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Scenes from Goethe's Faust

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Written between 1844 and 1853, Szenen aus Goethes Faust (Scenes from Goethe's Faust) has been described as the height of composer Robert Schumann's accomplishments in the realm of dramatic music.[1]

Schumann's work on what he labeled an oratorio began just over a decade after Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's completion of Part Two of the dramatic poem Faust in 1832, the year of Goethe's death.[2] Many contemporary readers of Faust found Goethe's epic poem daunting and difficult to grasp. Goethe himself declared only Mozart fit to write the music for Faust (though Mozart died in 1791, almost 20 years prior to the completion of Part One of Faust). As Schumann, thus, explained the felt weight of the task before him in an 1845 letter to Felix Mendelssohn: "[A]ny composer would not only be judged by his treatment of one of the seminal and most-widely acclaimed works in German literature, but would also be setting himself up to be compared to Mozart."[3] Yet despite Schumann's expressed reservations about the work, it has been labeled Schumann's "magnum opus."[1] Schumann is "[d]eeply sensitive to the all-inclusiveness of Goethe’s drama[.]" From the work's dark and tense overture, to its elegant and tranquil conclusion, Schumann opens wide "a manifold musical world" that coherently draws together elements of "lied, horror opera, grand opera, oratorio, and church music."[1]

Schumann's music suggests the struggle between good and evil at the heart of Goethe's work, as well as Faust's tumultuous search for enlightenment and peace.[3] After the overture, the music depicts Faust's wooing of Gretchen. For Gretchen's story, Schumann employs operatic music, beginning with a love duet, proceeding to Gretchen's passionate and desperate aria, and concluding with a church scene.[3] The second part of the work opens with stark contrast: On the one hand, the lively, fresh music of Ariel and the spirits, calls Faust to savor the beauties of nature; on the other hand, in the scene following, Schumann's restless orchestration brings to the fore Faust's delusions upon hearing of a new world being created and its rapturous promise of an everlasting present.[3] The final scenes, drawing the work to its placid yet unsettled conclusion, hold some of Schumann's best choral writing.[3]

Although often overlooked within Schumann's impressive oeuvre, Szenen aus Goethes Faust has been deemed among Schumann's most moving works, and a pinnacle of his quintessential Romantic concern with the extra-musical (and especially literary) potential of musical expression.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c John Daverio: "Schumann, Robert", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed October 26, 2007), <http://www.grovemusic.com>.
  2. ^ "Goethe, Johann Wolfgang van", The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed. (2001-2005) (Accessed October 26, 2007), <http://www.bartleby.com/65/go/Goethe-J.html>.
  3. ^ a b c d e Ann Feeney: "Scenes from Goethe's Faust", All Media Guide (Accessed October 26, 2007), <https://www.allmusic.com/work/c12266>.
  4. ^ Brian Schlotel: "Schumann, Robert (Opera)", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed October 26, 2007), <http://www.grovemusic.com>