Strauss Richard Georg, *11 June 1864 Munich, †8 September 1949 Garmisch-Partenkirchen, German composer and conductor. His father, Franz Joseph, was a French horn player. At the age of 4, Strauss began to learn the piano with A. Tombo, and composed his first piano pieces and songs two years later. In 1872, he began studying the violin with B. Walter and in 1875, he began composition studies under W. Meyer. From 1882, he played the violin in the amateur orchestra Wilde Gung’l, conducted by his father. In this period, Strauss started to give first public performances of his work in Munich (1881) and other cities (Dresden, Vienna, 1882), and his first composition was published (Festmarsch in E-flat major Op. 1, 1881). After graduating from the Ludwigsgymnasium in Munich, Strauss took a degree in humanities at the University of Munich, which he gave up after half a year; he went to Berlin, where he met, among others, H. von Bülow, then the director of the Meiningen Orchestra. Thanks to him, Strauss debuted as a conductor (1884) and became Bülow’s assistant (1885–86), gaining solid conducting knowledge. He also debuted as a pianist in 1885, performing Piano Concerto in C minor KV 491 by Mozart with his own cadences. In the spring of 1886, he travelled through Italy, which inspired him to compose the symphonic fantasy, Aus Italien. In 1886–89, he worked as third conductor of the Munich Hofoper. Strauss composed his first symphonic poems (Don Juan, Tod und Verklärung, Macbeth) and collections of songs (Op. 15, 17, 19, 22) in these years. He also met a singer Pauline de Ahna, whom he married in 1894. In the summer of 1888, Strauss worked as a musical assistant at performing Wagner’s works in Bayreuth, where he befriended Cosima Wagner; in October that year, he was appointed a Kapellmeister at the court in Weimar. Together with the local orchestra, he performed a symphonic poem Don Juan in 1889, the success of which allowed to include Strauss among the most outstanding German composers of his time. In Weimar, he was mainly responsible for conducting and preparing performances of, among others, Wagner’s works. He also performed in Berlin, Eisenach and Leipzig a few times. He had to recuperate from a serious lung disease he suffered in Greece and Egypt (winter 1892–93). In 1894 in Weimar, there was a world premiere of the opera Guntram conducted by Strauss, and in the summer of that year, he debuted as a conductor in Bayreuth (Tannhäuser); P. de Ahna took part in both these performances. From 1894, Strauss conducted the court opera in Munich and, at the same time, directed a series of concerts in Munich and Berlin (with the local philharmonic) and made concert tours to various European cities, including Paris and Brussels (November 1897). During these years, world premieres of a few symphonic poems took place, including Till Eulenspiegel (1895), Also sprach Zarathustra (1896) and Don Quixote (1898). In 1897, Strauss’s son was born, Franz Alexander. In November 1898, Strauss took up the position of first conductor at the court opera in Berlin. At that time, he also dealt with organisational issues – in 1901, he became president of the Allgemeiner Deutscher Musikverein and the editor of the book series Die Musik. His interest in copyright led to the establishment of the first trade union of composers. The first symphonic concerts devoted entirely to Strauss’s works took place in Vienna in 1901. A monographic festival of Strauss’s music took place in London in 1903; the same year, the composer received the honorary doctorate at Heidelberg University. During this time, he toured Europe with the Berlin Tonkünstler-Orchester, and in 1904, he went on tour to the United States with his wife. The success of the premiere of Salome (Dresden 1905), determined Strauss’s recognition as a leading German composer; other premieres in Germany and abroad quickly followed. In 1908, Strauss settled in Garmisch. The opera Elektra, composed there, gained slightly less fame but helped to consolidate the composer’s position. Strauss found a poet whose aesthetics was similar to his own concepts of artistic work and it was H. von Hofmannsthal, author of libretto for Elektra. Before World War I, two more operas written to Hofmannsthal’s librettos were premiered: Der Rosenkavalier (1911) and Ariadne auf Naxos (1912). From 1909, Strass’s Weeks (Strauss-Wochen) were organised in Germany, devoted to performances of his works. In 1910, Strauss became a director of the Berlin Hofoper and also conducted at the Vienna Hofoper. In 1914, he received an honorary degree from Oxford University and in 1917, he became a lecturer in the composition class at the Akademie der Künste in Berlin. After World War I, Strauss moved to Vienna. Together with F. Schalk, he took up the position of director at the Vienna State Opera, where he conducted several performances of works by, among others, Wagner, Mozart and his own. In the autumn of 1920, he toured South America with the Wiener Philharmoniker Orchestra, and in 1921, he gave concerts in the USA. In 1922, he conducted Mozart’s operas during the first Salzburg Festival, and a year later, he went on a concert tour to South America again. In 1924, on the occasion of Strauss’s 60th birthday, numerous festivals and weeks (Strauss-Tage) were held, devoted to his music (e.g. in Vienna, Berlin, and Munich), and the composer was accorded numerous honours on this occasion. In the same year, his son Franz married Alice von Grab, who came from a Jewish family, which later, during the Third Reich, complicated the composer’s political situation. The already deteriorating relations with F. Schalk led to Strauss’s resignation from the position of director of the Vienna State Opera (1924), but Strauss remained connected with the musical life of Vienna, and from 1926, he conducted guest opera performances there again. The following Strauss-Wochen in Dresden, Leipzig, Vienna and Berlin (1926–28) were occasions for presenting the composer’s works, including the film Der Rosenkavalier with Strauss’s music and a new opera Die ägyptische Helena. After Hitler came to power in Germany, Strauss was active in all areas of his interest and was therefore perceived internationally as a supporter of National Socialism. In the summer of 1933, the composer replaced A. Toscanini at Bayreuth, who had boycotted the festival; that year, Strauss became head of the Reichsmusikkammer, the institution responsible for musical life in the Third Reich. The following year, on the occasion of the composer’s 70th birthday, further Strauss-Wochen were held in Berlin, Vienna, Dresden and Munich. The staging of the comic opera Die schweigsame Frau in 1935, however, caused Strauss to come into conflict with the Nazi government – the main reason for this was the Jewish origin of the librettist S. Zweig. Strauss then resigned from his position in the Reichsmusikkammer, but did not cease his activities aimed at legitimising fascist cultural policy: he composed several propaganda pieces (1934 – Olympische Hymne for the Berlin Olympics, 1939 – a waltz for the propaganda film München, 1940 – Festmusik for the Empire of Japan), and often performed as a conductor in Germany and Italy. Strauss’s almost exclusive scope of composition during the Third Reich and World War II was opera. The composer established contact with the librettist J. Gregor, who became the co-creator of three operatic works: Friedenstag, Daphne and Die Liebe der Danae. The latter opera, written for the Salzburg Festival in 1944, was not performed after Goebbels decided to close theatres in the face of total war. In 1942, Strauss’s last opera, Capriccio, was premiered, with the libretto created by conductor C. Krauss and with the composer’s participation. After World War II, Strauss moved to Switzerland, and in 1947, he became an Austrian citizen. That same year, he went on a concert tour to London, where he conducted performances of his compositions. In 1948, he was cleared of the charge of collaboration with the fascist regime, and in 1949, he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Munich.
Strauss’s place in the history of music remains a subject of numerous discussions and disputes to this day, caused primarily by the composer’s involvement in the musical life of the Third Reich; his collaboration with the fascist regime resulted in a negative reception of his music after World War II. Another reason for disputes is the style of Strauss’s works, which shows the evolution of the compositional means and techniques only to a small extent. Strauss’s activity coincided with the years of fundamental changes in musical aesthetics, leading to the rise of the so-called New Music, to which the composer yielded only to a negligible extent, remaining faithful to his individual style of creation. His works composed in the 20th century show features typical of the 19th-century music, so they are aesthetically late and, for this reason, were often treated as a manifestation of anachronism or conservatism. This assessment was also influenced by Strauss’s lack of involvement in current events. One manifestation of this attitude was, among others, his opera Capriccio composed during World War II. The topic of the 18th-century aesthetic discussions on opera in this work is an expression of escapism and conformism in the context of the growing genocide of the early 1940s. Strauss’s work, presenting late Romantic aesthetic tendencies, marks the final link in German Romantic music. He composed for almost 80 years; his mature artistic activity was marked by the composition of the symphonic poem Don Juan. Due to the fact that Strauss began to occupy the position of the most important German composer during his lifetime, researchers’ interest in his biography and work appeared relatively early. In Germany and the United States in the first half of the 20th century, a dozen or so biographical and analytical works were published. The authors of these works, as well as later monographs, generally had direct contact with the artist, some, such as E. Krause, R. Specht and W. Schuh, were his collaborators or even friends; their biographical studies are in the nature of a direct account, and their reading shows an excellent knowledge of the composer’s entire creative legacy. Later research has allowed for a detailed description of Strauss’s work. Of primary importance are, above all, documentary works, mainly the catalogue of his works published by E. Mueller von Asow in the 1950s and 1960s (completed after his death by F. Trenner and A. Ott). This catalogue contains a detailed bibliography, quotes, opinions and fragments of reviews concerning individual compositions. The latest edition of the catalogue (1999) by F. Trenner introduces significant adjustments, referring to the genesis of many works but is devoid of review material. The Internationale Richard-StraussGesellschaft is responsible for coordinating scholarly activities concerning the composer’s life and work. In 1952–69, it published volumes of scholarly works on Strauss, and since the 1970s, it has published a cyclical scholarly journal that is an international forum for researchers dealing with the composer’s artistic activity and biography: until 2008 as the semi-annual Richard-Strauss-Blätter, since 2009 as the annual Richard Strauss-Jahrbuch. In addition, there are local institutions that deal with research on this subject, such as the Richard-StraussInstitut in Munich, established in 1982 (since 1999, it has been based in Garmisch-Partenkirchen). Since 1989, Garmisch-Partenkirchen has also hosted the annual RichardStrauss-Tage, a festival of Strauss music.
