Wagner: Richard Wagner, an artist and reformer born in Leipzig, Germany in 1813, is supposed to work in art. When his father died, Wagner remarried herself as a baby, mother, actress, actor, singer, writer, portrait painter, and her husband's old friend Ludwig Gayer (Henderson, 1923, 3). Wagner will continue to play an important role in the development of opera. Through his reform, Wagner was heavily responsible for changing the process of the opera of the 19th century.
Dresden Palace Opera House refused to perform his next opera "Lohengrin", not for artistic reasons; instead they were marginalized by Wagner's planned administrative and artistic reforms. His advice keeps the opera away from the court and makes a national theater whose production is determined by drama and composer's alliance. He focused on the idea of rejuvenation of society and was involved in the German revolution from 1848 to 1949. Wagner wrote several articles claiming the revolution and actively participated in the uprising of Dresden in 1849. When the uprising failed, an arrest warrant was issued, he fled from Germany and could not join the first performance of Weimar. On August 28, 1850 his friend Franz Liszt
¿ 1/2149506 COSIMA WAGNER: Mrs. Bayreuth, Hills, Oliver, Kosima Wagner, illegal girls of Franz Liszt, lover and attractive and moving photographs of Richard Wagner. The first book uses Bayreuth's existing literary biography to explore this extraordinary and compulsory women's work, illuminating the hidden chapter of European cultural history. 354 pgs. • 2010 146924 DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON: State of the art: celebrating the excellence of music for over 100 years Louis, Remy, et al. Deutsche Grammophon's label has become a leader in recording classical music. These amazing cartoon rolls contain a comprehensive illustration of many unprecedented archival images, including copies of program listings, documents, album covers, and behind-the-scenes photos of recording sessions, and the two CDs are the company's most innovative Includes record. 224 pgs. • 2010