ZEMLINSKY: Rustic Dances, Op. 1 / Four Fantasies, Op. 9 / A Ray of Light
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Alexander Zemlinsky (1871-1942) Piano Music Although the music of Alexander Zemlinsky has found an increasingly wide public during the past quartercentury,...
Alexander Zemlinsky (1871-1942)
Piano Music
Although the music of Alexander Zemlinsky has found
an increasingly wide public during the past quartercentury,
it is not on his piano music that his reputation
rests. While it features prominently in his formative
years, Zemlinsky effectively abandoned the medium at
the turn of the twentieth century. The present disc
collates all of the published music that Zemlinsky wrote
for piano after 1891, revealing a skilful and assured
figure who gradually worked free of his influences to
become the composer whose mark was to be made in
other fields.
Zemlinsky's juvenilia includes two sonatas and
numerous genre pieces. From 1891, the Landliche
Tanze (Rustic Dances) assembles its dance numbers
into a cumulative sequence - Zemlinsky 'trying out'
various idioms in the process. The Straussian suavity of
the first is followed by the Chopinesque elegance of
No. 2. The third has a wistfulness redolent of
Schumann, and the fourth a hint of Mendelssohn, before
the Lisztian radiance of No. 5. Brahms is to the fore in
the sixth, as is Dvořak in the seventh. The waltz-tempo
of No. 8 complements the Landler-tempo of its
similarly Schubertian successor, to be followed by the
lively rhythmic profile of No. 10. The final two pieces
proceed without pause, the drawing-room gallantry of
No. 11 leading into the overt rhetoric of No. 12, which
brings the collection to a stirring close.
Despite attracting favourable notices, Zemlinsky
may have felt that this 'Op. 1' gave a misleading
impression of the composer he aspired to be. He
published nothing further for six years, though the Vier
Balladen (Four Ballades) composed during 1892-3 and
dedicated to his teacher Johann Fuchs, were originally
intended as his 'Op. 2'. Brahms's Op. 10 Ballades are
directly though never slavishly evoked - above all, in
the first, Archibald Douglas, after a poem by Theodor
Fontane. From the depths of the piano it proceeds in
ominous accents to a tumultuous central section,
regaining its initial mood at the close. The second
ballad, Der Konig von Thule, is an affectionate
rendering of Gretchen's song from Goethe's Faust, a
central surge of emotion only briefly disturbing the
placid over-all mood. The third ballad, Der
Wassermann, after a poem by Justinus Kerner, is
largely humorous and good-natured, with a hint of
malevolence to heighten tension towards its centre. The
fourth ballad, Intermezzo, apparently has a secret
programme: the coming-together of its two main ideas,
respectively impulsive and capricious, suggests an
amorous encounter, with the music then tapering away
in a serene conclusion to the cycle as a whole.
A similar intimacy is embodied in the Albumblatt
(Albumleaf), 'Souvenir from Vienna', written in 1895
and dedicated to his pupil Catharina Maleschewski.
Marked 'Very slow and inward', with allusions to
Wagner and Tchaikovsky, the piece inhabits a wider
emotional range than its title implies, and, in its subtly
evolving form and modulatory freedom, suggests that
Zemlinsky was already familiar with the sets of piano
pieces that Brahms had published earlier in the decade.
Equally attractive is the Skizze (Sketch) of 1896,
revised from an unpublished set of four pieces written
five years earlier. Its capering initial idea is contrasted
with a more ruminative theme that pointedly intervenes,
only for the opening idea to have the final say.
In 1898 Zemlinsky composed his most imposing
piano work, the Vier Fantasien (Four Fantasies), after
poems by Richard Dehmel. Each of these miniature
tone-poems encapsulates, but does not portray
graphically, verse by the most prominent of Viennese
Secessionist poets. The first fantasy, Stimme des
Abends, has a gently brooding quality, reaching the
briefest of climaxes before regaining its repose. The
second fantasy, Waldseligkeit, contrasts its capricious
opening idea with a hymn-like rejoinder, building in
intensity and developing its themes right through to the
close. The third fantasy, Liebe, is of a rapt expression
such as inspires some telling exchanges between left
and right hands. The fourth fantasy, Kaferlied, is the
shortest and lightest, its insouciant gait rounding off the
set in humorous elegance.