Style features
Strauss was inspired by the achievements of F. Liszt and R. Wagner, as he referred to them many times in his own works, statements and letters. These references are especially visible in treating music as a heteronomous category, in which the extra-musical sphere constitutes the essential aesthetic scope of musical creation. Strauss’s attitude is evidenced by the fact that the main body of his works consists of compositions with verbal text (operas, songs) or involving the introduction of a programmatic extra-musical reference (symphonic poems). From Liszt and Wagner, the composer also took primarily the type of harmony and sound colour, as well as the types of textural solutions, which he developed, creating his own musical language. The stylisations of classical music, often present in Strauss’s work, certainly have a different character. Mozart stylisations in Der Rosenkavalier and the classicising features of Ariadne auf Naxos are an expression of an aesthetic opposed to the innovative activities of A. Schönberg at that time. However, dance stylisations, mainly related to the circle of J. Strauss’s waltzes, testify to his interest in popular music and connection with the tradition of Viennese operetta. In terms of harmony and tonality, Strauss was a continuator of the line marked out by Wagner. The organisation of the sound material in his works consists of general respect for the principles of the major-minor system, however in an extremely expanded version, of the introduction of alterations, unrelated keys and bitonality. Altered chords, in which the composer willingly used dissonances (e.g. tritones), cause the tonal plan of the work to be obscured. Their use reveals considerable dramatic power, especially in situations when Strauss juxtaposed complex dissonant progressions based on alterations with diatonic sections. This type of contrast creates the impression of two musical languages, evoking different expressive spheres or suggesting opposing valuations (e.g. Ochs’s sphere confronted with the sphere of Octavian and Sophie in Act III of Der Rosenkavalier). The juxtaposition of unrelated keys and chords serves to carry out abrupt modulations, influencing the dramatisation of the work’s progression, and to mark situations of transition, change or transformation (e.g. the problem of the emperor’s petrification in Die Frau ohne Schatten or Dyl’s death in Till Eulenspiegel). Bitonal structures are used in turn in moments of dramatic entanglements and conflicts; in such sound progressions, Strauss approached the style of free atonality present in the works of A. Schoenberg. In terms of instrumentation, Strauss achieved the highest level of mastery. His scores demonstrate an excellent knowledge of the sound possibilities of all the orchestral groups, resulting from many years of conducting practice, which also enabled him to edit H. Berlioz’s treatise on instrumentation (1905). In the introduction preceding this edition, Strauss drew attention to Wagner’s achievements in instrumentation, such as the free use of the valve horn group and the virtuoso treatment of all the orchestral instruments. In his own compositional practice, Strauss meticulously developed orchestral parts, the performance of which required virtuoso skills. In his orchestral works, individual instruments are exposed thanks to the use of refined articulation techniques. The number of different sound qualities seems almost limitless – from the chambered sounds of a string quintet to the vibrating, powerful orchestral tutti. Particularly idiomatic is the type of sound colour in which long-sustained legato violin sounds in the highest register are confronted with fast progressions in the wind instruments. In order to differentiate the sound sequences, Strauss reached for the solo use of instruments, which sometimes resulted from the dramatic flow or programmatic objectives (e.g. the representation of the child figure by a solo oboe in Symphonia domestica), while for the purposes of musical illustration, he did not even shy away from introducing sound tools into the scores, imitating the sounds of nature (Windmaschine and Donnermaschine in Don Quixote and Eine Alpensinfonie). Lyrical vocal parts in Strauss’s works also have an original character, in which long rhythmic values and legato articulation are preferred, with a clear predilection for high voices and the highest vocal tessitura. The singing technique necessary to perform Strauss’s works consists in the ability to combine opposing features: strong volume, typical of the Wagnerian vocal style, and delicate voice colour, reminiscent of Mozart. The composer made his vocal style dependent on the tempo of the verbal drama, which is why conflicts between singing and orchestra full of figuration and polyphony seemed difficult to avoid, which he considered to be an individual feature of his work (Erinnerungen an die ersten Aufführungen meiner Opern, 1942). The types of melodic lines introduced in Strauss’s compositions are strongly determined by the content scope of the vocal or programmatic works, while the method of operating the melody results from the Wagnerian technique of leitmotifs (Strauss spoke about creating his own melodies, among others, in a conversation with M. Marschalk, “Vossische Zeitung” from 15 October 1918, cf. Richard Strauss’s Betrachtungen und Erinnerungen, 1949). To present active male characters, the composer used melodics based on three-note movement, mainly in the ascending direction, with the use of rhythmic fragmentation or dotted rhythm (the hero’s themes in the symphonic poems Don Juan, Ein Heldenleben, the Agamemnon motif from Elektra). In turn, the characterisation of subtle female characters is achieved by using the movement of seconds in longer rhythmic values and slower tempo (the parts of Arabella, Daphne or the Marshal’s wife from Der Rosenkavalier). The melody intended to depict both of these groups is diatonic in nature and often based on the progressive repetition of the initial motif model. Different types of melody are associated with grotesque and specific characters (Herod from Salome, Clytemnestra from Elektra, Baron Ochs from Der Rosenkavalier, the Nurse from Die Frau ohne Schatten, Till Eulenspiegel), which are depicted through motifs based on chromatic, tonally unclear courses, in fragmented movement and staccato articulation. Melodic shapes, in which Strauss stylises popular, folk, religious or dance music, are not directly related to the characterisation, and the function of this type of melodic progression is related to the musical imagery of a given setting. The idiom of Strauss’s music has undergone certain changes over the years, which allows it to be assigned to such different stylistic categories as late romanticism, expressionism, modernism, Art Nouveau or neoclassicism. In order to distinguish stylistic periods, it seems useful to base the periodisation on the criterion of musical genres dominant in a given period of Strauss’s work. This allows us to distinguish four stages in the composer’s artistic activity: 1. youthful period, 1870–85 – non-program instrumental works, 2. 1886–1904 – symphonic poems, 3. 1905–41 – operas, 4. 1942–49 – return to writing non-program instrumental works. Strauss’s achievements in the two middle periods and in the two musical genres associated with these periods have fundamental importance for the history of music; the youthful stage was a period when the composer was coming to his own creative style, while in his final period, Strauss took on genres that were outside the main trends of his compositional activity. The highlighted caesuras only indicate, in an approximate way, the composer’s interest in a given genre, because, for example, Strauss’s last programmatic instrumental work (Eine Alpensinfonie) was not completed until 1915, while the beginning of his operatic activity dates back to the 1890s. The genre of solo song, which appeared with varying intensity in all the distinguished periods, does not fit into the presented periodisation. Strauss often composed songs on an occasional basis, undertaken, for example, for joint performances with his wife, the singer P. S. de Ahna.
Musical genres
Symphonic poems. Strauss’s statements on programmatic music indicate the evolution of his views in this area, from the affirmation of programmaticity (letter to J.L. Bella from 1890) to the conviction of the uselessness of a programme (“Der Morgen,” 1907); the composer’s point of reference in this sphere of work were Liszt’s symphonic poems and Berlioz’s programme symphonies. From these creators, he adopted a twofold understanding of musical programmes – plot-oriented and ideological. In works with a plot character (Aus Italien, Don Juan, Macbeth, Till Eulenspiegel, Don Quixote, Ein Heldenleben, Symphonia domestica, Eine Alpensinfonie) the music takes on narrative features, and extra-musical semantic references evoke the character of the unfolding story. The possibility of interpreting such works in extra-musical categories results from the programmatic title, taken from well-known literary themes and cultural topoi, and is sometimes also constructed from clues included in the score, e.g. in Eine Alpensinfonie, the titles of individual sections of the works were introduced (Night, Sunrise, The Ascent, Entry into the Forest, Wandering by the Brook, At the Waterfall, etc.). The narrative aspect of the composition is also emphasised by expressive programmatic media in subjective and objective representation. For the characterisation of the subject, Strauss introduced such media of programme as the main motif or musical theme in the function of character representation (e.g. Dyl’s themes in Till Eulenspiegel), an instrument-attribute of the character (e.g. solo cello in Don Quixote as a representation of the title character, solo violin for the characterisation of the hero’s “life companion” in Ein Heldenleben), the selection of key in the programmatic function (e.g. the key of E-flat major, characterising the main lyrical subject of Ein Heldenleben or Eine Alpensinfonie). In turn, the sphere of object representation often takes on illustrative features, enabling the identification of details, circumstances and stages of the unfolding story (tremolo on the snare drum before Dyl’s execution in Till Eulenspiegel, the sound of the oboe imitating of the bleating of rams in Don Quixote or the harp glissando as a representation of a waterfall in Eine Alpensinfonie). The means used affect the expressiveness of the extra-musical quality and the clarity of the presentation of the plot sphere of the works. The programmatic ideological scope is only visible in two of Strauss’s symphonic poems (Also sprach Zarathustra, Tod und Verklärung), in which there are expressive references to Liszt’s programmatic approach, based on the principle of confrontation and opposition of existential qualities. The ideological scope of Also sprach Zarathustra is determined by the opposition between the sphere of nature and the sphere of spirit; the opposition of these qualities is visible in the tonal plane of the composition – the manifestations of nature (Sunrise and Dance Song) are maintained in the key of C major, while the tonal equivalent of the sphere of spirit becomes B major. The confrontation of these unrelated keys is manifested in the sound material of the fugue (the section Of Science and Learning), which contains progressions starting with the notes C and B, as well as in the ending of the piece, in which both keys are juxtaposed. In turn, the programmatic representation in the symphonic poem Tod und Verklärung combines the plot presentation of the hero’s illness and death with an eschatological vision of his liberation, the musical manifestation of which is the opposition of modes (C minor–C major). The form of Strauss’s symphonic poems cannot always be reduced to simple architectural models and often shows features of orchestral fantasy, e.g. in Also sprach Zarathustra, the structure is based on the juxtaposition of the introduction, which is an image of a sunrise, with eight further sections, endowed with programmatic titles, referring to Nietzsche’s treatise. The structural coherence of the works is influenced by the composer’s use of the leitmotif technique. In general, however, Strauss’s programmatic music contains a traceable a priori formal principle, which is sometimes specified by the subtitle introduced by the composer, as in the case of Don Quixote (“fantastic variations on a knightly theme”) and Till Eulenspiegel (“arranged in the form of a rondo”). The architectural form of other works (Don Juan, Tod und Verklärung) was clearly influenced by the model of the sonata allegro, while the term “symphony” in the titles of two works (Symphonia domestica and Eine Alpensinfonie) indicates the large size of these single-movement compositions.
