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Chapter 6 - 1874–1875: Budapest and Bayreuth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 April 2017

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Summary

The gap of fifteen months (between December 1872 and March 1874) in the Wagner–Richter correspondence is only partly explained by Richter's new post in Budapest, his preoccupation with his duties there and the Liszt celebrations throughout 1873. When Wagner wrote in March 1874, his letter, together with the following five to May 1874, was of great significance. Matters concerning the Ring were rapidly developing. In March that year, Wagner told him that King Ludwig had finally committed himself financially to aiding the Bayreuth Festival project (the sovereign having abandoned any idea of hosting Wagner's festivals in Munich) and that contracts were now being signed by Carl Brandt as stage director and the Viennese artist Josef Hoffmann as designer. Richter himself would now have to agree to conduct the festival which Wagner intended to stage in 1876 after various stages of planning, selection, preparation and rehearsal had been worked out. In the light of many rash forecasts made hitherto by Wagner, this letter proved near to the eventual truth:

In this year, 1874, everything must be sufficiently prepared that next summer 1875 we can rehearse with the chosen cast (which must have been musically thoroughly prepared over the winter) on stage in the sets. The orchestra too must be complete and be able to be called for rehearsals such as read-throughs, correction of parts rehearsals, and with the singers [Sitzproben]. From these rehearsals it will become clear who is not up to his or her task – player or singer – so that we can make the necessary replacements. Only by being prepared in this way can we be sure that we'll need two months at the most in the year of performance to stage the gigantic work in worthy fashion, for we'll only have two weeks for each part and, reckoning on delays through illness etc., these rehearsals must bear all the hallmarks of dress rehearsals with necessary rest-periods between them.

This is my plan. Who will help me to carry it out however? Can you, from May on at the latest, place yourself at my disposal for three months? That's the question. You would have to do the following:

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Hans Richter , pp. 63 - 81
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2016

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