Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Plates
- List of Figures
- Foreword
- Preface to the New Edition
- Chronology
- Chapter 1 1843–1865: Childhood and Years of Study
- Chapter 2 1866–1867: Tribschen
- Chapter 3 1868–1869: Munich
- Chapter 4 1870–1871: Brussels; Tribschen
- Chapter 5 1871–1874: Budapest
- Chapter 6 1874–1875: Budapest and Bayreuth
- Chapter 7 1875: Vienna
- Chapter 8 1876: Bayreuth
- Chapter 9 1877: London
- Chapter 10 1878–1879: Vienna
- Chapter 11 1879–1880: Friends and Enemies
- Chapter 12 1880–1881: London and Vienna
- Chapter 13 1881–1882: Richter and d'Albert
- Chapter 14 1882: Richter and d'Albert
- Chapter 15 1882–1883: The Master's Death
- Chapter 16 1884: More Opera in London
- Chapter 17 1885–1886: Vienna, London and Birmingham
- Chapter 18 1887–1888 Return to Bayreuth
- Chapter 19 1889–1900: Vienna
- Chapter 20 1897–1900: Richter and Mahler
- Chapter 21 1889–1890: England
- Chapter 22 1891–1895: England
- Chapter 23 1895–1900: England
- Chapter 24 1890–1899: Bayreuth
- Chapter 25 1894–1899: Richter's Diary
- Chapter 26 1899–1900: Hallé Orchestra
- Chapter 27 1900–1902: England
- Chapter 28 1903–1904: England
- Chapter 29 1904–1906: England
- Chapter 30 1906–1908: England
- Chapter 31 1908–1909: England
- Chapter 32 1909–1911: England
- Chapter 33 1911–1914: Retirement
- Chapter 34 1914–1916: The Last Years
- Chapter 35 Finale
- HANS RICHTER'S CONDUCTING BOOKS
- Appendix 1 Works conducted by Hans Richter
- Appendix 2 Cities and towns where Richter conducted
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 3 - 1868–1869: Munich
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 April 2017
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Plates
- List of Figures
- Foreword
- Preface to the New Edition
- Chronology
- Chapter 1 1843–1865: Childhood and Years of Study
- Chapter 2 1866–1867: Tribschen
- Chapter 3 1868–1869: Munich
- Chapter 4 1870–1871: Brussels; Tribschen
- Chapter 5 1871–1874: Budapest
- Chapter 6 1874–1875: Budapest and Bayreuth
- Chapter 7 1875: Vienna
- Chapter 8 1876: Bayreuth
- Chapter 9 1877: London
- Chapter 10 1878–1879: Vienna
- Chapter 11 1879–1880: Friends and Enemies
- Chapter 12 1880–1881: London and Vienna
- Chapter 13 1881–1882: Richter and d'Albert
- Chapter 14 1882: Richter and d'Albert
- Chapter 15 1882–1883: The Master's Death
- Chapter 16 1884: More Opera in London
- Chapter 17 1885–1886: Vienna, London and Birmingham
- Chapter 18 1887–1888 Return to Bayreuth
- Chapter 19 1889–1900: Vienna
- Chapter 20 1897–1900: Richter and Mahler
- Chapter 21 1889–1890: England
- Chapter 22 1891–1895: England
- Chapter 23 1895–1900: England
- Chapter 24 1890–1899: Bayreuth
- Chapter 25 1894–1899: Richter's Diary
- Chapter 26 1899–1900: Hallé Orchestra
- Chapter 27 1900–1902: England
- Chapter 28 1903–1904: England
- Chapter 29 1904–1906: England
- Chapter 30 1906–1908: England
- Chapter 31 1908–1909: England
- Chapter 32 1909–1911: England
- Chapter 33 1911–1914: Retirement
- Chapter 34 1914–1916: The Last Years
- Chapter 35 Finale
- HANS RICHTER'S CONDUCTING BOOKS
- Appendix 1 Works conducted by Hans Richter
- Appendix 2 Cities and towns where Richter conducted
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Richter's first encounter with any anti-Wagner sentiment in Munich occurred soon after his arrival in December 1867. In spite of his appointment at the Court Opera he had to pass an audition as repetiteur set for him by Franz Lachner, General Music Director of the city and an opponent of Wagner. Lachner had met Richter on a visit to Vienna in February 1866 when he was pleased to give him a glowing reference as a potential Kapellmeister. Now Lachner was to test him again, but with Richter's colours firmly fixed to the Wagnerian mast, the young man no longer found a friend in the General Music Director. A message was sent to Richter to appear at ten o'clock the next morning at the opera house and accompany a production rehearsal of Nicolai's Merry Wives of Windsor. He was ordered not to bring a vocal score but to play from the full score provided. Fortunately he knew the work from his horn-playing days at the Vienna Opera and he duly came through the test with flying colours. He played the work with astonishing facility and earned the admiration and respect of both singers and observers, of whom there were many because word had got about of a possible public humiliation. Lachner's plan had misfired but he grudgingly conceded that in Hans Richter ‘a Wagnerian had been found who also knew other music.’
Richter was lodging in Munich with a repetiteur named Ludwig Eberle, who told him of a small town in Bavaria with a charming eighteenth-century opera house in which he had worked with a visiting company from Bamberg. The house had a particularly large and fine stage and Eberle recommended it to Richter. The town's name was Bayreuth. When the idea of building a festival opera house in Munich specifically to stage Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen was thwarted by the politics surrounding the scandal of the Wagner–Cosima–von Bülow affair and the impossible position in which it placed his patron King Ludwig, Richter suggested Bayreuth to Wagner as a possible alternative venue because it was still on land belonging to the king. Wagner remembered the town from his youth and warmed to the idea immediately, and although the opera house which was already in the town proved unsuitable for his needs, Bayreuth was chosen as the site for his own purpose-built house.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Hans Richter , pp. 25 - 38Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2016