DEUTSCHE SCHUBERT-LIED-EDITION, Vol. 21 Franz Schubert (1797-1828) Poets of Sensibility, Vol. 4 The Edition In 1816 Franz Schubert, together with his circle...
DEUTSCHE
SCHUBERT-LIED-EDITION, Vol. 21
Franz Schubert (1797-1828)
Poets of Sensibility, Vol. 4
The Edition
In
1816 Franz Schubert, together with his circle of friends, decided to publish a
collection of all the songs which he had so far written. Joseph Spaun, whom
Schubert had known since his school days, tried his (and Schubert's) luck in a
letter to the then unquestioned Master of the German language, Johann Wolfgang
von Goethe:
A selection of German songs will constitute the
beginning of this edition; it will consist of eight volumes. The first two (the
first of which, as an example, you will find in our letter) contains poems
written by your Excellency, the third, poetry by Schiller, the fourth and
fifth, works by Klopstock, the sixth by Mathison, Holty, Salis etc., the
seventh and eighth contain songs by Ossian, whose works are quite exceptional.
The
Deutsche Schubert-Lied-Edition follows the composer's original concept. All
Schubert's
Lieder, over 700 songs, will be grouped according to the
poets who inspired him, or according to the circle of writers, contemporaries,
members of certain literary movements and so on, whose works Schubert chose to
set to music. Fragments and alternative settings, providing their length and
quality make them worth recording, and works for two or more voices with piano
accompaniment will also make up a part of the edition.
Schubert
set the poetry of over 115 writers to music. He selected poems from classical
Greece, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, from eighteenth-century German
authors, early Romantics, Biedermeier poets, his contemporaries, and, of
course, finally, poems by Heinrich Heine, although sadly the two never met.
The
entire edition is scheduled for completion by 2005. Thanks to the
Neue
Schubert Ausgabe (New Schubert Edition), published by Barenreiter, which
uses primary sources - autograph copies wherever possible - the performers have
been able to benefit from the most recent research of the editorial team. For
the first time, the listener and the interested reader can follow Schubert's
textual alterations and can appreciate the importance the written word had for
the composer.
The
project's Artistic Advisor is the pianist Ulrich Eisenlohr, who has chosen
those German-speaking singers who represent the elite of today's young German
Lieder singers, performers whose artistic contribution, he believes, will stand
the test of time.
The Gottinger
Hainbund: Settings of poems by Matthias Claudius, Ludwig Holty, Leopold Graf zu
Stolberg and Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter
The
revolutionary 'invention' of the romantic song through Schubert is, in the
minds of song-lovers, indissolubly linked with the name of Goethe and his poems
Gretchen am Spinnrade and Erlkonig. Nevertheless there were, in Schubert's
early period of composition up to about 1816, other poets who played a different
part in his development as a song-composer, but one of similarly great
importance. The first of these is Friedrich Schiller, whose ballads and poems
inspired Schubert's earliest excursions in the fantastic realm of formally free
song settings. Already the first compositions such as 'Des Madchens Klage', D.
6 (The Maiden's Lament) (first version) and 'Leichenfantasie', D. 7 (Funereal
Fantasy) exemplify his thirst for something new and desire for expression in
this field. The then popular epics of Ossian/Macpherson also offered him rich 'material'
for experiment. There was in addition, however, a further group of poets,
settings of whom by Schubert have remained largely unknown, but that
nevertheless exercised a decisive influence on his development as a song composer.
These were the poets of the Empfindsamkeit, those poets who, taking
their origins in Pietism, in the middle of the eighteenth century created a new
prose and poetry, signs of a newly awakened bourgeois self-assurance.
Individual feeling, personal emotion beyond dogmatic guidelines stood at the
centre of their writing. Understanding and feeling were to be brought into
line, united in the true feeling of the heart. Coming from England, the movement also found wide dissemination in German speaking countries with the
famous Friedrich Klopstock leading the way.