Operas. Strauss’s operatic output is characterised by a mixture of various attitudes and aesthetic categories – from the post-Wagnerian concept of musical drama (Guntram, Feuersnot) and expressionist works of the avant-garde (Salome, Elektra), through the reinterpretation of romantic opera (Die Frau ohne Schatten) and fascination with classicism (Ariadne auf Naxos, Die ägyptische Helena, Daphne, Die Liebe der Danae) to bourgeois comedies (Der Rosenkavalier, Intermezzo, Arabella, Die schweigsame Frau, Capriccio). Strauss’s first operas (Guntram, Feuersnot) show the composer’s individual style only to a small extent, while their musical organisation (especially in Guntram) refers to the motific narrative typical of Wagner’s works. Neither of these operas became a permanent part of the repertoire, unlike Strauss’s next two works, the expressionist musical dramas Salome and Elektra. The pursuit of dramatic truth and the expressiveness of the psychological characterisation of the heroes found expression in the complex sound material and musical language of these works. The characteristics of the heroes and the dramatic situation is served by innovative harmony, going beyond the major-minor system (e.g. the ensemble parts of the Jews in Salome) and extremely varied sound colouring, related to the use of the possibilities of the extended orchestral apparatus and unconventionally used vocal voices (e.g. the scream in Elektra). Such means result from the drastic nature of the dramatic situations, in which scenes of abuse and murder are intertwined with a deepened psychoanalysis of the characters; the genesis of such solutions is related to the expressionist tendency to expose extreme emotional states and to the popularity of S. Freud’s theories. The high artistic value of Salome and Elektra is the result of the perfect interaction of music with the word and dramatic categories; Strauss, like Wagner, was aware of the importance and key role of the libretto, and was also convinced of the need to introduce myth as a central category of musical drama. A fruitful collaboration with the poet H. von Hofmannsthal begun while composing Elektra and led to the creation of several outstanding operatic works; the greatest achievement of both artists should be considered the opera Die Frau ohne Schatten, in which the content plot takes on almost Faustian features, while the music of stage events is characterised by emotional saturation resulting from the exploitation of the colourful possibilities of individual orchestra groups. After the expressionist musical dramas, Strauss began a period of searching for other artistic solutions and themes closer to bourgeois morality; this circle of works began with the opera Der Rosenkavalier, in which the genre term “musical comedy” meant focusing the recipient’s attention on the sphere of verbal and musical characterisation of exaggerated characters. In Der Rosenkavalier and subsequent works from this circle (Intermezzo, Arabella, Die schweigsame Frau, Capriccio), a strong realistic element is evident, and the problems raised concern social and family life. The change in the subject matter is also reflected in the selection of different sound solutions; the main method of narration is the discussions of the characters, which contrast with the monologue that dominated earlier operas. The conversations of the characters now concern social flirtation (Der Rosenkavalier, Arabella, Die schweigsame Frau), family life (Intermezzo) or art (Capriccio). The way in which the vocal parts are treated indicates the subordination of music to the word, so melodeclamation becomes the superior stylistic quality (“conversational opera”). The musical attractiveness of these operas was mainly determined by the orchestral parts, in which Strauss combined various musical styles. The multitude of stylistic references is most clearly presented in Der Rosenkavalier, since in the musical fabric of this opera one can notice, among others, references to Mozart’s style (the duet of Sophie and Octavian), Italian bel canto (Singer’s aria), the tradition of J. Strauss’s waltz and Viennese operetta (Ochs’s song). All these elements were integrated with Strauss’s individual style, although the variety of musical inspirations and references to the ranges of lower art (dance, operetta) may constitute the basis for interpreting these works as musical manifestations of Art Nouveau. A separate group of Strauss’s operas are compositions which themes refer to classical Greek myths, however, the way they are presented does not resemble the tragic tone of Elektra, but is connected either with the isolation of the pastoral category contained in the myth (Daphne), or with the ironic treatment of the myth (Ariadne auf Naxos, Die Liebe der Danae). Among these operas, Ariadne auf Naxos has achieved a special position, which – in its second version with a prologue (from 1916) – can be treated as the embodiment of Strauss’s operatic aesthetics. The confrontation of the prologue and the opera proper leads to the creation of a double discourse, in which the presented contents of the opera constitute a peculiar category of “theatre within a theatre”. The mixing of the ‘high’ world of Ariadne and the ‘low’ world of Zerbinetta, as well as the confrontation of the Composer’s character, romantic in terms of musical gesture, with the ironic representation of the bourgeois environment are evidence of a refined play with stage conventions and musical styles.
Solo songs were composed by Strauss throughout his life, and his song output is among the highest achievements in the genre of romantic song. A significant part of Strauss’s songs was written occasionally, often for specific performers (P.S. de Ahna, V. Ursuleac). The selection of texts for the songs testifies to the composer’s interest in both the poetry of outstanding German creators of the 18th and 19th centuries (J.W. Goethe, F. Schiller, L. Uhland, H. Heine, C. Brentano, F. Rückert), as well as in the lyricism of second-rate contemporary poets (K. Henckel, H. Gilm, A.F. Schack, O.J. Bierbaum). Most of Strauss’s songs are pieces for voice (usually high) and piano, but for specific performances the composer would arrange the piano part for the orchestra, often reaching back to a previously composed piece many years later (e.g. the song Zueignung from the collection Acht Gedichte aus “Letzte Blätter”, 1885, instrumentalised in 1940). Sometimes individual songs from a given collection were subjected to instrumentation and in performances with the composer’s participation, there were also individual songs combined from different collections. Strauss did not treat these song collections (publications with titles indicating only the number of pieces, e.g. FünfLieder) as cycles; only in reference to the satirical Krämerspiegel Op. 66 can we speak with certainty of a cyclical intention and the integrity of the piece. Strauss’s song style has many features in common with his operatic style. Lyricism of vocal parts, preference for long rhythmic values and high voice position dominate. The piano part is often characterised by rhythmic fragmentation and complex texture, which in the orchestral setting provides an opportunity to introduce refined sound colours. It is probably for this reason that Strauss’s orchestral songs have gained the greatest popularity, both the arrangements of works for voice and piano (e.g. 3 instrumented songs from the collection Vier Lieder Op. 27: Ruhe, meine Seele, Cäcilie, Morgen) and the original songs with orchestra (Vier letzte Lieder). The mood evoked by Strauss’s songs remains in the sphere of romantic expression, which, especially in compositions written after World War I, is an expression of aesthetic backwardness.
Strauss reached for almost all musical genres but in many cases, this was connected with occasional commissions. Parergon zur Symphonia domestica and Panathenaenzug for piano for the left hand and orchestra were intended for the pianist P. Wittgenstein, who lost his right hand during World War I; Concerto No. 1 for horn and orchestra was written by the composer for his father, and the Oboe Concerto for the oboist J. de Lancie. The ballet Josephslegende was commissioned by Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, and several compositions for wind orchestra are associated with the ensemble of Viennese city musicians. Of marginal importance in the context of Strauss’s creative legacy are non-operatic stage works (ballets, theatre and film music), usually written occasionally and not always completed. A specific circle is also marked by choral works, in which the composer used sophisticated technical means, intended for powerful performance ensembles – both unaccompanied (Zwei Gesänge Op. 34 for a 16-voice choir) and with the accompaniment of an orchestra (Wandrers Sturmlied Op. 14 for a 6-voice choir and orchestra). Sometimes, polyphonic vocal compositions had a social genesis and an occasional and humorous character, which was expressed in the random selection of texts – an extreme example is Utan svafvel och phosphor, which text Strauss took from an inscription on a Swedish matchbox. Among all these compositions, the most important seem to be works that refer to classical instrumental music genres, such as sonatas, chamber music or concertos. The creation of these works falls on two extreme periods in Strauss’s life – his youth and his late years. The youthful compositions only rarely show individual features of Strauss’s musical style, often being references to conventional 19th-century solutions (Violin Concerto, Concerto No. 1 for horn and orchestra, Cello Sonata Op. 6). In the late works from the 1940s (Concerto No. 2 for horn and orchestra, Oboe Concerto, Metamorphosen, Duett-Concertino for clarinet, bassoon and string orchestra), elements of neoclassicism are present, manifesting themselves in such areas as a chamber-like performance set, motor rhythmic progression, or the inclusion of parodic and ironic musical elements.
Literature:
Documentation – R. Specht Vollständiges Verzeichnis der im Druck erschienenen Werke von Richard Strauss, Vienna 1910; E. Mueller von Asow Richard Strauss. Thematisches Verzeichnis, 3 volumes, vol. 3 completed and published by A. Ott and E Trenner, Vienna 1955–74; Richard-Strauss-Bibliographie, 2 volumes, vol. 1: 1882–1944, ed. O. Ortner and E Grasberger, Munich 1964, vol. 2: 1944–1964, ed. G. Brosche, Vienna 1973; Richard Strauss. Autographen in München und Wien. Verzeichnis, ed. G. Brosche and K. Dachs, Tutzing 1979; R. Tenschert Straussiana aus vier Jahrzehnten, Tutzing 1994; F. Trenner Richard Strauss. Werkverzeichnis, Munich 1993, Vienna 1999; M.-D. Schmid The Richard Strauss Companion, Westport 2003; Richard Strauss Handbuch, ed. W. Werbeck, Stuttgart 2014.
Richard Strauss et Romain Rolland. Correspondance, ed. G. Samazeuilh, Paris 1951; Richard Strauss – Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Briefwechsel, ed. W. Schuh, Zurich 1952, 1978; Hans von Bülow – Richard Strauss. Briefwechsel, ed. W. Schuh and F. Trenner, “RichardStrauss-Jahrbuch” 1954; Richard Strauss. Briefe an die Eltern 1882–1906, ed. W. Schuh, Zurich 1954; Richard Strauss und Joseph Gregor. Briefwechsel 1934–1949, ed. R. Tenschert, Salzburg 1955; Richard Strauss, Stefan Zweig. Briefwechsel, ed. W. Schuh, Frankfurt am Main 1957; Cosima Wagner-Richard Strauss. Ein Briefwechsel and Richard Strauss-Ludwig Thuille. Ein Briefwechsel, ed. F. Trenner, Tutzing 1978, 1980; Lieber Collega! Richard Strauss im Briefwechsel mit zeitgenössischen Komponisten und Dirigenten, ed. G. Strauss, Berlin 1996; Ch. Youmans Ten Letters from Alexander Ritter to Richard Strauss 1887–1894, « Richard-Strauss-Blätter» No. 35, 1996; G. Brosche Richard Strauss – Clemens Krauss. Briefwechsel, Tutzing 1997; Ihr aufrichtig Ergebener. Richard Strauss im Briefwechsel mit zeitgenössischen Komponisten und Dirigenten, ed. G. Strauss and M. Reger, Berlin 1998; Richard Strauss – Ernst von Schuch. Ein Briefwechsel, ed. G. Hanke Knaus, Berlin 1999; Richard Strauss – Karl Böhm. Briefwechsel, 1921–1949, ed. M. Steiger, Mainz 1999; Sie kannten Richard Strauss: Ein Genie in Nahaufnahme, ed. Ch. Wagner-Trenkwitz, Vienna 2013; Richard Strauss: Späte Aufzeichnungen, ed. M. Beyer, J. May, W. Werbeck, Mainz 2016; “Mit dir keine Oper zu lang…”: Hugo von Hoffmannstahl, Alfred Roller, Richard Strauss – Briefwechsel, ed. Ch. Mühlegger-Henhapel, U. Renner, Munich 2021
F. Busch Aus dem Leben eines Musikers, Zurich 1949; Richard Strauss. Betrachtungen und Erinnerungen, ed. W. Schuh, Zurich 1949, 1957; Richard Strauss. Dokumente seines Lebens und Schaffens, ed. F. Trenner, Munich 1954; R. Petzold Richard Strauss. Sein Leben in Bildern, Leipzig 1960; Richard Strauss. Rozmyślania i wspomnienia, “Muzyka w Prasie Zagranicznej” 1961 No. 2; K. Böhm Begegnung mit Richard Strauss, ed. F.E. Dostal, Vienna 1964; L. Kusche Richard Strauss im Kulturkarussell der Zeit 1864–1964, Munich 1964; W. Deppisch Richard Strauss in Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten, Reinbek 1968; F. Trenner Die Skizzenbücher von Richard Strauss aus dem Richard-Strauss-Archiv in Garmisch, Tutzing 1977; Richard Strauss. Dokumente, ed. E. Krause, Leipzig 1980; Die Texte der Lieder von Richard Strauss. Kritische Ausgabe, ed. R. Schlotterer, Pfaffenhoffen 1988; Kritiken zu den Uraufführungen der Bühnenwerke von Richard Strauss, ed. F. Messmer, Pfaffenhoffen 1989; G. Brosche Richard Strauss und Wien, « Richard-Strauss-Blätter» No. 42, 1999; R. Schlötterer-Traimer Richard Strauss: Sein Leben und Werk im Spiegel der zeitgenössischen Karikatur, Mainz 2009; G. Lesnig Die Aufführungen der Opern von Richard Strauss im 20. Jahrhundert: Daten, Inszenierungen, Besetzungen, vol. 1–2, Tutzing 2008–10; Richard Strauss: Der Komponist und sein Werk – Überlieferung, Interpretation, Rezeption, ed. S. Bolz, A. Kech, H. Schick, Munich 2017; Richard Strauss und die Sächsische Staatskapelle, ed. W. Mende, H.-G. Ottenberg, Hildesheim 2019; Strauss on the Record, ed. O. Panagl, M.M. Werley, Vienna 2022.
