Bachtrack logo
Agenda
Critiques
Articles
Actualités
Vidéo
Site
Jeunes artistes
Voyage

Compositeur: Schumann, Robert (1810-1856)

Rechercher des événements de musique classique, opéra et ballet | Schumann
Loading image...
Schumann, Robert
Biographie
Schumann, Robert

Within the canon of acknowledged great composers, Robert Schumann is unique in being the only one to have written novels before embarking on his career as composer. Although he never became a great novelist, he did become a highly influential music critic who started his own musical journal.

There are many definitions of exactly what constitutes “Romantic” classical music. By just about any definition, whether based on form, tonality, theme or mood, Schumann is one of the composers who epitomises it. His character was depressive (he might today be labelled “bipolar”), lurching between extremes of joy and despondency, contrasts that are reflected in his music. But whichever the extreme, Schumann’s music is always of great beauty. It’s music which is easy to listen to, instilling its mood gently, subtly and harmoniously, even in its faster, louder or more vivacious passages.

Schumann was one of the first composers to make extensive use of “programme music” in which the music explicitly describes characters or scenes. He even invented characters to embody the opposite halves of his own personality: “Florestan” represents his more violent, passionate side, while “Eusebius” displays his introspective and distant side. Both Florestan and Eusebius appear frequently in his writing, and each appears as a movement of the piano suite Carnaval, a collection showing great variety and colour and one of Schumann’s best loved works. Throughout his output, Schumann makes extensive use of German romantic themes - the journey through the forest, the young woman taking holy orders at the cathedral gate while her lover watches silently, the traveller’s rest in a wild, stormy night, and many others.

Perhaps the work that best illustrates Schumann’s delicacy and subtlety is Kinderszenen (scenes from childhood), a set of thirteen piano pieces that beautifully portray the gentle, wide-eyed innocence of childhood, appealing both to a novice classical music listener and to any expert who, perhaps jaded by more complex or overwrought fare, will find a rare combination of beauty and economy of expression.

Schumann is probably best remembered for his piano works (as well as Kinderszenen and Carnaval, his Kreisleriana, Papillons and fantasies are much performed and recorded, as well as the A minor Piano Concerto) but he mastered many forms of composition. His symphonies are still frequently played and his chamber music contains several standards of the repertoire, most notably the Piano Quintet and the three Fantasiestücke for Clarinet and Piano. The single opera, Genoveva, remains an obscure curiosity. Unusually, he seems to have worked at the different musical forms in phases, devoting a few years of his life to each form.

In 1840, Schumann married Clara Wieck, the daughter of his music teacher (who disapproved of the match and made all possible efforts to prevent it) and a historically important pianist in her own right. The marriage was a very happy one: in that year, Schumann wrote no fewer than 168 songs, leading scholars to describe it as the “Year of the Lied”.

Schumann formulated his own set of musical “house and life rules”, which set out his view of how an aspiring musician should approach his art. They show the constant struggle between a man of vivid temperament and imagination and a meticulous believer in order, structure and hard work. To describe his music, one can do little better than to use his own words:

If you have been given a vivid imagination from above, then you will often find yourself spending solitary hours sitting at the piano as if in a trance searching for harmonies to express your inner feelings. The more mysteriously you feel yourself drawn as if into a magic circle, the more elusive seems the world of harmony. These are the happiest hours of youth. But beware of surrendering to a talent that may lead you to waste time and energy on phantoms. The mastery of form, the power of clear arrangement, can be acquired only through the fixed symbols of notation. Therefore write more, and dream less.


