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Theater St. Gallen Presents Strauss's Elektra Using Richard Dünser's Excellent Arrangement for Reduced Orchestral Forces

Apr. 28, 2025

Richard Strauss's Elektra, set to a libretto by Hugo Von Hoffmannsthal, will be in repertory at the Theater St. Gallen from May 10-June 1 in a production directed by Lisaboa Houbrechts and conducted by Modestas Pitrenas. The company is utilizing Richard Dünser's excellent arrangment of the opera. This version requires significantly fewer orchestral forces, allowing opera houses of various sizes to present Strauss's iconic work. Richard Dünser explained his inspiration for the new arrangement:

"It was a great challenge to make a new, reduced version of Elektra; the original instrumentation is flawless and Strauss was one of the greatest orchestrators of all time. On the other hand, the work is from another epoch and, like Schönberg’s Gurrelieder and Mahler’s 8th Symphony, a child of its time in its monumentality, the three works ending an epoch. From today’s standpoint it is possible and also intriguing to introduce a new reading for consideration, to hear certain details differently, to point up nuanced tonal shadings and orchestral developments – in particular if that enables performances of the opera in midsize and small houses, apart from very large ones.

My approach was to retain as many of Strauss’s sonic ideas as possible and transfer them from a gigantic orchestra to a standard-size symphony orchestra, without losing the force, vehemence and drama of the original.

Ergo, a purely mechanical procedure was precluded from the outset – for example, simply setting the tripartite violins singly, the violas and the bipartite cellos – that would have yielded a dismal sonic result (the “tempest-in-a-teapot” effect); therefore, I completely reconceived the string body and, together with the reduced winds, brought them into a harmonious and balanced relationship. In order to relieve the lesser number of woodwinds (which now could not pause as often), I gingerly mixed in a new sound not yet used in Strauss’ time - the cup mute for the brass – and an instrument which Strauss himself had used in e.g. Salome: the harmonium, which relieves the winds and brass and supports agglomerations where they occur in the original. Audiences will likely scarcely notice these colour mixtures, since the new sounds are used soloistically very seldom; they are incorporated in the overall sound colors.

Strauss himself had the chorus positioned offstage, thereby dramaturgically reducing its importance; here, it is omitted, for reasons of practicability and its musical substance transferred into the orchestra when necessary.

Now, precisely 110 years after Strauss finished the score (Garmisch, September 22, 1908) of one of the key works of the 20th century, I would like to commend it in a new guise for the 21st century to all opera lovers."


Richard Dünser describes reducing Strauss's Elektra

Visit universaledition.com to explore this and many outstanding arrangments of major operatic works for reduced forces.

Richard Strauss
Elektra, Op. 58 (1908)
opera
arr. Richard Dünser (2017/2018)
libretto (Ger.) by Hugo von Hofmannsthal
2.2.3.2-4.2.3.1-timp-3perc-hp-harm(cel)-str(10.9.8.7.5)
7S.3Mz.A.2T.Bar.2B
105'

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