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{{Short description|Tone poem by Richard Strauss}}
{{italic title}}
[[File:
'''''Death and Transfiguration''''' ({{
The music depicts the death of an artist. At Strauss's request, this was described in a poem by his friend [[Alexander Ritter]] as an interpretation of Death and Transfiguration, after it was composed.<ref>Bryan Gilliam: "Richard Strauss", ''[[Grove Music Online]]'', ed. L. Macy (Accessed January 16, 2007), (subscription access)</ref> As the man lies dying, thoughts of his life pass through his head: his childhood innocence, the struggles of his manhood, the attainment of his worldly goals; and at the end, he receives the longed-for transfiguration "from the infinite reaches of heaven".
==Performance history==
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==Critical reaction==
English music critic [[Ernest Newman]] described this as music to which one would not want to die or awaken. "It is too spectacular, too brilliantly lit, too full of pageantry of a crowd; whereas this is a journey one must make very quietly, and alone."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Newman |first1=Ernest |title=The Music of Death |journal=The Musical Times |date=1915 |volume=56 |page=399 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8yAlAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA399 |access-date=2 February 2022 |publisher=Novello |language=en}}</ref>{{rp|399}}
French critic [[Romain Rolland]] in his ''Musiciens d'aujourd'hui'' (1908) called the piece "one of the most moving works of Strauss, and that which is constructed with the noblest utility".<ref>Quoted in Mason, Daniel Gregory (1918), ''Contemporary Composers'', p. 84.</ref>
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[[File:Orchesterwerke Romantik Themen.pdf|450px|page=858]]
<score
== Instrumentation ==
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:[[timpani]]
:[[tam-tam]]
;[[String instrument|Strings]]
:[[violin]]s I, II
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==Quoted==
In one of his last compositions, "Im Abendrot" from the ''[[Four Last Songs]]'', Strauss poignantly quotes the "transfiguration theme" from his tone poem of 60 years earlier, during and after the soprano's final line, "Ist dies etwa der Tod?" (Is this perhaps death?).
<score
Just before his own death, he remarked that his music was absolutely correct
== Discography ==
{{more citations needed section|date=October 2021}}
{| class="wikitable"
|-
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! Orchestra
! Recorded
|-
| [[Richard Strauss]]
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|-
| [[Leopold Stokowski]]
| [[Philadelphia Orchestra]]
| 1934
|-
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| [[Fritz Reiner]]
| Vienna Philharmonic
| 4/6 Sep 1956
|-
| [[Artur Rodziński]]
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| [[Herbert von Karajan]]
| Berlin Philharmonic
| 1972<ref>[http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/album.jsp?album_id=1445 Strauss: ''Four Last Songs'', etc] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160917013759/http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/album.jsp?album_id=1445 |date=2016-09-17 }}, arkivmusic.com</ref>
|-
| [[Eugene Ormandy]]
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| [[Klaus Tennstedt]]
| [[London Philharmonic Orchestra]]
|
|-
| [[Claudio Abbado]]
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|-
| [[David Zinman]]
| [[Tonhalle
| 2001
|-
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{{Reflist}}
==
* [[Ernest Newman|Newman, Ernest.]] "The Music of Death" ''[[The Musical Times]]'', July 1, 1915, pp. 398–399.
* "Herr Richard Strauss" ''[[The Musical Times]]'', February 1, 1903, p. 115.
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==External links==
*{{YouTube|mu2M67IQ68Q}}, Symphony Orchestra of Flanders, conducted by [[Jan Latham-Koenig]]
*{{IMSLP|cname=Tod und Verklärung|work=Tod und Verklärung, Op.24 (Strauss, Richard)}}
{{Richard Strauss|state=collapsed}}
{{Death and mortality in art}}
{{Portal bar|Classical music}}
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