The conference was very well
attended. All three days. Which was wonderful. Students and all kind of other
people came to what was a very stimulating and intensive discourse on Wagner
and other phenomena. Wagner audiences is a strange but fruitful topic on its
own. The people attending a Wagner performance – or a Wagner conference – seem
to be quite diverse coming from all kind of different cultural, ethnical, age
or gender backgrounds; but then: a Wagner audience is not so diverse at all,
because the composer asks for strong identification. They, we – the Wagner conference
attendees – are „Wagnerites“,
„Wagnerianer“, real fans. I am one of them, I guess: wearing the nice T-shirt
the USC-conference team came up with, with Wagner’s suggestive eyes on my chest
and „WagnerWorldWide:America 2013“ on my back. You are either part of the circle
of admirers (throwing into the conversation, where you confirm that you love
Wagner, that this is the case despite the fact that he was a horrible guy...).
Or one clearly distances him- or herself from Wagner, finding the person
inacceptable, the music too long, the theater too complicated, and all of it
too germanic. No in-betweens. What could be noted in the South of the US was the
fact that the huge majority of the people attending the conference was white.
Kind of not proving Alex Ross’ point of an African-American Wagnerism; at least
not in Columbia 2013.
Other Wagner identities? Celia
Applegate found out on „Women’s Wagner“ and highlighted the fact that women in
the 19th and early 20th centuries were probably the most passionate admirers of
Wagner’s work. While Hilan Warshaw’s documentary „Wagner’s Jews“ dealt both
with the rejection of Wagner in Israel and the passionate fight of other people
to make ‚Wagner happen’ in live performances. Wagner in the radio actually is
not an issue. Is it the difference between public and private or the difference
between live and mediatized? Hilan Warshaw’s film had its very well received
world premiere in Columbia on Friday night. Being a co-production with the
German broadcast station of WDR it will be shown on German television in May
(on ARTE) and in November (on ARD). Check out our facebook site for exact dates
and watch this fascinating view on Wagner 2013 by a filmmaker who – by the way
– is also a musician. The question of how (!) we
actually listen to Wagner and watch his operas is not only a major topic of
discussion in that very special situation of reception history in Israel. How
are we able to look at the ‚whole’ at a time where detachment and the
consumption of clips and pieces (online and elsewhere) is becoming the normal
and part of our everyday culture? Mediatized Wagner depictions were discussed
at the conference, where stage productions are formatted to screening in film
and TV. An experience which can never be compared to the ‚real thing’. This is
just because of the fact that the spectator has to be following the film
director’s decisions on close ups and cuts, where film creates its own rhythm.
While, at the live performance, the spectator has all the pictures available at
once: having the totality of the image. I thought about a solution, which would
make the Wagner experience not only very private but also a game like interactive
procedure. It popped into my mind that somebody could develop something what
one could call an „I-Pad-Opera“. People would be using an interactive screen
while watching Wagner’s „Siegfried“ for example. If I were interested in
focussing on the moment where Siegfried finds the warrior aka Brünnhilde at the
end of Act 3, I would be the one who – with that new charcateristic movement of
fingers on screens – is deciding on detail. A little bit like using the
„Opernglas“ in the old days at the theatre: as a lense for ‚eye-privacy’.
As most kids in Germany
growing up in the 1960s and 70s we were fascinated with everything coming from
America. We knew abouth this country through television. Almost no movie we
watched at that time where one of the characters would not go on a Greyhound
bus on a long journey through the country. I came here a lot since the mid
1980s. But it is always a first time and I always wanted to do this. I boarded
one of those busses going from Columbia to Charleston on Saturday. This is not
the way everybody travels anymore in the US. I was the only white person on
that bus. And: I am for sure bringing back home that question of
African-American Wagnerism.
Monday, February 4, 2013
Friday, February 1, 2013
When I came up with my idea of WagnerWorldWide some years ago, I was not so sure, where this would take me. Now I know. Step no. 4 with our next conference took me to the town of Columbia, the captital of South Carolina. While we were suffering from snow in Germany, I landed on Wednesday at a small local airport after a long journey. And it was warm that night. Nice. Compared to the Franconian winter. Where did Wagner take me? Very generally speaking, www2013: took me to a good spot of academic investigation dealing with the anniversary culture in music and the arts. Again very interdisciplinary, here at the University of South Carolina. I think the project works out, basically. But I am also asking myself: what makes the difference of having that series of conferences instead of just one? It is probably the amount of approaches but also the fact how certain aspects – let’s say Wagner and Bismarck – are relating to each other from Bern to Columbia or vice versa. And how these aspects are looked at differently. The www2013:-books we are planning on will show this – hopefully. It is also interesting to see which topics are focused on at each place. The Columbia conference with its impressive programme WagnerWorldWide:America, put together by Nicholas Vazsonyi and Julie Hubbert, features a lot of talks on the Media topic as well as on the Gender topic, the last one being quite prominent also in all sections. The Northamerican scholars at the conference are in the majority, with people from the UK and from continental Europe. Different Wagner perspectives? Yes. Alex Ross, the very acclaimed music critic from the „New Yorker“, gave an impressive keynote and brought a complete new topic to Wagner Studies. As far as I can see. His talk was dealing with the African American Wagner connection, introducing the term of „African American Wagnerism“. Not only African American Bayreuth singers (L. Aldrige in great detail and Grace Bumbry very briefly) were discussed but also William Du Bois. The civil right advocat and writer went to Bayreuth in 1936; to be precise on August 19, 1936, he saw a performance of „Lohengrin“. About the same time, when Jesse Owens won four gold medals at the Berlin olympics. Two African Americans in Hitler’s Nazi Germany. With very different experiences.
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