Robert Schumann

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Robert Schumann
young white man in 1830s costume; he has wavy dark hair of medium length and is clean-shaven
Schumann in 1839 by Josef Kriehuber
Born(1810-06-08)8 June 1810
Died29 July 1856(1856-07-29) (aged 46)
Bonn, Rhine Province, Prussia
Occupations
  • Composer
  • Pianist
  • Music critic
Spouse
(m. 1840)

Robert Schumann[n 1] (German: [ˈʁoːbɛʁt ˈʃuːman]; 8 June 1810 – 29 July 1856) was a German composer, pianist, and music critic of the Romantic era. Born to a comfortable middle-class family, Schumann was unsure whether to pursue a career as a lawyer or to make a living as a pianist-composer. He studied law at Leipzig and Heidelberg Universities but his main interests were music and Romantic literature. From 1829 he was a student of the piano teacher Friedrich Wieck, but his hopes for a career as a virtuoso pianist were frustrated by a growing problem with his right hand, and he concentrated on composition. His early works were mainly piano pieces, including the large-scale Carnaval (1834–35) In 1834 he was a co-founder of the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik (New Musical Journal) which he edited for ten years. In his writing for the journal and in his music he distinguished between two contrasting aspects of his personality, dubbing them "Florestan" for his impetuous self and "Eusebius" for his gentle poetic side.

In 1840 Schumann married Wieck's daughter Clara, despite the bitter opposition of her father, who did not regard Schumann as a suitable husband for her.. The marriage was followed by prolific composing, first of songs and song‐cycles including Frauenliebe und Leben ("Woman's Love and Life") and Dichterliebe ("Poet's Love"). In 1841 he turned his attention to orchestral music, and in the following two years to chamber music and choral works.

Schumann and Clara toured Russia in 1844, after which his physical and mental health was poor for some months. The couple moved to Dresden, living there until 1850. In 1846 Clara gave the first performance of his Piano Concerto and their friend Felix Mendelssohn conducted the premiere of Schumann's Second Symphony. In 1850 the Schumanns moved to Düsseldorf in the hope that his appointment as the town's director of music would provide financial stability, but he was not a good conductor and had to resign after three years. In 1853 the Schumanns met the twenty-year old Johannes Brahms, whom Schumann praised in an article in theNeue Zeitschrift für Musik. The following year Schumann's always precarious mental health deteriorated gravely. He threw himself into Rhine but was rescued and taken to a private sanatorium where he lived another two-and-a-half years, dying there at the age of 46.

Schumann was recognised in his lifetime for his piano music – often programmatic – and his songs. His other works were less generally admired, and for many years there was a widespread belief that those from his later years lacked the inspiration of his early music. More recently this view has been less prevalent, but it is still for his piano works and songs from the 1830s and 1840s that he is most esteemed.

Life and career[edit]

Childhood[edit]

Exterior of substantial town house seen from the square outside it
Schumann's birthplace, now the Robert Schumann House, after an anonymous colourised lithograph

Robert Schumann[n 1] was born in Zwickau, in the Kingdom of Saxony (today the state of Saxony), into an affluent middle class family.[4] On 13 June 1830 the local newspaper, the Zwickauer Wochenblatt (Zwickau Weekly Paper), carried the announcement, "On 8 June to Herr August Schumann, notable citizen and bookseller here, a little son".[5] He was the fifth and last child of August Schumann and his wife, Johanna Christiane (née Schnabel). August, not only a bookseller but also a lexicographer, author and publisher of chivalric romances, made considerable sums from his German translations of writers such as Cervantes, Walter Scott and Lord Byron.[2] Robert, his favourite child, was able to spend many hours exploring the classics of literature in his father's collection.[2] Intermittently, between the ages of three and five-and-a-half, he was placed with foster parents, as his mother had contracted typhus.[4]

At the age of six Schumann went to a private preparatory school, where he remained for four years.[6] When he was seven he began studying general music and piano with the local organist, Johann Gottfried Kuntsch, and for a time he also had cello and flute lessons with one of the municipal musicians, Carl Gottlieb Meissner.[7] Throughout his childhood and youth his love of music and literature ran in tandem, with poems and dramatic works produced alongside small-scale compositions, mainly piano pieces and songs.[8] He was not a musical child prodigy like Mozart or Mendelssohn,[4] but his talent as a pianist was evident from an early age: in 1850 the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung (Universal Musical Journal) printed a biographical sketch of Schumann which included an account from contemporary sources that even as a boy he possessed a special talent for portraying feelings and characteristic traits in melody:

Indeed, he could sketch the different dispositions of his intimate friends by certain figures and passages on the piano so exactly and comically that everyone burst into loud laughter at the accuracy of the portrait.[9]