Life and work – E. Newman Richard Strauss, London 1908; R. Specht Richard Strauss und sein Werk, 2 volumes, Leipzig 1921; H.J. Moser Richard Strauss. Leben und Werk, Kraków 1944; W. Brandl Richard Strauss. Leben und Werk, Wiesbaden 1949; E. Bücken Richard Strauss, Kevelaer 1949; E. Krause Richard Strauss. Gestalt und Werk, Leipzig 1955, 1980, Polish ed. Richard Strauss. Człowiek i dzieło, transl. K. Bula, Kraków 1983; W. Panofsky Richard Strauss. Partitur eines Lebens, Munich 1965; G.R. Marek Richard Strauss. The Life of a Non-Hero, New York 1967; A. Jefferson Richard Strauss, London 1975; Q. Principe Strauss, Milan 1989; F. Messmer Richard Strauss. Biographie eines Klangzauberers, Zurich 1994; M. Kennedy Richard Strauss, «Master Musicians», London 1976, New York 1996; V. Beci Der ewig Moderne. Richard Strauss, Düsseldorf 1998; M. Boyden Richard Strauss. Die Biographie, Vienna 1999; K. Wilhelm Richard Strauss persönlich. Eine Bildbiographie, Berlin 1999; M. Publig Richard Strauss. Bürger, Künstler, Rebell. Eine historische Annäherung, Graz 1999; Wer war Richard Strauss? Neunzehn Antworten, ed. H. Krellmann, Frankfurt am Main 1999; F. Trenner Richard Strauss: Chronik zu Leben und Werk, Vienna 2003; G. Brosche Richard Strauss: Werk und Leben, Vienna 2008; R. Holden Richard Strauss: A Musical Life, New Haven 2011; M. Heinemann Richard Strauss: Lebensgeschichte als Musiktheater, Cologne-Rheinkassel 2014; L. Lütteken Richard Strauss: Musik der Moderne, Stuttgart 2014; L. Lütteken Strauss, New York 2019.
A. Berger Richard Strauss als geistige Macht. Versuch eines philosophischen Verständnisses, Berlin 1964; S. Kisielewski Richard Strauss, in: Gwiazdozbiór muzyczny, vol. 1, Kraków 1958, 1982; Richard Strauss and his World, ed. B. Gilliam, Princeton 1992; Richard Strauss. New Perspectives on the Composer and his Work, ed. B. Gilliam, Durham 1992; T. Ashley Richard Strauss and 20th-Century Composers, London 1999; B. Gilliam Richard Strauss: Magier der Töne – Eine Biographie, Munich 2014; D. Hurwitz Richard Strauss: An Owner’s Manual, Milwaukee 2014; Richard Strauss in Context, ed. M. Kristiansen, J.E. Jones, Cambridge 2020.
Th. Armstrong Strauss’s Tone-Poems, London 1931; E. Wachten Das psychotechnische Formproblem in den sinfonischen Dichtungen von Richard Strauss, Berlin 1933; S. Kisielewski Poematy symfoniczne Richarda Straussa, Kraków 1955; G. Krauklis Simfoniczeskije poemy Richarda Straussa, Moscow 1970; M. Kennedy Strauss. Tone Poems, London 1984; W. Werbeck Die Tondichtungen von Richard Strauss, Tutzing 1996; M. Hansen Richard Strauss: die Sinfonischen Dichtungen, Kassel 2003.
Reiss Dramat muzyczny Richarda Straussa, “Biblioteka Warszawska” vol. 3 book 3, 1911 and “Przegląd Muzyczny” 1911 No. 19; W. Schuh Kritiken und Essays, vol. 1: Über Opern von Richard Strauss, Zurich 1947; Richard Strauss Bühnenwerke, ed. E. Roth, London 1954; A. Natan Richard Strauss. Die Opern, Basel 1963; W. Mann Richard Strauss. A Critical Study of the Operas, London 1964; E. Wąsowska Funkcja dramaturgiczna języka muzycznego w „Salome” Richarda Straussa, “Muzyka” 1968 No. 3 and 4; A.A. Abert Richard Strauss. Die Opern. Einführung und Analyse, Hanover 1972; W. Winterhager Zur Struktur des Operndialogs. Komparative Analysen des musikdramatischen Werks von Richard Strauss, Frankfurt am Main 1984; M. Gmys Dwa oblicza muzycznego manieryzmu, “Monochord” 1995 No. 6–7; J. Bottenberg Shared Creation. Words and Music in the Hofmannsthal – Strauss Operas, Frankfurt am Main 1996; B. Banoun L’Opéra selon Richard Strauss. Un théâtre et son temps, Paris 2000; R.D. Golianek Muzyczna secesja. Opery Richarda Straussa, “Operomania” 2001/2002 No. 4 (Poznań); L. Kramer Opera and Modern Culture: Wagner and Strauss, Berkeley 2004; J. Liebscher Richard Strauss und das Musiktheater, Berlin 2005; L. Lütteken Richard Strauss: Die Opern – Ein musikalischer Werkführer, Munich 2013; Richard Strauss und die Oper, ed. Ch. Mühlegger-Henhapel, A. Steiner-Strauss, St. Pölten 2014; D. Ender Richard Strauss: Meister der Inszenierung, Vienna 2014; B. Gilliam Rounding Wagner’s Mountain: Richard Strauss and Modern German Opera, Cambridge 2014
A. Jefferson The Lieder of Richard Strauss, London 1971; U. Lienenlüke Lieder von Richard Strauss nach zeitgenössischer Lyrik, Regensburg 1976; A. Obere Richard Strauss – Vier letzte Lieder, in: Pieśń z orkiestrą lub zespołem kameralnym 1876–1976, «Zeszyty Naukowe Zespołu Analizy i Interpretacji Muzyki PWSM» No. 2, ed. K. Droba, L. Polony, M. Stachowski, K. Szwajgier, Kraków 1977; B.A. Peterson Ton und Wort. The Lieder of Richard Strauss, Ann Arbor 1979; A. Oberc Cytaty i autocytaty w cyklu pieśni „Krämerspiegel” op. 66 Richarda Straussa, in: Muzyka w muzyce, «Spotkania Muzyczne w Baranowie» vol. 2, ed. T. Małecka and L. Polony, Kraków 1980; Richard Strauss. “Rückert-Lieder” op. 46, «Muzyka i Liryka» book 1, ed. M. Tomaszewski, Kraków 1989 and Pieśni z orkiestrą Richarda Straussa, in: Muzyka, słowo, sens, commemorative book of M. Tomaszewski, ed. A. Oberc, Kraków 1994; Richard Strauss’ Complete Song Texts, ed. B. Glass, Mt. Morris 2004; Richard Strauss im europäischen Kontext, ed. J. May, Ch. Wolf, Tutzing 2011; The Cambridge Companion to Richard Strauss, ed. Ch. Youmans, Cambridge 2010; Ch. Youmans Mahler & Strauss: In Dialogue, Bloomington 2016.
Special issues – «Mitteilungen der Internationalen RichardStrauss-Gesellschaft» No. 1–43, Berlin 1952–69; “Richard Strauss-Jahrbuch,” ed. W. Schuh, 1954, 1959/60 (Bonn); « Richard-Strauss-Blätter» (biyearly), ed. Internationale Richard-Strauss-Gesellschaft, No. 1–12, Vienna 1971–78, later new series Nos 1–60, Vienna 1979–2008, and from 2009 again as «Richard Strauss-Jahrbuch» (yearly).
Compositions:
The following list of compositions does not include unfinished, lost, childhood compositions or of doubtful authorship. A complete list of Strauss’s output can be found in F. Trenner’s Richard Strauss Werkverzeichnis (Munich 1993, Vienna 1999), which forms the basis of this study (numbering TrV).
