cover image My Life with Wagner: Fairies, Rings, and Redemption; Exploring Opera’s Most Enigmatic Composer

My Life with Wagner: Fairies, Rings, and Redemption; Exploring Opera’s Most Enigmatic Composer

Christian Thielemann. Pegasus, $27.95 (288p) ISBN 978-1-68177-125-0

In this sometimes enigmatic and always entertaining memoir, which is also part music history, Thielemann conducts readers through the musical rings of his life as well as introducing the stories, characters, and themes of Wagner’s operas and the challenges associated with conducting them. Thielemann hears Tristan und Isolde and Parsifal for the first time when he’s in his early teens. He is overwhelmed by the colors and atmosphere of Wagner’s music and decides that he wants to “play an active part in this game,” introducing Wagner to others. At Bayreuth, Thielemann learns two of the cardinal lessons of conducting Wagner: conductors profit most from rehearsals when something doesn’t work, and they can add one little piece of mosaic to the next in practical performance. Drawing on his years of conducting, Thielemann characterizes the evocative beauty and power of each of Wagner’s operas. The so-called Tristan chord, for example, “contains everything: tension, longing, desire, melancholy, pain—and also relaxation, peace, and deep pleasure.” In The Flying Dutchman, Thielemann observes, Wagner moves away from the tradition of German Romantic opera into new directions, even though Wagner wasn’t clear where those moves would take him. In Lohengrin, Wagner pleases his audience with beauty and melody before employing novel musical techniques, foreshadowing his experimental later works. Thielemann masterfully orchestrates this colorful introduction to Wagner’s music and its themes. (May)