That Existential Feeling: Strauss's Thus Spake Zarathustra (2024)

According to his novelist friend Romain Rolland, Richard Strauss once quipped that “In music one can say everything. People won’t understand you.” Strauss’ characteristically humorous remark seems particularly applicable to Also sprach Zarathustra (Thus Spake Zarathustra), one of his best known yet most misunderstood works. Ever since Stanley Kubrick used it to score a cosmic sunrise and the evolution of technology and war in his 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, its iconic opening has become a symbol of bombastic affirmation, used by Elvis Presley as well as countless advertisers and satirists.

Thus Spake Nietzsche

That Existential Feeling: Strauss's Thus Spake Zarathustra (1)

Strauss’ piece, however, goes on for another half-hour. It was originally inspired by Nietzsche’s far less familiar book of the same name, which is perhaps most famous for including the infamous (and widely misunderstood) declaration that “God is dead.” Nietzsche’s Also sprach Zarathustra is a philosophical novel about a fictionalized Zarathustra (the historical Zarathustra founded the religion of Zoroastrianism). Nietzsche’s Zarathustra is essentially a raisonneur for his own philosophy, which addresses the crisis of values that faced European society as the advance of science led people to doubt traditional religions and cultural norms. Subtitled “A Book for Everyone and No One,” Also sprach Zarathustra was Nietzsche’s own very personal response to this crisis. It is as if he wanted to create his own sacred (or rather, anti-sacred) text that would express his beliefs.

Unusually for a work of philosophy, Nietzsche’s Also sprach Zarathustra is just as much a prose poem as a philosophical text; indeed Nietzsche, who was an amateur composer himself, said the book was in fact a “symphony.” Written in a pseudo-biblical style, it contains many cryptic aphorisms whose meanings are intentionally vague and poetic. Like the Analects of Confucius and other ancient texts, Also sprach Zarathustra is meant to be worked through and puzzled over. Each reader comes away with a highly subjective interpretation of what the book means, making a summary difficult. Nietzsche himself would follow Zarathustra with several more books that attempted to explain it.

Perhaps its main idea is that humans should embrace life, nature, the body and material existence, with all its pleasures and pains, rather than seek for a spiritual world beyond or afterlife. Its optimistic but challenging message is that life, even with all its suffering, is fundamentally worth living for its own sake, and that we should live accordingly.

Genesis

That Existential Feeling: Strauss's Thus Spake Zarathustra (2)

Though the initial idea for Also sprach Zarathustra may have originated a few years before, Strauss began serious work on it in February 1896, composing the bulk of it in the summer while staying in the Austro-Italian Dolomites. At 32, he was already widely regarded as the leading German composer of the day, Wagner’s musical heir and a controversial modernist bad boy. Nietzsche himself was still alive, although he had long since gone insane (likely as a result of tertiary syphilis).

Many artists and composers were influenced by Nietzsche’s Also sprach Zarathustra, but few took Nietzsche’s philosophy to heart to the degree that Strauss did. Premiered within months of its completion, the work’s opulent orchestrations, complex textures, daring harmonies and controversial subject matter provoked equally intense criticism and applause.

Strauss originally gave the work the cheeky subtitle “Symphonic optimism in fin de siècle form, dedicated to the twentieth century,” but replaced it with the tamer “freely after Nietzsche” before publication. He named the sections of his piece after different chapters in Nietzsche’s book, but needless to say, it was impossible to clearly translate Nietzsche’s abstract text into the equally abstract medium of instrumental music (as his critics were wont to point out). After consulting with Strauss, the writer Arthur Hahn published a lengthy explanation of the piece (in a typically mercenary move, Strauss actually suppressed the movement titles at the premiere so audience members would be forced to buy Hahn’s pamphlet if they wanted to know what the music was about), but perhaps the clearest, most concise explanation he gave of the work is reported once again by Romain Rolland: “in his mind, he really did want to express […] the hero’s inability to satisfy himself, either with religion or science or humor, when confronted by the enigma of nature.” Using ideas and images from Nietzsche’s book, the piece represents the quest to find what is popularly called “the meaning of life” when confronted by an indifferent, uncaring natural world and humanity’s own corporeal, animal existence.