The instrumental rendering of Dehmel's poetry was
taken to far more ambitious lengths by Arnold
Schoenberg, Zemlinsky's contemporary and later
brother-in-law, in his Verklarte Nacht the following
year. In 1901 both composers contributed to the
Überbrettl, the writer and entrepreneur Ernst von
Wolzogen's attempt at establishing a populist cabaret in
Berlin. Schoenberg wrote the songs now known as
Brettl-lieder, and Zemlinsky composed music for a
mime drama with piano accompaniment entitled Ein
Lichtstrahl (A Ray of Light). The scenario, devised by
playwright and actor Oskar Geller and typical
melodrama-cum-farce of its period, concerns the
encounters, both amorous and otherwise, of 'He', 'She'
and 'The Other'; their menage à trois being conducted
in a room with a large wardrobe during the early
evening.
The music opens in relaxed, unassuming mood,
though a more agitated manner soon asserts itself and
provokes some angry gestures, the initial music then
continuing in more elaborate textures. A waspish
repeated-note motif initiates a more humorous episode
allowing the opportunity for illustrative exaggeration on
the part of the pianist (and no doubt the mime-artists).
Next comes the false gracefulness of a 'song without
words', with its equally charming trio. The
confrontational mood is alluded to, only for the graceful
music to resume its unruffled course. Next, the
humorous episode is recalled, and the two musics
alternate before a decisive new theme, derived from the
opening idea, steers towards a final return of the
graceful music, before concluding proceedings with a
vigorous and unashamedly theatrical flourish.
Ein Lichtstrahl was not performed at the Überbrettl,
perhaps because of perceived sexual ambiguities, or on
account of the difficulty of its piano writing. Zemlinsky
made a shortened version for Franz Artzt's Cabaret du
Quartier Latin in Dresden, but again no performance
was forthcoming, and the piece was to languish unheard
until 1992. Its combining of direct illustration with a
subtly developing variation form has no parallels
elsewhere in the composer's output, and its many
felicities are best savoured, as here, in his original fulllength
version.
A similar ignominy was accorded the three-act
ballet Der Triumph der Zeit (The Triumph of Time), on
which Zemlinsky worked during 1901. The diffuse
Symbolist scenario by Hugo von Hofmannsthal aroused
little enthusiasm from Gustav Mahler, effectively
killing off the project. The composer salvaged two
orchestral works and, from the first act, Das glaserne
Herz (The Crystal Heart), this brief Minuet, published
in 1903. Its whimsical charm, tailor-made for the
amateur market, makes an unconsciously low-key
ending to Zemlinsky's output for piano.
Richard Whitehouse
Fantasien uber Gedichte von Richard Dehmel (Fantasies after poems by Richard Dehmel), Op. 9 (more info)
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Allegro - 0:58
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Presto - 1:22
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No. 1 Stimme des Abends - 2:30
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No. 2 Waldseligkeit - 3:23
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No. 3 Liebe - 3:29
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No. 4 Kaferlied - 1:27
Landliche Tanze (Rustic Dances), Op. 1 (more info)
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Moderato - 1:48
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Adagio - 1:14
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Allegro - 2:12
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No. 6 Energisch - 0:48
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No. 7 Sehr zart - 1:25
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No. 8 Heiter (Walzer-Tempo) - 0:52
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No. 9 Landler-Tempo - 1:04
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No. 10 Gut betont - 1:00
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No. 11 Sehr sanft - 2:08
Albumblatt (Albumleaf) (more info)
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Albumblatt (Albumleaf) - 2:46
4 Balladen (4 Ballades) (more info)
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No. 1 Archibald Douglas - 4:02
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No. 2 Der Konig von Thule - 2:21
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No. 3 Der Wassermann - 3:14
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No. 4 Intermezzo - 4:08
Das glaserne Herz (The Crystal Heart): Menuett (more info)
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Das glaserne Herz (The Crystal Heart): Menuett - 1:10
Skizze (Sketch) (more info)
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Skizze (Sketch) - 2:32
Ein Lichtstrahl (A Ray of Light) (more info)
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Ein Lichtstrahl (A Ray of Light) - 17:35