The Flying Dutchman PDF Free sheet music (2024)

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Composer: Wagner RichardInstruments: Voice Mixed chorus Orchestra Tags: Operas #Parts#ArrangementsDownload free scores:Complete. Complete Score PDF 44 MBComplete. Front matter and Overture PDF 4 MBComplete. Act I PDF 10 MBComplete. Act II PDF 15 MBComplete. Act III PDF 13 MBComplete. Complete Score PDF 58 MBOverture. Complete Score PDF 5 MBOverture. Complete Score PDF 18 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Complete Score PDF 1 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Color Cover PDF 1 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Complete Score PDF 3 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Color Cover PDF 0 MBBallade (Act II). Complete Score PDF 0 MBLied des Steuermanns (Act I). Complete Score PDF 0 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Complete Score PDF 0 MBParts for:AllViolinViolaTubaTrumpetTromboneTimpaniPiccoloOboeHarpFrench hornFluteClarinetCelloBassoonAlto saxophoneArrangements:OtherSpinnerlied (Act II). Piano (Unknown)Matrosenchor (Act III). Piano (Alexander Wenger)Overture. Piano four hands (Unknown)Overture. Orchestra (Jonas Vincent Spanier)Spinnerlied (Act II). Piano(2) (Léon Roques)Spinnerlied (Act II). Piano(2) (Carl Bial)Spinnerlied (Act II). Piano four hands (Léon Roques)Senta's Ballad (Act II). Piano + Violin (Hermann Gärtner)Overture. Piano (Singer II, Otto)Complete. Piano (Unknown)Overture. Piano + Violin (Fidelio F. Finke)Wikipedia Composer: Wagner Richard Instruments: Voice Mixed chorus Orchestra Tags: Operas Download free scores: Parts for: Arrangements: Arrangements: Other FAQs
The Flying Dutchman

Composer: Wagner Richard

Instruments: Voice Mixed chorus Orchestra

Tags: Operas

#Parts

#Arrangements

Download free scores:

Complete. Complete Score PDF 44 MBComplete. Front matter and Overture PDF 4 MBComplete. Act I PDF 10 MBComplete. Act II PDF 15 MBComplete. Act III PDF 13 MBComplete. Complete Score PDF 58 MBOverture. Complete Score PDF 5 MBOverture. Complete Score PDF 18 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Complete Score PDF 1 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Color Cover PDF 1 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Complete Score PDF 3 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Color Cover PDF 0 MBBallade (Act II). Complete Score PDF 0 MBLied des Steuermanns (Act I). Complete Score PDF 0 MBChorus "Summ' und brumm', du gutes Rädchen". Complete Score PDF 0 MB

Parts for:

AllViolinViolaTubaTrumpetTromboneTimpaniPiccoloOboeHarpFrench hornFluteClarinetCelloBassoonAlto saxophone

Arrangements:

Other

Spinnerlied (Act II). Piano (Unknown)Matrosenchor (Act III). Piano (Alexander Wenger)Overture. Piano four hands (Unknown)Overture. Orchestra (Jonas Vincent Spanier)Spinnerlied (Act II). Piano(2) (Léon Roques)Spinnerlied (Act II). Piano(2) (Carl Bial)Spinnerlied (Act II). Piano four hands (Léon Roques)Senta's Ballad (Act II). Piano + Violin (Hermann Gärtner)Overture. Piano (Singer II, Otto)Complete. Piano (Unknown)Overture. Piano + Violin (Fidelio F. Finke)Wikipedia

The Flying Dutchman (German: Der fliegende Holländer), WWV 63, is a German-language opera, with libretto and music by Richard Wagner. The central theme is redemption through love. Wagner conducted the premiere at the Königliches Hoftheater in Dresden in 1843.

Wagner claimed in his 1870 autobiography Mein Leben that he had been inspired to write the opera following a stormy sea crossing he made from Riga to London in July and August 1839. In his 1843 Autobiographic Sketch, Wagner acknowledged he had taken the story from Heinrich Heine's retelling of the legend in his 1833 satirical novel The Memoirs of Mister von Schnabelewopski (Aus den Memoiren des Herrn von Schnabelewopski).

