Myrthen
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''Myrthen'' ('' Myrtles''), Op. 25, is a
song cycle A song cycle () is a group, or cycle (music), cycle, of individually complete Art song, songs designed to be performed in sequence, as a unit.Susan Youens, ''Grove online'' The songs are either for solo voice or an ensemble, or rarely a combinat ...
composed in the spring of 1840 by
Robert Schumann Robert Schumann (; ; 8 June 181029 July 1856) was a German composer, pianist, and music critic of the early Romantic music, Romantic era. He composed in all the main musical genres of the time, writing for solo piano, voice and piano, chamber ...
. Its 26
Lied In the Western classical music tradition, ( , ; , ; ) is a term for setting poetry to classical music. The term is used for any kind of song in contemporary German and Dutch, but among English and French speakers, is often used interchangea ...
er were written as a wedding gift for his fiancée,
Clara Wieck Clara Josephine Schumann (; ; née Wieck; 13 September 1819 – 20 May 1896) was a German pianist, composer, and piano teacher. Regarded as one of the most distinguished pianists of the Romantic era, she exerted her influence over the course o ...
, and presented to her on the eve of their wedding which took place on 12 September that year. The cycle was published that same month, with a dedication to Clara, in four books by Kistner in
Leipzig Leipzig (, ; ; Upper Saxon: ; ) is the most populous city in the States of Germany, German state of Saxony. The city has a population of 628,718 inhabitants as of 2023. It is the List of cities in Germany by population, eighth-largest city in Ge ...
where the couple lived. The texts are poems by various authors, including eight by
Robert Burns Robert Burns (25 January 1759 – 21 July 1796), also known familiarly as Rabbie Burns, was a Scottish poet and lyricist. He is widely regarded as the List of national poets, national poet of Scotland and is celebrated worldwide. He is the be ...
, translated into German by the poet
Wilhelm Gerhard Christoph Wilhelm Leonhard Gerhard (b. 29 November 1780 at Weimar; d. 2 October 1858 at Heidelberg) was a German merchant, playwright and poet. Life Gerhard was a merchant's son. He completed a four-year-long apprenticeship as a merchant's assis ...
, and several each by
Friedrich Rückert Johann Michael Friedrich Rückert (16 May 1788 – 31 January 1866) was a German poet, translation, translator, and professor of Oriental languages. Biography Johann Michael Friedrich Rückert was born 16 May 1788 in Schweinfurt and was the e ...
,
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Johann Wolfgang (von) Goethe (28 August 1749 – 22 March 1832) was a German polymath who is widely regarded as the most influential writer in the German language. His work has had a wide-ranging influence on Western literature, literary, Polit ...
and
Heinrich Heine Christian Johann Heinrich Heine (; ; born Harry Heine; 13 December 1797 – 17 February 1856) was an outstanding poet, writer, and literary criticism, literary critic of 19th-century German Romanticism. He is best known outside Germany for his ...
. The cycle was originally published in a version for high voice, but has been performed by singers of all
voice type A voice type is a classification of the human singing voice into perceivable categories or groups. Particular human singing human voice, voices are identified as having certain qualities or characteristics of vocal range, vocal weight, tessitura ...
s, sometimes by a woman and man alternating. The opening song "Widmung" (Dedication) is the best-known song from the cycle. Regarded as a profound expression of marital devotion, it was one of Clara Schumann's favourites among her husband's Lieder.


