![]() A single movement, it takes perhaps ten minutes in performance. The honeyed classicism of the Serenade is a tribute to Franz Strauss’s paternal influence, and having grown up in the house of the most admired brass player in Europe must have had some bearing on Richard’s lifelong flair for wind music. More than sixty years later he recalled how he had “positively wolfed it down as though in a trance,” but he had not yet internalized it to the point that it influenced his own compositions. ![]() At seventeen, having barely arrived at Brahms by way of Mendelssohn, Chopin, and Schumann, he secretly studied the score of Tristan against his father’s orders. Young Richard, therefore, was brought up in a strictly classical orthodoxy. He detested Wagner the man and he feared and hated the whole current of modernism that Wagner stood for. One reads that his playing of the solos in the Wagner operas was heartbreakingly beautiful. Strauss’s father, Franz, was principal horn in the orchestra of the Bavarian Court Opera in Munich for forty-nine years. ![]() The Strauss most of us know best-the tone poems of the 1880s and 1890s, and the operas from the early years of the twentieth century-is full of Wagner, and in 1882 that particular magic had not yet made its effect on his work. Strauss was an extraordinarily accomplished and confident teenager, and this one-movement work is music of charm as well as skill. I cannot imagine anyone guessing the composer of the E-flat major Serenade for Winds just by listening. In 1882 Strauss had not yet emerged as Richard Strauss. INSTRUMENTATION: 2 each of flutes, oboes, clarinets 2 bassoons and contrabassoon 4 horns US PREMIERE: February 12, 1898, with Walter Damrosch and members of the New York Symphony Franz Wüllner conducted at the Hotel zu den drei Raben in Dresden DIED September 8, 1949, Garmisch, Germany
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