Overture Magazine - 2015-2016 Season September-October 2015 | Page 18

An Alpine Symphony is a symphony in name only; Strauss scholar Norman Del Mar more appropriately calls it “a free descriptive fantasia.” In 22 interlocking sections covering a 24-hour period, it describes the young Richard Strauss’ ascent of an Alpine peak in August 1879, when he was 15. Immediately after the hike, he described it to a friend: “Recently, we made a great hiking party to the top of the Heimgarten, on which day we walked for twelve hours. At two in the morning, we rode on a handcart to the village, which lies at the foot of the mountain. Then we climbed by the light of lanterns in pitchdark night and arrived at the peak after a five-hour march. There one has a splendid view: Lake Stafelsee, Riegsee … then the Isar valley with mountains, Ötz and Stubeir glaciers, Innsbruck mountains. …The next day I described the whole hike on the piano. Naturally huge tone paintings and smarminess à la Wagner.” This memory was reinforced daily for the older Strauss by the superb views of the Bavarian Alps he could see from his study window in the luxurious new villa his operatic profits had recently enabled him to build at Garmisch-Partenkirchen. Despite the specific titles given each section in the scor K\