My Life — Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 773 pages of information about My Life — Volume 1.

My Life — Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 773 pages of information about My Life — Volume 1.
a double set of wind instruments, was, I believe for the first time since the existence of the symphony, heard with real distinctness.  I proceeded in this manner throughout, in order to guarantee the greatest exactitude in the dynamical effects of the orchestra.  There was nothing, however difficult, which was allowed to be performed in such a way as not to arouse the feelings of the audience in a particular manner.  For example, many brains had been puzzled by the Fugato in 6/8 time which comes after the chorus, Froh wie seine Sonnen fliegen, in the movement of the finale marked alia marcia.  In view of the preceding inspiriting verses, which seemed to be preparing for combat and victory, I conceived this Fugato really as a glad but earnest war-song, and I took it at a continuously fiery tempo, and with the utmost vigour.  The day following the first performance I had the satisfaction of receiving a visit from the musical director Anacker of Freiburg, who came to tell me somewhat penitently, that though until then he had been one of my antagonists, since the performance of the symphony he certainly reckoned himself among my friends.  What had absolutely overwhelmed him, he said, was precisely my conception and interpretation of the Fugato.  Furthermore, I devoted special attention to that extraordinary passage, resembling a recitative for the ’cellos and basses, which comes at the beginning of the last movement, and which had once caused my old friend Pohlenz such great humiliation in Leipzig.  Thanks to the exceptional excellence of our bass players, I felt certain of attaining to absolute perfection in this passage.  After twelve special rehearsals of the instruments alone concerned, I succeeded in getting them to perform in a way which sounded not only perfectly free, but which also expressed the most exquisite tenderness and the greatest energy in a thoroughly impressive manner.

From the very beginning of my undertaking I had at once recognised, that the only method of achieving overwhelming popular success with this symphony was to overcome, by some ideal means, the extraordinary difficulties presented by the choral parts.  I realised that the demands made by these parts could be met only by a large and enthusiastic body of singers.  It was above all necessary, then, to secure a very good and large choir; so, besides adding the somewhat feeble Dreissig ’Academy of Singing’ to our usual number of members in the theatre chorus, in spite of great difficulties I also enlisted the help of the choir from the Kreuzschule, with its fine boys’ voices, and the choir of the Dresden seminary, which had had much practice in church singing.  In a way quite my own I now tried to get these three hundred singers, who were frequently united for rehearsals, into a state of genuine ecstasy; for instance, I succeeded in demonstrating to the basses that the celebrated passage Seid umschlungen, Millionen, and especially Bruder, uber’m Sternenzelt muss ein guter Vater

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My Life — Volume 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.