Roger Allen: On Conducting
Roger Allen: On Conducting
Roger Allen: On Conducting
Roger Allen
St Peter’s College
University of Oxford
There can be no doubt that Richard Wagner’s book length essay ‘On Conducting’ (1869), the
performance of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony he conducted on 22 May 1872 on the occasion
of the laying of the foundation stone of the Festpielhaus in Bayreuth, and his subsequent
report The Rendering of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony (1873), are significant milestones in
the history of conducting. Wagner’s essay, performance and report all exercised an important
influence on the subsequent development of the then nascent art. That much is beyond
dispute. As was always the case with Wagner, however, critical reception of his ideas was
mixed. Amongst those who responded adversely to Wagner’s idiosyncratic approach to
performance was the music theorist and pedagogue, Heinrich Schenker (1868-1935).
Heinrich Schenker was an assimilated Jew of Austrian parentage born in 1868 in the
Polish province of Galicia. He studied composition at the University of Vienna with
Bruckner and subsequently remained in the city as teacher of piano and theory. His first two
important theoretical publications were Harmonielehre (1906) and Kontrapunkt (1910),
1
followed in 1912 by a substantial monograph: Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony: a
representation of its musical content, with running commentary on performance and
literature as well. In any study of the history of conducting, this work deserves close critical
attention, not only for the information it gives on the development of Schenker’s analytical
methodology (at that time still at its pre-graphic, Formenlehre stage), but also for the
influence it had on subsequent performance practice. 1
As Nicholas Cook puts it, ‘The basic purpose of Schenker’s monograph on the Ninth
Symphony […] is to refute the whole edifice of Wagnerian interpretation, and to reclaim the
work for what he calls ‘absolute music’. It should be remembered in this context that, as he
made clear in his 1846 programme for his Dresden performance of the Ninth Symphony, for
Wagner ‘absolute music’ was a pejorative term. The absolute versus programme music
debate had polarised musical criticism since the publication in 1854 of Eduard Hanslick’s
Vom musikalische Schönen (On the Musically Beautiful). This influential treatise directly
critiques the expressive aesthetic promulgated by Wagner in Oper und Drama (1851) and
1 Heinrich Schenker, Beethovens neunte Sinfonie (1912); Eng. edn., tr. John Rothgeb, Beethoven's Ninth
Symphony, (New Haven and London: Yale UP, 1992).
2
continued in Über das Dirigiren. Schenker’s criticisms of 60 years later promulgated in the
Ninth Symphony monograph stem from a similar premise: in his view Wagner’s approach
was self-serving and conceptually flawed in that he approached the Ninth Symphony from a
theatrical rather than a symphonic perspective, thus misunderstanding and distorting the
nature of the work as symphony. ‘… for whatever and however he [Wagner] thought about
Beethoven, all of his thoughts unconsciously and ineluctably flowed into that artistic purpose
which he envisioned as his own’ (p.65). It was as a corrective to what he saw as this
misguided approach that Schenker published his monograph.
Schenker’s attacks on Wagner in the Introduction are the most hard-hitting and
uncompromising. ‘
Yet Schenker is by no means dismissive of Wagner’s ideas in their entirety, even if his back-
handed assessment is a classic example of damning with faint praise. He writes,
As is evident here [in Schenker’s own analysis], the otherwise original and
consequential Wagner has so completely misunderstood the Ninth Symphony
precisely in respect to the most crucial artistic points – for example in respect to
voice-leading, structure [Konstruktion], orchestration, style, and so forth – then
this must not automatically discredit all the consequences he has drawn with
such unprecedented passion from his own misunderstandings in support of an
alleged progress based on the idea of superseding absolute music (p.18).
It is beyond the scope of this paper to give a detailed exegesis of Schenker’s argument.
Nevertheless, it is instructive to extrapolate some of the features which relate directly to its
subsequent influence on performance practice. After a lengthy introduction notable for its
strident polemical tone, Schenker gives a detailed, bar by bar analysis of the form and
content of the Ninth Symphony in the traditions of Formenlehre, interspersed with strongly-
worded critiques of other commentators such as Felix Weingartner, Hugo Riemann,
Hermann Kretschmar and Richard Wagner. For example, in the course of his discussion of
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Beethoven’s metronome marks, Schenker states that ‘The metronome markings as given in
the score of the Ninth Symphony are all by Beethoven and thus to be accepted as authentic.’