Instrumental:
orchestra:
Festmarsch in E-flat major, Op. 1, TrV 43, 1876, premiere Munich 26 March 1881, conductor F. Strauss, 1st ed. Leipzig 1881 B & H
Serenade in G major, TrV 52, 1877, premiere (?)Munich 1881, conductor F. Strauss, 1st ed. Mainz 1994 Schott
Symphony No. 1 in D minor, TrV 94, 1880, premiere Munich 30 March 1881, conductor H. Levi, 1st ed. Mainz 1980 Schott
Concert Overture in C minor, TrV 125, 1883, premiere Munich 28 November 1883, conductor H. Levi, 1st ed. Mainz 1988 Schott
Symphony No. 2 in F minor, Op. 12, TrV 126, 1883–84, premiere New York 13 December 1884, conductor T. Thomas, 1st ed. Munich 1886 Aibl
Festmarsch in D major, TrV 135, 1884–85, premiere Munich 5 January 1885, conductor F. Strauss; 2nd ed. 1887, premiere 5 January 1888, conductor F. Strauss
Aus Italien, symphonic fantasia, Op. 16, TrV 147, 1886, premiere Munich 2 March 1887, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Munich 1887 Aibl
Don Juan, symphonic poem after N. Lenau, Op. 20, TrV 156, 1888–89, premiere Weimar 11 November 1889, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Munich 1890 Aibl
Festmarsch in C major, TrV 157, 1888, premiere Munich 1 February 1889, conductor F. Strauss
Tod und Verklärung, symphonic poem, Op. 24, TrV 158, 1888–89, premiere Eisenach 21 June 1890, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Munich 1891 Aibl
Macbeth, symphonic poem after W. Shakespeare, Op. 23, TrV 163, 1888, premiere Weimar 13 October 1890, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Munich 1891 Aibl; revised ed. 1891, premiere Berlin 29 February 1892, conductor R. Strauss
Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche, symphonic poem, Op. 28, TrV 171, 1894–95, premiere Cologne 5 November 1895, conductor F. Wüllner, 1st ed. Munich 1895 Aibl
Also sprach Zarathustra, symphonic poem after F. Nietzsche, Op. 30, TrV 176, 1896, premiere Frankfurt am Main 27 November 1896, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Munich 1896 Aibl
Don Quixote, symphonic poem for cello and orchestra, Op. 35, TrV 184, 1897, premiere Cologne 8 March 1898, cello F. Grützmacher, conductor F. Wüllner, 1st ed. Munich 1898 Aibl
Ein Heldenleben, symphonic poem, Op. 40, TrV 190, 1897–98, premiere Frankfurt am Main 3 March 1899, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Leipzig 1899 Leuckart
Symphonia domestica, Op. 53, TrV 209, 1902–03, premiere New York 31 March 1904, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1904 B & B
Zwei Militärmärsche, Op. 51, TrV 221, 1906, premiere Berlin 6 March 1907, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Leipzig 1907 Peters
Der Rosenkavalier, second suite of waltzes (from the 3rd act), TrV 227a, 1910–11, 1st ed. Berlin 1911 Fürstner
Eine Alpensinfonie, Op. 64, TrV 233, 1911–15, premiere Berlin 28 October 1915, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Leipzig 1915 Leuckart
Festliches Präludium, Op. 61, TrV 229, 1913, premiere Vienna 19 October 1913, conductor F. Löwe, 1st ed. Berlin 1913 Fürstner
Der Bürger als Edelmann, suite Op. 60, TrV 228c, 1920, premiere Vienna 31 January 1920, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1923 Fürstner
Tanzsuite nach Klavierstücken von F. Couperin for chamber orchestra, TrV 245, 1923, premiere Vienna 17 February 1923, conductor C. Krauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1923 Fürstner
Militärmarsch (soundtrack for the film Der Rosenkavalier), TrV 227b, 1925, premiere Dresden 18 October 1925, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1926 Fürstner
Vier sinfonische Zwischenspiele aus Intermezzo (from an opera), TrV 246a, 1929, 1st ed. Berlin 1929 Fürstner
Schlagobers, suite from a ballet, TrV 243a, 1932, 1st ed. Berlin 1932 Fürstner
München: ein Gelegenheitswalzer for the film München, directed by U. Keyser, TrV 274, 1939, premiere Munich 24 May 1939, conductor C. Ehrenberg (in the film by U. Keyser), 1st ed. Frankfurt am Main 1998 Peters; revised ed. 1945, premiere Vienna 31 March 1951, conductor F. Lehmann, 1st ed. London 1951 B & Haw
Festmusik zur Feier des 2600jährigen Bestehens des Kaiserreichs Japan, TrV 277, 1940, premiere Tokio 14 December 1940, conductor H. Fellmer, 1st ed. Berlin 1941 Oertel
Divertimento (based on a work by F. Couperin) for chamber orchestra, Op. 86, TrV 245b, 1940–41, premiere Vienna 31 January 1943, conductor C. Krauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1942 Oertel
Der Rosenkavalier, first suite of waltzes (from acts I–II), TrV 227c, 1944, premiere London 4 August 1946, conductor E. Leinsdorf, 1st ed. London 1947 B & Haw
Metamorphosen, study for 23 string instruments, TrV 290, 1945, premiere Zurich 25 January 1946, conductor P. Sacher, 1st ed. London 1946 B & Haw
Symphonische Fantasie (from the opera Die Frau ohne Schatten), TrV 234a, 1946, premiere Vienna 26 June 1947, conductor K. Böhm, 1st ed. Berlin–London 1947 Fürstner/B & Haw
Symphonisches Fragment aus Josephslegende (from a ballet), TrV 231a, 1947, premiere Cincinnati March 1949, conductor F. Reiner, 1st ed. Berlin 1947 Fürstner
for instruments solo and orchestra:
Romanze in E-flat major for clarinet and orchestra, TrV 80, 1879, premiere Munich, summer 1879; Garmisch-Partenkirchen 14 July 1991, clarinet S. Meyer, conductor M. Helmrath
Violin Concerto in D minor, Op. 8, TrV 110, 1880–82, premiere Cologne 4 March 1890, violin B. Walter, conductor F. Wüllner, 1st ed. Munich 1897 Aibl
Concerto No. 1 in E-flat major for horn and orchestra, Op. 11, TrV 117, 1882–83, premiere Meiningen 4 March 1885, horn G. Leinhos, conductor H. von Bülow, 1st ed. Munich 1884 Aibl
Romanze in F major for cello and orchestra, TrV 118, 1883, premiere (?) Dresden 21 May 1986, cello J. Vogler, conductor G. Neuhold, 1st ed. Mainz 1997 Schott
Burlesque in D minor for piano and orchestra, TrV 145, 1885–86, premiere Eisenach 21 June 1890, piano E. d’Albert, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Leipzig 1894 Steingräber
Parergon zur Symphonia domestica for piano for left hand and orchestra, Op. 73, TrV 209a, 1925, premiere Dresden 6 October 1925, piano P. Wittgenstein, conductor F. Busch, 1st ed. London 1950 B & Haw; piano reduction Vienna 1926 Kugel
Panathenäenzug, “symphonic studies in form of a passacaglia” for piano for left hand and orchestra, Op. 74, TrV 254, 1927, premiere Berlin 16 January 1928, piano P. Wittgenstein, conductor B. Walter, 1st ed. 1928 self-published; London 1953 B & Haw
Concerto No. 2 in E-flat major for horn and orchestra, TrV 283, 1942, premiere Salzburg 11 August 1943, horn G. Freiberg, conductor K. Böhm, 1st ed. London 1950 B & Haw
Concerto in D major for oboe and orchestra, 1945, revised 1948, premiere Zurich 26 February 1946, oboe M. Saillet, conductor V. Andreae, 1st ed. London 1948 B & Haw
Duett-Concertino for clarinet, bassoon and string orchestra, TrV 293, 1947, premiere Lugano 4 April 1948, clarinet A. Basile, bassoon B. Bergamaschi, conductor O. Nussio, 1st ed. London 1949 B & Haw
for wind orchestra:
Serenade in E-flat major for 13 woodwind instruments, Op. 7, TrV 106, 1881, premiere Dresden 27 November 1882, conductor F. Wüllner, 1st ed. Munich 1883 Aibl
Suite in B-flat major for 13 woodwind instruments, Op. 4, TrV 132, 1884, premiere Munich 18 November 1884, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Leipzig-Berlin 1911 Leuckart/Fürstner
Feierlicher Einzug der Ritter des Johanniter-Ordens for brass instruments and timpani, TrV 224, 1909, premiere (?) Vienna 12 December 1909, 1st ed. Berlin 1909 Lienau
Wiener Philharmoniker Fanfare for brass instruments and timpani, TrV 248, 1924, premiere Vienna 4 March 1924, 1st ed. London 1960 B & Haw
Fanfare zur Eröffnung der Musikwoche der Stadt Wien for brass instruments and timpani, TrV 250, 1924, premiere Vienna 14 September 1924, 1st ed. London 1960 B & Haw
Festmusik der Stadt for brass instruments and timpani, TrV 286, 1942–43, premiere Vienna 9 April 1943, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. London 1978 B & Haw
Wiener Fanfare for brass instruments and timpani, TrV 287, 1943, premiere Vienna 20 June 1943, conductor H.H. Scholtys, 1st ed. Mainz 1999 Schott
Sonatina No. 1 “Aus der Werkstatt eines Invaliden” in F major for 16 woodwind instruments, TrV 288, 1943, premiere Dresden 18 June 1944, conductor K. Elmendorff, 1st ed: London 1964 B & Haw
Sonatina No. 2 “Fröhliche Werkstatt” in E-flat major for 16 woodwind instruments, TrV 291, 1944–45, premiere Winterthur 25 March 1946, conductor H. Scherchen, 1st ed. London 1952 B & Haw
chamber:
Piano Trio No. 1 in A major, TrV 53, 1877, 1st ed. Mainz 1996 Schott
Introduction, Theme and Variations in E-flat major for horn and piano, TrV 70, 1878, 1st ed. Mainz 1995 Schott
Piano Trio No. 2 in D major, TrV 71, 1878, 1st ed. Mainz 1996 Schott
Introduction, Theme and Variations in G major for flute and piano, TrV 76, 1879, premiere (?) Munich, summer 1879; Graz 28 May 1978, flute G. Hechtl, piano A. Hennig
String Quartet in A major, Op. 2, TrV 95, 1880, premiere Munich 14 March 1881, Benno-Walter-Quartett, 1st ed. Munich 1881 Aibl
Variations on a Theme “Das Dirndl is harb auf mi” for string trio, TrV 109, 1882, premiere Munich 18 March 1882, 1st ed. Mainz 1995 Schott
Ständchen in G major for piano quartet, TrV 114, 1882, 1st ed. Mainz 1996 Schott
Sonata in F major for cello and piano, Op. TrV 115, 1880–83, premiere Nuremberg 8 December 1883, cello H. Wihan, piano H. Königsthal, 1st ed. Munich 1883 Aibl
Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 13, TrV 137, 1883–85, premiere Weimar 8 December 1885, Halir-Quartett, piano R. Strauss, 1st ed. Munich 1886 Aibl
Festmarsch in D major for piano quartet, TrV 136, 1886, 1st ed. Mainz 1996 Schott
Sonata in E-flat major for violin and piano, Op. 18, TrV 151, 1887, premiere Elberfeld 3 October 1888, violin R. Heckmann, piano J. Buths, 1st ed. Munich 1888 Aibl
Andante in C major for horn and piano (from an incomplete sonata), TrV 155, 1888, premiere Vienna 3 May 1973, horn B. Paul, piano R. Kramer-Preisenhammer, 1st ed. London 1973 B & Haw
Zwei Stücke for piano quartet, TrV 169, 1893, 1st ed. Mainz 1996 Schott
String Sextet (from the opera Capriccio), TrV 279a, 1943, 1st ed. Berlin 1943 Oertel
Dances for violin, cello and harpsichord (from the opera Capriccio) TrV 279b, 1943, 1st ed. Berlin 1943 Oertel
Allegretto for violin and piano, TrV 295, 1948, 1st ed. Giebing 1969 Katzbichler
for piano:
Sonata No. 1 in E major, TrV 47, 1877
12 Variations in D major, TrV 68, 1878
Aus alter Zeit. Eine kleine Gavotte, TrV 72, 1879, published in: Musikalisches Bilderbuch für das Pianoforte, Munich 1879
Sonata No. 2 (Grosse Sonate) in C minor, TrV 79, 1879
Sonata in B minor, Op. 5, TrV 103, beginning 1881, published in Munich 1882 Aibl
Fünf Klavierstücke, Op. 3, TrV 105, 1880–81, published in Munich 1881 Aibl
Stimmungsbilder, Op. 9, TrV 127, 1882–84, published in Munich 1886 Aibl
14 Improvisations and Fugue on an Original Theme, TrV 130, 1884, published in Munich 1898 Bruckmann (only Fugue)
Parade-Marsch des Regiments König-Jäger zu Pferde No. 1, in E-flat major, TrV 213, 1905, performed: Berlin 6 March 1907, published in Berlin 1906 Fürstner
De Brandenburgsche Mars, TrV 214, 1905, performed: Berlin 6 March 1907, published in Berlin 1906 Fürstner; arranged for orchestra, TrV 214, 1905
Militärischer Festmarsch in E-flat major, TrV 217,1905; second version for orchestra, TrV 217, 1906, performed in Berlin 27 January 1906, published in Berlin 1906 Fürstner (both versions)
Parade-Marsch für Kavallerie No. 2, in D-flat major, TrV 222, 1907, also version for orchestra, published in Berlin 1907 Fürstner (both versions)
Vocal and vocal-instrumental:
songs for voice solo and piano:
Weihnachtslied, TrV 2, text by Ch.F.D. Schubart, 1870, published in “Berliner Lokalanzeiger” 1898
Einkehr, TrV 3, text by L. Uhland, 1871, published in „Die Musik” 1905
Winterreise, TrV 4, text by L. Uhland, 1871, published in 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Waldkonzert, TrV 5, text by J.N. Vogel, 1871(?), published in London 1968 B & Haw
Der böhmische Musikant, TrV 7, text by O. Pletzsch, 1871(?), published in London 1968 B & Haw
Der müde Wanderer, TrV 16, text by A.H. Hoffmann von Fallersleben, 1873(?), published in Berlin-London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Husarenlied, TrV 42, text by A.H. Hoffmann von Fallersleben, 1876, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Der Fischer, TrV 48, text by J.W. Goethe, 1877, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Die Drossel, TrV 49, text by L. Uhland, 1877, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Lass ruhn die Toten, TrV 50, text by A. Chamisso, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Lust und Qual, TrV 51, text by J.W. Goethe, 1877, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Spielmann und Zither, TrV 58, text by Th. Körner, 1878, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Wiegenlied, TrV 59, text by A.H. Hoffmann von Fallersleben, 1878, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Abend- und Morgenrot, TrV 60, text by A.H. Hoffmann von Fallersleben, 1878, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Im Walde, TrV 62, text by E. Geibel, 1878, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Ein Spielmann und sein Kind, TrV 63, text by A.H. Hoffmann von Fallersleben, 1878, published in London 1968 B 8c Haw, also for soprano and orchestra
Nebel, TrV 65, text by N. Lenau, 1878, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Soldatenlied, TrV 66, text by A.H. Hoffmann von Fallersleben, 1878, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Ein Röslein zog ich mir im Garten, TrV 67, text by A.H. Hoffmann von Fallersleben, 1878, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Drei Lieder: 1. Waldgesang, 2. O schneller mein Ross, 3. Die Lilien glühn in Düften, TrV 75, text by E. Geibel, 1879, performed: Munich 16 March 1881, published in Berlin–London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
In Vaters Garten heimlich steht ein Blümlein, TrV 88, text by H. Heine, 1879, published in London 1968 B & Haw
Die erwachte Rose, TrV 90, text by F. von Sallet, 1880, performed: New York 30 November 1958, published in New York 1958 Henmar Press Inc.
