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Richard Strauss
Born: Jun 11, 1864; Germany   Died: Sep 8, 1949; Germany   Period: 20th Century
Though the long career of Richard Strauss spanned one of the most chaotic periods in political, social, and cultural history of the world, the composer retained his essentially Romantic aesthetic even into the age of television, jet engines, and atom bombs. Born in Munich in 1864, Strauss was the son of Franz Joseph Strauss, the principal hornist in the Munich Court Orchestra. Strauss demonstrated musical aptitude at an early age, and extensive ...
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There are 1,963 recordings available. Select a specific Composition Type or Most Popular Work below.
Richard Strauss titles in:
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Composition Types
Arias from Operas (232)
Chamber Music (138)
Choral (20)
Duets from Operas (84)
Operas (232)
Orchestral (639)
Organ (13)
Piano (38)
Soloist and Orchestra (139)
Songs (520)
Trios from Operas (40)
Wind Ensemble (64)
Most Popular Works
Don Juan, Op. 20 (147)
Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche, Op. 28 (142)
Also sprach Zarathustra, Op. 30 (76)
Ein Heldenleben, Op. 40 (94)
Tod und Verklärung, Op. 24 (98)
Four Last Songs, AV 150 (87)
Morgen (133)
Zueignung (101)
Dance of the Seven Veils (64)
Salome, Op. 54 (41)
Elektra, Op. 58 (36)
Der Rosenkavalier, Op. 59 (49)
Serenade for Winds in E flat major, Op. 7 (23)
Featured Richard Strauss CDs & DVDs:
Strauss: Orchestral Works / Kempe, Frager, Hoelscher, Staatskapelle Dresden
Release Date: 12/20/2005   Label: Brilliant Classics   Catalog: 7591   Number of Discs: 9
CD  $37.99
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Richard Strauss In High Fidelity / Fritz Reiner, Chicago
Release Date: 09/14/2004   Label: Rca Victor Living Stereo   Catalog: 61389   Number of Discs: 1
SuperAudio CD  $9.99
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Richard Strauss Edition
Release Date: 02/28/2012   Label: Brilliant Classics   Catalog: 9249   Number of Discs: 35
CD  $74.99
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Strauss: Four Last Songs, Orchestral Songs / Heather Harper, Richard Hickox, LSO
Release Date: 10/28/2008   Label: Emi Classics For Pleasure   Catalog: 28374   Number of Discs: 1
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$12.99
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Strauss: Orchestral Works / Karajan, Berlin Philharmonic [5-CD Collector's Edition]
Release Date: 10/18/2011   Label: Deutsche Grammophon   Catalog: 001607102   Number of Discs: 5
CD  $21.99
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Biography by All Music Guide
Though the long career of Richard Strauss spanned one of the most chaotic periods in political, social, and cultural history of the world, the composer retained his essentially Romantic aesthetic even into the age of television, jet engines, and atom bombs. Born in Munich in 1864, Strauss was the son of Franz Joseph Strauss, the principal hornist in the Munich Court Orchestra. Strauss demonstrated musical aptitude at an early age, and extensive training in piano, violin, theory, harmony, and orchestration equipped him to produce music of extraordinary polish and maturity by the time he reached adulthood. His primary teachers had been his father, who was a musical conservative, and Ludwig Thuille, a Munich School composer and family friend. Strauss' Serenade for 13 Winds, Op. 7 (1881), written when he was 17, led conductor Hans von Bülow to pronounce him "by far the most striking personality since Brahms." Bülow was able to give Strauss his first commission and an assistant conductor position. Through new friendships, Strauss learned to admire the writings of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche and the music of Wagner and Liszt. He embarked on a long career of conducting and composing, which take him all over Europe and the U.S.

From the beginning of Strauss' career as a composer, it was evident that the orchestra was his natural medium. With the composition of the "symphonic fantasy" Aus Italien in 1886, Strauss embarked on a series of works that represents both one of the pivotal phases of his career and a body of music of central importance in the late German Romantic repertoire. Though he did not invent the tone poem per se, he brought it to its pinnacle. In such works as Don Juan (1888-1889), Ein Heldenleben (1897-1898), and Also sprach Zarathustra (1895-1896) -- whose first minute or so, thanks to its use in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey, is the composer's most readily recognizable music -- Strauss displayed his abundant gift for exploiting the coloristic possibilities of the orchestra as a dramatic device like few composers ever had (or have since).

With the arrival of the twentieth century, after becoming conductor at Berlin's Hofoper, Strauss' interest turned more fully to opera, resulting in a body of unforgettable works that have long been fixtures of the repertoire: Salome (1903-1905), Elektra (1906-1908), and Der Rosenkavalier (1909-1910) are just a few of his best-known efforts for the stage. In 1919, Strauss became co-director of the Vienna Staatsoper, but was forced to resign five years later by his partner, Franz Schalk, who resented being left with many of the operational duties while Strauss was frequently away guest conducting or being feted as a great composer. When the political situation in Europe became malignant in the 1930s, profound political naïveté led to Strauss' confused involvement the Nazi propaganda machine, and the composer eventually alienated both the Nazis and their opponents. With the end of World War II, however, he was permitted to resume his professional life, although it would be a mere echo of his previous fame. He began to have serious health problems, his financial situation had been compromised, and the monuments that embodied great German art for him -- Goethe's Weimar house; the Dresden, Munich, and Vienna opera houses -- had been destroyed. Throughout his last years, works such as the Oboe Concerto (1945) and the gorgeously expressive Four Last Songs (1948) attest to Strauss' unwavering confidence in his singular musical voice.

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