It should be mentioned, however, that there are no metronome marks in Beethoven’s
autograph; they are specified in a letter to Moscheles written on 18 March 1827, i.e. shortly
before Beethoven’s death, before an upcoming performance in London. Schenker goes on to
suggest that ‘[the metronome marking] by no means ruled out possible tempo modifications;
but rather the master himself [Beethoven] always preferred a free manner of playing to the
rigid one’ (pp 40-41). Significantly, whether intentionally or not, Schenker here positions
Beethoven as a precursor of Wagner’s prescription for flexible tempo modification as an
expressive device in Über das Dirigieren. Whilst Schenker agrees with the importance
Wagner places on the ‘necessity for the clarification of melos’ (p.66) in the performance of a
Beethoven symphony, he takes him to task for misunderstanding the true nature of
Beethoven’s subtle means of achieving such clarity. ‘Both Beethoven and Wagner strove for
the same thing [clarity of melos]. The only difference between them was the choice of
methods and degree of insight into the psychology of the listener’ (p.68). Beethoven, of
course, is credited with a far greater degree of insight than Wagner.
A further point of interest is the importance Schenker attaches to Beethoven’s
‘orthography’ (Schreibart) in the Ninth Symphony: i.e. the way in which he has notated the
content as found in Beethoven’s autograph.
It is not the task of the orthography […] to provide the performer with definite
means of for achieving effects supposedly specified and attainable only through
precisely these means, but rather to arouse in his mind, in an a priori manner,
specific effects, leaving it up to him to choose freely the appropriate means for
their attainment [my Italics]. […] In short: orthography announces and seeks
effects, but says nothing at all about the means of producing them!’ (p.9)
Schenker thus sees in Beethoven’s score, and the autograph in particular, an Aristotelian
entelechy, simply defined as the essential nature or informing principle of a living thing,
which generates a performance through a recreative process of improvisation into an organic
whole, as opposed to the score as a fixed object, or semiotic plan determining a performance
through fidelity to a written text. This idea is closely related to the notion of a musical work
as a living organism and was to have a far-reaching influence on the performance aesthetic
of one of the earliest and most enthusiastic readers of Schenker’s monograph: Wilhelm
Furtwängler (1886-1954).
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Heinrich Schenker and Wilhelm Furtwängler
It was in 1911, the year of his appointment as conduction of the Verein der Musikfreunde
in Lübeck, that Furtwängler encountered Schenker’s work at first hand when he made an
intensive study of the Ninth Symphony monograph. This proved to be something of an
epiphany for Furtwängler and was to have a lasting influence on the development of his
thought and approach to performance. At the other end of his career in 1947 he wrote a
retrospective appreciation of Schenker in which he recalled the impact that this reading had
made on him:
The first work that became widely known was a monograph on Beethoven's Ninth
Symphony. This book fell into my hands in Lübeck in 1911 when I was beginning my
career as a Kapellmeister and immediately aroused my passionate interest. Whenever I
disagreed with him in matters of detail, whenever the polemical position was
questionable, such was the cast of mind, the overview that formulated the answers to
these questions which was so unusual and different from the usual style of musical
writing, that I was deeply moved. 2
2Furtwängler, TW, 199. See Appendix for a translation of the complete text.
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Schenker’s monograph was published in 1912, a year after Furtwängler states that he first
encountered the work. Writing in 1947 after the passage of 35 years it is possible that his
memory was at fault; but it is more likely that he was made aware of Schenker’s work prior
to publication by his mother’s cousin, the conductor George Dohrn (1867-1942), an
enthusiastic admirer of Schenker’s writings and an early champion of Furtwängler as a
conductor. 3
A musical content that is so perfect in itself as that of the Ninth Symphony uncovers
laws of tonal construction that most other human beings do, indeed, carry within their
own bosoms, but only the genius, by dint of natural gifts, can actually make manifest!
[...] Thus, while for the genius a specific content could produce only this specific shape
and none other, the theorists grasp the content a posteriori only through a form
arbitrarily abstracted by them, but one in which no manner of necessity rules. 5
It was this uncompromising approach to musical form as being defined by the composer’s
creative processes that earned Furtwängler's enthusiastic approval:
Here for the first time there were no hermeneutics, no irrelevances but the question
was asked, simply and directly, what really stands before us in Beethoven's Ninth
Symphony? No questions regarding the formal structure were asked, which today are
the cause of so much misunderstanding; there was no attempt made to place the work
in historical context, but rather the composer's creative process was examined which is
3 See ed. Ian Bent, David Bretherton and William Drabkin, Heinrich Schenker: Selected Correspondence. (The
Boydell Press: Woodbridge, 2014), pp. 251-254.