From 1820 Schumann attended the Zwickau Lyceum, the local high school of about two hundred boys, where he remained till the age of eighteen, studying a traditional curriculum. In addition to his studies he read extensively: among his early enthusiasms were Schiller and Jean Paul.[10] According to the musical historian George Hall, Paul remained Schumann's favourite author and exercised a powerful influence on the composer's creativity with his sensibility and vein of fantasy.[8] Musically, Schumann got to know the works of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and of living composers Weber, with whom August Schumann tried unsuccessfully to arrange for Robert to study.[8] August was not particularly musical but he encouraged his son's interest in music, buying him a Streicher grand piano and organising expeditions to Leipzig for a performance of Die Zauberflöte and Carlsbad to hear the celebrated pianist Ignaz Moscheles.[11]

miniature oil painting of a young, clean-shaven white youth in early-19th-century costume
Schumann c. 1826

University[edit]

August Schumann died in 1826; his widow was less enthusiastic about a musical career for her son and persuaded him to study for the law as a profession. After his final examinations at the Lyceum in March 1828 he entered Leipzig University. Accounts differ about his diligence as a law student. According to his room-mate Emil Flechsig, he never set foot in a lecture hall,[2] but he himself recorded, "I am industrious and regular, and enjoy my jurisprudence ... and am only now beginning to appreciate its true worth".[12] Nonetheless reading and playing the piano occupied a good deal of his time, and he developed expensive tastes for champagne and cigars.[8] Musically, he discovered the works of Franz Schubert, whose death in November 1828 caused Schumann to cry all night.[8] The leading piano teacher in Leipzig was Friedrich Wieck, who recognised Schumann's talent and accepted him as a pupil.[13]

After a year in Leipzig Schumann convinced his mother that he should move to the University of Heidelberg which, unlike Leipzig, offered courses in Roman, ecclesiastical and international law (as well as reuniting Schumann with his close friend Eduard Röller who was a student there).[14] After matriculating at the university on 30 July 1829 he travelled in Switzerland and Italy from late August to late October. He was greatly taken with Rossini's operas and the bel canto of the soprano Giuditta Pasta; he wrote to Wieck, "one can have no notion of Italian music without hearing it under Italian skies".[2] Another influence on him was hearing the violin virtuoso Niccolò Paganini play in Frankfurt in April 1830.[15] In the words of one biographer, "The easy-going discipline at Heidelberg University helped the world to lose a bad lawyer and to gain a great musician".[16] Finally deciding in favour of music rather than the law as a career he wrote to his mother on 30 July 1830 telling her how he saw his future: "My entire life has been a twenty-year struggle between poetry and prose, or call it music and law".[17] He persuaded her to ask Wieck for an objective assessment of his musical potential. Wieck's verdict was that with the necessary hard work Schumann could become a leading pianist within three years. A six-month trial period was agreed.[18]

1830s[edit]

musical score for solo piano piece
Opening of Schumann's Op. 1, the Abegg Variations

Later in 1830 Schumann published his Op. 1, a set of piano variations on a theme based on the name of its supposed dedicatee, Countess Pauline von Abegg (who was almost certainly a product of Schumann's imagination).[19] The notes A-B-E-G-G, played in waltz tempo, make up the theme on which the variations are based.[20] The use of a musical cipher became a recurrent characteristic of Schumann's later music.[8] In 1831 he began lessons in harmony and counterpoint with Heinrich Dorn, musical director of the Saxon court theatre,[21] and in 1832 he published his Op. 2, Papillons (Butterflies) for piano, a programmatic piece depicting twin brothers – one a poetic dreamer, the other a worldly realist – both in love with the same woman at a masked ball.[22] Schumann had by now come to regard himself as having two distinct sides to his personality and art: he dubbed his introspective, pensive self "Eusebius" and the impetuous and dynamic alter ego "Florestan".[23]

Front page of text of newspaper in old style Gothic German type
Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik, edited by Schumann from 1835

Schumann's pianistic ambitions were ended by a growing stiffness in the middle finger of his right hand. The early symptoms had come while he was still a student at Heidelberg, and the cause is uncertain.[24][n 2] He tried all the treatments then in vogue including allopathy, homeopathy, and electric therapy, but without success.[25] The condition had the advantage of exempting him from compulsory military service – he could not fire a rifle[25] – but by 1832 he recognised that a career as a virtuoso pianist was impossible and he shifted his main focus to composition. He completed further sets of small piano pieces and the first movement of a symphony (too thinly orchestrated according to Wieck).[2] An additional activity was journalism. From March 1834, along with Wieck and others, he was on the editorial board of a new music magazine, Neue Leipziger Zeitschrift für Musik (New Leipzig Music Magazine), which was reconstituted under his sole editorship in January 1835 as the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik.[2] Hall writes that it took "a thoughtful and progressive line on the new music of the day".[26] Among the contributors were friends and colleagues of Schumann, writing under pen names: he included them in his Davidsbündler (League of David) – a band of fighters for musical truth who warred with the Philistines – a product of the composer's imagination in which, blurring the boundaries of imagination and reality, he included his musical friends.[26]

