Aus Italien
Aus Italien (From Italy), Op. 16, is a tone poem for full orchestra composed by Richard Strauss in 1886 when he was 24 years old. It was inspired by the composer's visit to Italy (encouraged by Johannes Brahms) in the summer of the same year, where he travelled to Rome, Bologna, Naples, Sorrento, Salerno, and Capri. He began to sketch the work while still on the journey.
The full score of the work, Strauss's first tone poem, was completed in Munich on September 12, 1886. The work is named by the composer as "Symphonic Fantasy", and is dedicated to his mentor Hans von Bülow. It is the only work by Richard Strauss for which he himself wrote a specific program. The entire work takes over forty minutes to perform.
Strauss incorporated the tune of "Funiculì, Funiculà" into the symphony's fourth part "Scenes from Neapolitan Life", thinking it was a traditional Italian folk song, when it was in fact a piece written by Luigi Denza in 1880. Denza filed a lawsuit against Strauss and eventually won.
Premieres
The first performance of the work took place in Munich on March 2, 1887, by the Court Orchestra, which was conducted by the composer himself. As Richard Strauss's sister Johanna later recalled, the first three movements were received with applause, but the last movement was not well-approved and derisory whistles came from various quarters. Norman Del Mar's biography of the composer tells a different story: the first three movements were not well received, and the final was accorded booing and applause. Strauss himself found the work itself as new and revolutionary, and he was satisfied despite the critical responses for the première.
The first performance in the United States was given on March 8, 1888, with the Theodore Thomas Orchestra (Theodore Thomas conducting) at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia.
Instrumentation
Aus Italien is scored for the following orchestra:
- woodwind: piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes (2nd doubling English horn), 2 clarinets in B-flat, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon
- brass: 4 horns in F, 2 trumpets in C, 3 trombones
- percussion: timpani, snare drum, tambourine, cymbals, triangle
- strings: harp, violins i, ii, violas, cellos, double basses
Discography (performances of the full score only)
Conductor | Orchestra | Recorded |
---|---|---|
Artur Rother | Symphony Orchestra of Radio Berlin | 1949 |
Clemens Krauss | Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra | 1953 |
Henry Swoboda | Vienna Symphony Orchestra | 1953 |
Otakar Trhlík | Ostrava State Philharmonic Orchestra (Janáček Philharmonie) | 1971 |
Rudolf Kempe | Staatskapelle Dresden | 1974 |
Neeme Järvi | Scottish National Orchestra | 1988 |
Vladimir Ashkenazy | Cleveland Orchestra | 1989 |
Riccardo Muti | Berliner Philharmoniker | 1989 |
Zdeněk Košler | Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra | 1990 |
David Zinman | Tonhalle Orchestra, Zurich | 2000 |
Fabio Luisi | Staatskapelle Dresden | 2008 |
There is also a recording of the two piano version, with the duo pianists Begonia-Uriarte Mrongovius and Karl-Hermann Mrongovius recorded in 1985.
References
- Del Mar, Norman. Richard Strauss, A Critical Commentary on His Life and Works, vol. 1. London, 1962.