This work shows early attempts at operatic styles that would characterise his later music dramas. In Der fliegende Holländer Wagner uses a number of leitmotivs (literally, "leading motifs") associated with the characters and themes. The leitmotifs are all introduced in the overture, which begins with a well-known ocean or storm motif before moving into the Dutchman and Senta motifs.

Wagner originally wrote the work to be performed without intermission – an example of his efforts to break with tradition – and, while today's opera houses sometimes still follow this directive, it is also performed in a three-act version.

At the beginning of 1839, the 26-year-old Richard Wagner was employed as a conductor at the Court Theatre in Riga. His extravagant lifestyle plus the retirement from the stage of his actress wife, Minna Planer, caused him to run up huge debts that he was unable to repay. Wagner was writing Rienzi and hatched a plan to flee his creditors in Riga, escape to Paris via London and make his fortune by putting Rienzi on to the stage of the Paris Opéra. However, this plan quickly turned to disaster: his passport having been seized by the authorities on behalf of his creditors, he and Minna had to make a dangerous and illegal crossing over the Prussian border, during which Minna suffered a miscarriage. Boarding the ship Thetis, whose captain had agreed to take them without passports, their sea journey was hindered by storms and high seas. The ship at one point took refuge in the Norwegian fjords at Tvedestrand, and a trip that was expected to take eight days finally delivered Wagner to London three weeks after leaving Riga.

Wagner's experience of Paris was also disastrous. He was unable to get work as a conductor, and the Opéra did not want to produce Rienzi. The Wagners were reduced to poverty, relying on handouts from friends and from the little income that Wagner could make writing articles on music and copying scores. Wagner hit on the idea of a one-act opera on the theme of the Flying Dutchman, which he hoped might be performed before a ballet at the Opéra.

The voyage through the Norwegian reefs made a wonderful impression on my imagination; the legend of the Flying Dutchman, which the sailors verified, took on a distinctive, strange colouring that only my sea adventures could have given it.

Wagner wrote the first prose draft of the story in Paris early in May 1840, basing the story on Heinrich Heine's satire "The Memoirs of Mister von Schnabelewopski" ("Aus den Memoiren des Herrn von Schnabelewopski") published in Der Salon in 1834. In Heine's tale, the narrator watches a performance of a fictitious stage play on the theme of the sea captain cursed to sail forever for blasphemy. Heine introduces the character as a Wandering Jew of the ocean, and also added the device taken up so vigorously by Wagner in this, and many subsequent operas: the Dutchman can only be redeemed by the love of a faithful woman. In Heine's version, this is presented as a means for ironic humour; however, Wagner took this theme literally and in his draft, the woman is faithful until death.

By the end of May 1841 Wagner had completed the libretto or poem as he preferred to call it. Composition of the music had begun during May to July of the previous year, 1840, when Wagner wrote Senta's Ballad, the Norwegian Sailors' song in act 3 ("Steuermann, lass die Wacht!") and the subsequent Phantom song of the Dutchman's crew in the same scene. These were composed for an audition at the Paris Opéra, along with the sketch of the plot. Wagner actually sold the sketch to the Director of the Opéra, Léon Pillet, for 500 francs, but was unable to convince him that the music was worth anything. Wagner composed the rest of the Der fliegende Holländer during the summer of 1841, with the Overture being written last, and by November 1841 the orchestration of the score was complete. While this score was designed to be played continuously in a single act, Wagner later divided the piece into a three-act work. In doing so, however, he did not alter the music significantly, but merely interrupted transitions that had originally been crafted to flow seamlessly (the original one-act layout is restored in some performances).

In his original draft Wagner set the action in Scotland, but he changed the location to Norway shortly before the first production staged in Dresden and conducted by himself in January 1843.