During 1835 Schumann met three musicians whom he regarded with particular respect: Mendelssohn, Moscheles and Chopin.[27] Early in that year he completed two substantial compositions: Carnaval, Op.9 and the Symphonic Studies, Op.13. These works grew out of his romantic relationship with Ernestine von Fricken, a fellow pupil of Wieck. The musical themes of Carnaval derive from the name of her home town, Asch. The Symphonic Studies are based on a melody said to be by Ernestine's father, Baron von Fricken, an amateur flautist.[2] Schumann and Ernestine became secretly engaged, but in the view of the musical scholar Joan Chissell, during 1835 Schumann gradually realised that Ernestine's personality was not as interesting as he first thought, and this, together with his discovery that she was an illegitimate, impecunious, adopted daughter of Fricken, brought the affair to a gradual end.[28]

Young white woman, in white gown, with elaborately arranged dark hair, seated and looking towards the artist
Clara Wieck in 1832

Schumann felt a growing attraction to Wieck's daughter, the sixteen-year-old Clara. She was her father's star pupil, a piano virtuoso with a growing reputation and emotionally mature beyond her years.[29] According to Chissell, her concerto debut at the Leipzig Gewandhaus on 9 November 1835, with Felix Mendelssohn conducting, "set the seal on all her earlier successes, and there was now no doubting that a great future lay before her as a pianist".[29] Schumann had watched her career approvingly since she was nine, but only now fell in love with her. His feelings were reciprocated: they declared their love to each other in January 1836.[30] Schumann expected that Wieck would welcome the proposed marriage, but he was mistaken: Wieck refused his consent, fearing that Schumann would be unable to provide for his daughter, that she would have to abandon her career, and that she would be legally required to relinquish her inheritance to her husband.[31] It took a series of acrimonious legal actions over the next four years for Schumann to obtain a court ruling that he and Clara were free to marry without her father's consent.[2]

Professionally the later years of the 1830s were marked by an abortive attempt by Schumann to establish himself in Vienna, and the beginning of an important friendship with Mendelssohn, who was by then based in Leipzig, conducting the Gewandhaus Orchestra and also by an increasing output of piano works including Kreisleriana (1837) Kinderszenen (Scenes from Childhood, 1838) and Faschingsschwank aus Wien (Carnival Prank from Vienna, 1839).[26] In 1838 Schumann visited Schubert's brother Ferdinand and discovered several manuscripts including that of the Great C major Symphony.[32] Ferdinand allowed him to take a copy away and Schumann arranged for the work's world premiere, conducted by Mendelssohn in Leipzig on 21 March 1839.[33] In the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik Schumann wrote enthusiastically about the work and described its "himmlische Länge" – its "heavenly length" – a phrase that has become common currency in later analyses of the symphony.[34]

1840s[edit]

Schumann and Clara finally married on 12 September 1840, the day before her twenty-first birthday.[35] Hall writes that marriage gave Schumann "the emotional and domestic stability on which his subsequent achievements were founded".[26] Clara made some sacrifices in marrying Schumann: as a pianist of international reputation she was the better-known of the two but her career was continually interrupted by motherhood of their seven children. She inspired Schumann in his composing career, encouraging him to extend his range as a composer beyond solo piano works.[26] During 1840 Schumann turned his attention to song, producing more than half his total output of Lieder, including the cycles Myrthen ("Myrtles", a wedding present for Clara), Frauenliebe und Leben ("Woman's Love and Life"), Dichterliebe ("Poet's Love"), and settings of words by Joseph von Eichendorff and Heinrich Heine and others.[26]

In 1841 Schumann focused on orchestral music. On 31 March his First Symphony, The Spring, was premiered by Mendelssohn at a concert in the Gewandhaus at which Clara played Chopin's Second Piano Concerto and some of Schumann's works for solo piano.[36] Then came the Overture, Scherzo and Finale, the Phantasie for piano and orchestra (which later became the first movement of the Piano Concerto) and a new symphony (eventually published as the Fourth, in D minor). Clara gave birth to a daughter in September, the first of the Schumanns' seven children to survive.[26]

commemorative silver-coloured medallion showing left profiles of Clara and Robert Schumann
Medallion commemorating the Schumanns, 1846

The following year Schumann turned his attention to chamber music. He studied works by Haydn and Mozart, despite an ambiguous attitude to the former: "Today it is impossible to learn anything new from him. He is like a familiar friend of the house whom all greet with pleasure and with esteem, but who has ceased to arouse any particular interest".[37] He was stronger in his praise of Mozart: "Serenity, repose, grace, the characteristics of the antique works of art, are also those of Mozart's school. The Greeks gave to 'The Thunderer' a radiant expression, and radiantly does Mozart launch his lightnings".[38] After his studies Schumann produced three string quartets, a Piano Quintet and a Piano Quartet.[26]

1843 began with a setback to Schumann's career: he had a severe and debilitating mental crisis. This was not the first such attack, although it was the worst so far. Hall writes that he had been subject to similar attacks at intervals over a long period, and speculates that the condition may have been congenital, affecting Schumann's father and younger sister.[26] Later in the year, Schumann, having recovered, completed a successful secular oratorio, Das Paradies und die Peri (Paradise and the Peri), based on an oriental poem by Thomas Moore. It was premiered at the Gewandhaus on 4 December and repeat performances followed at Dresden on 23 December, Berlin early the following year, and in London in June 1856, when Schumann's friend William Sterndale Bennett conducted a performance given by the Philharmonic Society before Queen Victoria and the Prince Consort.[39] Although neglected after Schumann's death it remained popular throughout his lifetime and brought his name to international attention.[26] During 1843 Mendelssohn invited him to teach piano and composition at the new Leipzig Conservatory,[40] and Wieck approached him with an offer of reconciliation.[25] Schumann gladly accepted both, although the resumed relationship with his father-in-law remained polite rather than close.[25]

