Posted on 03/23/2015 4:53:40 PM PDT by mojito
Truly, Beethoven remarked in 1827, in Schubert there dwells a divine spark. Franz Schubert himself worshiped the older composer and was a torchbearer at his funeral. In the following year, he asked for one of Beethovens string quartets to be played at his own sickbed, days, if not hours, before he died at the age of thirty-one. Many of Schuberts works contain homages to Beethoven: the Fate theme of Beethovens Fifth Symphony is the animating motif of Schuberts terrifying song Der Zwerg (The Dwarf). His Auf dem Strom (On the River, for voice, piano, and horn) takes up the theme of the Eroicas death march. And the unusual tempo marking of the first song of the Winterreise cycle (Mässig, in gehender Bewegung, moderate, at walking pace), written in the year of Beethovens death, might be seen as a valedictory reference to the latters piano sonata Les Adieux of 18091810.
For Schuberts contemporaries, Beethoven was the colossus, a figure whose titanic energy and sublime originality went on to define the cult of the hero-musician in the nineteenth century. His deafness added a strain of tragedy. And Beethoven could look the part, his image in paint, print, and sculpture portraying the rugged aesthetic adventurer. Schubert, on the other hand, was under five feet tall, bespectacled, and pudgy, looking not like a god of music but like a harried Viennese clerk with a head-cold....
(Excerpt) Read more at nybooks.com ...
You said it. I have a version with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. Beautiful.
I'm curious as to where and how the Lied as a form started. In form, and structure, and execution, it is so different from the chanson and madrigal with which I am more familiar (I am firmly backward-looking. Mahler is an anomaly.)
Schubert is in my Top 5 as I am more of a “K” Man than a “D” Man.
It started with Mozart. After him, a host of minor composers from northern German lands set poetry to music, but they were second raters. It was Schubert, under the tutelage of Salieri, who added an Italian style to the German lied.
Thanks. That makes sense. Mozart has a good deal of Italian in him, too.
Thank you! That was beautiful.
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