Wagner's influence
The next major expansion of symphonic practice came from
Richard Wagner's
Bayreuth orchestra, founded to accompany his musical dramas. Wagner's works for the stage were scored with unprecedented scope and complexity: indeed, his score to
Das Rheingold calls for six
harps. Thus, Wagner envisioned an ever-more-demanding role for the conductor of the theater orchestra, as he elaborated in his influential work "On Conducting".
[8] This brought about a revolution in orchestral
composition, and set the style for orchestral performance for the next eighty years. Wagner's theories re-examined the importance of
tempo,
dynamics, bowing of string instruments and the role of principals in the orchestra. Conductors who studied his methods would go on to be influential themselves.
the influnce of wagner....
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