SCHUMANN, C.: Piano Concerto in A Minor / Piano Trio in G Minor
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Clara Schumann (1819-1896) Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 7 Piano Trio in G minor, Op. 17 Born in Leipzig in 1819, Clara Schumann, as she later became, was...
Clara Schumann (1819-1896)
Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 7 Piano Trio in G minor, Op. 17
Born in Leipzig in 1819, Clara Schumann, as she later
became, was the first surviving child of Friedrich
Wieck, a music-teacher who has perhaps suffered
unduly through his opposition to her marriage to his
former pupil, Robert Schumann. Wieck himself had
first studied theology before turning to music and spent
the earlier part of his career as a private tutor in various
families. After his marriage in 1816, he settled in
Leipzig, where he combined his activities as a musicteacher
with those of a piano-dealer, hiring and selling
pianos. With his daughter Clara he was able to pursue
single-mindedly his strict but relatively enlightened
principles of musical training. His concentration of
attention on his eldest daughter became all the greater
after his separation in 1824 and subsequent divorce
from a woman who had her own career as a singer and
pianist and later married Wieck's earlier friend and
possible mentor, the piano-teacher Adolf Bargiel. Clara
Wieck was trained as a musician and pianist and was
able, by stages, to embark on a career as a performer.
She made her first public appearance in 1828 at a
Gewandhaus concert in Leipzig, playing a piano duet,
Kalkbrenner's Variations on a March from Moses. She
continued to play privately to friends, making her public
debut as a solo artist at the Gewandhaus in 1830. The
following years brought the first development of a
brilliant career. In tours to Paris and throughout
Germany, and in 1837 to Vienna, where she was fêted
and received the title of Royal and Imperial Virtuosa
from the Emperor, she remained dependent on her
father, who saw to all the practical details of such tours,
acting both as teacher and manager.
It was in 1830 that Robert Schumann had first
become involved in the Wieck circle in Leipzig. He had
undertaken, at his widowed mother's behest, the study
of law, but persuaded her, with the help of Friedrich
Wieck's guarded recommendation, to allow him to
study music with Wieck in Leipzig, lodging in the
latter's house. As Clara Wieck grew older and more
independent in spirit she found herself attracted to
Schumann. Her father, however, was well aware of the
latter's strengths and weaknesses, his unsteadiness of
purpose and his underlying ability as a composer, if not
as a pianist. For a time Schumann turned his attention to
another of Wieck's pupils, Ernestine von Fricken, but
this association was soon ended in favour of Clara,
leading to their secret engagement in 1837.
In the months and years that followed, Wieck's
opposition to Clara's proposed marriage grew in
vehemence. Whatever his views of the suitability of
Schumann as a husband, and here his paternal doubts
might have been justified, he saw his daughter's
marriage as an obstacle to a splendid career in which
much had been invested. Increasing bitterness and a
long, enforced separation led to an application by the
young couple to the court for permission for Clara to
marry without her father's consent. In 1839 she
undertook a concert-tour to Paris without her father and
the following year a decision was given in their favour
and they were able to marry.
Robert and Clara Schumann remained, at first, in
Leipzig. There were obviously conflicting interests,
since she was at the outset of a very distinguished career
and was practical and determined enough to manage her
own life as a concert-artist. Schumann, on the other
hand, had other needs. As a composer he demanded
some limits on her necessary practice and would at
times, it seemed, have been happy to have kept his
young wife to himself. Nevertheless she found herself
gradually able to overcome the difficulties that
presented themselves, to cope with her husband's
depressive moods and with the demands of child-birth
in a succession of pregnancies that only ended with the
birth of her eighth child in 1854. While giving her
husband what encouragement she could as a composer
and writer, she did her best to continue her own career.
This stood her in good stead when, after some six years
in Dresden, they moved to Düsseldorf, where
Schumann took up a position to which he was in many
ways unsuited, as director of music, obliged to deal
regularly both with performers and with the demands of
the city council, his employer.
Schumann's attempted suicide and breakdown in
1854 was followed by a final period in a private asylum
at Endenich. Clara Schumann, supported by many
friends, continued her concert career, the only practical
means of supporting her young family and of meeting
the hospital bills for her husband. She returned from a
concert-tour to England in early July 1856, in time to
see Schumann for the first time since his breakdown,
two days before his death. By October she had resumed
her work.