Signed engraving of middle-aged white couple seated and looking towards the camera. The man is clean-shaven; the woman's dark hair is tied in a bun
Robert and Clara Schumann in 1847, lithograph with a personal dedication

In 1844 Clara embarked on a concert tour of Russia; Schumann joined her. It was an artistic and financial success, and they were both immensely impressed by Saint Petersburg and Moscow,[2][41] but the tour was arduous and by the end Schumann was in a poor state both physically and mentally.[2] After he and Clara returned to Leipzig in late May he sold the Neue Zeitschrift, and in December the family moved to Dresden. Schumann had been passed over for the conductorship of the Leipzig Gewandhaus in succession to Mendelssohn, and he thought that Dresden, with a thriving opera house, might be the place where he could, as he now wished, become an operatic composer. His health remained poor. His doctor in Dresden reported complaints "from insomnia, general weakness, auditory disturbances, tremors, and chills in the feet, to a whole range of phobias".[42]

From the beginning of 1845 Schumann's health began to improve; he and Clara studied counterpoint together and both produced contrapuntal works for the piano. He added a slow movement and finale to the 1841 Phantasie for piano and orchestra, to create his Piano Concerto, Op 54.[43] The following year he worked on what was to be published as his Second Symphony, Op. 61. Progress on the work was slow, interrupted by further bouts of ill health.[44] When the symphony was complete he began work on his opera, Genoveva, which was not completed until August 1848.[45]

Between 24 November 1846 and 4 February 1847 the Schumanns toured in Vienna, Berlin and other cities. The Viennese leg of the tour was not a success. The performance of Schumann's First Symphony and Piano Concerto at the Musikverein on 1 January 1847 attracted a sparse and unenthusiastic audience, but in Berlin the performance of Das Paradies und die Peri was well received, and the tour gave Schumann the chance to see numerous operatic productions. In the words of Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, "A regular if not always approving member of the audience at performances of works by Donizetti, Rossini, Meyerbeer, Halévy and Flotow, he registered his 'desire to write operas' in his travel diary".[2] The Schumanns suffered several blows during 1847, including the death of their first son, Emil, born the year before, and the deaths of their friends Felix and Fanny Mendelssohn.[32] A second son, Ludwig, and a third, Ferdinand, were born in 1848 and 1849.[32]

1850s[edit]

early photograph of a middle-aged white man, clean shaven, seated, leaning on the hand of his right arm, of which the elbow is on the adjacent table
Schumann in an 1850 daguerreotype

Genoveva, a four-act opera based on the medieval legend of Genevieve of Brabant, was premiered in Leipzig, conducted by the composer, in June 1850. There were two further performances immediately afterwards, but the piece was not the success Schumann had been hoping for. In a 2005 study of the composer, Eric Frederick Jensen attributes this to Schumann's operatic style: "not tuneful and simplistic enough for the majority, not 'progressive' enough for the Wagnerians".[46] Liszt, who was in the first-night audience, revived Genoveva at Weimar in 1855 – the only other production of the opera in Schumann's lifetime.[47] Since then, according to Kobbé's Opera Book, despite occasional revivals Genoveva has remained "far from even the edge of the repertory".[48]

With a large family to support, Schumann sought financial security and with the support of his wife he accepted a post as director of music at Düsseldorf in April 1850. Hall comments that in retrospect it can be seen that Schumann was fundamentally unsuited for the post: "His diffidence in social situations, allied to mental instability, ensured that initially warm relations with local musicians gradually deteriorated to the point where his removal became a necessity in 1853".[49] During 1850 Schumann composed two substantial late works – the Third (Rhenish) Symphony and the Cello Concerto.[50] He continued to compose prolifically, and reworked some of his earlier works, including the D minor symphony from 1841, published as his Fourth Symphony (1851) and the 1835 Symphonic Studies (1852).[50]

In 1853 the twenty-year-old Johannes Brahms called on Schumann with a letter of introduction from their mutual friend the violinist Joseph Joachim. When Brahms began playing one of his piano sonatas, Schumann excitedly rushed out of the room and came back leading his wife by the hand, saying "Now, my dear Clara, you will hear such music as you never heard before; and you, young man, play the work from the beginning".[51] Schumann was so impressed that he wrote an article – his last – for the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik titled "Neue Bahnen" (New Paths), extolling Brahms as a musician who was destined "to give expression to his times in ideal fashion".[52]

