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The Flying Dutchman

opera by Wagner
Also known as: “Der fliegende Holländer”

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basis on legend

  • In Flying Dutchman

    …the basis of the opera Der fliegende Holländer (1843) by the German composer Richard Wagner.

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development in operatic style

  • Il trovatore
    In opera: Wagner

    …with Der fliegende Holländer (The Flying Dutchman), he began to develop a novel method of operatic construction using leitmotifs—brief melodic and other motifs symbolizing situations, characters, or abstract ideas—as materials for spinning a more or less continuous web of music in which the voice was only one strand. Already,…

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discussed in biography

Flying Dutchman, in European maritime legend, spectre ship doomed to sail forever; its appearance to seamen is believed to signal imminent disaster. In the most common version, the captain, Vanderdecken, gambles his salvation on a rash pledge to round the Cape of Good Hope during a storm and so is condemned to that course for eternity; it is this rendering which forms the basis of the opera Der fliegende Holländer (1843) by the German composer Richard Wagner.

Another legend depicts a Captain Falkenberg sailing forever through the North Sea, playing at dice for his soul with the devil. The dice-game motif recurs in the Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798) by the English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge; the mariner sights a phantom ship on which Death and Life in Death play dice to win him. The Scottish writer Sir Walter Scott adapted the legend in his narrative poem Rokeby (1813); murder is committed on shipboard, and plague breaks out among the crew, closing all ports to the ship.