Schubert set
more than a hundred poems by poets of sensibility (Empfindsamkeit). Over
forty of these come from members of the Gottinger Hainbund, called after
Klopstock's ode 'Der Hügel und der Hain' (The Hill and the Grove), established
about 1772 in the university city of Gottingen by Ludwig Holty, Johann Heinrich
Voss, the Stolberg brothers and others, and connected, too, with Matthias
Claudius as well as Klopstock. It was above all the simple poems of the group,
in folk-style, that Schubert chose. With their individual basic attitude
striving for emotional and intellectual truth they were near to his own
thinking, and in his 'training' as a composer of strophic or varied strophic
songs he developed the technical command that gave him assurance in his
decisive steps towards the aforementioned 'revolutionary' song-writing. This
also afforded him full freedom in the creative transformation of the most
unheard of compositional ideas.
While the
intellectual attitude and view of life of Schubert and the poets of sensibility
were connected, the courses of their lives were completely different. On the
one side was Schubert, who, apart from a few trips and his two periods in
Zseliz as music teacher to the daughters of Count Esterhazy, remained true to Vienna throughout his life. On the other was a poet such as Matthias Claudius (1740-1815),
who, coming from a clergy family, first studied theology, law and political
science at Jena, without graduating, and then served in various positions as
private secretary in Copenhagen, as a free-lance writer, translator and
journalist in Hamburg. He lived for a time in Darmstadt, until he found his
physical and literary home in Wandsbeck as editor and writer for the literary publication
Der Wandsbecker Bote (The Wandsbeck Messenger). His original
mixture of serious and comic, naivety and profundity, his absolute clarity,
comprehensibility and his affinity with folk style made him famous and beloved,
but also brought him bitter hostility from some fellow poets.
'Zufriedenheit',
D. 501 (Contentment) by Claudius (second version) shows us an image,
particularly favoured from the Enlightenment to the Biedermeier, of the citizen
happy with himself and his modest existence, devoted to the simple life, with
everything necessary for a materially frugal existence, humble before God,
confident in the face of other men, free in all his opinions of life. What to
us today may seem petit bourgeois, then had thoroughly rebellious elements: in
each of the corresponding poems the one provided with all worldly goods, but
corrupted by gluttony, lust or greed, prince, king or sultan, is pilloried.
Schubert composed this portrait of the 'contented man' with audible pleasure:
an extended introduction brings a kind of 'entry music' for the protagonist in
gentle tones and playful motion. The beginning of the song characterizes him
changing theatrically between showing off his selfassurance and mischievous
shrewness. Schubert thus in the wider course of the song indulges in a comic
musical play between weighty affirmation and witty irony.
'Das Lied vom
Reifen', D. 532, (Song of the Frost) by Claudius sings of the beauty of the
trees adorned with morning frost. The poem is preceded by a biblical quotation:
'He pours forth frost on the earth like salt' (Ecclesiasticus, ch.43). The
cheerfully circling semiquavers of the piano suggest a peasant rounddance.
Actually Claudius's fifteen-verse poem places this peasant pleasure in nature
above 'many a fine thing' of the city-dweller, who has 'credit and gold and
golden ring / and bank and exchange'.
The life of
Friedrich Leopold Stolberg (1750-1819) was also marked by a number of changes
of occupation and place. With Goethe he travelled through Switzerland, was subsequently active in various political functions, translated Homer's Iliad
into German, wrote travel diaries, voluminous religious treatises, two novels
and a number of poems.
Stolberg's 'An die Natur', D. 372,
(To Nature), a kind of quiet hymn, praises Nature, who, like a mother, offers
peace, rest and shelter. Schubert's music is composed in a lilting 6/8, in the
style of a baroque siciliano. Stolberg's 'Morgenlied', D. 266, (Morning Song)
traces the panorama of sunrise in the mountains. The human spirit, which 'durch
des Schlafes Hülle bricht' ('breaks through sleep's veil'), sings in amazement
at the wonder of the new beginning of morning. Schubert meets the demands of
the imagery with wide-reaching music traversing the heights and depths in great
melodic arcs.
Ludwig Holty
(1748-1776) was the son of a clergyman, studied theology in Gottingen, and
earned his living as a teacher and translator. He died of consumption at the
age of 27. After his death Johann Heinrich Voss published his poems, sometimes
making considerable alterations to the texts, rendering them more polished and 'accomplished',
while also destroying their originality.
