer examination, to be complexes built up from basic motives, each
consisting of only a few notes. In fact, there are five kinds of thematic
element in this motivic web of evolution and renewal:
complexes, such as
Kundry's Curse or Nature's Healing
main subjects, of which there are few,
including Faith, Holy Grail and Prophecy
basic motives, to which we can
apply such labels as Suffering, Yearning, Nature and Bells
characteristic
intervals, such as the tritone associated with Kundry
characteristic chords,
such as the added sixth chord associated with Parsifal.
number of
commentators on the work have observed that it is entirely made out of a small
number of closely-related motives. They are related either by common elements
(e.g. complexes sharing basic motives and characteristic intervals), or by their
common origin in one or more thematic elements heard earlier in the work. Even
the monody that opens the work, which I have referred to elsewhere as the
Grundthema, is itself a complex which is, at the higher level of structure,
composed of three short motives that will later develop their distinct
associations, and at the lower level made up of a broken chord (that of
Parsifal) followed by a number of tiny melodic cells that will be combined and
developed later. Several of the extended themes (e.g. Prophecy) are revealed
fragment by fragment until, at the appropriate moment, they are heard complete
and connected to the dramatic action. Where there is contrast, it is mainly
provided by the development of chromatic variants of diatonic originals, or by
changes of rhythm.
Mediation
ach of the four principal characters has his
or her own motif (although Gurnemanz, as a neutral narrator, does not seem to
have one of his own).
These Leitmotives, together with those associated with
objects, events and abstractions, blend into one another according to the
relationships between the characters. This is deliberate; in this music Wagner
was concerned with mediation. Whereas in earlier works he had used strong
contrasts, he was now concerned with shadings, as of grey between the poles of
black and white.
I recognise now that the characteristic fabric of my music
(always of course in the closest association with the poetic design), which my
friends regard as so new and significant, owes its construction above all to the
extreme sensitivity which guides me in the direction of mediating and providing
an intimate bond between all the different moments of transition that separate
the extremes of mood. I should now like to call my most delicate and profound
art the art of transition, for the whole fabric of my art is made up of such
transitions: all that is abrupt and sudden is now repugnant to me; it is often
unavoidable and necessary, but even then it may not occur unless the mood has
been clearly prepared in advance, so that the suddenness of the transition
appears to come as a matter of course.
[Letter to Mathilde Wesendonk, 29
October 1859, Wesendonk-Briefe 232-6, tr. Spencer and Millington]
The Secret of Form
Wagner referred to and exploited the
operatic tradition by making use of traditional operatic forms. It is possible
to identify accompanied recitative, arioso, ensembles and even strophic passages
in Parsifal. The traditional forms, however, are scarcely recognisable, since
Wagner transcended their limitations.
The German musicologist Alfred Lorenz
analysed the forms of Wagner's works in his Das Geheimnis der Form bei Richard
Wagner. In the later works, Lorenz found many examples of bar form (stollen;
stollen; abgesang), as described by David in the first act of Der Meistersinger
von Nürnberg, often on a large scale. According to Lorenz, the second act of
Parsifal is constructed of nineteen musico-poetic periods, each of which has its
own tonality. In terms of bar form, on the architectural scale, the first
Stollen (periods 1 to 7) ends with the disappearance of Klingsor; the second
Stollen (periods 8 to 12) ends at the reappearance of Kundry; and the scene
between Kundry and Parsifal forms the Abgesang. Since it returns, in periods 18
and 19, to the tonality of b minor (associated with Klingsor, and therefore the
tonality of period 1), and since material from earlier in the act returns in
reminiscence during these two periods, this act can also be seen as an example
of arch form. As can the entire opera, through the parallelism of acts 1 and 3,
a structural aspect that Parsifal shares with Tristan und
Isolde.
In
greatly simplified terms, the use of musical motives in Parsifal is governed and
conditioned by the contrast of chromaticism and diatonicism.
The chromaticism
that conveys the deceptions of Klingsor's kingdom also expresses the anguish of
Amfortas, while the expressive range of the diatonicism reaches from the naive
simplicity of Parsifal's motif to the sublimity of the Grail themes.
As
categories of musical technique, chromaticism and diatonicism also have an
allegorical significance: the very fact that two motives are both chromatic - an
insignificant characteristic in itself, because it is so general - creates a
dramatic association between them. The connection between deception and
suffering, between the magic garden and Amfortas' lamentation, is as
unmistakable as, in the diatonic sphere, that between the naivety of the "pure
fool" and the Grail kingship that awaits Parsifal at the end of his path to
recognition. The fact that Wagner based the differentiations and ramifications
of the dramatic argument, which have caused so much torment to exegetes, on so
simple, so obvious a contrast, which holds good for the stage action as well as
for the music, is the proof of his theatrical genius.
