The Met Orchestra
Part of: Fall of the Weimar Republic: Dancing on the Precipice
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The Met Orchestra: Also performing , and , and June 12, , and June 18, , and February 4, 2026, , and June 11, 2026, , and and June 18, 2026.
Yannick Nézet-Séguin: Also performing , and , and April 15, , and April 28, , and June 12, , and June 18, , and October 16, , and October 31, , and December 9, , and February 4, 2026, , and March 1, 2026, , and March 10, 2026, , and May 5, 2026, , and May 29, 2026, , and June 11, 2026, , and and June 18, 2026.
Lise Davidsen: Also performing , and , and June 5, 2026.
Performers
The Met Orchestra
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Music Director and Conductor
Lise Davidsen, Soprano
Program
J. S. BACH Fuga (Ricercata) a 6 voci from Musical Offering (orch. Webern)
WAGNER Wesendonck Lieder
G. MAHLER Symphony No. 5
Encore:
WAGNER "Dich, teure Halle" from Tannhäuser
Event Duration
The printed program will last approximately two hours, including one 20-minute intermission.This Concert in Context
While he is mostly remembered today for his epic operas, Richard Wagner composed a number of works in other musical genres, including symphonic and chamber music and songs, such as the Wesendonck Lieder. Widely regarded as Hitler’s favorite composer, Wagner’s connection to Nazism was further cemented due to the warm personal relationship the Nazi dictator enjoyed with Winifred Wagner, the wife of Wagner’s son Siegfried. During his itinerant period in Vienna before World War I, Hitler ironically counted the Jewish Gustav Mahler among his favorite conductors of Wagner’s operas.By the time Anton Webern completed his orchestration of the six-voice Ricercata from J. S. Bach’s Musical Offering in 1935, Hitler’s regime was firmly in power in Germany. With the rise of Nazism, most Jewish composers in Germany and Austria recognized early on that there would be no place for them in the new Reich and fled throughout the 1930s. But Webern—despite the menacing fact that his music was derided as entartete Kunst (“degenerate art”) by Nazi cultural authorities—remained in Vienna and chose the path of “internal emigration” following the Anschluss in 1938 when Hitler (himself an Austrian national) formally annexed the nation in the first of many foreign policy coups leading up to the outbreak of World War II in 1939.
—Brendan Fay, author of Classical Music in Weimar Germany