The ''Schicksalslied'' (''Song of Destiny''),
Op. 54, is an orchestrally accompanied choral setting of a poem written by
Friedrich Hölderlin and is one of several major choral works written by
Johannes Brahms
Johannes Brahms (; ; 7 May 1833 – 3 April 1897) was a German composer, virtuoso pianist, and conductor of the mid-Romantic period (music), Romantic period. His music is noted for its rhythmic vitality and freer treatment of dissonance, oft ...
.
History
Brahms began the work in the summer of 1868 at
Wilhelmshaven
Wilhelmshaven (, ''Wilhelm's Harbour''; Northern Low Saxon: ''Willemshaven'') is a coastal town in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is situated on the western side of the Jade Bight, a bay of the North Sea, and has a population of 76,089. Wilhelmsha ...
, but it was not completed until May 1871.
The delay was primarily due to Brahms's hesitation over how the piece should end. Hesitant to make a decision, he began work on the ''
Alto Rhapsody'', Op. 53, which was completed in 1869 and first performed in 1870.
''Schicksalslied'' is considered to be one of Brahms's best choral works along with
''Ein deutsches Requiem''. In fact, argues in his book on Brahms, "Had Brahms never written anything but this one work, it would alone have sufficed to rank him with the best masters."
The premiere performance of ''Schicksalslied'' was given on 18 October 1871 in
Karlsruhe
Karlsruhe ( ; ; ; South Franconian German, South Franconian: ''Kallsruh'') is the List of cities in Baden-Württemberg by population, third-largest city of the States of Germany, German state of Baden-Württemberg, after its capital Stuttgart a ...
, under the direction of
Hermann Levi.
One of the shortest of Brahms's major choral works, a typical performance lasts around 15 to 16 minutes.
[, Bach-Collegium Stuttgart, Gächinger Kantorei. Helmuth Rilling. Hänssler Classic CD98.122]
The autograph manuscript of the work is preserved in the
Library of Congress
The Library of Congress (LOC) is a research library in Washington, D.C., serving as the library and research service for the United States Congress and the ''de facto'' national library of the United States. It also administers Copyright law o ...
.
Instrumentation
The piece is scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, strings, and a
four-part chorus.
[See score at IMSLP]
Form
The work is in three movements, marked as follows:
Text
Ihr wandelt droben im Licht
Auf weichem Boden selige Genien!
Glänzende Götterlüfte
Rühren Euch leicht,
Wie die Finger der Künstlerin
Heilige Saiten.
Schicksallos, wie der Schlafende
Säugling, atmen die Himmlischen;
Keusch bewahrt,
In bescheidener Knospe
Blühet ewig
Ihnen der Geist,
Und die seligen Augen
Blicken in stiller
Ewiger Klarheit.
Doch uns ist gegeben
Auf keiner Stätte zu ruh'n;
Es schwinden, es fallen
Die leidenden Menschen
Blindlings von einer
Stunde zur andern,
Wie Wasser von Klippe
Zu Klippe geworfen
Jahrlang in's Ungewisse hinab.
Ye wander gladly in light
Through goodly mansions, dwellers in Spiritland!
Luminous heaven-breezes
Touching you soft,
Like as fingers when skillfully
Wakening harp-strings.
Fearlessly, like the slumbering
Infant, abide the Beatified;
Pure retained,
Like unopened blossoms,
Flowering ever,
Joyful their soul
And their heavenly vision
Gifted with placid
Never-ceasing clearness.
To us is allotted
No restful haven to find;
They falter, they perish,
Poor suffering mortals
Blindly as moment
Follows to moment,
Like water from mountain
to mountain impelled,
Destined to disappearance below.
History
Brahms began work on the ''Schicksalslied'' in the summer of 1868 while visiting his good friend
Albert Dietrich in Wilhelmshaven.
[ Walter Niemann. ''Brahms''. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1929.] It was in Dietrich's personal library that Brahms discovered "''Hyperions Schicksalslied''", from Hölderlin's novel ''
Hyperion'', in a book of Hölderlin's poetry. Dietrich recalls in his writing that Brahms first received the inspiration for the piece while watching the sea:
In the summer Brahms again came o Wilhelmshaven to make a few excursions in the neighbourhood with us and the Reinthalers. One morning we went together to Wilhelmshaven, for Brahms was interested in seeing the magnificent naval port. On the way there, our friend, who was usually so lively, was quiet and grave. He described how early that morning (he was always an early riser), he had found Hölderlin's poems in the bookcase and had been deeply impressed by the ''Schicksalslied''. Later on, after spending a long time walking round and visiting all the points of interest, we were sitting resting by the sea, when we discovered Brahms a long way off sitting by himself on the shore writing. It was the first sketch for the ''Schicksalslied'', which appeared fairly soon afterwards. A lovely excursion which we had arranged to the Urwald was never carried out. He hurried back to Hamburg, in order to give himself up to his work.
Brahms completed an initial setting of Hölderlin's two verses in
ternary form
Ternary form, sometimes called song form, is a three-part musical form consisting of an opening section (A), a following section (B) and then a repetition of the first section (A). It is usually schematized as A–B–A. Prominent examples inclu ...
with the third movement being a complete restatement of the first.
[ Michael Steinberg. ''Choral Masterworks: A Listener's Guide''. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.] However, Brahms was dissatisfied with this full restatement of the first movement to close the piece, as he felt that it would nullify the grim reality depicted in the second movement.
This conflict remained unresolved, and ''Schicksalslied'' unpublished, while Brahms turned his attention to the "Alto Rhapsody" from 1869–70. The piece was not realized in its final form until a solution was suggested to Brahms in 1871 by Hermann Levi (who conducted the premiere of ''Schicksalslied'' later that year).
Levi proposed that in lieu of a full return of the first movement, a reintroduction of only the orchestral prelude should be used to conclude the piece. Convinced by Levi, Brahms composed the third movement as a copy of the orchestral prelude in the first movement with a richer instrumentation and transposed into C major.
While Brahms was hesitant to break the desperation and ultimate futility of the second movement by bringing a blissful return to the first, some see Brahms's return to the orchestral prelude as "a desire on the part of the composer to relieve the gloom of the concluding idea of the text by shedding a ray of light over the whole, and leaving a more hopeful impression".
Musical elements
''Schicksalslied'', which John Lawrence Erb posits is "perhaps the most widely loved of all of Brahms's compositions and the most perfect of his smaller choral works",
is sometimes referred to as the "Little ''Requiem''",
as it shares many stylistic and compositional similarities with Brahms's most ambitious choral composition. The
Romantic characteristics of ''Schicksalslied'', however, give this piece a closer tie with the "Alto Rhapsody" than the ''Requiem''. Whichever piece it most closely relates to, it is clear that ''Schicksalsied'' was the work of a master composer working at the height of his skill.
John Alexander Fuller Maitland stated that in ''Schicksalslied'', Brahms "set the pattern of the short choral-ballad, to which, in ''
Nänie'', Op. 82, and the ''
Gesang der Parzen'', Op. 89, Brahms subsequently returned".
Likewise, Hadow praises the piece for "its technical beauties, its rounded symmetry of balance and charm of melody, and its marvelous cadences where chord melts into chord like colour into colour".
The first movement, marked ''Adagio'', is in
common time
A time signature (also known as meter signature, metre signature, and measure signature) is an indication in music notation that specifies how many note values of a particular type fit into each measure ( bar). The time signature indicates the ...
and begins in E major.
The piece opens with 28 measures of an orchestral prelude (which Brahms later re-orchestrates in the third movement). At measure 29, the altos enter with the initial statement of the choral melody, which is immediately reiterated by the sopranos while the rest of the chorus adds harmony.