In his essay "A Communication to My Friends" in 1851, Wagner claimed that The Dutchman represented a new start for him: "From here begins my career as poet, and my farewell to the mere concoctor of opera-texts." Indeed, to this day the opera is the earliest of Wagner's works to be performed at the Bayreuth Festival, and, at least for that theatre, marks the start of the mature Wagner canon.

Der fliegende Holländer is scored for the following instruments:

on-stage

On his homeward journey, the sea captain Daland is compelled by stormy weather to seek a port of refuge near Sandwike in southern Norway. He leaves the helmsman on watch and he and the sailors retire. (Song of the helmsman: "Mit Gewitter und Sturm aus fernem Meer"– "With tempest and storm on distant seas.") The helmsman falls asleep. A ghostly vessel appearing astern is dashed against Daland's vessel by the sea and the grappling irons hold the two ships together. Invisible hands furl the sails. A man of pale aspect, dressed in black, his face framed by a thick black beard, steps ashore. He laments his fate. (Aria: "Die Frist ist um, und abermals verstrichen sind sieben Jahr"– "The time has come and seven years have again elapsed") Because he once invoked Satan, the ghost captain is cursed to roam the sea forever without rest. An angel brought to him the terms of his redemption: Every seven years the waves will cast him upon the shore; if he can find a wife who will be true to him he will be released from his curse.

Daland wakes up and meets the stranger. The stranger hears that Daland has an unmarried daughter named Senta, and he asks for her hand in marriage, offering a chest of treasure as a gift. Tempted by gold, Daland agrees to the marriage. The southwind blows and both vessels set sail for Daland's home.

A group of local girls are singing and spinning in Daland's house. (Spinning chorus: "Summ und brumm, du gutes Rädchen"– "Whir and whirl, good wheel") Senta, Daland's daughter, dreamily gazes upon a gorgeous picture of the legendary Dutchman that hangs from the wall; she desires to save him. Against the will of her nurse, she sings to her friends the story of the Dutchman (Ballad with the Leitmotiv), how Satan heard him swear and took him at his word. She vows to save him by her fidelity.

The huntsman Erik, Senta's former boyfriend, arrives and hears her; the girls depart, and the huntsman, who loves the maiden, warns her, telling her of his dream, in which Daland returned with a mysterious stranger, who carried her off to sea. She listens with delight, and Erik leaves in despair.

Daland arrives with the stranger; he and Senta stand gazing at each other in silence. Daland is scarcely noticed by his daughter, even when he presents his guest as her betrothed. In the following duet, which closes the act, Senta swears to be true till death.

Later in the evening, the local girls bring Daland's men food and drink. They invite the crew of the strange vessel to join in the merry-making, but in vain. The girls retire in wonder; ghostly forms appear at work upon the vessel The Flying Dutchman, and Daland's men retreat in fear.

Senta arrives, followed by Erik, who reproves her for deserting him, as she had formerly loved him and vowed constancy. When the stranger, who has been listening, hears these words, he is overwhelmed with despair, as he thinks he is now forever lost. He summons his men, tells Senta of the curse, and to the consternation of Daland and his crew declares that he is the "Flying Dutchman".

As the Dutchman sets sail, Senta throws herself into the sea, claiming that she will be faithful to him unto death. This is his salvation. The spectral ship disappears, and Senta and the Dutchman are seen ascending to heaven.

Notes

Footnotes

The Flying Dutchman PDF Free sheet music (2024)

FAQs

What is flying Dutchman slang for? ›

Definitions of Flying Dutchman. a phantom ship that is said to appear in storms near the Cape of Good Hope. type of: apparition, fantasm, phantasm, phantasma, phantom, shadow. something existing in perception only.

What is the true story of The Flying Dutchman? ›

Lesson Summary. The Flying Dutchman is a European maritime legend about a phantom ship condemned to sail forever. Dutch folklore designates the captain as Hendrik Vander Decken, whose mission is to find the Cape of Good Hope. However, a freak storm thwarted the captain, and he could reach his destination.

What is the curse of The Flying Dutchman? ›

In this version, the Dutchman (Wayne Tigges) has sold his soul to Satan and is forced to live at sea. He can only return to land every seven years to find a woman who will be with him until death, it is only then that the Dutchman is able to break the curse and find redemption.

