Return to a Lost Life
Heinz Marecek narrates Alfred Lord Tennyson’s “Enoch Arden” set to music
by Richard Strauss. A tale as gripping as the stories of
Odysseus or Robinson Crusoe. A symphony of sound in the form of a melodrama
set to music by Richard Strauss.
The Munich Court Kapellmeister
Richard Strauss was one of the first
to take up the suggestion to raise the “melodrama
long thought dead” to new
heights with his work ENOCH ARDEN,
following the great success of Engelbert
Humperdinck’s opera “Die Königskinder”,
which premiered in 1897.
His first opera ‘Guntram’ had been
a failure shortly
before, whereupon he
had turned primarily to symphonic
poetry, but remained
in search of new opera material.
It was then that the ballad ‘Enoch
Arden’ by the English poet Alfred
Tennyson (in the translation by Adolf
Strodtmann), and he
set it to music (dated 26 February) as
a melodrama – for his “boss”, the
Court Theatre Director Ernst von Possart,
a famous “singing actor”,
whose “rolling R” was legendary. The
world premiere, performed by him and Possart on 24 March 1897
in Munich
significantly improved the somewhat strained
relationship between the two artists
; and in
the years that followed, on many
concert tours, they reaped triumph after triumph, indeed
“whole streams of female adoration”.
In truth, Strauss had been rather sceptical about the
melodrama
and had even
during the composition of ‘Enoch
Arden’ described it as ‘trivial trash’
, yet the great
success of the work made him reconsider his views significantly.
Moreover, he had probably realised that
the ballad, with its alternation between
dramatic action, poetic
descriptions of nature and heartfelt
expressions of emotion, as in his
larger-scale works, had provided
ample opportunities for an appropriate
musical ‘interpretation’
in each instance.
Richard Strauss, who titled the printed edition
of his setting ‘Tennyson’s Enoch
Arden composed for pianoforte’,
had the extensive
text recited unaccompanied
. In key scenes or
“sensitive” plot elements
, the piano then joins in, to which the
composer entrusts, at the outset, the
mysterious G minor
prelude, which traces the surging of
the ocean waves, over which a
simple, self-circling melody symbolises a
kind of “sense of home”. Thereafter
the piano takes on both
“illustrations” of the scenes and
(above all) a musical
elaboration of the various
emotional states of the three characters. And
each of these three characters is immediately
assigned a characteristic motif,
with which Strauss adopts the idea
of Wagner’s “leitmotifs” in
his own personal form. First,
we are introduced to Annie Lee with a figurative, rapidly ascending
figure, then to
Philipp Ray with a parallel melody ascending in E major thirds, and
immediately afterwards to Enoch Arden, whose chordal E-flat major motif is
interrupted by a sighing pause and then, with an “exclamation”,
jumps into a dissonance.
The subsequent plot strands are now determined by these motifs, depending on which of the
three characters is primarily involved, and these motifs
also run through the short interludes according to thematic considerations
. And the sound of the sea also appears, along with the
“circling” melody, until, in the face of Enoch Arden’s imminent
death, solemn E-flat major chords and chromatic lines illuminate his final
words and lead into a tranquil swan song.
Hartmut Krones
Vienna, November 2023
Heinz Marecek Narrator
Heinz Marecek, born on 17 September 1945 in Vienna, is an
Austrian actor, director and cabaret artist.
He studied at the Max Reinhardt Seminar. His first engagement
took him to the Vienna Ateliertheater in 1966. From 1968, he performed at the
Vienna Volksoper; from 1971 to 1998, he was a member of the ensemble at the
Theater in der Josefstadt, where he also directed.
In addition to many roles in television productions,
he translates and adapts English-language plays. He is also known from
Lindenstraße as Bruno Skabowski and from the historical
miniseries Ringstraßenpalais, from the improvised series Die liebe Familie
as well as from the film series Der Bockerer. Until 2021, Heinz
Marecek played leading roles in the series SOKO Kitzbühel and Die Bergretter.
Around 1970, Heinz Marecek married the actress Julia
Migenes[1]; this marriage lasted four years. From his second marriage to
Christine, he has two children; his daughter Sarah Marecek and
his son Ben Marecek are also actors. He lives with his
wife on a finca in Ibiza.
Florian Krumpöck Piano
Born in 1978, the son of a cellist and an art historian,
Krumpöck learnt the art of piano playing from renowned
pianists such as Rudolf Buchbinder, Gerhard Oppitz, Elisabeth Leonskaja
and Daniel Barenboim. In 2011, he was appointed as one of the youngest
General Music Directors for Concert and Opera at the Volkstheater
and as principal conductor of the Norddeutsche Philharmonie
; in 2012, he was appointed principal conductor of the
Liechtenstein Symphony Orchestra.
Since summer 2015, Florian Krumpo¨ck has been artistic director of Kultur.
Sommer.Semmering.
The musician is known for his solo recitals at international
festivals such as those in Salzburg, Bregenz, Bad Kissingen or
at the Bach Festival in Leipzig, as well as for his regular performances
of complete piano cycles such as the 32 piano sonatas by
Ludwig van Beethoven or the complete piano sonatas of Franz
Schubert.
As a guest conductor,
Krumpo¨ck has performed
with, amongst others,
the Vienna
Symphony Orchestra, the
Philadelphia Orchestra,
the Jerusalem Symphony
Orchestra, the
Gulbenkian Orchestra
in Lisbon and the
Royal Chapel
Orchestra in Copenhagen.
Florian Krumpöck performs
as a soloist, song accompanist
and chamber musician in
the majority of all
international concerts
and recordings on his
own instruments.