Tag: Romantic Era

  • Schumanns’ Forbidden Love Story & Musical Legacy

    Schumanns’ Forbidden Love Story & Musical Legacy

    On this date in 1840, the Schumanns finally got hitched. The couple had wanted to marry for years, but Clara’s father – Robert’s former teacher, Friedrich Wieck – bitterly opposed the match, so violently in fact that the matter landed everyone in court.

    At the time of their first meeting, Robert was 20 years-old and a live-in student at the Wiecks’. Clara was 11. Clearly circumstances were problematic. The minute Clara turned 18, she accepted Robert’s proposal of marriage. The elder Wieck declined to grant his permission, and the young couple was compelled to bring suit against him. In the end, the judge ruled in the lovers’ favor, and the two were at last able to wed – one day before Clara’s 21st birthday, at which point she would no longer have needed her father’s consent!

    Ah well. In the interim, after he had been tossed out of the house, Robert’s passion for Clara was sublimated into ardent love letters and bursts of creative energy. He composed reams of piano music at white heat up until the year of their marriage. Thereafter, he wrote for piano and orchestra, always with Clara in mind.

    The two maintained a joint diary, and the entries are frequently touching. The Schumanns, like any married couple, had their issues, but they clearly loved one another very much. They became one of the great power couples of their time, with Robert a composing dynamo and Clara one of the great concert pianists of her day. More than 20 years after Robert’s death, she became a professor at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt. Her 61 year concert career played a huge role in molding public taste in so far as what we have come to expect, down to the present day, from a piano recital.

    Happy anniversary to the happy couple.


    Schumann’s “Widmung” (“Dedication”), written as a wedding present for Clara:

    Schumann’s love letters, read by Sting!

  • Mendelssohn Genius Cut Short at 38

    Mendelssohn Genius Cut Short at 38

    Ach! The birthday anniversary of yet another musical genius? Musical geniuses are certainly thick on the ground this time of year.

    Felix Mendelssohn has the unfortunate reputation, as one wag put it, of having been “born a genius and died a talent.” With masterworks such as the “Midsummer Night’s Dream Overture” (composed at the age of 17) and the Octet for Strings (composed at 16!), it is difficult to argue against the assessment, especially when, later in life, the odd flash of inspiration (eg. the Violin Concerto in E Minor, his last major orchestral work, conceived when he was about 29 and written over six years) rends the gloom of stodgy choral works and cloying songs without words.

    But there is no doubt he was influential, especially in Victorian England (hard to imagine William Sterndale Bennett or Sir Arthur Sullivan without him), where his music was adored, Scandinavia (particularly marked in his disciple Niels Wilhelm Gade), and not surprisingly Germany (cue early Richard Strauss).

    His tenure as music director of the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra was also significant, not only for the number of performances, especially premieres, of important contemporary works (Schubert’s Symphony No. 9, Schumann’s Symphonies Nos. 1 & 4), but also as a breeding ground for top musical talent of the day (including Ferdinand David, Mendelssohn’s concertmaster, who played in the debut of the Violin Concerto).

    Of course, Mendelssohn was also the most important figure in the revival of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach, engineering the first performance, at the age of 20, since Bach’s death of the “St. Matthew Passion.”

    Hey, so many composers are lucky to be remembered for but a single work. At least a fair amount of Mendelssohn’s output is still performed regularly. And he accomplished it all by the age of 38!

    Happy birthday, Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847).

  • Robert Schumann’s June Birthday & Romantic Music

    Robert Schumann’s June Birthday & Romantic Music

    There is no shortage of interesting June birthdays, musically speaking.

    A case in point is that of arch-Romantic Robert Schumann, whose life story sports many colorful incidents – his ardent courtship of the under-aged Clara Wieck, which led to a spectacular court case against her father, who ultimately lost the suit (the matter was settled one day before the relationship would have been deemed legal); his mentorship of that young lion of German music, Johannes Brahms, who harbored a semi-disguised affection for Clara; and his bouts with mental instability, which led to his hurling himself into the Rhine and subsequent placement in an asylum.

    Is it any surprise that such an overheated personality would write such emotionally turbulent music? Whether tender (the “Kinderszenen,” his reminiscences of childhood) or troubled (the “Nachtstücke,” a premonition of his brother’s death), Schumann was the ne plus ultra of Romantics.

    Happy Birthday, Robert Schumann!

    Kinderszenen (Scenes from Childhood), Op. 15, performed by Clara Haskil:

    Nachtstücke, Op. 23, performed by Emil Gilels:

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