The first example of the text painting in ''Schicksalslied'' occurs in measure 41, with the "luminous" harmonies as the choir sings "''Glänzende Götterlüfte''".

The orchestra returns to prominence at measure 52 with harplike accompaniment as the chorus presents a new melody to the line ''Wie die Finger der Künstlerin Heilige Saiten''. At measure 64, the orchestra cadences in the
dominant key (B major) before repeating the first thematic melody line originally stated by the alto voices.

This time, however, the melody is taken initially by the horn with the entire chorus repeating the theme on ''Schicksallos, wie der Schlafende Säugling''.

While Brahms does return to the initial thematic material in the dominant tonality, the restatement is a mere 12 bars while the initial statement was 23. This section ends with a similar orchestral
cadence in measure 81, this time in tonic.

The melodic theme returns one final time in this first movement at the choral line ''Und die seligen Augen'' (measure 84), which cadences in E major (measure 96). The orchestra plays two D
diminished triad
In music theory, a diminished triad is a triad (music), triad consisting of two minor thirds above the root (chord), root. It is a Minor chord, minor triad with a lowered (flat (music), flattened) Fifth (chord), fifth. When using Chord names and ...
s to conclude the first movement and prepare C minor as the next tonality.
The second movement, in C minor and
meter
The metre (or meter in US spelling; symbol: m) is the base unit of length in the International System of Units (SI). Since 2019, the metre has been defined as the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time interval of of ...
, is marked ''Allegro'' and opens with eight measures of
eighth note
180px, Figure 1. An eighth note with stem extending up, an eighth note with stem extending down, and an eighth rest.
180px, Figure 2. Four eighth notes beamed together.
An eighth note ( American) or a quaver ( British) is a musical note pla ...
motion in the strings. The orchestral eighth notes continue for 20 measures as the chorus enters in unison with ''Doch uns ist gegeben''. The eighth notes intensify and climax at a
in measure 132 as Brahms sets the lyric ''blindlings von einer Stunde zur andern'' to the chorus dividing into a B
diminished seventh chord.

In an effort to elicit an effect of gasping for breath, Brahms inserts a
hemiola over the lyric ''Wasser von Klippe zu Klippe geworfen''. By alternating quarter notes with quarter rests, this section feels as though the meter has changed, essentially converting two bars of into one of .

The ordinary rhythm returns in measure 154 with the choir completing the stanza and ultimately cadencing on a D major triad in measure 172.
After a 21-measure orchestral interlude, Brahms restates the last stanza of text with two separate
fugal sections in measures 194–222 and 222–273. Following the fugal sections, Brahms repeats the entire second movement (excluding the fugues) in D minor. The chorus replaces their final D major triad of the first statement with a D diminished chord in measure 322.

The cadential material then repeats, landing on the tonic C minor in measure 332.

The second movement closes by way of a 54-measure orchestral section with a C pedal tone and the chorus intermittently repeating the last line of Hölderlin's poem. The addition of Es starting in measure 364 predicts the coming
modulation
Signal modulation is the process of varying one or more properties of a periodic waveform in electronics and telecommunication for the purpose of transmitting information.
The process encodes information in form of the modulation or message ...
to C major for the final movement.
The third movement, marked ''Adagio'', is in C major and returns to common time. This postlude is the same as the orchestral prelude, save for some changes in instrumentation and
transposition into C major.
Notes
Further reading
*
Adler, Guido, and
W. Oliver Strunk. "Johannes Brahms: His Achievement, His Personality, and His Position". ''
The Musical Quarterly'', vol. 19, no. 2 (April 1933). .
* Bozarth, George S. "The First Generation of Brahms Manuscript Collections". ''
Notes'', second series, vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 239–262 (December 1983).
* Bozarth, George S. "Johannes Brahms and George Henschel: An Enduring Friendship". ''
Music & Letters'', vol. 92, no. 1 (February 2011). .
*
Daverio, John. "The ''Wechsel der Töne'' in Brahms's ''Schicksalslied''". ''
Journal of the American Musicological Society
The ''Journal of the American Musicological Society'' is a triannual peer-reviewed academic journal and an official journal of the American Musicological Society. It is published by University of California Press and covers all aspects of musicol ...
'', vol. 46, no. 1 (Spring 1993). .
* Harding, H. A., "Some Thoughts upon the Position of Johannes Brahms among the Great Masters of Music". ''
Proceedings of the Musical Association'', vol. 33, no. 1 (1906). .
*
Jackson, Timothy L. "The Tragic Reversed Recapitulation in the German Classical Tradition". ''
Journal of Music Theory'', vol. 40, no. 1 (Spring 1996). .
External links
* ''Schicksalslied'', Op. 54
Brahms' autograph in the Library of Congress*
{{Authority control
1871 compositions
Choral compositions by Johannes Brahms
Musical settings of poems by Friedrich Hölderlin