Holty's 'Blumenlied',
D. 431, (Flower Song), a free adaptation of Walther von der Vogelweide's
love-song 'Sô die bluomen ûz dem grase dringent' ('When the flowers sprout up
through the grass') sings of the 'demi-paradise' of spring - and the whole in
the form of a 'noble woman, good in soul and fair in body, in the fresh bloom
of youth' ('edlen Weib, von Seele gut und schon von Leib, in frischer Jugendblüte').
Gotter's 'Pflicht
und Liebe', D. 467, (Duty and Love) is the only poem by the playwright and poet
Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter that Schubert set. Surviving only as a fragment, the
whole poem was set by Schubert, and Max Friedlander, the first editor of a
comprehensive collection of Schubert songs, added a short interlude and
postlude, recorded here. The poem is a monologue of a man inwardly divided in
mind. A youthful friendship - 'unbekannt mit Reu' und Leide / wie die Lammlein
auf der Weide / spielten, ich und du' ('unacquainted with remorse and sorrow /
like lambs in the meadow / we played, I and you') - has grown over the years
into a deep love that, for whatever reason, cannot be realised. The passionate
invitation to renunciation has correspondingly dramatic music, which, with its
restlessly fluctuating piano figuration, chromatic bass progressions and
wide-spanning highmounting arches of melody bears operatic traces.
Holty's 'Erntelied',
D. 434, (Harvest Song) shows the life-affirming, robust energy of which many of
the poets of sensibility, notably Holty and Claudius, were capable. The genre
picture of ringing sickles, singing girls, and festive labourers and peasants
inspired Schubert to energetic music that graphically holds the balance between
the girls' delicate singing and lumbering peasant dancing.
The first
version of Claudius's 'Zufriedenheit', D. 362, shows some motivic variations
from the later version already discussed. It is formally laid out as a
classical strophic song that gives the poem a musical structure without
detailed characterization or comment.
That western
poetry has for centuries produced poems about spring may today seem to us
remarkable, but due regard must be given to the realities of everyday life: the
winter was without central heating, cold running water rather than warm,
without electricity, without fresh food, without any kind of modern
communication and means of entertainment, without modern medical care; it was
above all a time of suffering, uncomfortable and bitter for the great number of
people, life-threatening for the old, the weak and sick. The one who lived
through until May had survived. In Holty's 'Mailied', D. 503, (May Song) the
praise of spring is sung and clearly associated with love, since spring 'makes
the flowers many-coloured / and the girl's lips red' ('macht die Blume bunt/rot
des Madchens Mund'), so 'Kiss them, brothers, kiss them, / since they are
kissable' ('küsst ihn, Brüder küsst,/ weil er küsslich ist'.
A completely
different dark side of spring meets us in Holty's 'Die Mainacht', D. 194, (The
May Night). Beyond cheerful dancing and songs of joy this also brings with it
anxieties, differences, depression, all treated here. The poem is famous today
through Johannes Brahms' inspired setting, which transports Holty's fine
sensibility into the musical language of high romanticism. Schubert approaches
the text in completely different ways with a simple strophic setting that
infuses the poem with an unadorned yet musical atmosphere. The feeling of the
music, so unlike the quietly powerful melody rising up from the depths of
suffering of Brahms' setting, conveys above all disquiet, the inevitable
restlessness of one who has not found the love of his life.
In contrast, 'Am
ersten Maimorgen', D. 344, (The First Morning of May) by Claudius is a poem of
sheer joy of life and uncontrolled delight: 'I will dance and shout for joy' ('...
will mich walzen und für Freude schrein'), the poet says, and the piano
performs a playful dance of joy in an extended interlude.
