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Robert Schumann
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The son of a bookseller, publisher and writer, Robert Schumann showed early abilities in both music and literature, the second facility used in his later writing on musical subjects. After brief study at university, he was allowed by his widowed mother and guardian to undertake serious study of the piano with Friedrich Wieck, whose favourite daughter Clara Wieck was later to become Schumann's wife. MIDI
FILE - Träumerei, for piano (2'09'') His ambitions as a pianist were thwarted by a weakness in the fingers of one hand, but the 1830s nevertheless brought a number of compositions for the instrument. The year of his marriage, 1840, was a year of song, followed by attempts in which his young wife encouraged him at more ambitious forms of orchestral composition. Settling first in Leipzig and then in Dresden, the Schumanns moved in 1850 to Duesseldorf, where Schumann had his first official appointment, as municipal director of music. In 1854 he had a serious mental break-down, followed by two years in
the asylum at Endenich before his death in 1856.
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completed four symphonies, after earlier unsuccessful attempts at the form. A second symphony followed in 1846 and the third, the Rhenish, a
celebration of the Rhineland and its great cathedral at Cologne, was written in
Duesseldorf in 1850. The Overture, Scherzo and Finale, Op. 52, was described by the composer as a symphonette. Schumann's only completed piano concerto was started in 1841 and completed in 1845. MIDI FILE - Piano Concerto: Allegro (13'17'') Intermezzo -
Allegro Vivace (14'35'') The Cello Concerto of 1850 was first performed four years after Schumann's death, while the 1853 Violin Concerto had to wait over eighty years before its first performance in 1937. The Konzertstueck for four French horns is an interesting addition
to orchestral repertoire. The overture to Schumann's only completed opera, Genoveva,
unsuccessful in the theatre, is part of concert-hall repertoire, with an overture to
Byron's Manfred, again first intended for the theatre. A setting of scenes from Goethe's Faust also includes an overture. In his final years he wrote a setting of the Mass and of the Requiem Mass. The solo songs of Schumann offer a rich repertoire, an important addition to German Lieder repertoire. From these many settings mention may be made of the collections and song-cycles Myrthen, Op. 25, Liederkreis, Op. 39, Frauenliebe und -leben, Op. 42, and Dichterliebe, Op. 48, all written in the Year of Song, 1840. Schumann wrote three string quartets in 1842, a fertile period that saw also the composition of the Piano Quintet and a Piano Quartet. Other important chamber music by Schumann includes three piano trios, three violin sonatas and a number of shorter character-pieces that include the Maerchenbilder for viola and piano, collections of Phantasiestuecke with alternative instrumentation and the cello and piano Fuenf Stuecke im Volkston, with other short pieces generally suggesting a literary or otherwise extra-musical programme. The piano music of Schumann, whether written for himself, for his wife, or, in later years, for his children, offers a wealth of material. MIDI FILE - Toccata for piano (6'47'') From the earlier period comes Carnaval, a series of short musical scenes based on the letters of the composer's name and that of the town of Asch, home of Ernestine von Fricken, a fellow-student of Friedrich Wieck, to whom Schumann was briefly engaged. The same period brought the Davidsbuendlertaenze (Dances of the League of David), a reference to the imaginary league of friends of art against the surrounding Philistines. This decade also brought the first version of the monumental Symphonic Studies, based on a theme by the father of Ernestine von Fricken, and the well known Kinderszenen (Scenes of Childhood). Kreisleriana has its literary source in the Hoffmann character Kapellmeister Kreisler, as Papillons (Butterflies) have a source in the work of the writer Jean Paul and Noveletten a clear literary reference in the very title. MIDI FILE - Papillons for piano (14'45'') Later piano music by Schumann includes the Album fuer die Jugend of 1848, Waldszenen of 1849 and the collected Bunte Blaetter and Albumblaetter drawn from earlier work.
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