What is The Flying Dutchman a terrifying South African legend? ›

The Flying Dutchman was a sea captain who once found himself struggling to round the Cape of Good Hope during a ferocious storm. He swore that he would succeed even if he had to sail until Judgment Day. The Devil heard his oath, and took him up on it; the Dutchman was condemned to stay at sea forever.

Why is the Flying Dutchman so famous? ›

The Flying Dutchman (Dutch: De Vliegende Hollander) is a legendary ghost ship, allegedly never able to make port, but doomed to sail the sea forever. The myths and ghost stories are likely to have originated from the 17th-century Golden Age of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and of Dutch maritime power.

Why is it called a Dutchman? ›

They coined the term “dutchman” to refer to the act of covering up sloppy workmanship, whether with a plaster veneer or a wooden patch. After a while, though, even the nativist English realized that wattle and daub was a huge hassle and the new technique was faster, cheaper AND allowed for more decorative detail.

Where did the myth of the Flying Dutchman come from? ›

Origin. The Flying Dutchman has its roots in the ancient maritime tales of the Netherlands. The story is believed to be based on real events, but over time it has been mixed with supernatural and mystical elements.

Where did the Flying Dutchman disappear? ›

In March 1939, no less than sixty people at False Bay in South Africa had a complete view of the Flying Dutchman as she appeared to sail straight for the sands of Strandfontein. However, before it could hit the beach, the ship vanished into thin air as mysteriously as it had appeared.

Has anyone ever seen the Flying Dutchman? ›

There have been many sightings over the years, although the last reported one was by a Nazi submarine in WWII. Some sightings involved the Flying Dutchman sailing quickly through calm waters while the majority of sailors have spotted it during extremely stormy weather with wind and waves crashing all around.

What is the Flying Dutchman weakness? ›

It's immune to all debuffs and has a high resistance to knockback. However, it has a weakness: it cannot move down through platforms. Therefore, a good strategy to defeat the Flying Dutchman is to stay below it on a platform and attack from there.

What happens after 100 years on the Flying Dutchman? ›

Behind the scenes

With every year that passes, the crewmen become less human, their bodies taking on traits from the sea, until eventually they become part of the Flying Dutchman itself. After Jones' own death, the crew turned back to normal, with Will Turner as the new captain of the Dutchman.

Who controls the Flying Dutchman? ›

Davy Jones is the near-immortal god of passing to the afterlife and Jack Sparrow's and Will Turner's archenemy. He is the captain of the Flying Dutchman (based on the legendary ghost ship of the same name), whose crew consists of humans who traded 100 years of servitude for immortality, and master of The Kraken.

How did the Flying Dutchman crash? ›

On Nov. 10, 1942, the C-47 nicknamed The Flying Dutchman (S/N 41-18564) hit a strong down-draft over the Owen Stanley Range while carrying U.S. Army troops from Port Moresby to Pongani, New Guinea. It crashed into the side of Mount Obree, killing seven of the 23 onboard and destroying most of the food it carried.

How does the Flying Dutchman end? ›

He summons his men to resume their endless voyage. But as they set sail, Senta throws herself into the sea, vowing to be faithful to him in death. Redeemed by her sacrifice, the Dutchman ascends to heaven with Senta, and his ghost ship finally disappears.

What happened to the Flying Dutchman? ›

The ship was condemned to sail the seven seas for eternity either as punishment meted out by an angel for his blasphemy or because he had made a pact with the devil to survive the storm. The Flying Dutchman, a ship that seemed to come out of the horizon sailing on air, became a harbinger of doom.

What is a Dutchman slang? ›

As used to refer to a German, the term Dutchman was originally standard English. But around the time of World War I, it became a slang term of contempt for the enemy. Its use nowadays is still sometimes perceived as insulting.

What is the expression I am a Dutchman? ›

idiom UK humorous old-fashioned. said after describing or hearing something that is very obviously not true: If that's his real hair, then I'm a Dutchman.

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