Works That Never Seem To Work (No. 4: Strauss' Ein Heldenleben)

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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 50

  • @williamwhittle216
    @williamwhittle216 Год назад +17

    Have been listening to this work fro 70+ years. and I get your point. I still concider it a masterpiece. The "resignation" section I think has the message that even heros are mortal.

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Год назад +3

      I figured that out in ten seconds. I didn't need ten minutes.

    • @donaldjones5386
      @donaldjones5386 Год назад +3

      Dave: Your view of "Heldenleben" is mine of. "Zarathustra". When it comes to "Heldenleben", I am hooked. Always have been. I love the poetry at the end. Can't help it.

  • @janantonbrouwer3971
    @janantonbrouwer3971 Год назад +15

    Yes David, you are totally right, from an objective point of view. But omg, I love this piece, just because you sometise love bad food, eating a big bag of potato chips while you know it's bad and unhealthy, or even worse. Heard it twice life with Jansons and the RCO and that perfomances were gorgeous. Like a michelin star chef cooking just McNuggets and fries. That's why I sometimes like it! I love Strauss, too fat, too much, too horrible, but who else did that so well?

  • @gavingriffiths2633
    @gavingriffiths2633 Год назад +13

    I agree with all you say. But years ago, in London, I heard Karajan conduct the Berlin Phil. in the work and it was spellbinding. It can work....

  • @Timrath
    @Timrath Месяц назад +1

    And that's why in Germany it's being referred to as Ein Hundeleben (A Dog's Life).

  • @nicholasjschlosser1724
    @nicholasjschlosser1724 Год назад +5

    When your tone poem is longer than any of Liszt's, you know you're in trouble.

  • @charlescoleman5509
    @charlescoleman5509 Год назад +4

    Yep, agreed about the last few minutes of Ein Heldenleben. I think Neeme Järvi’s version with the RSO is one of the better recordings. Bright sonics with an overall inspired performance.

  • @HassoBenSoba
    @HassoBenSoba Год назад +1

    When the battle breaks out, there's that wonderful moment when, amidst blaring trumpets and pounding drums, the "beloved's" theme comes waltzing in (D Major). It's like Nell calling out to Dudley Doo-Right "Oh, do be careful out there, my darling Hero!..", or something like that. I LOVE that moment, which never fails to crack me up. But overall, I agree with your assessment of the work. LR

  • @giffordnakajima616
    @giffordnakajima616 Год назад +1

    Couldn't agree more! I always thought there was 20 minutes of actual music in this piece that got stretched out to almost an hour. In general, I think Strauss's shorter works (Four Last Songs comes to mind) work a lot better since you can enjoy the tunes without having to worry about the structure.

  • @sbor2020
    @sbor2020 Год назад +6

    Just finished listening to the live relay from the Philharmonie with Petrenko and the Berliner Philharmoniker. Wonderful performance. I love the work, but there is a reason why my favourite Strauss tone poem is Death and Transfiguration, and that is its perfect length. Had Strauss restricted Heldenleben, Zarathustra, Alpine, Quixote, etc. to 26/27 minutes, he'd be the undisputed king of orchestral music! Surely it's not just me that thinks Ein Heldenleben seems longer than any Mahler symphony.

  • @richfarmer3478
    @richfarmer3478 Год назад +1

    I love it up to the climax of the battle as the hero's theme emerges in triumphant glory. Even the Hero's Works section starts out stupendously with a thrilling statement of the Don Juan theme, but after that my interest flags(listening at home I've even fallen asleep only to be roused awake by the crescendo at the end.

  • @b1i2l336
    @b1i2l336 11 месяцев назад

    Couldn't agree more; you're on a roll!

  • @fjblanco
    @fjblanco Год назад

    YES! This work does have its absolutely gorgeous and wonderful moments but I always felt it was kind of stitched together from leftover musical snippets Strauss had lying around.

  • @nattyco
    @nattyco Год назад +1

    I actually like listening to this work.

  • @melodymaker135
    @melodymaker135 Год назад +4

    “Chubby the Critic” 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @terryfaulkner5062
    @terryfaulkner5062 Год назад +1

    The point of The Hero's Work's part is to make absolutely sure that the audience knows who the hero is. Iit wouldn't do to leave a single person in doubt about that. So, you see; part 4 is necessary.