Composition

''Myrthen'' was a product of Schumann's 1840 "
year of song Robert Schumann (; ; 8 June 181029 July 1856) was a German composer, pianist, and music critic of the early Romantic music, Romantic era. He composed in all the main musical genres of the time, writing for solo piano, voice and piano, chamber ...
". On 23 January he jotted down an early version of his setting of Heine's "Du bist wie eine Blume", the first song recorded in his ''Berliner Liederbuch'', and eventually to be published as No. 24 in the cycle. This was followed by notes for various songs later to form part of several other song cycles. writes that "the notion of uniting the songs into a cycle ppearsto have arisen only gradually". She also points out that the songs were likely originally arranged into books by their librettist: "the songs later published as ''Myrthen'' were ... intended as a book of songs after
Goethe Johann Wolfgang (von) Goethe (28 August 1749 – 22 March 1832) was a German polymath who is widely regarded as the most influential writer in the German language. His work has had a wide-ranging influence on Western literature, literary, Polit ...
, a book after
Burns Burns may refer to: Astronomy * 2708 Burns, an asteroid * Burns (crater), on Mercury People * Burns (surname), list of people and characters named Burns ** Burns (musician), Scottish record producer Places in the United States * Burns, ...
, and two books of songs after assorted poets." Only after the great majority of the songs in ''Myrthen'' had been worked out did Schumann begin in the late spring of 1840 to consider publication as a cycle for both this work and the ''Liederkreis'', Op. 39. Division into four books seems to have been the intention from early on, not only in light of pragmatic consideration of publication logistics, but also as an aid to the cyclical structure of ''Myrthen''. But even after this approach had been decided upon, Schumann changed the songs' ordering several times. On 7 March 1840 Schumann offered ''Myrthen'' to his publisher Kistner. He wrote that he intended them to appear in print as a bridal gift in the form of a song cycle in four books. The title refers to myrtles, traditionally part of a bride's outfit. On 1 August, a court judgement gave Clara and Robert permission at last to marry, following a long legal battle in which the bride's father
Friedrich Wieck Johann Gottlob Friedrich Wieck (18 August 1785 – 6 October 1873) was a noted German piano teacher, voice teacher, owner of a piano store, and author of essays and music reviews. He is remembered as the teacher of his daughter, Clara, a chil ...
had bitterly contested their union. Schumann presented Clara with an opulently decorated copy of the first edition of the ''Myrthen'' on the eve of their wedding. The printed dedication "To his beloved bride" addresses not only this private occasion, but also the public matter of the legality of their marriage; Schumann was eager to publicise the court's decision. By the publication of ''Myrthen'', writes Grotjahn, Schumann not only positioned himself as "a man inspired to create by joyous love"; he intended by the work's symbolic title to provide "proof of his success as a commercially minded man just as well as his success as creative artist". Schumann gave the collection to Clara on the eve of their wedding which took place on 12 September that year. The musicologist
Eric Sams Eric Sams (3 May 1926 – 13 September 2004) was a British musicologist and Shakespeare scholar. Life Born in London, Sams was raised in Essex. He studied at the Westcliff High School for Boys, where he performed well and earned a scholars ...
asked in his book, ''The Songs of Robert Schumann'', "what bride ever had a finer wedding gift?"