[Carl Dahlhaus, tr.
Mary Whittall, Richard Wagner's Music Dramas]
The domain of the Grail, which
is physically the location of the first and last acts of the drama, is
predominantly diatonic; whereas that of the magician Klingsor, which is the
physical location of the second act, is predominantly chromatic. Parsifal's
motivic group is at the diatonic extreme; Klingsor's motivic group is at the
opposite extreme of chromaticism. The music of Amfortas and Kundry lies between
these poles.
In the domain of Klingsor (or when Gurnemanz refers to it) we
hear, in minor keys, chromatic versions of Leitmotives that were originally
diatonic and predominantly in major keys. Consider the use of the Redemption
theme (motif 1A) in Parsifal's outburst after the Kiss. This kind of variation
according to context is not just restricted to the melodic and rhythmic
elements. This also applies to another important element: the transformation
music that accompanies Parsifal's access to the Grail Castle in each of the
outer acts. At the climax of the second act prelude, there is a distorted parody
of the transformation music that takes the listener into Klingsor's distorted
version of the Grail Castle. Like the reflections in Klingsor's mirror, all that
is found in his castle is a distorted, sterile reflection of the domain of the
Grail.
Although there are some triadic passages in the score, there are also
passages in which diminished seventh chords are prominent. One such chord is the
Tristan chord, which is heard for example in the second act, at the moment of
the Kiss, and other diminished seventh chords are the basic element of
Parsifal's subsequent outburst, from Amfortas! Die Wunde! to Hier, hier!. Later,
it is a diminished seventh chord (B flat, D flat, E and G) that dominates the
desolate music of the third act prelude. Both harmonically and melodically,
Wagner's consistent use of minor thirds and tritones to some extent replaces the
traditional triadic harmonies based on perfect
intervals.
Fig. 1 Cadences
Several
commentators have noted that there are relatively few unequivocal cadences in
the work.
Note, shown above, the outburst of diatonic harmonies, with three very
definite B major cadences, after Gurnemanz hails the pure one as the new Grail
King. Obviously something extremely important is happening at this moment. It is
followed by the 26 bars during which Kundry is baptised. Then, as Kundry weeps,
the music reaches the remote key of b flat minor (the tonal center of the
prelude to this act), returning to B major for Parsifal's motif in its final
development. In his essay in the Cambridge Opera Handbook on Parsifal, Arnold
Whittall has observed:
It is clear that Wagner's essential musico-dramatic
technique is not merely a matter of preparing and then evading cadences, but an
almost ironic reversal of traditional cadential function. The fewer the points
of diatonic cadential resolution, the greater their structural significance
might appear to be. But if some of these resolutions are outside of the
prevailing tonality ... they resolve nothing; they rather enhance the prevailing
instability, and create an even stronger contrast with the truly structural
cadences which do confirm prevailing tonal tendencies.
ot only does Wagner
sometimes seem to be evading cadences, but also avoiding the appearance of the
implied tonic, e.g. by establishing the dominant of an unheard tonic. As for
example in the first scene with Kundry, where the shifting chromatic harmonies
at times suggest an underlying b minor, although the tonic chord is never heard.
The emphasis on keys a tritone apart is one factor that has frustrated attempts
to analyse this music with the techniques appropriate to sonatas and symphonies,
including Schenkerian analysis. Listen, for example, to the change from D flat
to A major at the end of Gurnemanz's narration in the first act (durch hell
erschauter Wortezeichen Male) and the equally powerful shift from D major to A
flat major on the word Gral in Parsifal's final phrase (Enthullet den Gral,
öffnet den Schrein!) at the end of the work.
In the orchestration of Parsifal, Wagner returned to
the quadruple woodwind he had used in the Ring, but omitted the so-called Wagner
tubas, bass trumpet and contrabass trombone. In his scoring of the work, Wagner
seems to have returned to the blocked instrumentation of his earlier operas,
rather than the integrated scoring of Tristan and Die Meistersinger, where
melodic lines pass seamlessly from one instrument to another and textures are
built with instruments from different divisions of the orchestra. Parsifal
actually begins with this kind of orchestration, but when the motives of Holy
Grail (motif 2) and Faith (motif 3) appear, they are played by different
instrumental groups in turn. The block-like scoring is less evident in the more
contrapuntal passages, such as the music of the Flower Maidens. As in Tristan,
the horns are mostly grouped with the woodwind, rather than with the other brass
instruments.
As Pierre Boulez has remarked, the tempi of Parsifal are
unstable in dramatic passages and stable in reflective passages. There seems to
be an increasing tendency for conductors to emphasis the contrasts in tempi, for
example taking the opening of the work (marked sehr langsam) very, very slowly,
and the prelude to the second act (marked heftig, doch nicht übereilt) very,
very fast.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
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