  • @iankemp1131
    @iankemp1131 Год назад +1

    Bravo Dave. This work seems to be played live more than any of Strauss' other tone poems and is highly acclaimed, yet I have to admit I have never "got" it even after listening to live performances. Difficult to play, too; Tovey commented that it needed multiple rehearsals whereas an Elgar piece with similar orchestration fell into place at once. But then I also feel that Also Sprach Zarathustra is 1 minute of brilliant opening followed by 30 minutes of less memorable stuff. (Pieces that don't quite live up to their openings might make an interesting subject for discussion; Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto? In both this and ASZ the arresting opening simply disappears from the rest of the work.)

    • @iankemp1131
      @iankemp1131 Год назад

      @@michaeledwards1172 Yes, with the Tchaikovsky I've sometimes imagined what it might be like to rewrite it so that either the first or last movements brought the grand opening theme back. But it doesn't actually seem to fit well with any of the existing themes either. I have a feeling that it may have been added by Tchaikovsky when he revised the score later. If so, that might help t explain it.

  • @leestamm3187
    @leestamm3187 Год назад +2

    Even though you're picking on a personal favorite, I do see your point. It could have been abbreviated, but the same could be said of a great many notable compositions. I enjoy a good performance all the way to the end, though I agree that the strongest moments come earlier.

    • @OuterGalaxyLounge
      @OuterGalaxyLounge Год назад +1

      What's your opinion of Mengelberg on this, Lee? He did it twice, I think. I always go back to his 1928 for excitement even though I have tons of other good/better sounding performances of it.

    • @leestamm3187
      @leestamm3187 Год назад +3

      ​@@OuterGalaxyLounge They're both great, but if I can take only one Mengelberg, it's the 1928, I agree. More punch overall and some of the recent restorations sound pretty good. I'm one of those weirdos who would rather hear a really great performance in somewhat marginal sound than a lesser one with good sonics.

    • @OuterGalaxyLounge
      @OuterGalaxyLounge Год назад

      @@leestamm3187 That has traditionally been my stance but I've tended to go for the better sound argument with age. In this I might be more aligned with Hurwitz, but luckily we have the luxury of enjoying it all, and my opinion is usually in flux on these matters.

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Год назад +3

      I go for 1928.

  • @tarakb7606
    @tarakb7606 Год назад

    Yes, less is more wasn't always part of Strauss's thinking. However, I find the overindulgence and extravagance very much part of the music's appeal.

  • @phamthanh4785
    @phamthanh4785 Год назад

    without that final crescendo, I wouldn't even know that the piece is still going on :)

  • @AndrewDesiderio1117
    @AndrewDesiderio1117 Год назад

    Fascinating series! Another tough nut to crack is Rachmaninov's 3rd symphony, of which I've heard all of one recording that "gets it" (Ormandy's)...

  • @daawesomedude6119
    @daawesomedude6119 Год назад

    I think the only reason I enjoyed listening to this was because I heard it for the first time with Welser-Most/Cleveland (live). Normally, his tendency to rush through everything as if he had something better to do after the concert is irritating, but for Ein Heldenleben, it made for a more compact interpretation, and I actually really enjoyed it. I've listened to a few more recordings since then and they weren't at all as satisfying and definitely suffer from that drawn-out episodic drag. I'm glad I got that live performance though, one of the few outstanding Welser-Most moments as he normally gets Strauss right.

  • @EgoSumAbbas820
    @EgoSumAbbas820 Год назад +3

    I remember hating that interminable violin solo the first time I heard Heldenleben almost 50 years ago, and I still can't stand it.

  • @cstamitz
    @cstamitz Год назад

    There is no question that Heldenleben is far from perfect but I still love it. He made orchestras sound really spectacular and Heldenleben is a great demonstration piece for great orchestras. Many conductors avoid it including George Szell. However Szell did play the Domestic Symphony which is also outrageous and very long. Many of the works by R. Strauss are too long including his most famous opera, Der Rosenkavalier. One more thought, Mahler's music is also very long especially the 3rd Symphony but most people do not complain about it. It is all a matter of taste and for me Heldenleben is a masterpiece but with plenty of flaws.

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Год назад

      It's not a matter of taste, it's a question of structure and timing. Mahler had it, and Strauss (often) did not.