Structure

In many musicological treatments, the ''Myrthen'' have been taken to lack the systematic structure which characterises a cycle. called them "a colourful wreath abundant in individual flowers" which have, nevertheless, no unifying idea.
Peter Gülke Peter Ludwig Gülke (born 29 April 1934) is a German conductor and musicologist. Biography Born in Weimar, Gülke studied cello and musicology at the Hochschule für Musik Franz Liszt, Weimar. He completed his doctorate in philosophy in Leipzig ...
considers it more of a "collection of songs ... than a coherent cycle" and senses that behind the cycle lies a "private motivation" more strongly motivating than the aim of well-unified art: namely that Schumann "had need of the songs in order to grow ever closer to his bride". Likewise
Arnfried Edler Arnfried Edler (21 March 1938 – 20 April 2022) was a German musicologist and university professor in Kiel and Hanover. Life Born in Lüdenscheid, Edler studied music, German literary history and philosophy in Saarbrücken and Kiel and also ...
finds that the title ''Myrthen'' relates only to the cycle's functional purpose as a sort of bride-price for Clara, the primarily personal character of the songs underlined by titles such as "Widmung" (Dedication) and "Zum Schluss" (At the End), which bear proverbial relations to opportunity and good fortune. According to a German saying, (the best comes at the end). These views are grounded largely in an understanding of the song cycle as a musical form, which takes songs' texts to be foremost, and ties a cycle's coherence to the unity of its texts. Such a unity Schumann is supposed to have achieved in the '' Eichendorff Liederkreis'', the ''
Dichterliebe ''Dichterliebe'', ''A Poet's Love'' (composed 1840), is the best-known song cycle by Robert Schumann ( Op. 48). The texts for its 16 songs come from the ''Lyrisches Intermezzo'' by Heinrich Heine, written in 1822–23 and published as part of Hein ...
'' and other cycles constructed similarly. Grotjahn argues that in the wake of his piano cycles of the 1830s, Schumann experimented with various song-cycle arrangements, beginning at the latest in 1840; and that the ''Myrthen'' as they stood at publication were testament to only one of several previous attempts on Schumann's part to integrate many fragmented songs into a well-formed cyclical structure. And she holds that the "composition of a song cycle eginswith the composition of poems", so that Schumann should be regarded as the author of the ''Myrthen''s text "even more extensively than in his other cycles". Grotjahn writes that "the ''Myrthen'' are not simply a series of 26 songs, but four books of songs related each to the others by their structures." Books 1, 2 and 3 contain six songs each, while book 4 contains eight songs, though it is shorter than the others. Each book contains songs with texts by three or four poets, and each is closed by a pair of songs after a single poet. In designing things like this, Schumann arranges the songs of ''Myrthen'' into characteristic groupings in which formal unity arises in the resulting complementary and contrasting pairs. In their thematic content almost all of the songs concern such contemporary issues in Robert and Clara's relationship as longing, lovers' pains, marriage and motherhood. At its core, though, the cycle is held together in its overarching themes of art, freedom and love, made apt by the circumstances of the Schumanns' lives, but having significance beyond them. Grotjahn writes: "the songs not only relate to Schumann's circumstances at the time – his approaching wedding and its troubled background – but also offer a general picture of his artistic persona." This picture is conveyed in private ciphers and musical codes, typical of Schumann's compositions, entirely comprehensible only to the pair of lovers, and some likely only to the composer himself. Throughout ''Myrthen'', Schumann works themes into slight variations upon one another in correspondent songs and pairs of songs. Similarly, in his treatment of tonality he works to create connections and symmetries in the music; for example by employment of keys related to A-flat, in which the work begins and ends, by a long and consistent digression into sharp keys in songs falling in the middle of the work, and by shifts in tonality through fifths and thirds; his motivic approach meant that he frequently fused the piano coda belonging to one song into the beginning of the following song, the result being in some instances chains of several related songs flowing continuously one into the next.


