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Wagner Wilhelm Richard, 1813 - 1883

Rebel, pioneer, demagogue, revisionist, heretic. Whether admired or fiercely opposed, no one who engages seriously with Richard Wagner can deny his genius. He proposed a radically different conception of opera—one that came to dominate the second half of the nineteenth century and gave rise to passionate supporters and equally determined opponents, whose disagreements remain unresolved to this day.

Wagner called for the complete fusion of music and drama into a single, indivisible entity. Drawing inspiration from ancient Greek tragedy, he envisioned a form of musical drama that went beyond established theoretical models, redefining not only how opera should sound, but how it should be conceived, structured, and experienced. Under his influence, opera was transformed into something fundamentally new, decisively distancing itself from the traditions of bel canto and conventional lyric theater.

The dramatic force of Wagner’s operas invites reflection as much as emotion. Their power lies not in the immediate seduction of melody alone, but in the cumulative impact of sound, word, myth, and symbolism—without ever renouncing emotional intensity.

Wagner’s music, though central to his lyrical dramas, was never intended to stand alone. Rich in expressive force and descriptive capacity, it remains inseparable from the ideological and philosophical vision of its creator. Its monumental scale mirrors the mythic themes Wagner himself shaped, elaborated, and controlled with uncompromising authority.

He allowed no one to share authorship or artistic glory. At the same time, he assumed full responsibility for his work, even when the outcome of his bold musical experiments was uncertain. Those experiments ultimately succeeded, pushing the art of music—and opera in particular—decisively forward.

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