Claudius's 'An
die Nachtigall', D. 497, (To the Nightingale) ('Er liegt und schlaft' / 'He
lies and sleeps') reveals itself surprisingly as an anti-love song. After a
gently rising prelude, leading through a wonderfully melodic and harmonic
passage, as it were, to a place of rest, the song starts with the words 'Er
liegt und schlaft an meinem Herzen' ('He lies and sleeps by my heart'), by
which the singer leaves us absolutely unclear as to who 'he' is. Now, to the
accompaniment of a graceful, cheerful piano motif, she can 'be happy and play'
('frohlich sein und scherzen'). A surprising pause provides the colon before
the solution to the riddle: it is Love which the nightingale must on no account
wake with her song. To the opening words of this plea, 'Nachtigall ach' ('Ah
Nightingale') the piano uncovers the reason in a melancholy minor motif: he
would, so the music clearly says, bring the sorrow and sighs of love. Once
again we marvel at Schubert's artistry in this 'little' song which, with the
most sparing of musical means, bestows on a poem a psychological and poetic
depth that is in no way inherent in it.
Stolberg's 'Daphne
am Bach', D. 411, (Daphne at the Brook), with a wonderful melody of folk-style
naivety, is a song of lament and yearning for the distant beloved, while Holty's
'Frühlingslied', D. 398, (Spring Song) sings of pure delight in spring. The
poem 'Phidile', D. 500, by Claudius was known to Schubert from childhood, often
sung by his mother in an older setting. The comic tale of the unlucky meeting
of the simple country-girl with the sentimental young man was set by Schubert
in simple strophic form, as was Holty's witty song in praise of boyhood, 'Die
Knabenzeit', D. 400. The cheerful and light-hearted warning of the 'verschimmelten
Latein' ('mouldy old Latin') of 'dicken Cicero' ('stout Cicero') that later in
school would threaten him, takes direct aim at the antiquated middle-class
education of the time.
Holty's 'An den
Mond', D. 468, (To the Moon) ('Was schauest du so hell' / 'Why do you look down
so bright') is marked by a strong contrast of major and minor. The memory of a
better time starts in the idyllic major and changes with the lament for a 'schwarzes
feindliches Geschick' ('black hostile fate') in a darker disconsolate minor
colour.
Holty's An die
Nachtigall, D. 196, (To the Nightingale) ('Geuss nicht so laut' / 'Pour not so
loudly') surprises with its strangely formal impression yet its extraordinary
expressivity: the vocal part starts, without a prelude over arpeggiated chords,
a restless, ever more intense song of lament which after seven bars finds only
a short point of rest in a fermata. The following five-bar phrase brings a
quieter melodic line and painfully dissonant harmony before, in the last five
bars, parallel to the vocal part, in the piano accompaniment the nightingale
raises her voice in a truly urgent song. Like 'Die Mainacht' this poem was also
set by Brahms and here the short but incredibly concentrated Schubert setting
is no less inspired than the completely different setting by Brahms.
'Klage um Ali
Bey', D. 496A, (Lament for Ali Bey) by Claudius brings dramatic humour. Ali Bey
was a Mameluke prince in Egypt and in 1773 he was murdered by his favourite,
Abu Dahab. Over the death of the 'cheerful warrior' ('muntren Kriegers'), who
hacked everything 'into pieces' ('kurz und klein'), 'man and crocodile' ('Mensch
und Krokodil') now mourn throughout the whole of Egypt. Schubert gives the poem
a quite sparing setting, with slight oriental suggestions which allow the singer
every freedom for comic dramatic effect.
Stolberg's 'Abendlied',
D. 276, (Evening Song) and Holty's 'Winterlied', D. 401, (Winter Song) are
simple mood pictures, while Claudius's 'Am Grabe Anselmos', D. 504, (By Anselm's
Grave) by contrast seems more ambitious and in the formation of musical ideas
highly inspired. The three-part song, in ABA form, shows an incredibly rich
range of expression.
Holty's 'Die
Laube', D. 214, (The Arbour) provides an example of the intense pathos of the
poetry of sensibility, while the anonymous 'Wiegenlied', D. 498, (Cradle Song)
('Schlafe, süßer holder Knabe' / 'Sleep, sweet, lovely boy') convinces in a
completely opposite way, with simple words and music as simple as it is
captivating.
Ulrich
Eisenlohr
English version by Keith Anderson