, using
classical and
classicist motives: "" () Wagner's last work,
Parsifal has been both influential and controversial. The use of Christian symbols in
Parsifal (the Grail, the spear, references to the Redeemer) together with its restriction to Bayreuth for almost 30 years sometimes led to performances being regarded almost as a religious rite. However, Wagner never actually refers to
Jesus Christ by name in the opera, only to "The Redeemer". In his essay "Religion and Art", Wagner described the use of Christian imagery thus: The critic
Eduard Hanslick objected to the religious air surrounding
Parsifal even at the premiere: "The question of whether
Parsifal should really be withheld from all theatres and limited to ... Bayreuth was naturally on all tongues ... I must state here that the church scenes in
Parsifal did not make the offensive impression on me that others and I had been led to expect from reading the libretto. They are religious situations – but for all their earnest dignity they are not in the style of the church, but completely in the style of the opera.
Parsifal is an opera, call it a 'stage festival' or 'consecrational stage festival' if you will."
Schopenhauer Wagner had been greatly impressed with his reading of the German philosopher
Arthur Schopenhauer in 1854, and this deeply affected his thoughts and practice on music and art. Most writers (e.g.
Bryan Magee) see
Parsifal as Wagner's last great espousal of Schopenhauerian philosophy.
Nietzsche Friedrich Nietzsche, who was originally a champion of Wagner and Schopenhauer, chose later to use
Parsifal as the ground for his breach with Wagner. Nietzsche took the work as an exemplar of the self-denying, life-denying, and otherworldly Christian
slave morality motivated by the "will to nothingness", as opposed to the self-affirming and earthly master morality of pre-Christian ruling classes and the strong motivated by the "will to power". An extended critique of
Parsifal opens the third essay ("What Is the Meaning of Ascetic Ideals?") of
On the Genealogy of Morality. In
Nietzsche contra Wagner he wrote: Despite this attack on the subject matter, he also admitted that the music was sublime: "Moreover, apart from all irrelevant questions (as to what the use of this music can or ought to be) and on purely aesthetic grounds; has Wagner ever done anything better?" (Letter to
Peter Gast, 1887).
Racism debate Some writers see in the opera a promotion of
racism or
antisemitism. One line of argument suggests that
Parsifal was written in support of the ideas of the French diplomat and racial theorist Count
Arthur de Gobineau, expressed most extensively in his
Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races. Parsifal is proposed as the "pure-blooded" (i.e.
Aryan) hero who overcomes Klingsor, who is perceived as a Jewish stereotype, particularly since he opposes the quasi-Christian knights of the Grail. Such claims remain heavily debated, since there is nothing explicit in the libretto to support them. Wagner never mentions such ideas in his many writings, and Cosima Wagner's diaries, which relate in great detail Wagner's thoughts over the last 14 years of his life (including the period covering the composition and first performance of
Parsifal) never mention any such intention. Having met Gobineau for the first time very briefly in 1876, it was nonetheless only in 1880 that Wagner read Gobineau's essay. However, the libretto for
Parsifal had already been completed by 1877, and the original drafts of the story even date back to 1857. Besides the question of chronology, an eventual meeting in person between Wagner and Gobineau was also accompanied by mutual disagreements and quarrels; e.g., on 3 June 1881 Wagner is reported to have "exploded in favour of Christian theories in contrast to racial ones". Despite this, Gobineau is sometimes cited as an inspiration for
Parsifal. The related question of whether the opera contains a specifically antisemitic message is also debated. Some of Wagner's contemporaries and commentators (e.g.
Hans von Wolzogen and
Ernest Newman) who analysed
Parsifal at length, make no mention of any antisemitic interpretations. However the critics
Paul Lindau and Max Nordbeck, present at the world premiere, noted in their reviews how the work accorded with Wagner's anti-Jewish sentiments. Similar interpretive conflict continues even today; some of the more recent commentators continue to highlight the perceived antisemitic or anti-Judaic nature of the opera, and find correspondences with antisemitic passages found in Wagner's writings and articles of the period, while others deny such claims, seeing for example the opposition between the realm of the Grail and Klingsor's domain as portraying a conflict between the sphere embodying the world-view of Wagner's Schopenhauerian Christianity and a pagan sphere more generally. The conductor of the premiere was
Hermann Levi, the court conductor at the
Munich Opera. Since
King Ludwig was sponsoring the production, much of the orchestra was drawn from the ranks of the Munich Opera, including the conductor. Wagner objected to
Parsifal being conducted by a Jew (Levi's father was in fact a
rabbi). Wagner first suggested that Levi should convert to Christianity, which Levi declined to do. Wagner then wrote to King Ludwig that he had decided to accept Levi despite the fact that (he alleged) he had received complaints that "of all pieces, this most Christian of works" should be conducted by a Jew. When the King expressed his satisfaction at this, replying that "human beings are basically all brothers", Wagner wrote to the king angrily: "If I have friendly and sympathetic dealings with many of these people, it is only because I consider the Jewish race as the born enemy of pure humanity and all that is noble about it (sic)". Seventy-one years later, the Jewish bass-baritone
George London performed in the role of Amfortas at
Neu Bayreuth, causing some controversy. It has been claimed that
Parsifal was denounced as being "ideologically unacceptable" in
Nazi Germany and that the Nazis placed a de facto ban on
Parsifal because of what many scholars see as the presence of themes such as compassion, Schopenhauerian negation of the will, renunciation of desires, asceticism and even non-violence and anti-militarism in the work's libretto. Some of the Nazi officials and leaders may have had certain doubts about the work. In his 1930 book
The Myth of the Twentieth Century the Nazi ideologue
Alfred Rosenberg expressed the view that "
Parsifal represents a church-influenced enfeeblement in favour of the value of renunciation". According to
Joseph Goebbels'
diaries,
Adolf Hitler too had apparently some reservations about
Parsifal, particularly about what he called its "Christian mystical style". Despite this, there were in fact 26 performances at the Bayreuth Festival between 1934 and 1939 and 23 performances at the
Deutsche Oper Berlin between 1939 and 1942. However,
Parsifal was not performed at Bayreuth during World War II, a significant omission since the work, with the exception of one year, had been an annual fixture of the Festival since 1882. ==Music==