Hall writes that Brahms proved "a personal tower of strength to Clara during the difficult days ahead": in early 1854 Schumann's health deteriorated drastically. On 27 February he attempted suicide by throwing himself into the Rhine.[49] He was rescued by fishermen, and at his own request he was admitted to a private sanatorium at Endenich, near Bonn, on 4 March. He remained there for more than two years, gradually deteriorating, with intermittent intervals of lucidity during which he wrote and received letters and sometimes essayed some composition.[2] The director of the sanatorium held that direct contact between patients and relatives was likely to distress all concerned and reduce the chances of recovery. Friends, including Brahms and Joachim, were permitted to visit Schumann but Clara did not see her husband until nearly two and a half years into his confinement, and only two days before his death.[2] Schumann died at the sanatorium aged 46 on 29 July 1856, the cause of death being recorded as pneumonia.[53][n 3]

Works[edit]

Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians (2001) begins its entry on Schumann: "[G]reat German composer of surpassing imaginative power whose music expressed the deepest spirit of the Romantic era", and concludes: "As both man and musician, Schumann is recognized as the quintessential artist of the Romantic era in German music. He was a master of lyric expression and dramatic power, perhaps best revealed in his outstanding piano music and songs ..."[59][60]

In the late nineteenth century and most of the twentieth it was widely held that the music of Schumann's later years was less inspired than his earlier works (up to about the mid-1840s), and that this was due to his declining health. More recently his later works have been viewed more favourably; Hall suggests that this is because they are now played more often in concert, are widely available on record, and have "the beneficial effects of period performance practice as it has come to be applied to mid-19th-century music".[26]

Solo piano[edit]

Although Schumann's works in some other musical genres have had a mixed critical reception, both during his lifetime and since, there is widespread agreement about the high quality of his solo piano music.[8] In his youth the classical tradition of Bach, Mozart and Beethoven was temporarily eclipsed by a fashion for the flamboyant showpieces of composers such as Ignaz Moscheles. Schumann's first published work, the Abegg Variations, is in that style.[2] But he revered the earlier German masters, and in his three piano sonatas (composed between 1830 and 1836) and the Fantasie in C (1836) he showed his respect for the earlier German tradition.[61] Absolute music such as those works are in the minority in his piano compositions, of which many are what Hall calls "character pieces with fanciful names".[26]

Schumann's most characteristic form in his piano music is the cycle of short, interrelated pieces, often programmatic, such as Carnaval, Fantasiestücke, Kreisleriana, Kinderszenen and Waldszenen. J. A. Fuller Maitland wrote of the first of these, "Of all the pianoforte works [it] is perhaps the most popular; its wonderful animation and never-ending variety ensure the production of its full effect, and its great and various difficulties make it the best possible test of a pianist's skill and versatility".[62] Schumann continually inserted into his piano works veiled allusions to himself and others – particularly Clara – in the form of ciphers and musical quotations.[2] His self-references include both the "Florestan" and the "Eusebius" elements he identified in himself.[63]

Although some of his music is technically challenging for the pianist Schumann also wrote simpler pieces for young players, the best-known of which are his Album for the Young (1848) and Three Sonatas for Young People (1853).[8] He also wrote some undemanding music with an eye to commercial sales, including the Blumenstück (Flower Piece) and Arabeske (both 1839), which he privately considered "feeble and intended for the ladies".[64]

Songs[edit]

The authors of The Record Guide describe Schumann as "one of the four supreme masters of the German Lied", alongside Schubert, Brahms and Hugo Wolf.[65] He wrote more than 300 songs for voice and piano.[66] They are known for the quality of the texts he set: Hall comments that the composer's youthful appreciation of literature was constantly renewed in adult life.[67] Although Schumann greatly admired Goethe and Schiller and set a few of their verses, his favoured poets for lyrics were the later romantics such as Heine, Eichendorff and Mörike.[65]

Among the best-known of the songs are those in four cycles composed in 1840 – a year Schumann called his Liederjahr (year of song).[68] These are Dichterliebe (Poet's Love) comprising sixteen songs with words by Heine; Frauenliebe und Leben (Woman's Love and Life), eight songs setting poems by Adelbert von Chamisso; and two sets simply titled Liederkreis – German for "Song Cycle" – the Op. 24 set, consisting of nine Heine settings and the Op. 39 set of twelve settings of poems by Eichendorff.[2] Also from 1840 is the set Schumann wrote as a wedding present to Clara, Myrthen (Myrtles – traditionally part of a bride's wedding bouquet),[69] which the composer called a song cycle, although with twenty-six songs with lyrics from ten different writers this set is a less unified cycle than the others. In a study of Schumann's songs Eric Sams suggests that even here there is a unifying theme, namely the composer himself.[70]

Musical score with line for voice and two lines below for piano accompaniment
Opening of "Du Ring am meinen Finger" from Frauenliebe und Leben

Although during the twentieth century it became common practice to perform these cycles as a whole, in Schumann's time and beyond it was usual to extract individual songs for performance in recitals. The first documented public performance of a complete Schumann song cycle was not until 1861, five years after the composer's death; the baritone Julius Stockhausen sang Dichterliebe with Brahms at the piano.[71] Stockhausen also gave the first complete performances of Frauenliebe und Leben and the Op. 24 Liederkreis.[71]

