Richard Strauss
Also known as: Richard Georg Strauss
Biography
Strauss served as principal conductor at Deutsches Nationaltheater from 1889-94, crucial for his development. At 25, he conducted major Wagner operas with limited resources. His 'Don Juan' premiered in Weimar (1889) to acclaim, launching international reputation. 'Death and Transfiguration' followed (1890). He met and taught soprano Pauline de Ahna, marrying her in 1894. Despite his opera 'Guntram' failing there, Weimar years established him as Wagner's heir.
Famous Quotes
“Melody... is one of the most noble gifts which an invisible deity has bestowed on mankind.”
“It is better to conduct with the ear instead of with the arm: the rest follows automatically.”
Notable Works & Achievements
Don Juan
Death and Transfiguration
Till Eulenspiegel
Also sprach Zarathustra
Salome
Der Rosenkavalier
Guntram
Symphonia Domestica
Aus Italien
Burleske for piano and orchestra
Connected Places in Weimar
Theaterplatz 2, 99423 Weimar
Served as principal conductor (1889-1894), premiered Don Juan and other major works
Evidence: Theatre records and premiere documentation
Historical Context
Conductor at Deutsches Nationaltheater (1889-1894), premiered major works and established international reputation
Historical evidence: Don Juan premiered in Weimar in 1889, launching his career
Weimar Classicism refers to the late-18th and early-19th-century flowering of literature and culture in Weimar. It began in 1775 when young Duke Carl August invited Johann Wolfgang von Goethe to live in Weimar. Goethe joined other luminaries like poet Johann Gottfried Herder, writer Christoph Martin Wieland, and later Friedrich Schiller, transforming the ducal court into a vibrant intellectual hub. Under the enlightened patronage of Duchess Anna Amalia and Carl August, Weimar became synonymous with humanistic values, classical art, and literary achievement. During this period Goethe and Schiller produced works of enduring importance (e.g. Goethe's "Faust" and Schiller's "William Tell"), and together with Herder and Wieland, they cultivated a new German national culture grounded in Enlightenment ideals. The small city boasted salons, a theater (with Goethe as director from 1791), and abundant artistic activity. Architecture and landscape were not neglected: Goethe helped plan the Park an der Ilm and renovations of the Weimar City Castle in classical style. Weimar Classicism peaked around 1800, symbolized by the friendship of Goethe and Schiller (1794–1805) and lasting until Goethe's death in 1832. This era left an outsized cultural legacy, establishing Weimar as a spiritual center of German classic literature and art, later recognized by UNESCO as "Classical Weimar."
Read more about this period →Quick Facts
1864
1949
German