In the following years Clara Schumann showed
remarkable resolution. There were, over the years,
problems and tragedies to cope with, as her children
grew up and suffered their own vicissitudes. Brahms,
who had first met the Schumanns through the violinist
Joachim in 1853, remained a loyal friend, in some ways
taking the place of a father and of a husband in his
advice and moral support. She dedicated herself, with a
drive inherited, perhaps from her father, to the very
practical matter of her family and to the further
promotion of her husband's music, which she
introduced gradually into her programmes, aware,
always, of the practical needs of programming, if she
was to retain her leading position in the concert world.
In 1878 she settled in Frankfurt, coupling her continuing
career with teaching at the Hoch Conservatory. Ten
years later she undertook her final concert tour, to
England and in 1891 gave her last concert in Frankurt.
In 1896 she suffered a stroke and died on 20th May.
Clara Schumann's compositions were necessarily
limited in number, but reflect the care her father had
taken over her general musical education, supported by
lessons in counterpoint in Berlin from Siegfried Dehn,
who included Glinka and Anton Rubinstein among his
pupils, and instruction from others in theory and
composition in the course of her travels with her father.
She wrote the first sketch of her Piano Concerto in A
minor, Op. 7, her only extant orchestral composition, at
the age of fourteen, in 1833, planning at first a singlemovement
work. This she completed in November,
leaving the orchestration to Schumann, which he duly
finished in February 1834. This movement was to form
the finale of what was to become a three-movement
concerto, and formed part of her own concert repertoire.
She tackled the first movement in the summer of 1834
and a year later was preparing the work for publication,
having orchestrated it and written out the parts herself.
The concerto was performed at the Gewandhaus in
November 1835, with the composer as soloist,
conducted by Mendelssohn. Further revision of the
work was followed by publication of the piano part,
with the orchestral parts as a supplement, in January
1837, with a dedication to Louis Spohr.
The three movements of the completed concerto are
linked, like those of Mendelssohn's Concerto in G
minor that he had performed in Leipzig for the first time
in 1835. The opening movement, marked Allegro
maestoso, starts with an orchestral tutti, announcing the
first theme and leading to the entry of the soloist with
ascending octave scale passages, punctuated by the
orchestra, before the piano takes up the principal theme.
Passage-work leads to the second subject and the
modulations of the development, before a transition that
proceeds directly to the second movement, an A flat
major Romanze for piano and solo cello, with
characteristically Brahmsian cross-rhythms. Timpani
rolls are heard, as the slow movement draws to a close,
assuming greater prominence as a trumpet call
introduces the final Allegro non troppo and the entry of
the soloist with the octaves of which Clara Wieck seems
to have been so fond. Here there is more interplay
between the soloist and the orchestra in a work of some
virtuosity, ending in a rapid coda.
The Piano Trio in G minor, Op. 17, was written
some ten years later during the summer of 1846. Clara
Schumann's fourth child, Emil, had been born in
February and was to die a year later, and a summer
holiday with her husband at Norderney on the North Sea
brought a possible miscarriage, although her musical
activities, geographically more circumscribed,
continued. The form was one with which she was
familiar as a performer, and her achievement seems to
have provoked Schumann to his own Piano Trio in D
minor, Op. 63, which he completed in 1847. She herself
had organized a piano trio ensemble in Dresden and
embarked on a series of chamber music recitals.
The first movement of the Piano Trio allows the
violin the first statement of the principal subject, then
taken up by the piano, duly leading to a secondary
theme, a central development and a recapitulation. The
B flat major Scherzo, with its perky rhythms within the
restraints of a Tempo di Minuetto pace, frames an E flat
major Trio, and the G major Andante allows the piano
music of greater technical complexity than hitherto. The
final Allegretto traditionally finds a place for an episode
of fugal treatment of the principal theme, which shapes
the coda, shared by violin and cello, with more
elaborate piano accompaniment.
Keith Anderson
Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 7 (more info)
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Allegro maestoso - 07:08
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Romanze: Andante non troppo con grazia - 04:52
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Finale: Allegro non troppo - Allegro molto - 11:30
Piano Trio in G minor, Op. 17 (more info)
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Allegro moderato - 11:02
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Scherzo: Tempo di Menuetto - 05:23
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Andante - 06:33
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Allegretto - 07:26