Begegnung, TrV 98, text by O.E. Gruppe, 1880, performed: Meiningen 21 February 1886, published in New York 1958 Henmar Press Inc.
John Anderson, mein Lieb, TrV 101, text by R. Burns, translation F. Freiligrath, 1880, published in London 1968 B & Haw
Rote Rosen, TrV 119, text by K. Stieler, 1883, performed: New York 30 November 1958, published in New York 1958 Henmar Press Inc.
Acht Gedichte aus “Letzte Blätter”: 1. Zueignung, 2. Nichts, 3. Die Nacht, 4. Die Georgine, 5. Geduld, 6. Die Verschwiegenen, 7. Die Zeitlose, 8 Allerseelen, Op. 10, TrV 141, text by H. von Gilm, 1885, published in Munich 1887 Aibl, No. 1 in version for voice and orchestra, 1940, performed: Rome 4 July 1940
Wer hat’s getan?, TrV 142, text by H. von Gilm, 1885, performed: Salzburg 15 August 1974, published in Tutzing 1974 Schneider
Fünf Lieder: 1. Madrigal, 2. Winternacht, 3. Lob des Leidens, 4. Aus den Liedern der Trauer, 5. Heimkehr, Op. 15, TrV 148, No. 1 text by Michelangelo, No. 2–5 text by A.F. von Schack, 1884–86, published in Hamburg-Petersburg 1887 Rahter/Büttner
Sechs Lieder for soprano or tenor and piano: 1. Seitdem dein Aug’ in meines schaute, 2. Ständchen, 3. Das Geheimnis, 4. Aus den Liedern der Trauer, 5. Nur Muth!, 6. Barkarole, Op. 17, TrV 149, text by A.F. von Schack, 1885–87, performed: Weimar 28 October 1889, published in Hamburg-Petersburg 1888 Rahter/Büttner
Sechs Lieder aus “Lotosblätter”: 1. Wozu noch, Mädchen, soll es frommen, 2. Breit’ über mein Haupt dein schwarzes Haar, 3. Schön sind, doch kalt die Himmelssterne, 4. Wie sollten wir geheim sie halten, 5. Hoffen und wieder verzagen, 6. Mein Herz ist stumm, Op. 19, TrV 152, text by A.F. von Schack, 1885–88, published in Munich 1888 Aibl
Mädchenblumen: 1. Kornblumen, 2. Mohnblumen, 3. Efeu, 4. Wasserrose, Op. 22, TrV 153, text by F. Dahn, 1886–88, published in Berlin 1891 Fürstner
Schlichte Weisen: 1. All’ mein Gedanken, mein Herz und mein Sinn, 2. Du meines Herzens Krönelein, 3. Ach Lieb, ich muss nun scheiden, 4. Ach weh mir, unglückhaftem Mann, 5. Die Frauen sind oft fromm und still, Op. 21, TrV 160, text by F. Dahn, 1889–90, published in Munich 1890 Aibl
Zwei Lieder: 1. Frühlingsgedränge, 2. O wärst du mein, Op. 26, TrV 166, text by N. Lenau, 1891, published in Munich 1895 Aibl
Vier Lieder for soprano or tenor and piano: 1. Ruhe, meine Seele, text by K. Henckell, 2. Cäcilie, text by H. Hart, 3. Heimliche Aufforderung, text by J.H. Mackay, 4. Morgen, text by J.H. Mackay, Op. 27, TrV 170, 1894, published in Munich 1894 Aibl, No. 2 and 4 in version for voice and orchestra, 1897, performed: Brussels 21 November 1897, No. 1 in version for voice and orchestra, 1948
Drei Lieder: 1. Traum durch die Dämmerung, 2. Schlagende Herzen, 3. Nachtgang, Op. 29, TrV 172, text by O.J. Bierbaum, 1895, published in Munich 1895 Aibl
Vier Lieder for soprano and piano: 1. Blauer Sommer, 2. Wenn…, 3. Weisser Jasmin, 4. Stiller Gang (with viola ad libitum), Op. 31, TrV 173, No. 1–3 text by C. Busse, No. 4 text by R. Dehmel, 1895–96, published in Berlin 1896 Fürstner
Fünf Lieder: 1. Ich trage meine Minne, 2. Sehnsucht, 3. Liebeshymnus, 4. O süsser Mai, 5. Himmelsboten zu Liebchens Himmelsbett, Op. 32, TrV 174, No. 1, 3 and 4 text by K. Henckell, No. 2 text by D. von Liliencron, No. 5 text from Des Knaben Wunderhom, 1896, performed in: Munich 9 November 1896 (No. 1–4), published in Munich 1896 Aibl, No. 3 in a version for voice and orchestra 1897, performed: Brussels 21 November 1897
Wir beide wollen springen, TrV 175, text by O.J. Bierbaum, 1896, facsimile ed. “Jugend” from 17 October 1896
Vier Lieder: 1. Das Rosenband, text by F.G. Klopstock, 2. Für fünfzehn Pfennige, text from Des Knaben Wunderhorn, 3. Hat gesagt – bleibt’s nicht dabei, text from Des Knaben Wunderhorn, 4. Anbetung, text by F. Rückert, Op. 36, TrV 186, 1897–98, published in Munich 1898 Aibl, No. 1 in the version for voice and orchestra 1897, performed: Brussels 21 November 1897
Sechs Lieder: 1. Glückes genug, text by D. von Liliencron, 2. Ich liebe dich, text by D. von Liliencron, 3. Meinem Kinde, text by G. Falke, 4. Mein Auge, text by R. Dehmel, 5. Herr Lenz, text by E. von Bodman, 6. Hochzeitlich Lied, text by A. Lindner, Op. 37, TrV 187,1897–98, published in Munich 1898 Aibl, No. 3 in the version for voice and orchestra 1900(?), performed: Elberfeld 8 July 1900, No. 4 in the version for voice and orchestra 1933, performed: Berlin 13 October 1933, No. 2 in the version for voice and orchestra 1943
Fünf Lieder: 1. Leises Lied, 2. Junghexenlied, 3. Der Arbeitsmann, 4. Befreit, 5. Lied an meinen Sohn, Op. 39, TrV 189, No. 1 and 3–5 text by R. Dehmel, No. 2 text by O.J. Bierbaum, 1898, published in Leipzig 1898 Forberg, No. 3 in the version for voice and orchestra 1918, performed: Berlin 20 April 1919, No. 4 in the version for voice and orchestra, 1933, performed: Berlin 13 October 1933
Fünf Lieder. 1. Wiegenlied, text by R. Dehmel, 2. In der Campagna, text by J.H. Mackay, 3. Am Ufer, text by R. Dehmel, 4. Bruder Liederlich, text by D. von Liliencron, 5. Leise Lieder, text by Ch. Morgenstern, Op. 41, TrV 195, 1899, published in Leipzig 1899 Leuckart, No. 1 in the version for voice and orchestra 1900, performed: Elberfeld 8 July 1900
Drei Gesänge älterer deutscher Dichter: 1. An sie, text by F.G. Klopstock, 2. Muttertändelei, text by G.A. Bürger, 3. Die Ulme zu Hirsau, text by L. Uhland, Op. 43, TrV 196, 1899, published in Berlin 1899 Challier, No. 2 in the version for voice and orchestra 1900, performed: Elberfeld 8 July 1900
Weihnachtsgefühl, TrV 198, text by M. Greif, 1899, facsimile ed. “Die Woche” from 23 December 1899
Fünf Gedichte: 1. Ein Obdach gegen Sturm und Regen, 2. Gestern war ich Atlas, 3. Die sieben Siegel, 4. Morgenrot, 5. Ich sehe wie in einem Spiegel, Op. 46, TrV 199, text by F. Rückert, 1899–1900, published in Berlin 1900 Fürstner
Fünf Lieder: 1. Auf ein Kind, 2. Des Dichters Abendgang, 3. Rückleben, 4. Einkehr, 5. Von den sieben Zechbrüdern, Op. 47, TrV 200, text by L. Uhland, 1900, published in Berlin 1902 Fürstner, No. 2 in the version for voice and orchestra 1918
Fünf Lieder: 1. Freundliche Vision, 2. Ich schwebe, 3. Kling!, 4. Winterweihe, 5. Winterliebe, Op. 48, TrV 202, No. 1 text by O.J. Bierbaum, No. 2–5 text by K. Henckell, 1900, published in Berlin 1901 Fürstner, No. 1,4 and 5 in the version for voice and orchestra 1918
Acht Lieder: 1. Waldseligkeit, text by R. Dehmel, 2. In goldener Fülle, text by P. Remer, 3. Wiegenliedchen, text by R. Dehmel, 4. Das Lied des Steinklopfers, text by K. Henckell, 5. Sie wissens nicht, text by O. Panizza, 6. Junggesellenschwur, text from Des Knaben Wunderhorn, 7. Wer lieben will, muss leiden, text by C. Mündel, 8. Ach, was Kummer, Qual und Schmerzen, text by C. Mündel, Op. 49, TrV 204, 1900–01, published in Berlin 1902 Fürstner, No. 1 in the version for voice and orchestra, 1918
Der Einsame Op. 51, TrV 206, text by H. Heine, 1906, also for voice and orchestra, cf. songs for voice solo and orchestra
Sechs Lieder: 1. Gefunden, 2. Blindenklage, 3. Im Spätboot, 4. Mit deinen blauen Augen, 5. Frühlingsfeier, 6. Die heiligen drei Könige aus Morgenland, Op. 56, TrV 220, No. 1 text by J.W. Goethe, No. 2 text by K. Henckell, No. 3 text by C.E Meyer, No. 4–6 text by H. Heine, 1903–06, published in Berlin 1906 B & B, No. 6 in the version for voice and orchestra 1906, No. 5 in the version for voice and orchestra 1933, performed: Berlin 13 October 1933
Sechs Lieder: 1. An die Nacht, 2. Ich wollt’ ein Sträusslein binden, 3. Säusle, liebe Myrthe, 4. Als mir dein Liederklang, 5. Amor, 6. Lied der Frauen, Op. 68, TrV 235, text by C. Brentano, 1918, performed: Berlin 30 May 1919 (No. 1–5), Dresden 29 September 1920 (No. 6), published in Berlin 1919 Fürstner, No. 6 in the version for voice and orchestra 1933, performed: Berlin 13 October 1933, No. 1–5 in the version for voice and orchestra 1940, whole in the version for voice and orchestra, performed: Düsseldorf 9 February 1941
Krämerspiegel: 1. Es war einmal ein Bock, 2. Einst kam der Bock als Bote, 3. Es liebte einst ein Hase, 4. Drei Masken sah ich am Himmel stehn, 5. Hast du ein Tongedicht vollbracht, 6. O lieber Künstler sei ermahnt, 7. Unser Feind ist, grosser Gott, 8. Von Händlern wird die Kunst bedroht, 9. Es war mal eine Wanze, 10. Die Künstler sind die Schöpfer, 11. Die Händler und die Macher, 12. O Schöpferschwarm, o Händlerkreis, Op. 66, TrV 236, text by A. Kerr, 1918, performed: Berlin 1 November 1925, published in Berlin 1921 Cassirer
