After Bayreuth, he became the musical director at Mannheim and in 1942 in Dresden.[1]
Bayreuth
When Fritz Busch refused to return to Bayreuth after the 1924 Festival and with Michael Balling dead the following year, Siegfried Wagner invited Elmendorff and Franz von Hoesslin to Bayreuth.[2] Although Richard Wagner, at the beginning of his 1869 tract On Conducting (Über das Dirigiren), states that he has no intention of imposing a system on conducting practice,[3] he nevertheless takes pains to establish a principle, summed up in the phrase, modification of tempo, which is "the principle conditioning the very life of music".[4] In Damascene terms Wagner recalls how an 1839 performance of Beethoven's ninth symphony, by the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra conducted by François Habeneck, led him to believe that he had heard the symphony for the first time, and as Beethoven himself had conceived it. Habeneck's success was not solely attributable to conscientious diligence, although he did spend over two years studying and rehearsing the work,[5] but rather that the orchestra "really sang this symphony". Habeneck had, Wagner expounds, "found the right tempo because he took infinite pains to get his orchestra to understand the melos of the symphony.[6] Wagner defines melos as a singing style which shaped melodic phrases with rubato, tonal variation, and shifting accent, and the right comprehension of the melos is the sole guide to the right tempo: these two things are inseparable: the one implies and qualifies the other.[7] Bayreuth conductors were able to develop their own idiosyncrasies, and a house style gradually developed from this Wagnerian Ideal. The Bayreuth style tended toward slower tempi, which not only reflected Cosima's personal ideology, but could also be practically justified as the style demanded by the Festspielhaus's unique acoustics.[8] It was into this undulating sound world of flowing symphonic texture that both Elmendorff and von Hoesslin, men who fully met Bayreuth's conservative criteria,[9] began their Bayreuth careers in 1927.[10][11]
In 1928 Winifred was approached by Elsa Bruckmann to help enlist Muck into the ranks of the Militant League for German Culture (the KfdK). Winifred agreed to help and, in a letter to Bruckmann dated 15 October 1928, outlined her plan to use Elemendorff ('he's very keen on anything like this' as the easiest and most natural way of achieving their aim.[12] In the end, neither Winifred, nor Elmendorff's enthusiasm could persuade Muck to join.
Following Siegfried Wagner's death in August 1930, a memorial concert was held in the Festspielhaus. The concert programme was framed by two pieces by Richard Wagner that commemorated Siegfried's birth and death; the opening piece, the Siegfried Idyll, conducted by Arturo Toscanini, and to close,[13] Siegfried's Funeral March' from Götterdämmerung, conducted by Muck. The centrepiece of the concert was conducted by Elmendorff, and commemorated Siegfried's own 'modest genius'[14] with excerpts from his operas including the overture to Angel of Peace and 'Faith' from Heathen King.
During the 1931 Festival a memorial concert was planned to take place on 4 August, the first anniversary of Siegfried's death. During the rehearsals a row broke out that led to Toscanini storming out of Bayreuth. Initially Furtwängler wanted to be the sole conductor of an all-Beethoven concert but Winifred insisted that all three of that year's Festival conductors Elmendorff, Wilhelm Furtwängler and Toscanini, should take part in a programme of music by Liszt, Richard and Siegfried Wagner. Furtwängler prolonged the argument by declaring that he had no intention of conducting "dynastic programme".[15] The time taken up by the argument started to intrude on Toscanini's general rehearsal time, a situation exacerbated when an incompetent assistant lost Toscanini's score. Enraged, Toscanini snapped his baton and immediately left Bayreuth. From a safe distance in the US, he declared that he would never return and although he did return to conduct his remaining performances that year, he never again conducted at Bayreuth.[16]
It wasn't until after Furtwängler acrimoniously departed following the 1936 Festival that Elmendorff was officially appointed as an assistant to the principal conductor, Heinz Tietjen.[17] It was at this time, in 1937, that Elmendorff joined the Nazi Party.[18]
Bayreuth Festival statistics
Elemendorff conducted five Ring cycles and eight performances, in total, of three different operas during his fifteen years at Bayreuth.[19] His conducting at the Festival ended when Furtwängler returned to Bayreuth in 1943.[20]
Jonathan Carr describes Elmendorff's 1928 recording of Tristan und Isolde as 'orchestrally exemplary' whilst also noting that although it was Toscanini was responsible for fully preparing Bayreuth Festival orchestra to achieve great things in the 1930 production of Tannhäuser, it was Elmendorff who (for contractual reasons) conducted the Bayreuth recording.[21]
Ernest Newman regarded Elmendorff's performance in the 1930 Ring as 'efficient rather than dazzling' - an opinion noted by Frederic Spotts as not uncommon.[22]
In August 1933 Walter Legge attended the Bayreuth Festival in his role as the music critic of the Manchester Guardian newspaper. As well as observing that the Wagner Festival had been transformed into a Hitler festival, with Mein Kampf displacing Mein Leben, Legge heaped scorn on the quality of the conducting which he considers a consequence of German musical protectionism. Lamenting the absence of Toscanini, Legge's review critically slated both Richard Strauss, whose 'conducting days are over' and Elmendorff who Legge damns as 'an artist of but average talent'.