4For an alternative reading of Schenker's polemics in relation to Wagner's view of the Ninth Symphony see
Nicholas Cook, 'Heinrich Schenker, Polemicist: a reading of the Ninth Symphony Monograph', Music Analysis
14:1 (1995), 89-105.
5Schenker, Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, 4.ff.
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the source of the organic cohesion of the work as a whole and which so profoundly
affects us all. 6
The organic worldview of Heinrich Schenker, still at this point at an early stage of its
development, found a ready adherent in Furtwängler. His early musical education in the
idealist traditions of Bildung, together with his own study of Beethoven and his early
experiences as a conductor, made him receptive to the idea that a musical work functioned
through the working of processes inherent within itself. These ideas were firmly embedded
in Furtwängler’s mind when on 26 April 1913 he conducted Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony
for the first time
Although Furtwängler had first encountered Schenker's ideas in 1911 it was not until
1919 that the two encountered each other personally. The meeting was arranged by Dr Paul
Hammerschlag, Director of the Austrian Credit Institute for Trade and Industry, who on 2
Yesterday evening Herr Kapellmeister Furtwängler was with me and he spoke of you and
your work in the warmest possible terms. He also expressed a wish to meet you personally.
[...] I think perhaps that you will be interested to meet this excellent musician. 7
The meeting took place on 3 May 1919 and marked the beginning of a working relationship
based on mutual respect rather than uncritical admiration. Schenker had a high regard for
did not fully share his views, particularly with regard to Bruckner and Wagner. They met
restaurants - and Schenker, clearly hoping that Furtwängler would be a conductor whose
6Furtwängler,
TW, 199.
7Helmut Federhofer, Heinrich Schenker nach Tagebüchern und Briefen in der Oswald Jonas Memorial Collection
(1985), 107. All translations from Federhofer are by the author. The original text and alternative translations of
these documents may also be accessed at www.schenkerdocumentsonline.org
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mission was to put Schenkerian ideas into practice, was unsparing with his artistic advice.
Furtwängler was generally receptive and took every opportunity to express his thanks which
in 1931 took the form of a personal donation of 3,000 marks in support of the publication of
In a diary entry following his first meeting with Furtwängler Schenker describes his initial
Furtwängler appeared to be about thirty years of age. [...] He had been introduced to my
book six years previously whilst working in Lübeck and was well acquainted with my
contacts in Germany. In any case, he was willing to involve himself in my current mission. 9
The idea of mission is a common thread running through Schenker's writings; he was clearly
November 1919 Schenker attended his first concert directed by Furtwängler (Beethoven
Egmont stage music and Fifth Symphony). The diary entry in which he records the event is
representative of his critical approach: ‘There is no doubt that the young conductor is
superior to Weingartner, Nikisch and Strauss, so it is only to be regretted that he does not
penetrate more deeply into the composition’. 10 The following day, 5 November, Schenker
Furtwängler later replied, ‘I must confess that there is no-one whose approval of my work so
8Furtwängler's name occurs in Schenker's diaries approximately one hundred times. The Schenker archive, held as
part of the Oswald Jonas Memorial Collection by the University of California, Riverside, contains twenty-two
letters and two cards from Furtwängler dated between 1919 and 1937, two years after Schenker's death. Latterly
Furtwängler directed his communications to the theorist's widow. See Federhofer, 106-7.
9Ibid., 107.
10Ibid., 109.
11 SPK Berlin, 55 Nachlass 13, Kasten 31. The full text of Schenker’s letter, transcribed by Christoph Hust and
translated by Ian Bent, may be found at www.schenkerdocumentsonline.org
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pleases me as yourself for there is no-one today whose knowledge of Beethoven approaches
yours’. 12
connection with Furtwängler in a diary entry for 15 April 1920. On this occasion Schenker's
pupil, Hans Weisse, acted as intermediary between the two: ‘Dr Weisse brought greetings
Symphony. He recounted how he had acquainted Furtwängler with the concept of the
Urlinie’. 13 Schenker attended the performance in question which took place on 28 April
1920; his critical approach to Furtwängler's art is again clear from his comments: ‘The
conductor does not yet understand that an increase in tension comes from an accelerando
rather than a crescendo and that this heightens the effect of moving towards a specific
destination. In the last movement the vocal parts were sufficiently prominent and the chief
Schenker's exegesis of musical texts for Furtwängler continued throughout the period of
their acquaintance. On 19 November 1922 Schenker records how he showed Furtwängler the
Urlinie of Brahms's Third Symphony, Bach's Little Preludes, Beethoven's Appassionata (op.