Fünf kleine Lieder: 1. Der Stern, 2. Der Pokal, 3. Einerlei, 4. Waldesfahrt, 5. Schlechtes Wetter, Op. 69, TrV 237, No. 1–3 text by A. von Arnim, No. 4–5 text by H. Heine, 1918, published in Berlin 1919 Fürstner
Sechs Lieder: I. Drei Lieder der Ophelia, text by W. Shakespeare, translated by K. Simrock – 1. Wie erkann’ ich mein Treulieb von andern nun?, 2. Guten Morgen, ‘s ist Sankt Valentinstag, 3. Sie trugen ihn auf der Bahre bloss, II. Aus der Büchern des Unmuts der Rendsch Nameh, text by J.W. Goethe – 4. Wer wird von der Welt verlangen, 5. Hab’ ich euch denn je geraten, 6. Wanderers Gemüthsruhe, Op. 67, TrV 238, 1918, performed: Dresden 27 June 1919 (No. 4–6), published in Berlin 1919 B & B
Sinnspruch “Alle Menschen gross und klein”, TrV 239, text by J.W. Goethe, 1919, published in Berlin 1919 Mosse
Erschaffen und Beleben for bass and piano, Op. 87, TrV 244, 1922, text by J.W. Goethe, performed: Berlin 4 February 1952, published in Vienna 1964 Universal Edition
Durch allen Schall und Klang, TrV 251, text by J.W. Goethe, 1925, performed: Berlin 19 April 1953, published in “Schweizerische Musikzeitung” from 11 June 1949
Gesänge des Orients: 1. Ihre Augen, 2. Schwung, 3. Liebesgeschenke, 4. Die Allmächtige, 5. Huldigung, Op. 77, TrV 257, No. 1, 2, 4 and 5 text by Hafiz, translated by H. Bethge, No. 3 text from H. Bethge Die chinesische Flöte, 1928, performed: Vienna 5 June 1929, published in Leipzig 1929 Leuckart
Und dann nicht mehr for bass and piano, Op. 87, TrV 258, text by F. Rückert, 1929, performed: Munich 2 August 1964, published in Vienna 1964 Universal Edition
Vom künftigen Alter for bass and piano, Op. 87, TrV 260, text by F. Rückert, 1929, performed: Munich 2 August 1964, published in Vienna 1964 Universal Edition
Spruch “Wie etwas sei leicht”, TrV 261, text by J.W. Goethe, 1930, published in London 1968 B & Haw
Das Bächlein Op. 88, TrV 264, text mistakenly attributed to J.W. Goethe, 1933, instrumentalised 1935, performed: Berlin 19 June 1942, published in Vienna 1951 Universal Edition
Im Sonnenschein for bass and piano, Op. 87, TrV 268, text by F. Rückert, 1935, performed: Munich 2 August 1964, published in Vienna 1964 Universal Edition
Zugemessne Rhythmen, TrV 269, text by J.W. Goethe, 1935, published in London 1953 B & Haw
Sankt Michael Op. 88, TrV 280, text by J. Weinheber, 1942, performed: Vienna 9 March 1942, published in Vienna 1964 Universal Edition
Blick vom oberen Belvedere Op. 88, TrV 281, text by J. Weinheber, 1942, performed: Vienna 9 March 1942, published in Vienna 1964 Universal Edition
Xenion, TrV 282, text by J.W. Goethe, 1942, performed: Berlin 19 April 1953, published in London 1964 B & Haw
Malven, TrV 297, text by B. Knobel, 1948, performed: New York 10 January 1985
for voice solo and orchestra (information about arrangement for voice and orchestra of works originally composed for voice and piano was given in the section: songs for voice solo and piano):
Vier Gesänge: 1. Verführung, text by J.H. Mackay, 2. Gesang der Apollopriesterin, text by E. von Bodman, 3. Hymnus, text by an unknown poet, 4. Pilgers Morgenlied, text by J.W. Goethe, Op. 33, TrV 180, 1896–97, performed: Berlin 2 November 1896 (No. 1–2), Cologne 15 February 1898 (No. 3), Elberfeld 13 November 1897 (No. 4), published in Berlin 1897 B & B
Zwei grössere Gesänge: 1. Notturno, text by R. Dehmel, 2. Nächtlicher Gang, text by F. Rückert, Op. 44, TrV 197, 1899, performed: Berlin 3 December 1900, published in Leipzig 1899 Forberg
Zwei Gesänge for bass and orchestra: 1. Das Tal, text by L. Uhland, 2. Der Einsame, text by H. Heine, Op. 51, TrV 206, 1902–06, performed: Berlin 7 April 1903 (No. 1), Leipzig 5 March 1906 (No. 2), published in Berlin 1903–06 Fürstner
Drei Hymnen von Friedrich Hölderlin for soprano or tenor and orchestra: 1. Hymne an die Liebe, 2. Rückkehr in die Heimat, 3. Liebe, Op. 71, TrV 240, text by F. Hölderlin, 1921, performed: Berlin 9 November 1921, published in Berlin 1921 Fürstner
Vier letzte Lieder for soprano and orchestra: 1. Frühling, 2. September, 3. Beim Schlafengehen, 4. Im Abendrot, TrV 296, No. 1–3 text by H. Hesse, No. 4 text by J. Eichendorff, 1948, performed: London 22 May 1950, published in London 1950 B & Haw
for voice/s solo or voice/s accompanied by instruments:
Der weisse Hirsch for alto, tenor, bass and piano, TrV 6, text by L. Uhland, 1871(?), published in London 1968 B & Haw
Ein Alphorn hör ich schallen for voice, horn and piano, TrV 64, text by J. Kerner, 1878, published in Berlin-London 1964 Fürstner/B & Haw
Utan svafvel och fosfor for 2 tenors and 2 basses, TrV 159, text Swedish matchbox, 1889, performed: Weimar 14 December 1889, published in 1889 Karrer (lithographic print)
Enoch Arden, melodrama for reciting voice and piano, Op. 38, TrV 181, text by A. Tennyson, translated by A. Strodtmann, 1897, performed: Munich 24 March 1897, published in Leipzig 1898 Forberg
Das Schloss am Meere, melodrama for reciting voice and piano, TrV 191, text by L. Uhland, 1899, performed: Berlin 23 March 1899, published in Berlin 1911 Fürstner
Zwei Lieder aus “Der Richter von Zalamea”: 1. Liebesliedchen for tenor, guitar and harp, 2. Lied der Chuspa for mezzo-soprano, 1-voice male choir and 2 harps, TrV 211, text by P. Calderón de la Barca, 1904, performed: Berlin 7 September 1904, published in London 1953 B & Haw
Hymne auf das Haus Kohorn for 2 tenors and 2 basses, TrV 252, text by the composer, 1925, published in Tutzing 1986 Schneider
Hab Dank du güt’ger Weisheitsspender for bass solo, TrV 275, text by the composer, 1939, published in London 1960 B & Haw
for choir a cappella:
Zwei Lieder for 4-voice choir: 1. Morgengesang, 2. Frühlingsnacht, TrV 37, text by J. Eichendorff, 1876, published in Mainz 1996 Schott
Kyrie, Sanctus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei for 4-voice choir, TrV 54, 1877, performed: Munich 13 December 1987, published in Mainz 1996 Schott
Sieben Lieder for 4 voices solo and 4-voice choir: 1. Winterlied, 2. Spielmannsweise, 3. Pfingsten, 4. Käferlied, 5. Waldessang, 6. Schneeglöcklein, 7. Trüb blinken nur die Sterne, TrV 92, No. 1 text by J. Eichendorff, No. 2 text by O.F. Gensichen, No. 3 and 5–7 text by A. Böttger, No. 4 text by R. Reinick, 1880, published in Mainz 1996 Schott
Schwäbische Erbschaft for 4-voice male choir, TrV 134, text by F. Löwe, 1884, performed: Mönchen-Gladbach 7 October 1950, published in Leipzig 1950 Leuckart
Zwei Gesänge for 16-voice choir: 1. Der Abend, text by F. Schiller, 2. Hymne, text by F. Rückert, Op. 34, TrV 182, 1897, performed: Cologne 19 April 1898, published in Munich 1897 Aibl
Richard Till Knopff for 4-voice choir, TrV 188, 1898
Soldatenlied for 4-voice male choir, TrV 192, text by A. Kopisch, 1899, performed: Munich 26 November 1910, published in Munich 1900 Bauer
Drei Männerchöre for 4-voice male choir: 1. Schlachtgesang, 2. Lied der Freundschaft, 3. Der Brauttanz, Op. 45, TrV 193, text by J.G. Herder, 1899, published in Berlin 1900 Fürstner
Zwei Männerchöre for 4-voice male choir: 1. Liebe, 2. Altdeutsches Schlachtlied, Op. 42, TrV 194, text by J.G. Herder, 1899, performed: Vienna 8 December 1899, published in Leipzig 1899 Leuckart
Hans Huber in Vitznau sei schönstens bedanket, 4-voice canon, TrV 208, text by the composer, 1903, facsimile ed. in: E. Refardt H. Huber. Leben und Werk eines Schweizer Musikers, Zurich 1944 Atlantis
Skatkanon for 4 male voices, TrV 210, 1903, published in Vienna 1974 Doblinger
Sechs Volksliedbearbeitungen for 4-voice male choir, TrV 216, 1905, published in Leipzig 1906 Peters
Deutsche Motette for soprano, alto, tenor, bass and 16 voices, Op. 62, TrV 230, text by F. Rückert, 1913, performed: Berlin 2 December 1913, published in Berlin 1913 Fürstner
Tüchtigen stellt das schnelle Glück, cantata for 4 male voices, TrV 232, text by H. von Hofmannsthal, 1914, published in Berlin 1935 Junker & Dünnhaupt
Die Göttin im Putzzimmer for 8 voices, TrV 267, text by F. Rückert, 1935, performed: Vienna 2 March 1952, published in London 1958 B & Haw
Drei Männerchöre for 4–5-voice male choir: 1. Vor den Türen, 2. Traumlicht, 3. Fröhlich im Maien, TrV 270, text by F. Rückert, 1935, performed: Cologne 5 April 1936, published in Leipzig 1958 Leuckart
An den Baum Daphne (epilogue of the opera Daphne) for 9 voices, TrV 272a, text by J. Gregor, 1943, performed: Vienna 5 January 1947, published in London 1958 B & Haw
Durch Einsamkeit for 4 male voices, TrV 273, text by A. Wildgans, 1938, performed: Vienna 1 April 1939, published in Mainz 1996 Schott
for voices solo, choir and orchestra:
Choir from “Elektra” for male voices and orchestra, TrV 104, text by Sophocles, 1881(?), performed: Munich 1881, published in Leipzig 1902 B & H