After his Liederjahr Schumann returned in earnest to writing songs after a break of several years. Hall describes the the variety of the songs as immense, and comments that some of the later songs are entirely different in mood from the composer's earlier Romantic settings. Schumann's literary sensibilities led him to create in his songs an equal partnership between words and music unprecedented in the German Lied.[67] His affinity with the piano is heard in his accompaniments to his songs, notably in their preludes and postludes, the latter often summing up what has been heard in the song.[67]

Orchestral[edit]

page of full orchestral score
Opening of Schumann's Third Symphony, the "Rhenish"

Schumann acknowledged that he found orchestration a difficult art to master, and many analysts have criticised his orchestral writing.[2] Conductors including Gustav Mahler, Max Reger, Otto Klemperer and George Szell have made changes to the instrumentation before conducting his orchestral music.[72] The music scholar Julius Harrison considers such alterations fruitless: "the essence of Schumann's warmly vibrant music resides in its forthright romantic appeal with all those personal traits, lovable characteristic and faults" that make up Schumann's artistic character.[73] Hall comments that a trend towards performing the orchestral music with smaller forces than the modern symphony orchestra and using historically informed performance practice has helped Schumann's orchestration appear in a more favourable light.[49]

After the successful premiere of the first of his four symphonies (1841) the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung described it as "well and fluently written ... also, for the most part, knowledgeably, tastefully, and often quite successfully and effectively orchestrated",[74] although a later critic called it "inflated piano music with mainly routine orchestration".[75] Later in the year a second symphony was premiered and was less enthusiastically received. Schumann revised it ten years later and published it as his Fourth Symphony although Brahms preferred the original, more lightly-scored version.[76] The latter is occasionally performed and has been recorded, but the revised 1851 score is more usually played.[77] The work now called the Second Symphony (1846) is structurally the most formal of the four and is influenced by Beethoven and Schubert.[78] The Third Symphony (1851), known as the Rhenish, is, unusually for a symphony of its day, in five movements, and is the composer's nearest approach to pictorial symphonic music, with movements depicting a solemn religious ceremony in Cologne Cathedral and outdoor merrymaking of Rhinelanders.[79]

Schumann experimented with unconventional symphonic forms in 1841 in his Overture, Scherzo and Finale, Op. 52, sometimes described as "a symphony without a slow movement".[80] Its unorthodox structure may have made it less appealing and it is not often performed.[81] Schumann composed six overtures, three of them for theatrical performance, preceding Byron's Manfred (1852), Goethe's Faust (1853) and his own Genoveva. The other three were stand-alone concert works inspired by by Schiller (The Bride of Messina), Shakespeare (Julius Caesar) and Goethe (Hermann and Dorothea).[82]

The Piano Concerto (1845) quickly became and has remained one of the most popular of Romantic piano concertos.[83] In the mid-twentieth century, when the symphonies were less well regarded than they later became, the concerto was described in The Record Guide as "the one large-scale work of Schumann's which is by general consent an entire success".[84] The pianist Susan Tomes comments, "In the era of recording it has often been paired with Grieg's Piano Concerto (also in A minor) which clearly shows the influence of Schumann's".[83] The first movement pitches against each other the forthright Florestan and dreamy Eusebius elements in Schumann's artistic nature – the vigorous opening bars succeeded by the wistful A minor theme that enters in the fourth bar.[83] No other concerto or concertante work by Schumann has approached the popularity of the piano concerto, but the Concert Piece for Four Horns and Orchestra (1849) and the Cello Concerto (1850) remain in the concert repertoire and are well represented on record.[85] The late Violin Concerto (1853) is less often heard but has received several recordings.[86]

Chamber[edit]

Schumann composed a substantial quantity of chamber pieces, of which the best-known and most performed are the Piano Quintet in E major, Op. 44, the Piano Quartet in the same key (both 1842) and three piano trios, the first and second from 1847 and the third from 1851. The quintet became a template for other nineteenth-century composers. Schumann's writing for piano and string quartet – two violins, one viola and one cello – was in contrast with earlier piano quintets with different combinations of instruments, such as Schubert's Trout Quintet (1819). Schumann's ensemble became the template for later composers including Brahms, Franck, Fauré, Dvořák and Elgar.[87]

In addition to his chamber works for what were or were becoming standard combinations of instruments, Schumann wrote for some unusual ensembles and was often flexible about which instruments a work called for: in his Adagio and Allegro, Op. 70 the pianist may, according to the composer, be joined by either a horn, a violin or a cello, and in the Fantasiestücke, Op. 73 the pianist may be duetting with a clarinet, violin or cello.[2] His Andante and Variations (1843) for two pianos, two cellos and a horn (see sound clips, right) later became a piece for just the pianos.[2]

Recordings[edit]

All Schumann's major works and most of the minor ones have been recorded. From the 1920s his music has had a prominent place in the catalogues. In the 1920s Hans Pfitzner recorded the symphonies, and other early recordings were conducted by Georges Enescu and Arturo Toscanini. Large-scale performances with modern symphony orchestras have been recorded under conductors including Herbert von Karajan, Wolfgang Sawallisch and Rafael Kubelik, and from the mid-1990s smaller ensembles such as the Orchestre des Champs-Élysées with Philippe Herreweghe and the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique with John Eliot Gardiner have recorded historically informed readings of Schumann's orchestral music.

