SCHUMANN, R.: Symphonic Etudes, Op. 13 / Fantasie in C Major, Op. 17
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Robert Schumann (1810-1856) Symphonic Etudes Phantasie in C major Robert Schumann is in many ways typical of the age in which he lived, combining in his...
Robert Schumann (1810-1856)
Symphonic Etudes Phantasie in C major
Robert Schumann is in many ways typical of the age in
which he lived, combining in his music a number of the
principal characteristics of Romanticism, as he did in his
life. Born in Zwickau in 1810, the son of a bookseller,
publisher and writer, he showed an early interest in
literature and was to make a name for himself in later
years as a writer and as editor of the Neue Zeitschrift für
Musik, a journal launched in 1834. His father encouraged
his literary and musical interests and at one time thought
of sending him to study with Weber, a proposal that was
abandoned with the death of the latter, closely followed
by the death of Schumann's father.
Schumann's career now followed a more
conventional course. In 1828 he entered the University of
Leipzig, where his attention to his studies was as
intermittent as it was to be the following year at
Heidelberg. He was eventually able to persuade his
mother and guardian that he should be allowed to study
music under the well- known piano teacher Friedrich
Wieck, whose own energies had been directed with some
intensity towards the training of his own daughter Clara,
a pianist of prodigious early talent. Schumann's
ambitions as a pianist, however, were frustrated by a
weakness in the fingers, whatever its true cause, and his
other musical studies had, at the very least, lacked
application. Nevertheless in the 1830s he wrote a great
deal of music for the piano, often in the form of shorter,
genre pieces, with some extra-musical literary or
autobiographical association. There was an affair with
one of Wieck's pupils, later broken off, but by 1835 he
had begun to turn his attention to Clara Wieck, nine years
his junior. Wieck had good reason to object to the liaison.
His daughter had a career before her as a concert
performer and Schumann had shown signs of instability
of character, whatever his abilities as a composer might
be. Matters were taken to an extreme when resort was
had to litigation, in order to prevent what Wieck saw as a
disastrous marriage.
It was not until 1840 that Schumann was eventually
able to marry Clara, after her father's legal attempts to
oppose the match had finally failed. The couple married
in September, remaining first in Leipzig, although
journeys took place for concert appearances by Clara,
generally accompanied by her husband, whose position
was of lesser distinction. In 1844 they moved to Dresden,
where it seemed that Schumann might recover from the
bouts of depression that he had suffered in the earlier
days of marriage. Here again no official position seemed
to offer itself and it was only in 1849 that the prospect of
employment arose, this time in Düsseldorf, where
Schumann took up his position as director of music in
1850.
Mendelssohn had enjoyed an uneasy relationship
with the Düsseldorf authorities, and Schumann, much
less skilled in administration and conducting, proved
even less able to cope with the difficulties that arose. The
pressures on him led to a complete nervous break-down
in 1854 and final years spent in an asylum at Endenich,
where he died in 1856.
Schumann wrote his Symphonic Studies during the
years from 1834 and 1837, revising the work in 1852,
when he dedicated it to his friend William Sterndale
Bennett. It was later to appear after his death in variously
extended forms. The original composition came at a time
when he was concerned with the Neue Zeitschrift and
with the writing of piano music.
In 1834, when the Symphonic Studies were first
conceived, Schumann was directing his amatory
intentions towards Ernestine von Fricken, a young pupil
of Wieck. His ardour cooled when he discovered that she
was the illegitimate daughter of Baron von Fricken, and
not likely to inherit from him. The theme for the studies
was designed as a compliment to the Baron and makes
use of a melody of his, the basis of a set of variations for
flute. At first Schumann brought together a group of
twelve variations, out of the original eighteen, under the
title 12 Davidsbündler Studien, a reference to the
fictititious League of David, banded together against the
cultural Philistines of the day. This was later to be
changed to Etüden in Orchestercharakter für Pianoforte
von Florestan und Eusebius (Studies in Orchestral Style
for Piano by Florestan and Eusebius), Florestan and
Eusebius being two of the pseudonyms Schumann used
in his critical writing, one passionate, the other
thoughtful. The publishers, however, provided the
simpler XII Etudes symphoniques, issuing the work
under this title in 1837. The 1852 edition bore the title
Etudes en forme de variations, and included only ten
variations. Five more were published seventeen years
after Schumann's death, in 1873, here included and listed
under the title Anhang.