The Music

Kubrick was not too far off the mark in using the piece’s opening to score a sunrise from outer space; Strauss indeed intended it to depict the mountaintop sunrise that opens Nietzsche’s book. The opening motif in the trumpets has been called the “nature” or “world riddle” motif; it recurs throughout the piece as a symbol of nature’s indifference and mystery:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40e7mqtWwcs

After the emphatic opening, the next section is titled “Von den Hinterweltlern.” “Hinterweltlern” is an untranslatable Nietzschean neologism. “Hinter” can be translated as “after,” “back,” or “behind”; “welt” is “world”; and the “-lern” suffix indicates people of the “Hinterwelt.” The corresponding chapter in Nietzsche’s book discusses the reasons people yearn for religious faith or a belief in an ideal “world beyond”; essentially he says the suffering and imperfections of life cause people to yearn for this. Out of dark, fragmentary ideas low in the orchestra emerges a horn call, which Strauss labeled with the words “Credo in unum deum” (Latin for “I believe in one God,” a phrase from the Roman Catholic mass). The horn is answered by a hymn-like melody that is brilliantly orchestrated for divisi strings. It begins softly, but grows in intensity, representing humankind’s yearning for a perfect, heavenly, spiritual alternative to nature.

That Existential Feeling: Strauss's Thus Spake Zarathustra (3)

The next section, Von der großen Sehnsucht(Of Great Longing), is essentially transitional and begins as the hymn-melody subsides. The World Riddle/Nature motif reappears, disturbing the increasingly fragmentary hymn melody. This struggle between faith and nature crescendos as upward-thrusting motifs rumble from the depths of the orchestra, leading to the next section: Von den Freuden und Leidenschaften(Of Joys and Passions). An intense, passionate melody appears in the violins over a turbulent orchestral accompaniment. This represents humanity’s natural, animal passions, which Nietzsche argues should be embraced: “Inexpressible and nameless is that which is torment and delight to my soul and is even the hunger of my entrails too.”

These joys and passions soon collapse, however, leading to another transitional section: Das Grablied (The Grave Song). The corresponding chapter of Nietzsche’s book is not so much a meditation on death as a lament for lost “visions and apparitions” of youth. Musically, this is not a dirge or funeral march, but a decrescendo leading to the next section: Von der Wissenschaft (Of Science). This section begins quietly in the cellos and basses with a strange, chromatic melody. Its first three notes actually consist of the Nature/World Riddle motif, perhaps suggesting the scientific quest to understand the natural world. This theme becomes the subject of a fugue (the most learned of musical forms) as more instruments enter.

This heavy, gloomy atmosphere is suddenly dispelled by light, high, cheerful music commonly interpreted as Zarathustra’s laughter;Nietzsche did not believe that science, with its methodical quest to understand nature, could provide the metaphysical knowledge he sought. The World Riddle/Nature motif, however, soon challenges the laughter. After an emotional outburst, the next section, Der Genesende (The Convalescent) begins with an energetic resumption of the science fugue, which builds in intensity until the World Riddle/Nature motif makes a climactic, powerful return in the full orchestra; it seems that nature is ultimately greater than human knowledge.

A long, gradual crescendo full of strange orchestral effects ensues, featuring fragments of the Zarathustra’s laughter melody. This leads to the next section, Das Tanzlied (The Dance Song) in which music based on the Nature/World Riddle motif gives way to a solo violin waltz. This is not a Viennese waltz from a glittering ballroom, however, but its more rustic Bavarian cousin. Indeed, the accompaniment contains the World Riddle/Nature motif, suggesting that the waltz represents humankind in harmony with nature. Though this waltz has struck some critics as anticlimactic, its lighthearted character is completely in keeping with Nietzsche’s philosophy; throughout Also sprach Zarathustra, Nietzsche praises “lightness” and describes Zarathustra as a dancer, suggesting that humanity should strive for a similar lighthearted affirmation of life and nature. Throughout the waltz, themes from earlier in the work reappear (such as the Joys and Passions melody).

The waltz builds to a passionate, but ultimately unstable climax that collapses with twelve strokes of a bell to signal midnight and the transition to the final section of the piece, the Nachtwandlerlied (Night Wanderer Song). This essentially serves as a long decrescendo to the piece’s famous question-mark ending: flutes, oboes, harps and violins come to rest on a B major chord, but the cellos and double basses repeat a dissonant, unresolved C natural. Strauss explained that “C major is Nature, Man as being; B minor (at the end of the work B major) his metaphysical aspiration,” suggesting that ultimately the World Riddle remains unsolved.—Calvin Dotsey

Don’t miss Strauss’s Also sprach Zarathustra on April 26, 28 & 29, 2018! Get tickets and more information at houstonsymphony.org.