Table of songs


Book 1

"Widmung", the first song in ''Myrthen'', treats one of the cycle's central themes, love. The text was composed by
Friedrich Rückert Johann Michael Friedrich Rückert (16 May 1788 – 31 January 1866) was a German poet, translation, translator, and professor of Oriental languages. Biography Johann Michael Friedrich Rückert was born 16 May 1788 in Schweinfurt and was the e ...
, though Schumann made modifications to it, changing the title in order directly to engage the dedicatee, Clara. He also doubled both the first and last verses, in order for the song to conform to a A-B-A structure. "Widmung" establishes A-flat as the home key of the cycle. The piano accompaniment is figured by broken chords doubled in octaves, set in dotted rhythms characteristic of Schumann. The second stanza is set to a key change from A-flat to E major; here the accompaniment is replaced by repeated-chord triplet figurations. This song is the best-known of the cycle, and was among Clara Schumann's favourite songs of her husband's. It is regarded as a profound expression of love and marital devotion, having a text which encapsulates the meaning of the entire poem. The song features prominently in the film '' Song of Love'', a fictionalisation of the Schumanns' marriage. Several famous transcriptions have been made of this song, including an especially popular one by
Liszt Franz Liszt (22 October 1811 – 31 July 1886) was a Hungarian composer, virtuoso pianist, conductor and teacher of the Romantic period. With a diverse body of work spanning more than six decades, he is considered to be one of the most pro ...
, his S. 566, made in 1846–1847 and issued in print by Kistner in 1848. It is his most popular arrangement for the piano and one of his most frequently performed works. A melodic idea appearing in "Widmung"'s piano coda is reused in the following song, "Freisinn" (Free Spirit), composed after a poem by
Goethe Johann Wolfgang (von) Goethe (28 August 1749 – 22 March 1832) was a German polymath who is widely regarded as the most influential writer in the German language. His work has had a wide-ranging influence on Western literature, literary, Polit ...
. Its key of E-flat is related to "Widmung"'s A-flat, and its material is connected motivically to "Widmung"'s. On this basis they are regarded as a pair, in which not only the theme of love but also Schumann's concept of the artist as a man "inspired and freed through love" is exposed. This theme of love is explored further in "Der Nussbaum", setting a text by Julius Mosen. It is a through-composed song with a piano accompaniment in wave-like semiquaver figures; throughout dominant sixth suspensions add a characteristic harmonic flavour. The key is G, the mediant of "Freisinn"'s E-flat. Heinemann describes the song: "It depicts a nut tree in blossom. For a girl in the gentle summer breeze, the tree inspires thoughts of intimate partnership which she dare not admit to herself; and thus the prospect of marriage and matrimony is revealed." The simple melodic line is in partnership with the arpeggios in the piano that represent the breeze in the tree. The cycle's first setting of a Burns poem, "Jemand" (No. 4), is free in its form, a song with "intimate" but also "passionate" character, characterized by rests, mercurial changes in tempo and recitative-like passages. Practically every one of the ten appearances of the word (somebody) is set to a different suspension. Schumann revisits the harmonic lexicon of "Der Nussbaum" in setting the last occurrence of the word, sung to a suspended sixth. Schumann closes the cycle's first book with settings of two poems by Goethe, whose collective title ''Aus dem Schenkenbuch'' is due to their selection from the "Book of the Cupbearer", one of twelve parts constituting the '' West-östlicher Divan''. The first song, "Sitz' ich allein" (No. 5), is through-composed. Its formal compactness makes it the cycle's shortest. Its text dwells upon the experience of a lonely drinker and treats ideas relating to the cycle's broad theme of freedom. Schumann's freedom with form in this song manifests itself in the sudden change in the tenth bar from the key of E and the main time signature of to C and . This hiatus lasts only four bars, before the home key and time signature are restored for a recapitulation of the song's opening phrase, which is clipped and repeated to the song's end for an echoing effect. E is the dominant of A minor, the opening key of the second of the ''Schenkenbuch'' songs, "Setze mir nicht, du Grobian" (No. 6). This song's text also concerns drinking, but here directly engages the eponymous cupbearer of Goethe's book, addressed here as (You charming boy). Possibly Schumann sought in this song to create ironic distance between himself and the homoerotic experiences of his past, his mind on his forthcoming marriage to Clara. The A-section's vigorous syncopations and the emphatic right-hand pedal on E in the opening have an exaggerated quality to match the speaker's rejection of the (oaf). Likewise the B-section's shift into the parallel major key as the speaker invites the "cupbearer-to-be" to enter is almost saccharine. The poem's final line, (Every wine is tasty and bright), makes plausible allusion to bisexuality and is followed in the setting by an energetic coda for the piano.