Wandrers Sturmlied for 6-voice choir and orchestra, Op. 14, TrV 131, text by J.W. Goethe, 1885, performed: Cologne 8 March 1887, published in Munich 1886 Aibl
Hymne “Lieddu ewiglich Eines” for 4 female voices, wind ensemble and orchestra, TrV 183, text by F. Schiller, 1897, performed: Munich 1 June 1897
Taillefer for soprano, tenor, baritone, 8 voices and orchestra, Op. 52, TrV 207, text by L. Uhland, 1903, performed: Heidelberg 26 October 1903, published in Berlin 1906 Fürstner
Bardengesang for 12 male voices and orchestra, Op. 55, TrV 219, text by F.G. Klopstock, 1906, performed: Dresden 6 February 1907, published in Berlin 1906 Fürstner
Die Tageszeiten for 2 tenors, 2 basses and orchestra: 1. Der Morgen, 2. Mittagsruh, 3. Der Abend, 4. Die Nacht, Op. 76, TrV 256, text by J. Eichendorff, 1927, performed: Vienna 21 July 1928, published in Leipzig 1928 Leuckart
Austria for male choir and orchestra, Op. 78, TrV 259, text by A. Wildgans, 1929, performed: Vienna 10 January 1930, published in Berlin 1930 B & B
Olympische Hymne for 4-voice choir and orchestra, TrV 266, text by R. Lubahn, 1934, performed: Berlin 1 August 1936, published in Berlin 1936 Fürstner
Scenic:
operas:
Guntram in 3 acts, Op. 25, TrV 168, 1887–93, libretto R. Strauss, premiere Weimar 10 May 1894, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Munich 1895 Aibl
revised ed., 1934, premiere Weimar 29 October 1940, conductor P. Sixt, 1st ed. Berlin 1934 Fürstner
Feuersnot, vocal poem in 1 act, Op. 50, TrV 203, 1900–01, libretto E. von Wolzogen, premiere Dresden 21 November 1901, conductor E. Schuch, 1st ed. Berlin 1901 Fürstner
Salome, music drama in 1 act, Op. 54, TrV 215, 1903–05, libretto O. Wilde, translated by H. Lachmann, premiere Dresden 9 December 1905, conductor E. Schuch; Polish premiere Warsaw 20 February 1908, 1st ed. Berlin 1905 Fürstner
Elektra, tragedy in 1 act, Op. 58, TrV 223, 1906–08, libretto H. von Hofmannsthal, premiere Dresden 25 January 1909, conductor E. Schuch; Polish premiere Warsaw 5 January 1971, 1st ed. Berlin 1909 Fürstner
Der Rosenkavalier, music comedy in 3 acts, cf. compositions for orchestra and film music, Op. 59, TrV 227, 1909–10, libretto H. von Hofmannsthal, premiere Dresden 26 January 1911, conductor E. Schuch; Polish premiere Warsaw 7 December 1922, 1st ed. Berlin 1911 Fürstner
Ariadne auf Naxos in 1 act, Op. 60, TrV 228, 1911–12, libretto H. von Hofmannsthal, premiere Stuttgart 25 October 1912, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1912 Fürstner; second version with a prologue, 1916, premiere Vienna 4 October 1916, conductor F. Schalk; Polish premiere Poznań 4 December 1926; 1st ed. Berlin 1916 Fürstner
Die Frau ohne Schatten in 3 acts, cf. compositions for orchestra, Op. 65, TrV 234, 1914–17, libretto H. von Hofmannsthal, premiere Vienna 10 October 1919, conductor F. Schalk, 1st ed. Berlin 1919 Fürstner
Intermezzo, bourgeois comedy in 2 acts, cf. compositions for orchestra, Op. 72, TrV 246, 1918–23, libretto R. Strauss, premiere Dresden 4 November 1924, conductor F. Busch, 1st ed. Berlin 1924 Fürstner
Die ägyptische Helena in 2 acts, Op. 75, TrV 255, 1923–27, libretto H. von Hofmannsthal, premiere Dresden 6 June 1928, conductor F. Busch, 1st ed. Berlin 1928 Fürstner; 2nd version, 1932–33, premiere Salzburg 14 August 1933, conductor C. Krauss; 3rd version, 1940, premiere Munich 15 June 1940, conductor L. Sievert
Arabella, lyric comedy in 3 acts, Op. 79, TrV 263, 1929–32, libretto H. von Hofmannsthal, premiere Dresden 1 July 1933, conductor C. Krauss; Polish premiere Bytom 18 January 1969, 1st ed. Berlin 1933 Fürstner
Die schweigsame Frau, comic opera in 3 acts, Op. 80, TrV 265, 1933–34, libretto S. Zweig after B. Jonson, premiere Dresden 24 June 1935, conductor K. Böhmm, 1st ed. Berlin 1935 Fürstner
Friedenstag in 1 act, Op. 81, TrV 271, 1935–36, libretto J. Gregor, premiere Munich 24 July 1938, conductor C. Krauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1938 Oertel
Daphne, bucolic tragedy in 1 act, cf. compositions for choir a cappela, Op. 82, TrV 272, 1936–37, libretto J. Gregor, premiere Dresden 15 October 1938, conductor K. Böhm, 1st ed. Berlin 1938 Oertel
Die Liebe der Danae, cheerful mythological play in 3 acts, Op. 83, TrV 278, 1938–40, libretto J. Gregor after H. von Hofmannsthal, premiere Salzburg 16 August 1944, conductor C. Krauss (rehearsal called off before the premiere); Salzburg 14 August 1952, conductor C. Krauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1944 Oertel
Capriccio, a conversation piece for music in 1 act, cf. chamber compositions, Op. 85, TrV 279, 1940–41, libretto C. Krauss and R. Strauss, premiere Munich 28 October 1942, conductor C. Krauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1942 Oertel
Des Esels Schatten, 6 images, completed by P. Stephan Schaller, TrV 294, 1947–48, libretto H. Adler, premiere Ettal 7 June 1964, conductor K. Haussner, 1st ed. London 1967 B & Haw
ballets:
Josephslegende in 1 act, cf. compositions for orchestra, Op. 63, TrV 231, 1912–14, libretto H.G. Kessler and H. von Hofmannsthal, premiere Paris 14 May 1914, conductor R. Strauss; Polish premiere Warsaw 18 February 1937, 1st ed: Berlin 1914 Fürstner
Schlagobers in 2 acts, cf. compositions for orchestra, Op. 70, TrV 243, 1921–22, libretto R. Strauss, premiere Vienna 9 May 1924, conductor R. Strauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1923 Fürstner
Verklungene Feste, dance vision (after F. Couperin), TrV 245a, 1940–41, libretto Pia Mlaker, Pino Mlaker, premiere Munich 5 April 1941, conductor C. Krauss, 1st ed. Berlin 1923 Fürstner (orchestra score used in the performance)
theatre music:
Romeo und Julia by W. Shakespeare, TrV 150, 1887, performed: Munich 23 October 1887, published in London 1960 B & Haw
Lebende Bilder, TrV 167, 1892, performed: Weimar 8 October 1892, published in Magdeburg 1930 Heinrichshofen’s Verlag (fragments), Frankfurt am Main 1998 Peters (whole)
Der Bürger als Edelmann, ed H. von Hofmannsthal after Le bourgeois gentilhomme by Moliere, Op. 60, TrV 228b, 1912, performed: Stuttgart 25 October 1912; 2nd version 1917, performed: Berlin 9 April 1918, published in Berlin 1918 Fürstner, cf. compositions for orchestra
music for the film Der Rosenkavalier, script H. von Hofmannsthal, director R. Wiese, TrV 227b, 1925, performed: Dresden 10 January 1926, published in Berlin 1926 Fürstner
Arrangements:
arrangements of works from the 18th and 19th c. by various composers for, e.g., voice and orchestra:
Ganymed by F. Schubert, TrV 179, 1897, performed: Munich 31 January 1897
2 songs by L. v. Beethoven: 1. Ich liebe dich, 2. Wonne der Wehmut, TrV 185, 1898
revisions of works for performance and publication
Writings (selection):
Aus Ltalien. Analyse, “Allgemeine Musikzeitung” XVI, 1889
Tannhäuser-Nachklänge, “Bayreuther Blatt” 1892 No. 4
Tagebuch der Griechenland- und Ägyptenreise (1892), “Richard-StraussJahrbuch” 1954; introduction to: «Die Musik. Sammlung illustrierter Einzeldarstellungen», in: A. Göllerich Beethoven, Berlin 1904
Gibt es für die Musik eine Fortschrittspartei?, “Der Morgen” from 14 June 1907 (Berlin)
preface in: L. Schmidt Aus dem Musikleben der Gegenwart, Berlin 1908
Bemerkungen über amerikanische Musikpflege, “Allgemeine Musikzeitung” XXXV, 1908
Erinnerungen an H. von Bülow, “Neue Freie Presse” from 25 October 1909 (Vienna)
Die Hohen Bach-Trompeten, “Zeitschrift für Instrumentenbau” 1909 No. 6
Gustav Mahler, in: G. Mahler. Ein Bild seiner Persönlichkeit, ed. P. Stefan, Munich 1910
Die Rosenkavalier-Streitfrage, “Allgemeine Musikzeitung” XXXVII, 1910
Wagner, “Neues Wiener Journal” from 6 June 1914
Über Komponieren und Dirigieren, “Berliner Börsen-Courier” from 8 June 1929
Über den musikalischen Schaffensprozess (1931), in: J. Bahle Der musikalische Schaffensprozess, Leipzig 1936; preface in: H. Diestel Ein Orchester-Musiker über das Dirigieren, Berlin 1931
Anmerkungen zur Aufführung von Beethovens Symphonien, “Neue Zeitschrift für Musik” CXXV, 1964
numerous articles in music magazines and daily press.
Most of works by Strauss were reprinted in, among others, Richard Strauss. Betrachtungen und Erinnerungen, ed. W. Schuh, Zurich 1949, 1957 (includes also not published writing by Strauss, e.g. Erinnerungen an die ersten Aufführungen meiner Opern) and in: Richard Strauss. Dokumente, ed. E. Krause, Leipzig 1980
Editions:
H. Berlioz Instrumentationslehre, preface, supplement and revision, Leipzig 1905, 1955
R. Strauss Nachgelassene Werke für Horn, with H. Rüdel, Leipzig 1909–13
Editing:
«Die Musik. Sammlung illustrierter Einzeldarstellungen», Berlin 1904–28