The Suite from Der Rosenkavalier is scored for piccolo, 2 flutes,2 oboes, English horn, 4 clarinets (including E-flat clarinet and bass clarinet), 2 bassoons, contrabassoon, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, harp, celesta and strings. The Winston-Salem Symphony’s most recent performances of the Suite from Der Rosenkavalier took place in January 2015 with Robert Moody conducting.

Der Rosenkavalier may be seen as a sentimental glimpse back to an eighteenth-century Vienna that never really existed. Indeed, its late-romantic musical vocabulary and use of waltzes are charmingly anachronistic. Strauss uses a wonderful libretto by the great Austrian playwright and poet, Hugo von Hofmannthal, to give musical expression to a super-charged eroticism free from the more disturbing sexuality and violence of his earlier scandalous operas, Salomė and Elektra. Der Rosenkavalier is set in the Vienna of Habsburg monarch, Maria Theresia (reigned 1740-80). To make short work of a rather complicated plot, the story centers on a young nobleman, Octavian, the lover of the Marschallin (wife of the Field Marshall). When the Marschallin is asked by her oafish and lascivious cousin, Baron Ochs, to find a representative to present a silver rose as a wedding offering to his young and innocent fiancée, Sophie von Faninal, she gives the job to Octavian, who promptly falls in love with Sophie. The opera ends happily for the young lovers and wistfully for the wise and aging Marschallin.

Hear an excerpt from this piece:

Sat, Sep 21
7:30 PM

Sun, Sep 22
3:00 PM

Among the music that Strauss extracted from his three-act opera for the Suite from Der Rosenkavalier is the exciting and sensuous opening sequence from Act I, depicting the rapturous lovemaking of Octavian and the Marschallin. The music from near the start of Act II, featuring the solo oboe, accompanies Octavian’s presentation of the silver rose to Sophie. This music’s piquancy derives in part from an ethereal sequence of chords in the flutes, celesta, and harp interpolated as the theme unfolds. This is followed by a waltz sequence based upon a tune sung by the vain Baron Ochs, “Ohne mich . . . mit Mir,” that dominates the end of Act II. Strauss also interpolates an Italianate aria for tenor, which is sung during the Marschallin’s morning toilette in Act I. The final music from the Suite is derived comes from the trio and duet (“Is it a dream, can it truly be?”) that ends the opera. The magical harmonies from the presentation of the silver rose punctuate the cadences of this heavenly love duet.

Program Note by David B. Levy © 2014/2024

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