Book 2

Schumann centres the cycle's second book around a pair of poems each by Goethe and Rückert. But as well as the opening song to a text by Heine, Schumann includes a setting of "The Highland Widow's Lament" by Burns. It is the first in a narrative set, continued in the third book, of Burns songs about highland life, though this song is unusual amongst them since it regards death. Schumann uses key relationships in order to tie this part of the cycle to later sections. The keys of songs 3 to 7 are: G major, E minor, E major, A minor/A major, and F major. An almost identical scheme of keys appears in songs 17 to 23, in the third and fourth books. The second cycle opens with "Die Lotosblume" (No. 7), the first setting in the cycle of a poem by Heine. The poem mainly treats quiet longing, but touches upon the erotic. The song is through-composed, but Schumann sets each line of the poem in a single two-bar phrase, with some rhythmic regularity. The first stanza's setting begins with a statement in bars 2–3, a motif whose notes Sams identifies as a musical cipher for Clara, the non-diatonic letters L and R substituted for neighbouring notes: C, B, A, G, A. But the second stanza's modulation in bars 9–10 from the dominant key C major to A-flat major signals "the courting moon's passage to the island of the mediant, marked out not only by he change ofkey but by the disappearance of the bass". The opening line of "Talismane" (No. 8), ("The Orient is God's!"), is set melodically to the notes of a C-major triad. Eric Sams conjectures that this motif, sung and then echoed hy the piano, is a musical cypher for Schumann himself. The song is marked (Solemn, not too slow); it is a setting of the first three stanzas of another poem from Goethe's ''West-östlicher Divan'', whose text has its origins in a
Surah A ''surah'' (; ; ) is an Arabic word meaning 'chapter' in the Quran. There are 114 ''suwar'' in the Quran, each divided into ayah, verses (). The ''suwar'' are of unequal length; the shortest ''surah'' (al-Kawthar) has only three verses, while ...
from the
Koran The Quran, also Romanization, romanized Qur'an or Koran, is the central religious text of Islam, believed by Muslims to be a Waḥy, revelation directly from God in Islam, God (''Allah, Allāh''). It is organized in 114 chapters (, ) which ...
; Schumann set the same three verses again in his choral cycle . The song's inclusion in the ''Myrthen'' owes possibly to its third verse, which deals thematically with the creation of art and God's constant love: Mich verwirren will das Irren, Doch du weisst mich zu entwirren. Wenn ich handle, wenn ich dichte, Gib du meinem Weg die Richte! My errors would bewilder me, But You know how to disentangle me. When I act, when I compose poetry, Show me the right path! The "Lied der Suleika" (No. 9) takes its text from ''West-östlicher Divan'', but it is one of the few poems in that collection which was probably not originally the work of Goethe, but Marianne von Willemer, an actress, singer and acquaintance of Goethe's at Frankfurt. The poem is an intimate treatment of the force of love poetry and song. Schumann's song in strophic form sets each stanza to the same melody, though the final strophe is modified. Schumann sets the words in the first stanza, "Lied, empfind' ich deinen Sinn!" ("Song, I can feel your meaning!"); Sams identifies this motif as a cryptogram for Clara. The motif's chromaticism is also in evidence in the piano coda. The vocal line is mirrored in the piano, as a reflection of the absent lover mentioned in the text. "Die Hochländer-Witwe" (No. 10), setting a translation of a poem by Burns, uses the unusual time signature of . Its key is E minor. The poem describes the fate of an outcast widow who has lost everything, throwing the surrounding Lieder into sharp relief and leaving the highland narrative without resolution until the cycle's third book. The book ends with two poems by Rückert, (Songs of the bride, Nos. 11 and 12). They are typically assigned to a woman singer when the cycle is performed by two singers. The poems' female speaker suggests the idealised perspective of Clara. The first song, "Mutter, Mutter! Glaube nicht" (No. 11) is marked and . Its time is , its key G major, and it employs strophic form. In the poem, a bride reassures her mother that her love for her has only been deepened by the love she bears her bridegroom. In the piano, a placid chordal progression plays out beneath semiquaver accompaniment in the right hand. The second of the , "Lass mich ihm am Busen hangen" (No. 12), takes the same time signature and key as the first. From Rückert's single-stanza poem Schumann measures out a song in strophic form; the second strophe's beginning comes at the poem's repetition of the word , and is heralded by a diminished seventh chord in the piano and a fermata. The song is introduced in the piano by a statement of the melody of the opening line, ("Let me rest upon his chest"); this line is repeated at the song's end in bars 29–32 and the song ends with an answering phrase in the piano which mirrors the melody's rhythm and shape. With the piano's final notes the voice reenters with the words .


Book 3

The third book consists of six songs, all setting poems by English-language writers in translation. It begins with "Hochländers Abschied" (No. 13), setting a translation by Gerhard of Burns's poem "The Highlander's Farewell". It describes
Highland Highlands or uplands are areas of high elevation such as a mountainous region, elevated mountainous plateau or high hills. Generally, ''upland'' refers to a range of hills, typically from up to , while ''highland'' is usually reserved for range ...
life and the sadness in saying goodbye. Schumann's setting is a strophic song in B minor, though three strophes are in B major. An introduction, an interlude and a coda for the piano are identical. The book is closed by a pair from Moore's ''Venetian Songs'', with somewhat erotic content, "Leis' rudern hier, mein Gondolier!" (Row gently here, my gondolier!, No. 17) and "Wenn durch die Piazzetta" (When through the piazzetta, No. 18).