If Elmendorff is the best Wagnerian conductor Germany can produce, we can only sympathise with the intelligent music-lovers who have to live in a land where only German conductors are allowed to appear. It looks as if "German music performed by German artists" were fit only for the German home.[23]
1944 Luisa Miller, Verdi, Dresden State Opera Chorus, Saxon State Orchestra, Label: BASF, nd, reissued on CD by Preiser Records, 2006
References
^Skelton, Geoffrey (1965). Wagner at Bayreuth: experiment and tradition (First American ed.). New York: George Braziller. p. 150.
^Spotts, Frederic (1996). Bayreuth: A History of the Wagner Festival. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 169. ISBN0-300-06665-1.
^Wagner, Richard (1979). "On Conducting". Three Wagner Essays. Translated by Robert L. Jacobs. London: Ernst Eulenburg Ltd. p. 49.
^Wagner, Richard (1979). "On Conducting". Three Wagner Essays. Translated by Robert L. Jacobs. London: Ernst Eulenburg Ltd. p. 66.
^Wagner, Richard (1979). "On Conducting". Three Wagner Essays. Translated by Robert L. Jacobs. London: Ernst Eulenburg Ltd. p. 55.
^Wagner, Richard (1979). "On Conducting". Three Wagner Essays. Translated by Robert L. Jacobs. London: Ernst Eulenburg Ltd. p. 57.
^Fifield, Christopher (1992). "1: Conducting Wagner: The Search for Melos". In Millington, Barry; Spencer, Stewart (eds.). Performing Wagner. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 1. ISBN0-300-05718-0.
^Breckbill, David (1992). "Section 17: Wagner in Performance: Conducting". In Millington, Barry (ed.). The Wagner Compendium: A Guide to Wagner's Life and Work. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 369.
^Spotts, Frederic (1996). Bayreuth: A History of the Wagner Festival. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 148. ISBN0-300-06665-1.
^Breckbill, David (1992). "Section 17: Wagner in Performance: Conducting". In Millington, Barry (ed.). The Wagner Compendium: A Guide to Wagner's Life and Work. London: Thames and Hudson. pp. 369–370.
^Skelton, Geoffrey (1965). Wagner at Bayreuth: experiment and tradition (First American ed.). New York: George Braziller. p. 150.
^quoted in Hamann, Brigitte (2005). Winifred Wagner: A Life At The Heart of Hitler's Bayreuth. Orlando: Harcourt Books. pp. 129–30n.40.
^Hamann, Brigitte (2005). Winifred Wagner: A Life At The Heart of Hitler's Bayreuth. Orlando: Harcourt Books. p. 145.
^Wagner, Nike (2000). "15". The Wagners: The Dramas of A Musical Dynasty. Translated by Osers, E; Downes, M. London: Phoenix. p. 211. ISBN0-75381-280-0.
^Lieselotte Schmidt, letter to her parents 23.7.1931 quoted in Hamann, Brigitte (2005). Winifred Wagner: A Life At The Heart of Hitler's Bayreuth. Orlando: Harcourt Books. p. 129n.51.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Hamann, Brigitte (2005). Winifred Wagner: A Life At The Heart of Hitler's Bayreuth. Orlando: Harcourt Books. pp. 129–130.
^Spotts, Frederic (1996). Bayreuth: A History of the Wagner Festival. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 178. ISBN0-300-06665-1.
^Fred K. Prieberg: Handbuch Deutsche Musiker 1933–1945, CD-Rom-Lexikon, Kiel 2004, p. 1392–1393.