The songs featured in the recorded repertoire from the early days of the gramophone, with performances by singers such as Elisabeth Schumann (no relation to the composer), Friedrich Schorr, Alexander Kipnis and Richard Tauber, followed in a later generation by Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. Although in 1955 the authors of The Record Guide lamented the prevailing scarcity of Schumann's songs on record,[88] by the early twenty-first century every one of them was available on disc. A complete set was published in 2010 with the songs in chronological order of composition; the pianist Graham Johnson partnered a range of singers including Ian Bostridge, Simon Keenlyside, Felicity Lott, Christopher Maltman, Ann Murray and Christine Schäfer.[66] Pianists for other recordings of Schumann Lieder have included Gerald Moore, Dalton Baldwin, Erik Werba, Jörg Demus, Geoffrey Parsons, and more recently Roger Vignoles, Irwin Gage and Ulrich Eisenlohr.[89]

Schumann's music has remained core repertoire for pianists; there have been numerous recordings of major works played by performers from Sergei Rachmaninoff, Alfred Cortot, Myra Hess and Walter Gieseking to Alfred Brendel, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Martha Argerich, Stephen Hough, Arcadi Volodos and Lang Lang.[90] The chamber works are also well represented in the recording catalogues. In 2023 Gramophone magazine singled out among recent issues recordings of the Piano Quintet by Leif Ove Andsnes and the Artemis Quartet, String Quartets 1 and 3 by the Zehetmair Quartet and the Piano Trios by Andsnes pf Christian Tetzlaff and Tanja Tetzlaff.[91]

Schumann's only opera, Genoveva has been recorded. A 1996 complete set conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt with Ruth Ziesak in the title role followed an earlier recording under Gerd Albrecht.[92] Recordings of Das Paradies und die Peri include sets conducted by Gardiner[93] and Sir Simon Rattle.[94]

Room in old house with grand piano in the centre
Schumann's piano in the museum in the house in which he was born in Zwickau

Legacy[edit]

Schumann had considerable influence in the nineteenth century and beyond. Apart from Brahms, other composers influenced by him included French composers such as Fauré and Messager, who made a joint pilgrimage to his tomb in 1879,[95] Other French composers including Bizet, Widor, Debussy and Ravel, in common with the developers of symbolism, were influenced by Schumann.[2] Elsewhere in Europe, Elgar called Schumann "my ideal",[96] and as noted above, Grieg's Piano Concerto is heavily influenced by Schumann's.[83] Grieg wrote that Schumann's songs deserved to be recognised as "major contributions to world literature",[2] and Schumann was a major influence on the Russian school of composers, including Anton Rubinstein and Tchaikovsky.[97] The latter, though critical of the orchestration, said that Schumann's symphonic works, as well as the chamber music and piano pieces, revealed "a whole new world of musical forms".[2] Others whose music shows Schumann's influence include Mahler, Richard Strauss and Schoenberg.[98]

Schumann's birthplace in Zwickau is preserved as a museum in his honour. It hosts chamber concerts and is the focus of an annual festival commemorating him.[99]