The meetings in Vienna between Schenker, Furtwängler and other members of the circle
sometimes became heated. On 11 April 1925 Schenker records a discussion that had a
During the meal we touched upon technical questions, principally those relating to the
sonata. We had not previously suspected just how ignorant Furtwängler is on these matters.
He hardly understands sonata form at all!!
He stands up for Bruckner - a composer towards whom he considers me an opponent. He
thinks that Bruckner is a composer who has something specific to say. It is futile for him to
try and clarify the spiritual content of Bruckner's works. He seems to think that spiritual
12 Federhofer,, 109.
13Ibid., 111.
14 Ibid., 112.
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fulfillment is only possible through abnegation of personality. In short, Furtwängler speaks
as a dilettante and both Weisse and I have the greatest trouble in conversing with him on
artistic matters. In spite of this he remains the leading conductor. After the meal we went
into the music room where the Bruckner debate continued. 15
Most importantly, Schenker enhanced his understanding of organic growth through the
concept of the Urlinie, the Ursatz [Fundamental structure] and Fernhören (roughly
realised through the act of performance as a series of exfoliations of the Ursatz. Thus to
Furtwängler there was no such thing as a definitive musical text. Each performance of a
improvisation and at the same time reveal the deep underlying structure of a work. The idea
performance as an organic process. There is no sense in which this means that a performance
performances were meticulously planned beforehand through detailed study of the score; but
the crucial difference is that Furtwängler conceived of a score as a living organism rather
than a pre-determined semiotic plan. The term Improvisation is used here in the sense that a
of organic growth and the human will. As Ferdinand Tönnies put it, ‘Organic growth must be
seen as spontaneous process, and so too is the development of natural or instinctive will’. 16
In Schenkerian terms the underlying deep structure of a work unfolds in performance from
the fundamental or background structure (Ursatz) through the middle ground to the musical
surface. According to Schenker, ‘the whole must be discovered through improvisation if the
piece is to be more than a collection of individual parts and motives in the sense of a
15 Ibid., 116.
16 Tönnies p.97
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schema’ (Schenker, 1926). Schenker acted as a powerful catalyst in Furtwängler’s
understanding of this concept, although he was too independent-minded not to retain a strong
sense of critical distance from the complete Schenkerian package. In his retrospective tribute
he criticised Schenker for lack of clarity (somewhat ironically in view of his own convoluted
prose style) and for the concept of the Urlinie, which he considered insufficiently thought
through. It was the concept of Fernhörens, or structural hearing, that left the longest lasting
impression.
The ideas first encountered in Schenker's Ninth Symphony and subsequently strengthened
through personal contact brought together many of the diverse strands in Furtwängler's
performance aesthetic. In particular the idea of a musical work as a living organism became
the driver of a way of thinking about music and its realisation through the practice of
performance which stands in contrast the idea of werktreue, or fidelity to the written score.
This is nowhere more clearly seen than in the controversy between Furtwängler and his
performance aesthetic rooted in the traditions of philosophical idealism and the work of art
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as a living organism was directly challenged by the enthusiastic reception given to Toscanini
on his visit to Berlin with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra in May 1930. The
American Orchestra under their Italian conductor gave two concerts in the Philharmonie on
27 May 1930: Haydn, Symphony No 101 (The ‘Clock’); Debussy La Mer; Beethoven,
28 May 1930: Beethoven, Eroica Symphony (Op 55); Brahms Haydn Variations (Op.56a);
These concerts are the subject of a long Notebook entry headed Toscanini in Germany:
An article on the true situation of German music-making in 1930. This extended polemic
he achieves, especially in the first movement of the Haydn symphony; but this has the
effect of damning with faint praise once the familiar tropes of Furtwängler’s thinking come
to the fore. Toscanini is taken to task for his 'literal renderings' [notengetreue]. The idea
that the written text as fixed in the printed score is inviolate, is to Furtwängler not only a
meaningless cliché but a conceptual impossibility. A performance must above all else be
faithful to the spirit of the work as revealed through the organic unfolding of the deep sub-
structure. In his attempts to give a literal rendering Toscanini extinguishes the necessary
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element of spontaneity and thus fails to achieve the equilibrium between the whole and the
The overall impression was therefore divided, because the essence of Haydn's music
and its style, that inimitable mixture of cheerful sweetness and tautened energy which
makes Haydn one of the greatest masters ever to have created anything, was not
