Carnaval (Schumann): Difference between revisions
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Both Schumann and his wife [[Clara Schumann|Clara]] considered his solo piano works too difficult for the general public. ([[Frédéric Chopin]] is reported to have said that ''Carnaval'' was not music at all.<ref>[[Frederick Niecks|Niecks, Frederick]], ''Frédéric Chopin as Man and Musician'', Volume 2, BiblioLife, 2008, p. 147.</ref> Chopin did not warm to Schumann on the two occasions they met briefly, and had a generally low opinion of his music.) Consequently, the works for solo piano were rarely performed in public during Schumann's lifetime, although [[Franz Liszt]] performed selections from ''Carnaval'' in Leipzig in 1840. However, today, despite its immense technical and emotional difficulty, it is one of Schumann's most often performed works.<ref>[http://www.abrsm.org/resources/performanceComplete.pdf]</ref> |
Both Schumann and his wife [[Clara Schumann|Clara]] considered his solo piano works too difficult for the general public. ([[Frédéric Chopin]] is reported to have said that ''Carnaval'' was not music at all.<ref>[[Frederick Niecks|Niecks, Frederick]], ''Frédéric Chopin as Man and Musician'', Volume 2, BiblioLife, 2008, p. 147.</ref> Chopin did not warm to Schumann on the two occasions they met briefly, and had a generally low opinion of his music.) Consequently, the works for solo piano were rarely performed in public during Schumann's lifetime, although [[Franz Liszt]] performed selections from ''Carnaval'' in Leipzig in 1840. However, today, despite its immense technical and emotional difficulty, it is one of Schumann's most often performed works.<ref>[http://www.abrsm.org/resources/performanceComplete.pdf]</ref> |
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Heinz Dill has mentioned Schumann's use of musical quotes and codes in this work.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://mq.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/73/2/172 | last=Dill | first=Heinz J. | title=Romantic Irony in the Works of Robert Schumann | journal=The Musical Quarterly |volume=73 | issue=2 | pages=172–195 | year=1989 | accessdate=2008-03-01 | doi=10.1093/mq/73.2.172}}</ref> Eric Sams has discussed literary allusions in the work, such as to novels of [[Jean-Paul]].<ref>{{cite journal | jstor=765977 | last=Sams | first=Eric | title=The Tonal Analogue in Schumann's Music | journal=Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association | volume=96 | issue=1 | pages=103–117 | date=1969–1970 | doi=10.1093/jrma/96.1.103 |
Heinz Dill has mentioned Schumann's use of musical quotes and codes in this work.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://mq.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/73/2/172 | last=Dill | first=Heinz J. | title=Romantic Irony in the Works of Robert Schumann | journal=The Musical Quarterly |volume=73 | issue=2 | pages=172–195 | year=1989 | accessdate=2008-03-01 | doi=10.1093/mq/73.2.172}}</ref> Eric Sams has discussed literary allusions in the work, such as to novels of [[Jean-Paul]].<ref>{{cite journal | jstor=765977 | last=Sams | first=Eric | title=The Tonal Analogue in Schumann's Music | journal=Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association | volume=96 | issue=1 | pages=103–117 | date=1969–1970 | doi=10.1093/jrma/96.1.103 }}</ref> |
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==Movements== |
==Movements== |
Revision as of 22:11, 2 February 2015
Carnaval, Op. 9, is a work by Robert Schumann for piano solo, written in 1834–1835, and subtitled Scènes mignonnes sur quatre notes (Little Scenes on Four Notes). It consists of 21 short pieces representing masked revelers at Carnival, a festival before Lent. Schumann gives musical expression to himself, his friends and colleagues, and characters from improvised Italian comedy (commedia dell'arte).
The four notes are encoded puzzles, and Schumann predicted that "deciphering my masked ball will be a real game for you."[1] The 21 pieces are connected by a recurring motif. In each section of Carnaval there appears one or both of two series of musical notes. These are musical cryptograms, as follows:
- A, E-flat, C, B – signified in German as A-S-C-H
- A-flat, C, B – signified in German as As-C-H
- E-flat, C, B, A – signified in German as S-C-H-A.
The first two spell the German name for the town of Asch (now Aš in the Czech Republic), in which Schumann's then fiancée, Ernestine von Fricken, was born. The sequence of letters also appears in the German word Fasching, meaning carnival. In addition, Asch is German for "Ash," as in Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent. Lastly, it encodes a version of the composer's name, Robert Alexander Schumann. The third series, S-C-H-A, encodes the composer's name again with the musical letters appearing in Schumann, in their correct order.
Carnaval had its origin in a set of variations on a Sehnsuchtswalzer by Franz Schubert, whose music Schumann had only discovered in 1827. The catalyst for writing the variations may have been a work for piano and orchestra by Schumann's close friend Ludwig Schuncke, a set of variations on the same Schubert theme. Schumann felt that Schuncke's heroic treatment was an inappropriate reflection of the tender nature of the Schubert piece, so he set out to approach his Variations in a more intimate way, and worked on them in 1833 and 1834. The work was never completed, however, and Schuncke died in December 1834, but Schumann did re-use the opening 24 measures for the opening of Carnaval. Andreas Boyde has since reconstructed the original set of Variations from Schumann's manuscript;[2] Romanian pianist Herbert Schuch has recorded this reconstruction, with his own editorial emendations, for the Oehms Classics label.[3]
In Carnaval, Schumann goes further musically than in Papillons, Op. 2, for he himself conceives the story of for which it serves as a musical illustration. Each piece has a title, and the work as a whole is a musical representation of an elaborate and imaginative masked ball during carnival season.[4] Carnaval remains famous for its resplendent chordal passages and its use of rhythmic displacement, and has long been a staple of the pianist's repertoire.