Book 4

Book 4 begins as Book 3 ended, with a couple of poems, now by Burns. "Hauptmann's Weib" (No. 19) illustrates the warrior's actions dramatically in the outer sections of a ternary form, while the middle section repeats a brooding motif in the piano. The following "Weit, weit" (No. 20) portrays a woman's desire for an absent lover with lyric expression. This simple strophic song reaches its expressive climax only in the piano postlude after the third stanza. Heines "Du bist wie eine Blume" (You are like a flower, No. 24) is one of the poems set to music most often, and "one of Schumann's finest". The last two songs are again based on works by one poet, Rückert, the same poet as in the first song, "Widmung". "Aus den östlichen Rosen" (From the Eastern roses, No. 25) is taken from a cycle ''Oestliche Rosen'' (Eastern Roses), which the poet titled "Ein Gruss an die Entfernte". "Zum Schluss" (To the end, No. 26) contrasts the incomplete situation on earth to an ideal love in Heaven. The key is A-flat major as in the opening song, closing a circle. The last song bears the dedication: "Here ... I have woven for you an imperfect garland, sister, bride!".


Recordings

Complete recordings of ''Myrthen'' include: Recordings of individual selections from ''Myrthen'' abound, but complete recordings of the cycle are rare. Of the ten complete recordings listed, seven divide the songs between a male and a female singer, as the cycle's open-ended subtitle, "For singer and pianoforte", permits, though the Mathis and Fischer-Dieskau recording was apparently the result of compilation by the record label and not originally intended to be a whole-cycle recording. In these recordings, the cycle's songs are divided differently between the voices, lending special emphasis to certain songs, and drawing out new thematic and narrative strands in the cycle. Grotjahn also observes that the structure of key relationships within the cycle is compromised by transposition for different voice types. For instance, when "Widmung" ("Dedication"), No. 1, is performed by a man, the biographical significance which Schumann's own dedication of the cycle to his bride carries is highlighted; when performed by a woman the text's principal theme of love as a springboard for artistic inspiration comes to the fore. In other songs the singer's voice type may suggest a particular biographical significance for the Schumanns. Performed by a man, "Räthsel" ("Riddle"), No. 16, takes on the tone of an address from Robert to Clara; performed by a woman, there is the sense of an inner monologue about it.


Performances

An annual festival, Schumann-Woche, has been held in Leipzig for several days around the wedding day, 12 September. In 2012, ''Myrthen'' was performed by four singers at the Schumann House on that day.


References


Sources

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * also: * * * * * * * * *


Further reading

*
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (; 28 May 1925 – 18 May 2012) was a German lyric baritone and conductor of classical music. One of the most famous Lieder (art song) performers of the post-war period, he is best known as a singer of Franz Schubert's ...
: ''Robert Schumann. Das Vokalwerk.'' dtv/Bärenreiter, München/Kassel 1985, . * Ingo Müller: ''Maskenspiel und Seelensprache. Zur Ästhetik von Heinrich Heines 'Buch der Lieder' und Robert Schumanns Heine-Vertonungen'' (= Rombach Wissenschaft), 2 vols. Baden-Baden 2020. Vol. 1: ''Heinrich Heines Dichtungsästhetik und Robert Schumanns Liedästhetik'', . Vol. 2: ''Heinrich Heines 'Buch der Lieder' und Robert Schumanns Heine-Vertonungen'', Baden-Baden 2020, . * Harald Schmutz, Erich Wolfgang Partsch: " 'Du bist wie eine Blume'. Literatur- und musikwissenschaftlich Annäherungen", in: ''Heinrich Heine in zeitgenössischen Vertonungen'', Andrea Harrandt and Erich Wolfgang Partsch (eds.), Hans Schneider, Tutzing 2008, pp. 105–142.


External links

*
"Widmung" (Rückert) and "Stille Liebe" (Kerner)
(Facsimile of "Widmung") omifacsimiles.com * Oppermann, Anette
"Bordering on the modern – The Urtext edition of Schumann's ''Myrthen'', Op. 25"
(in German)
G. Henle Verlag G. Henle Verlag is a German music publishing house specialising in Urtext editions of classical music. The catalogue includes works by composers from different epochs periods, in particular composers from the Baroque to the early twentieth cent ...
18 February 2019
''Myrten'', song cycle by Robert Schumann (1810–1856)
(texts) LiederNet Archive
"''Myrthen'' (song cycle)"
(texts) ClassicCat {{Authority control 1840 in music Song cycles by Robert Schumann Music dedicated to family or friends Classical song cycles in German Adaptations of works by Robert Burns Musical settings of poems by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Musical settings of poems by Heinrich Heine