forthcoming, so that the individually apparent qualities of the performance hampered
each other rather than complementing and mutually supporting one another. 18
the functional meaning of the modulations in Leonore No.3 and for his resulting inability to
The functional meaning of the modulations in the long term, which in absolute music
such as Beethoven's play such a different role, seems to be completely unknown to his
naïve feeling for opera music. But beyond this too, there is not the slightest attempt to
transmute purely musical forms into a spiritual and psychological insight. 19
For Furtwängler it was the expressive potential of purely musical forms that was
Furtwängler makes his postion quite clear: the former's perceived shortcomings as an
interpreter, we are given to understand, are unsurprisingly and in no small measure due to
Doubtless he has never understood the origin of this passage. But as a result, the same
misunderstanding recurred many times during the symphony – revealing a lack of
acquaintance with and a naïve ignorance of one of the main demands of properly
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symphonic music, the demand for organic development, the living and organic growth
of every melodic, rhythmic, harmonic formation out of what has gone before. 20
Toscanini is essentially an Italian operatic musician: the operatic Tutti and Aria are his
musical modes of thought. Toscanini cannot deny his own self. The sonata ‘which in all its
major examples is a German creation’ is therefore beyond his understanding; but in
Strauss’s programmatic Tod und Verklärung ‘the theatrical Kapellmeister’s sense of effect
was an advantage. Furtwängler even criticizes Toscanini’s inexpressive conducting
gestures and lack of manual talent.
It is unclear whether this extensive Notebook entry was ever intended for publication. It
is not included amongst Furtwängler’s published or unpublished formally composed
essays. The uncut original text is to be found in the handwritten Notizkalendar 21and
transcribed in an incorrectly dated typescript where the stenographer has clearly had
difficulty in reading Furtwängler’s notoriously problematic script: hence the minor Italian
composer and Toscanini’s near contemporary from Parma, Ildebrando Pizetti (1880-1968 ),
whose Rondo Veneziano Furtwängler loftily dismisses as unworthy of attention, is
incorrectly transcribed as Donizetti, a misreading that has found its way into both published
versions. 22 The form in which it appears in the published German and English editions of
the Notebooks is abridged: the passages omitted amount to more attacks on Toscanini,
accusing him of posturing, lacking in talent and for his schoolmasterly [Schulmeister]
insistence on precision above all else.
But the most significant redaction is the epigrammatic final sentence: Toscanini’s
performances are described as ‘Sleek portrayals, obliging, lively, springy, without tragedy,
without the daemonic, full of gleaming strength, completely cold, tedious. Just like a
record’. Most damningly of all, Toscanini’s performances are without the two essentially
German qualities of the tragic [Tragik] and the daemonic [Dämonie]. 23
Furtwängler’s criticisms of Toscanini are driven not only his personal insecurities and
clear resentment of a rival’s success on his home territory, but, more significantly for the
present discussion, by his very German way of thinking about the act of musical
performance. His attacks on the Italian’s ‘literal renderings’ and overreliance on technique
14
stem from his belief in the conceptual impossibility of playing music according to the letter
of the score without the element of spontaneous improvisation that is the lifeblood of every
living performance. The non-rational qualities of spontaneity, improvisation and organic
growth in performance belong to the ‘mythos’; literal rendering, precision and overreliance
on technical perfection belong to the ‘logos’. It was the creative force embodied in the non-
rational mythos that Goethe, ‘following the example of the ancients’ represented poetically
as the daemonic [das Dämonische]; Furtwängler’s criticism of Toscanini’s performances as
lacking in the daemonic is therefore particularly significant and hard-hitting. 24 The
ideological dichotomy of nature versus artifice seen in the opposition between the non-
rational and the overly-intellectual is a later manifestation of the distinction between
mythos and logos: the encoded agenda is all that is natural, i.e. organic growth, is good; all
that is artificial, i.e. technique, is bad.
Conclusion
24Angus Nicholls, Goethe’s Concept of the Demonic after the Ancients (Rochester NY: Camden House,
2006), p.31
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counterpart in Wagner’s ideas of flexible tempo modification. It might be suggested that
although Schenker wrote his Ninth Symphony monograph as an attack on Wagnerian
aesthetics, the performance practice of Wilhelm Furtwängler suggests that Schenker’s ideas
on performance were not as far removed from Wagner’s as he liked to think.
For anyone who might like to pursue these ideas further, may I with all due modesty suggest
my recent book which considers these ideas in more depth.
Roger Allen
Bern
2 November 2018
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