The article, as promised.

The original, by your truly, was published in "Gitara Historia Aktualno¶ci", No 
1/1998 pp. 19-20 as a part of the series "Great Composers & The Guitar". 

Two comments:
1. I will ommit here the large part dealing with the instrument Wagner used for 
Beckmesser's song. This is Lute-Guitar (Lautengitarre), in the score referred 
to as "Laute". In fact it is a guitar with EADGBE tuning and evrything 
guitar-like except for the body shape. There is no need to deal with the 
problem in detail in this forum of specialists.

2. Further minor changes were added to the original as being the author of the 
original I take my right for that, thank you.

Here we go:

The lute is conected with the character of Beckmesser, who plays the instrument 
himself. The very beginning of the instrumental part is quite quixotic: it 
contains only open strings notes - EADGBE. This appears to be the easiest thing 
to play on the instrument. But at the same time it makes ultmate use of the 
lute's tuning. It is a daring idea, not followed untill the Heitor Villa-Lobos 
studies. The Brasilian composer made use of the guitar's tuning resources 
making them his textural Credo. 

The meaning and purpose of this unusual passage is as follows:

1. the lute's part is intended for the singer; it should be playable after 
shortest possible training.

2. the character of Beckmesser is a personification of all things Wagner hated 
in music. Beckmesser is not a proffesional singer; he is an amateur in the 
worst sense of the word. Not only he thinks singing and music is easy; he 
thinks he is good at it himself. Beckmesser is in opposition to Hans Sachs, a 
shoemaker, therefore technically an amateur singer too. But Sach's approach to 
the art is by all means proffessional. Beckmesser's one is not, and the opening 
passage of the lute becomes his 
Leitmotive, that illustrates his self consiousness of bourgeois dillettante.

3. some researchers have suggested that the passage illustrates a process of 
tuning of the lute. 

This last point needs a word of comment here. At first glance the point is 
doubtful, as nobody would be able to check the correctness of tuning this way, 
to say nothing of the tuning. The opening passage is written in small, flowing 
rhythmic values. Nobody ever was able to tune the instrument this way, 
dependless of the musical training she or he had received. But indeed, few bars 
later we are told by Wagner that the D string is out of tune. This is the 
explanation of the comical search for 
the correct note to complete the A minor chord. The D-E oscillation suggests 
that Wagner calls for overtuning of the D string (closer to D# actually). 
Therefore, as Beckmesser is a mockery, we can accept the interpretation of 
"tuning" considering the satirical purpose of the song and the scene. 

The Laute is therefore used by Wagner in most unfavourable light, as an 
attribut of the low, uneducated, musically untrained and taste-lacking class of 
society. From the other hand, the effectivness of the instrument's usage, the 
ultimate effect achieved out of conciously and purposedly limited resources 
make us believe that Richard Wagner studied the instrument well before writing 
this scene.


Krzysztof Komarnicki
Dnia 24-06-2006 o godz. 12:37 Rob MacKillop napisa³(a):
> >>>One thing for further discussion: the song is not a fugue of course. 
> Not
> in a formal sense. Does "Fugue" has another meaning in English? Maybe 
> Bone
> was thinking about the texture in running eights?<<<
> 
> I think Bone was referring to a real fugue later in the Meistersinger. 
> But I
> have never seen the score. Hopefully I will soon.
> 
> Rob
> 
> 
> 
> 
> To get on or off this list see list information at
> http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~wbc/lute-admin/index.html
> 

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