Notes, references and sources[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b Many sources from the 19th century onwards state that Schumann had the middle name Alexander,[1] but according to the 2001 edition of Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians and a 2005 biography by Eric Frederick Jensen there is no evidence that he had a middle name and it is possibly a misreading of his teenage pseudonym "Skülander". His birth and death certificates and all other existing official documents give "Robert Schumann" as his only names.[2][3]
  2. ^ Wieck believed the damage was done by Schumann's use of a chiroplast – a finger-stretching device then favoured by pianists; the biographer Eric Sams has theorised that the affliction was caused by mercury poisoning as a side effect of treatment for syphilis, a hypothesis subsequently discounted by neurologists.[24]
  3. ^ As with the hand ailment earlier in his life, Schumann's decline and death have been the subject of much conjecture. In Grove, John Daverio and Eric Sams suggest tertiary syphilis, long dormant, as the cause, and the official certification as death from pneumonia as intended to spare Clara's feelings.[2] This view is given varying degrees of credence by Joan Chissell, Alan Walker and Tim Dowley,[54][55][56] and is not endorsed by Eric Frederick Jensen and Martin Geck, who regard the evidence for syphilis as unconvincing.[57] [58]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Liliencron, p. 44; Spitta, p. 384; Slonimsky and Kuhn, p. 3234; and Wolff p. 1702
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Daverio, John and Eric Sams. "Schumann, Robert", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001 (subscription required)
  3. ^ Jensen, p. 2
  4. ^ a b c Perrey, Schumann's lives, p. 6
  5. ^ Dowley, p. 7
  6. ^ Chissell, p. 3
  7. ^ Geck, p. 8
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Hall, p. 1125
  9. ^ Wasielewski, p. 11
  10. ^ Geck, p. 49
  11. ^ Chissell, p. 4
  12. ^ Chissell, p. 16
  13. ^ Jensen, p. 22
  14. ^ Dowley, p. 27
  15. ^ Taylor, p. 58
  16. ^ "Robert Schumann", The Musical Times, Vol. 51, No. 809 (1 July 1910), pp. 426
  17. ^ Jensen, p. 34
  18. ^ Jensen, p. 37
  19. ^ Geck, p. 62; and Jensen, p. 97
  20. ^ Taylor, p. 72
  21. ^ Jensen, p. 64
  22. ^ Taylor, p. 74
  23. ^ Dowley, p. 46
  24. ^ a b Ostwald, pp. 23 and 25
  25. ^ a b c d Slonimsky and Kuhn, pp. 3234–3235
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Hall, p. 1126
  27. ^ Perrey, Chronology, p. xiv
  28. ^ Chissell, p. 36
  29. ^ a b Chissell, p. 37
  30. ^ Chissell, p. 38
  31. ^ Geck, p. 98
  32. ^ a b c Perrey, Chronology, p. xv
  33. ^ Marston, p. 51
  34. ^ Maintz, p. 100; and Marston, p. 51
  35. ^ Dowley, p. 66
  36. ^ Dowley, p. 74
  37. ^ Schumann, p. 94
  38. ^ Schumann, pp. 94–95
  39. ^ Browne Conor. "Robert Schumann's Das Paradies und die Peri and its early Performances", Thomas Moore in Europe, Queen’s University Belfast, 31 May 2017; and "Philharmonic Concerts", The Times, 24 June 1856, p. 12
  40. ^ Perrey, Chronology, p. xvi
  41. ^ Daverio, p. 286
  42. ^ Daverio, p. 299
  43. ^ Daverio, p. 305
  44. ^ Daverio, p. 298
  45. ^ Walker, p. 93
  46. ^ Jensen, p. 235
  47. ^ Jensen, pp. 316–317
  48. ^ Harewood, pp. 718–719
  49. ^ a b c Hall, p. 1127
  50. ^ a b Perrey, Chronology, p. xvii
  51. ^ Walker, p. 110
  52. ^ Schumann, pp. 252–254
  53. ^ Daverio, p. 568
  54. ^ Chissell, p. 77
  55. ^ Walker, p. 117
  56. ^ Dowley, p. 117
  57. ^ Jensen, p. 329
  58. ^ Geck, p. 251
  59. ^ Slonimsky and Kuhn, p. 3234
  60. ^ Slonimsky and Kuhn, p. 3236
  61. ^ Solomon, pp. 41–42
  62. ^ Fuller Maitland, p. 52
  63. ^ Chissell, p. 88
  64. ^ Jensen, p. 170
  65. ^ a b Sackville-West and Shawe-Taylor, p. 686
  66. ^ a b Johnson, pp. 5–24
  67. ^ a b c Hall, pp. 1126–1127
  68. ^ Ferris, p. 251
  69. ^ Finson (2007), p. 21
  70. ^ Sams, p. 50
  71. ^ a b Reich p. 222
  72. ^ Heyworth, p. 36; Kapp, p. 239; and "Schumann Symphonies; Manfred – Overture", Gramophone, February 1997
  73. ^ Harrison, p. 249
  74. ^ Finson (1989), p. 1
  75. ^ Abraham, Gerald, quoted in Burnham, p. 152
  76. ^ Harrison, p. 247
  77. ^ March, et al, pp. 1139–1140
  78. ^ Harrison, pp. 252–253
  79. ^ Harrison, p. 255
  80. ^ Burnham, p. 157; and Abraham, p. 53
  81. ^ Burnham, p. 158
  82. ^ Burnham, pp. 163–164
  83. ^ a b c d Tomes, p. 126
  84. ^ Sackville-West and Shawe-Taylor, p. 678
  85. ^ March et al, pp. 1134, 1138 and 1140
  86. ^ March et al, p. 1137
  87. ^ "List of Compositions for Piano Quintet", International Music Score Library Project. Retrieved 17 May 2024
  88. ^ Sackville-West and Shawe-Taylor, p. 687
  89. ^ March et al, pp. 1147–1149; and "Robert Schumann", Naxos Music Library. Retrieved 17 May 2024 (subscription required)
  90. ^ March et al, pp. 1144–1147; and "Robert Schumann", Naxos Music Library. Retrieved 17 May 2024 (subscription required)
  91. ^ "Robert Schumann: 12 Gramophone Award-winning recordings", Gramophone, 15 May 2023
  92. ^ "Schumann Genoveva", Gramophone, January 1998
  93. ^ March et al, p. 1150
  94. ^ "Schumann: Das Paradies und die Peri", London Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 17 May 2024
  95. ^ Nectoux, p. 277
  96. ^ Moore, p. 97
  97. ^ Kapp, p. 237
  98. ^ Kapp, p. 245
  99. ^ Robert Schumann House. Retrieved 16 May 2024

Sources[edit]

External links[edit]