  • @이말러
    @이말러 Год назад

    Hello Dave! Great topic; especially this Strauss work.
    I have a suggestion though not really fit for this topic since there are good recordings of this work (maybe Serkins&Bernstein): But Beethoven's Choral Fantasy deserves some attention.
    I would not call the orchestration 'elegant'... but all in all this is a unique, fun, but hard piece. I think it's quite a challenge to get this work done right. You need a virtuoso pianist one who has some understanding of Beethoven's structure, a fantastic choir and solo, a good orchestra with good wind players with a crisp sound and a good conductor to harmonize all these together.
    Maybe I missed some video regarding this piece, but It's just a humble suggestion.

  • @neiltheblaze
    @neiltheblaze 9 месяцев назад

    I've always liked "Ein Heldenleben" well enough as a blockbuster sonic experience - but have found it really helpful to ignore the storyline altogether. The Strauss piece that really makes me roll my eyes so far back in my head they've threated to get stuck is his bizarre "Symphonia Domestica". So silly. It goes on so long you start to hope for a divorce. Then there's "Schlagobers", which is a whole other level of dreck. Other than that, that Strauss guy was pretty good.

  • @Timrath
    @Timrath Месяц назад

    I love your shirt!
    Of course the reason why intelligene is so rare in music, is that people who have any sense at all, stay the hell away from that profession.
    Obviously I'm not one of them, otherwise I would have listened to my father and become an engineer, instead of wasting away as a dumb musician. Ah well, at least I get to sleep in the mornings...

  • @davidaiken1061
    @davidaiken1061 Год назад

    Many thanks, Dave, for cogently explaining exactly why I've never liked this piece. Simply put, it's a let-down. As for Romantic pessimism and resignation, there is at least one composer who managed to express that worldview--namely, Mahler. I conclude with a suggestion for "greatest projects ever"--Kempe's invaluable survey of Strauss orchestral music for EMI/Warner. No single conductor recorded as much Strauss orchestral repertoire and so well.

  • @robertdandre94101
    @robertdandre94101 Год назад

    a work of which you could speak is undoubtedly Gliere's symphony no. 3 ''ilya murometz''....i knew this symphony for the first time with stokowski. knew that stokowski had made cuts in this work, I understood why....by listening to the ''original version''...what length in this work...! themes that are repeated without stopping, it becomes boring....I can understand why this work has had only a few versions...in any case, quite a contract when you decide to audition it.. ...!

  • @michaweinst3774
    @michaweinst3774 10 месяцев назад

    The false advertising is the point.

  • @hiphurrah1
    @hiphurrah1 Год назад +2

    Excellent analysis, Dave, it's how i feel about it. it gets programmed much too often, after the strong first part, it gets so boring and seems to go on forever, it's so self indulgent, yikes!

  • @classicalperformances8777
    @classicalperformances8777 Год назад +1

    Well, agree or not ,you rarely fail to entertai🎉nme 4:56

    • @DavesClassicalGuide
      @DavesClassicalGuide  Год назад

      Thank you. It doesn't matter if anyone agrees with me or not. I know I'm right. ;)

  • @michelangelomulieri5134
    @michelangelomulieri5134 Год назад

    Litterature dialogues with music in this piece. I’ve always identified as an anti-hero. There are no retoric or metaphors, it is about a man, Strauss, who shows his human nature without misrepresentations.

  • @zdl1965
    @zdl1965 Год назад +2

    If Ein Heldenleben seems interminable, wait for Sinfonia Domestica and Alpine Symphony! At least Heldenleben has a character arc, as does Don Quixote which seems to go nowhere for quite a bit. It's as if post-Don Juan, Strauss wanted to give the listener the most bang for his buck.

    • @HassoBenSoba
      @HassoBenSoba Год назад +1

      Disagree on Domestica; even though it knocks around too much in the slow mvt. and finale, I think it's exciting, warm and thrilling in a life-affirming way. The Alpine, on the other hand, despite a few nice moments, is a total snooze-fest. LR

  • @hyperaticism
    @hyperaticism 8 месяцев назад

    The timing of this video is no less interesting than the proportion of Ein Heldenleben, Dave. You spend more than a half of the length explaining the part after the battle. This timing itself could constitute a criticism of the structures of this work by Strauss.