The work opens with the solemn C sharp minor
theme, followed by ascending imitative entries in the
slightly livelier first Etude, here leading to the delicate
accompanying tracery of the first Anhang variation. The
theme is heard in the bass of the second Etude, while the
third brings rapid arpeggios. The solid chords of the
fourth Etude are succeeded by a fifth scherzando in
which the left hand answers the right. The fourth of the
Anhang variations provides an expressive contrast, while
the sixth Etude is marked by the wide leaps in the left
hand, with the melody heard in the upper part. The triplet
figuration of the E major seventh Etude here leads to the
third and second of the Anhang variations, the latter with
elaborate figuration. The eight Etude uses a motif of
contrapuntal suggestion, to be followed by the very rapid
ninth and the fifth Anhang variation, written in D flat
major. An energetic tenth Etude and an expressive
eleventh are capped by the triumphant more extended
final treatment of the material, now in D flat major, the
enharmonic equivalent of the tonic major of C sharp.
Schumann's Phantasie in C major, Op.17, originally
bore the title Obolen auf Beethovens Monument: Ruinen,
Trophaen, Palmen: grosse Sonate für das Pianoforte für
Beethovens Denkmal, von Florestan und Eusebius,
Op.12 (Small Contribution to Beethoven's Monument:
Ruins, Trophies, Palms: Grand Sonata for the Pianoforte
for Beethoven's Memorial, by Florestan and Eusebius).
It had the alternative and briefer title of Ruine,
Siegesbogen und Sternbild (Ruinen, Triumphbogen und
Sternenkranz: Ruins, Triumphal Arch and Constellation).
The matter of the proposed Beethoven monument in
Bonn was one that interested a number of musicians. A
statue was eventually erected in 1845, largely as the
result of the generosity of Franz Liszt, who provided the
greater part of the money needed, while reserving to
himself the choice of artist. Schumann, who in the end
dedicated his Phantasie to Liszt, suggested that a
hundred copies of his Grand Sonata, as it was first
envisaged, should be sold for the benefit of the fund. This
does not seem to have happened, and in any case, before
its publication in 1839, the work underwent some
revision. Liszt replied enthusiastically to the dedication
to him, while offering his assistance to Schumann in his
proposed relationship with Clara Wieck, in answer to
Schumann's implied revelation of the state of his
affections.
Whatever changes may have been made, the
Phantasie remains something of a sonata. It is in three
movements, prefaced by four lines from Friedrich
Schlegel:
Durch alle Tone tonet
in bunten Erdentraum
ein leiser Ton gezogen
für den, der heimlich lauschet.
(Through all the notes that sound
in the varied dream of earth,
a gentle sound there is
for the one who listens secretly.)
Symphonic Etudes, Op. 13 (more info)
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Thema (Andante) - 1:41
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Etude I (Un poco piu vivo) - 1:15
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Anhang Variation I - 1:39
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Etude II (Espressivo) - 3:39
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Etude III (Vivace) - 1:14
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Etude IV - 0:58
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Etude V (Scherzando) - 1:25
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Anhang Variation IV - 3:35
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Etude VI (Agitato) - 0:48
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Etude VII (Allegro molto) - 1:12
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Anhang Variation III - 1:33
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Anhang Variation II - 2:34
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Etude VIII (Sempre marcatissimo) - 2:51
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Etude IX (Presto possibile) - 0:40
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Anhang Variation V - 3:20
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Etude X (Sempre con energia) - 1:19
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Etude XI (Con espressione) - 3:05
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Etude XII (Allegro brillante: Finale) - 6:22
Phantasie in C major, Op. 17 (more info)
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Durchaus phantastisch und leidenschaftlich vorzutragen - 14:19
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Massig. Durchaus energisch - 8:03
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Langsam getragen (durchweg leise zu halten) - 10:45