That Existential Feeling: Strauss's Thus Spake Zarathustra (2024)

FAQs

What is the main message of Thus Spoke Zarathustra? ›

Zarathustra urges people to embrace the physical world with all its suffering rather than postponing fulfillment until an afterlife. He critiques false idols and values, including nationalism. He views the state as promoting uniformity and mediocrity.

What is the famous quote from Thus Spoke Zarathustra? ›

The higher we soar the smaller we appear to those who cannot fly.

What is the meaning of so spoke Zarathustra? ›

The main theme of Thus Spoke Zarathustra is the nature of values. The values of traditional religions involve contempt for the body and a lack of creativity. Nietzsche thinks traditional religions ultimately lead to nihilism. Nietzsche proposes a morality that is creative and life-affirming.

What did Nietzsche think of Strauss? ›

Still, in spite of his tone, and his attacks at Strauss' grammar, Nietzsche has both embraced Strauss' historical-critical interpretation of Christian origins, from his first work, and, with less acknowledgement, from the later work, strong elements of Strauss' moral critique of Christianity.

What is existentialism in Thus Spoke Zarathustra? ›

This passage expresses one of the main themese of Existentialism. Zarathustra speaks to the despisers of the body, telling them that the soul is only a word for something about the body. So far, philosophers have always thought that reason involves turning away from the body, a denial of the body and senses.

What was the message of Zarathustra? ›

Zarathustra had a revelation from the god Ahura Mazda, according to the religious scriptures of the Gathas, that there was a cosmic war between Ahura Mazda and his antithesis and supreme evil Angra Mainyu. Zarathustra spread this message and how to align with Ahura Mazda, which was simply by living a virtuous life.

What is the conclusion of Thus Spoke Zarathustra? ›

The book ends with Zarathustra joyfully embracing the eternal recurrence, and the thought that "all joy wants deep, wants deep eternity."

What did Nietzsche think of Zarathustra? ›

Nietzsche viewed the Persian prophet as his arch rival: an opponent of similar power and stature, whom he admired but could never fully overcome. In the character of 'Zarathustra', Nietzsche attempts to create his own spokesman worthy of Zoroaster's greatness.

What is the first sentence of Thus Spoke Zarathustra? ›

ZARATHUSTRA'S PROLOGUE. 1. When Zarathustra was thirty years old, he left his home and the lake of his home, and went into the mountains. There he enjoyed his spirit and solitude, and for ten years did not weary of it.

Why should you read Thus Spoke Zarathustra? ›

Thus Spoke Zarathustra contains, without a doubt, Nietzsche's most significant concepts and ideas, his most radical way of thinking, as well as his hardest rebellion against all of traditional philosophy. Because of that, it is often classified as one of the most challenging books in contemporary philosophy as a whole.

What is criticism of Thus Spoke Zarathustra? ›

The critic Harold Bloom criticized Thus Spoke Zarathustra in The Western Canon (1994), calling the book "a gorgeous disaster" and "unreadable". Other commentators have suggested that Nietzsche's style is intentionally ironic for much of the book.

What does going under mean in Thus Spoke Zarathustra? ›

throughout Zarathustra uses wordplay to signify that Zarathustra's “going under” is a “going over” or transition, übergehen, from human to superhuman, from man to overman. After Zarathustra draws his first analogy between himself and the sun, I use “going under” for untergehen and its noun form Untergang.

Why is also sprach zarathustra so popular? ›

Why is Strauss' work so famous? There is, of course, the prominent use of the first bars in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. Previously virtually unknown to the general public, this was the first time the work appeared in a visual medium.

Was Strauss a nihilist? ›

Abstract. Many of the writings of Leo Strauss were dedicated to combating the "crisis of modernity". This crisis was for him the advent and acceptance of nihilism--a state of being wherein any principle one dare dream is allowed and judgment must be withheld.

Who was the woman who rejected Nietzsche? ›

Salomé was the daughter of a Russian army officer of French Huguenot descent. She studied theology at the University of Zürich. In 1882 the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche fell in love with her, but she rejected his proposal of marriage.

What is the meaning of the word Zarathustra? ›

someone who speaks by divine inspiration; someone who is an interpreter of the will of God.

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