By David Nice

Published: Wednesday, 28 February 2024 at 12:29 PM


A wife as nothing more than helpmate, comfort, cushioner: how long ago did that go out of fashion? Probably more recently in the world at large than it did in the sphere of the arts – composers, artists, writers generally moved in more liberated, more Bohemian circles than their contemporaries in the standard professions. But what were the stories of the wives of the great composers? While some enjoyed careers in their own right, others were forced to suppress their wishes to support their husbands…

Of the great composers’ wives, there are a few which already familiar household names, but many others have been left as footnotes in the lives of their famous husbands. Some enjoyed careers as composers, performers or artists, but were still often left playing second fiddle to the compositional output of their husbands. In nearly all instances, however, the wives of the great composers played integral roles in supporting and facilitating their husbands’ work, so their impact can be felt in much of the music we know and love.

Schumann’s Clara was a pianist of astonishing skill and sensitivity, all reports attest, a muse not only to Robert but also, extending after his death, to their friend-in-common Johannes Brahms. Carl Nielsen’s Anne Marie enjoyed as high a reputation in the field of sculpture as he did in music, at least during their lifetimes. Yet there were still limits we wouldn’t think acceptable today: ‘There isn’t room for two artists in this relationship’; ‘My career comes first’.

The women forced to sacrifice their careers for their composer husbands

No doubt it happens, but the woman will often think twice at such an ultimatum, or else make a decision to make the greater of the pair her life project to support and follow of her own free will (the same is true of gay marriages and relationships). A recipe for unhappiness in the first case was true for Alma Mahler; by all accounts, Pauline Strauss (Richard Strauss‘s wife) herself made the decision to give up a strong career as a fine soprano.

Yet even Pauline still suffers from the male perspective, as is clear in Strauss’s autobiographical marriage-opera Intermezzo.

Constanze Mozart: how Mozart fell for her and wrote her into his music

In 1781, Mozart announced to his father that he wanted to marry one of the three ‘Weber women’. He wasn’t interested in the eldest, Josepha, who had driven him to distraction, but ‘the Martyr of the family’, Konstanze. He went on to name his heroine Constanze in his opera, Die Entführung aus dem Serail (The Abduction from the Seraglio), composed the following year.

The letter of 15 December 1781 is typically perceptive and sensitive, one of many contradicting the image of the scatological numpty projected in Peter Shaffer’s Amadeus. Wolfgang tells Leopold that while he has the same sexual drive as any young man, he has been too religious and decent ‘to seduce an innocent girl’ and too concerned for his health ‘to play around with whores’: ‘as my personal disposition is more inclined to a quiet and domestic life than towards noise and excitement… In my eyes, an unmarried man lives only half a life’. Constanze is ‘the most kindhearted, the most skilled’ of the sisters, he goes on, with ‘no great wit but enough common sense to fulfil her duties as a wife and mother’ and ‘two little black eyes and a graceful figure’ which are ‘her whole beauty… I love her and she loves me with all her heart.’

As in most marital relationships of the 18th and 19th centuries, we’d like to hear more from the woman’s side, of course. But there is enough evidence to prove that Constanze was a resourceful and spirited individual, who cared for her husband’s legacy long after his death. The wedding took place on 4 August 1782 in Vienna’s Stefansdom.

I’d always wondered why the (semi) comic opera of that year and the most sublime of all the wind serenades were the first of Mozart’s works to have that at-one-with-the-world aura we know so well from the mature masterpieces, a radiance only very fitfully to be found in the riven genius of his first great opera Idomeneo. Last year’s discovery reinforced a hunch: Konstanze’s role as muse as well as wife had a more profound effect on the music than we can ever realise.

Konstanze Mozart ne Weber © Getty Images

How Richard Strauss wrote his wife Pauline into his music

In the case of Pauline Strauss, née de Ahna, a major-general’s daughter just like Alice Elgar (the wife of 19th-century British composeer Edward Elgar), we know exactly the effect on the music. Richard Strauss created a series of musical portraits, filtered through a satirical or mock-epic imagination. There’s the woman of infinite variety portrayed in the most complex and difficult violin solo ever written for an orchestral leader in the symphonic tone poem Ein Heldenleben (A Hero’s Life); Strauss himself is the hero, but only in part and very much with tongue in cheek.

The Wife has a variety of themes in the 24 hours of Strauss family life so exuberantly portrayed in the Symphonia Domestica. As a soprano of formidable talent, strong enough to sing Isolde and Freihild, the heroine of Strauss’s first opera, under Strauss’s baton at Weimar, and Elisabeth in Tannhäuser as well as a Parsifal flower-maiden at Bayreuth, Pauline’s amazing breath control was the reason why songs like ‘Traum durch die Dämmerung’ and ‘Freundliche Vision’ are especially taxing to singers of shorter wind.