
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In Weimar, Germany, on today’s date in 1850, the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt conducted the first performance of “Lohengrin,” a new opera by the German composer Richard Wagner. Liszt was determined to make Weimar famous, musically-speaking, despite the rather provincial nature of the forces he had at his disposal.
Liszt had to go out and buy a bass-clarinet, since the Court orchestra didn’t own one, and he beefed up the number of violins from the usual 11 players to a grand total of 18.
The title role of Lohengrin was sung by a tenor named Karl Beck, who was also a local baker. Even so, Liszt’s unprecedented 46 rehearsals apparently paid off: the premiere of “Lohengrin” was a big success and helped put both Weimar and Wagner on the map.
Ironically, Wagner himself was unable to attend the premiere. He was a wanted man on German soil, having participated in the unsuccessful Dresden uprising of 1849, and there was a warrant out for his arrest. Liszt had helped him escape to Switzerland, and while his opera was being staged in Weimar, Wagner was at a hotel in Lucerne, listening in his imagination, he later told Liszt, as each scene unfolded.
Richard Wagner (1813 - 1883) — Lohengrin (Bayreuth Festival Orchestra; Peter Schneider, cond.) Philips 438 500
By American Public Media4.7
1010 ratings
In Weimar, Germany, on today’s date in 1850, the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt conducted the first performance of “Lohengrin,” a new opera by the German composer Richard Wagner. Liszt was determined to make Weimar famous, musically-speaking, despite the rather provincial nature of the forces he had at his disposal.
Liszt had to go out and buy a bass-clarinet, since the Court orchestra didn’t own one, and he beefed up the number of violins from the usual 11 players to a grand total of 18.
The title role of Lohengrin was sung by a tenor named Karl Beck, who was also a local baker. Even so, Liszt’s unprecedented 46 rehearsals apparently paid off: the premiere of “Lohengrin” was a big success and helped put both Weimar and Wagner on the map.
Ironically, Wagner himself was unable to attend the premiere. He was a wanted man on German soil, having participated in the unsuccessful Dresden uprising of 1849, and there was a warrant out for his arrest. Liszt had helped him escape to Switzerland, and while his opera was being staged in Weimar, Wagner was at a hotel in Lucerne, listening in his imagination, he later told Liszt, as each scene unfolded.
Richard Wagner (1813 - 1883) — Lohengrin (Bayreuth Festival Orchestra; Peter Schneider, cond.) Philips 438 500

38,516 Listeners

43,680 Listeners

25,828 Listeners

7,683 Listeners

3,985 Listeners

1,355 Listeners

520 Listeners

182 Listeners

247 Listeners

75 Listeners

112,321 Listeners

2,178 Listeners

56,692 Listeners

4,112 Listeners

76 Listeners

35 Listeners

6,560 Listeners