Richard Wagner in the later years of his life, by then a dominant and deeply divisive force in European music. Richard Wagner (1813–1883) remains one of the most transformative — and controversial — figures in Western music. Composer, librettist, and theorist, he sought to redefine opera as a Gesamtkunstwerk (“total work of art”), uniting music, poetry, myth, architecture, and stagecraft into a single dramatic vision. His artistic ambitions reshaped the course of 19th-century music. Wagner expanded harmonic language, transformed orchestral writing, and altered the very architecture of musical drama. At the same time, his political views, personal conduct, and antisemitic writings continue to provoke serious debate about the relationship between artistic achievement and moral legacy.
Among the many terms that shape musical performance, legato stands as one of the most fundamental. It describes the seamless connection between successive notes, allowing a melody to unfold as a single, uninterrupted musical line. More than a technical indication of articulation, legato embodies an entire aesthetic philosophy of phrasing, continuity, and expressive flow. The word derives from the Italian verb legare , meaning to bind , to connect , or to tie together . Its etymology perfectly reflects its musical purpose: individual notes cease to function as isolated sounds and instead become part of a coherent musical gesture. In legato playing, every note naturally grows out of the one before it and gently leads toward the next. Rather than perceiving a sequence of separate pitches, the listener experiences an uninterrupted melodic contour, shaped by continuity rather than interruption. The result is a musical line that breathes with warmth, lyricism, and organic direction. Throug...