Schumann dedicated the work to the violinist Karol Lipiński.
Both Schumann and his wife Clara considered his solo piano works too difficult for the general public. (Frédéric Chopin is reported to have said that Carnaval was not music at all.[5] Chopin did not warm to Schumann on the two occasions they met briefly, and had a generally low opinion of his music.) Consequently, the works for solo piano were rarely performed in public during Schumann's lifetime, although Franz Liszt performed selections from Carnaval in Leipzig in 1840. However, today, despite its immense technical and emotional difficulty, it is one of Schumann's most often performed works.[6]
Heinz Dill has mentioned Schumann's use of musical quotes and codes in this work.[7] Eric Sams has discussed literary allusions in the work, such as to novels of Jean-Paul.[8]
Movements
The work has 22 sections, 20 of which are numbered. Schumann did not number Sphinxes (which comes between the 8th and 9th numbered sections) or Intermezzo: Paganini (between the 16th and 17th).
1. Préambule (A-flat; Quasi maestoso)
- The Préambule is one of the few pieces in the set not explicitly organized around the A-S-C-H idea. It was taken from the incomplete Variations on a Theme of Schubert (reconstructed in 2000 by Andreas Boyde).[9] The theme was Schubert's Trauerwalzer, Op. 9/2, D. 365.[10]
2. Pierrot (E-flat; Moderato)
- This is a depiction of Pierrot, a character from the Commedia dell'arte, commonly represented in costume at a ball.
3. Arlequin (B-flat; Vivo)
- This is a depiction of Harlequin, another character from the Commedia dell'arte.
4. Valse noble (B-flat; Un poco maestoso)
5. Eusebius (E-flat; Adagio)
- Depicting the composer's calm, deliberate side.
6. Florestan (G minor; Passionato)
- Depicting the composer's fiery, impetuous side. Schumann quotes the main waltz theme from his earlier work Papillons, Op. 2, in this movement.
7. Coquette (B-flat; Vivo)
- Depicting a flirtatious girl.
8. Réplique (B-flat-G minor; L'istesso tempo)
- A 'reply' to the coquette
--. Sphinxes
- This consists of three sections of one bar each, with no key, tempo or dynamic indications. The notes are in the configurations S-C-H-A, As-C-H and A-S-C-H. This section was not intended to be played[11] and is generally omitted in performance and recording. However, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Vladimir Horowitz, Alfred Cortot, and Walter Gieseking included it in their recordings, as does Herbert Schuch, who plays it as String piano music in the same recording referenced above.
9. Papillons (B-flat: Prestissimo)
- This piece is unrelated to his earlier work of the same name.
10. A.S.C.H. – S.C.H.A: Lettres Dansantes (E-flat; Presto)
- Despite the title, the pattern used is As-C-H.
11. Chiarina (C minor; Passionato)
- A depiction of Clara Schumann.
12. Chopin (A-flat; Agitato)
- An evocation of his colleague Frédéric Chopin
13. Estrella (F minor; Con affetto)
- Depicting Ernestine von Fricken.
14. Reconnaissance (A-flat; Animato)
- Likely depicting Schumann and Ernestine recognizing each other at the ball.
15. Pantalon et Colombine (F minor; Presto)
16. Valse allemande (A-flat; Molto vivace)
--. Intermezzo: Paganini (F minor; Presto)
- An evocation of Niccolò Paganini; it leads into a reprise of the Valse allemande
17. Aveu (F minor-A flat; Passionato)
- Depicting a confession of love.
18. Promenade (D-flat; Con moto)
19. Pause (A-flat; Vivo)
- An almost identical reprise of a passage from the opening Préambule, leading without pause into the final section.
20. Marche des "Davidsbündler" contre les Philistins (A-flat; Non allegro)
- Quotations from a number of the previous sections fleetingly reappear; the Grossvater Tanz, identified by Schumann in the score as a "Theme from the 17th Century" and intended to represent those holding to old-fashioned, outdated and inartistic ideals[12] (i.e., Philistines) is quoted from his earlier work Papillons, Op. 2. The piece ends Prestissimo.
Orchestrations
In 1910,[13] Carnaval was choreographed for a ballet for a production by Sergei Diaghilev, with orchestration written collaboratively by Alexander Glazunov, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Anatoly Lyadov and Alexander Tcherepnin.
Among others who have orchestrated Carnaval are Maurice Ravel (1914).[14]
References
- ^ Perrey, Beate Julia, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Schumann, Cambridge University Press, 2007, p. 72.
- ^ Andreas Boyde
- ^ Program notes booklet to Oehms Classics CD OC 754.
- ^ Jensen, Eric Frederick, Schumann, Oxford University Press, 2004, p. 150.
- ^ Niecks, Frederick, Frédéric Chopin as Man and Musician, Volume 2, BiblioLife, 2008, p. 147.
- ^ [1]
- ^ Dill, Heinz J. (1989). "Romantic Irony in the Works of Robert Schumann". The Musical Quarterly. 73 (2): 172–195. doi:10.1093/mq/73.2.172. Retrieved 2008-03-01.
- ^ Sams, Eric (1969–1970). "The Tonal Analogue in Schumann's Music". Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association. 96 (1): 103–117. doi:10.1093/jrma/96.1.103. JSTOR 765977.
- ^ Music Web International
- ^ Classical Archives
- ^ Charles Rosen. 1995. The romantic generation. HarperCollins.
- ^ Jensen, Eric Frederick, Schumann, Oxford University Press, 2004, p. 151.
- ^ Answers.com
- ^ Maurice Ravel: Arrangements et transcriptions (French)