The composer Richard Strauss at his desk in between letters from an American blogger.

Photo © 2014 Richard-Strauss Institut, Garmisch-Partenkirchen.

by Paul J. Pelkonen Paul J. PelkonenEditor,*** 44th St. Apt. *Brooklyn NY 11220 USADr. Richard Strauss,The Villa Strauss, 42 Zoeppritzstraße,Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany 82467 June 11, 2014Dear Dr. Strauss:I know we don't know each other and I am sure you are getting a lot of birthday greetings today. I wanted to take this occasion to wish you the very happiest of 150th birthdays and to write a little about what your music has meant to me in the past 25 years of my life. I'm an American music critic living and working in New York City, and my music blogis frequently devoted to writing about your work.When I was young, I first recognized your name as the gentleman who wrote the music that is commonly referred to here as the "2001" theme, that is the Dawn from your tone poem. I enjoyed that brief selection when I saw the movie but didn't know it was the opening of a huge and gloriously complex work that still proves rewarding to me today.The first recording of your music that I ever purchased was a cheap three-dollar cassette of(the Vienna Philharmonic recording with Herbert von Karajan at ain Rockaway, NJ. That night, I fell asleep in my bed at our summer house in North Jersey, pressing "play" on my little tape recorder. I was blissfully unaware that in 30 minutes, the tolling bell ofwould wake the entire house from sleep. As an aficionado of American and British loud music (called "heavy metal") the sheer power and volume of this work appealed to me--though I learned to listen to it on headphones.As I got older, I recognized that your catalogue had more to it thanwhen my Mom took me (at age 16) to see my first live performance of one of your operas:. Two minutes into that massive work, I was enchanted although there were no surtitles, I spoke no German and had little idea of the plot. I didn't care--that day I became drunk on orchestration.When I finished grad school and got my first job (I think I was 23) I saw my firstat the New York City Opera in Jonathan Miller's excellent production. The rough-and-tumble humor ofcommunicated itself to me in the theater--helped since I already had acquired the Bernard Haitink recording of the opera--still my favorite version.Other operas and concert performances of your works followed. Thanks to the industrious work of conductor Leon Botstein, I discovered the joys of your rare operas:andA late-night PBS broadcast offrom Vienna with Anna Tomowa-Sintow caused me to stay up to operate the VCR. And I finally saw Salome and. I was in my late 20s. And I was a confirmed Straussian.As I've grown in the last decade, I've come to appreciate the wide diversity of your catalogue and the inspiration behind "underrated" works like. I've even seen (and hated) a performance of(thankfully without the dancing candy!) This year I saw my first concert performance of, again with Dr. Botstein conducting. But I think the most important and personal work for me is--the most heartbreaking music of the 20th century and an elegy for your country before the Nazis and the horrors of World War II.I will conclude this long, rambling letter with a simple "thank you" and "Happy Birthday."I wish you all the best andSincerely,Paul J. Pelkonen,Editor,P.S. Burn this before Pauline sees it.