David Karlin
22nd December 2009

Fichier de données
Année de naissance1810
Année du décès1856
NationalitéAllemagne
ÉpoqueRomantique
Liste des œuvres
4 Fantasiestücke en la mineur, pour violon, violoncelle et piano, Op.884 Nachtstucke pour piano, Op.235 stücke im Volkston (5 pièces dans le style populaire), Op.102: Langsam5 stücke im Volkston (5 pièces en style traditionnel) Op.102Adagio et Allegro en la bémol majeur, Op.70Andante et Variations, Op.46Arabesque en ut majeur, Op.18Bedeckt mich mit Blumen, Op.138 no.4Belsazar, Op.57Bilder aus dem Osten (Images d'Orient), Op.66Blondels Lied, Op.53 no.1Carnaval, Op.9Concerto pour piano et orchestre en la mineur, Op.54Concerto pour violon en ré mineurConcerto pour violoncelle et orchestre en la mineur, Op.129Davidsbündlertänze, Op.6Dein Angesicht, Op.127 no.2Der Soldat, Op.40 no.3Der schwere Abend, Op.90 no.6Dichterliebe, Op.48Die beiden Grenadiere, Op.49 no.1Die feindlichen Brüder, Op.49 no.2F- A- E Sonate: IntermezzoFantaisie en ut majeur pour violon et orchestre, Op.131Fantasie en ut majeur pour piano, Op.17Fantasiestücke, Op.12Fantasiestücke, Op.73Faschingsschwank aus Wien (Carnaval de Vienne), Op.26Faschingsschwank aus Wien: Intermezzo, Op.26 no. 4Four Schumann PiecesFrauenliebe und -leben, Op.42Fünf Lieder, Op.40 (Märzveilchen, Muttertraum, Der Soldat, Der Spielmann, Verratene Liebe)Genoveva, Op.81: ouvertureGesänge der Frühe, Op.133Humoresque en si bémol majeur, Op.20In Der Fremde, Op.39 no.1Introduction et Allegro en ré mineur pour piano et orchestre, Op.134Kinderszenen, Op.15Kinderszenen, Op.15: AuszügeKinderszenen: Träumerei (Rêverie), Op.15 no. 7Konzertstück pour quatre cors et orchestre, Op.86Kreisleriana, Op.16Le Paradis et la Péri (Das Paradies und die Peri), pour solistes, chœur et orchestreLiederkreis, Op.24Liederkreis, Op.39Manfred Ouverture, Op.115Mein Wagen rollet langsam, Op.142 no.4Mondnacht, Op.39 no.5Myrthen: Die Lotosblume, Op.25 no.7Myrthen: Hauptmans Weib, Op.25 no.19Myrthen: Widmung, Op.25 no.1Mädchenlieder, Op.103Märchenbilder pour alto et piano, Op.113Märchenerzählungen, Op.132Nachtlied, Op.108Novelette no. 8, Op.21Ouverture, Scherzo et Finale en mi majeur, Op.52Papillons, Op.2Quatre Marches pour pianoforte, Op.76Quatuor avec piano en mi bémol majeur, Op.47Quatuor à cordes en fa majeur, Op.41 no. 2Quatuor à cordes en la majeur, Op.41 no. 3Quatuor à cordes en la mineur, Op.41 no. 1Quintette avec piano en mi bémol majeur, Op.44Requiem Op.90 no.7Requiem, Op.148Romance en fa dièse majeur, Op.28 no. 2Romances et Ballades: Livre 1 pour choeur mixte a cappella, Op.67Schneeglöckchen, Op.96 no.2Scènes de la forêt (Waldszenen), Op.82Sechs Gedichte und Requiem, Op.90Sechs Gesänge, Op.107Six Fugues sur the name BACH, Op.60Six études en forme de canons, Op.56Sonate pour piano en sol mineur, Op.22Sonate pour piano et violon no. 1 en la mineur, Op. 105Sonate pour piano et violon no. 2 en ré mineur, Op.121Sonate pour piano et violon no. 3 en la mineurSonate pour piano no. 1 en fa dièse mineur, Op.11Sonate pour piano no. 3 en fa mineur, Op.14Spanisches Liederspiel, Op.74: Erste BegegnungSpanisches Liederspiel, Op.74: LiebesgramStille Tränen, Op.35 no.10Symphonie en sol mineur « Zwickau », WoO 29Symphonie no. 1 en si bémol majeur 'Printemps', Op. 38Symphonie no. 2 en ut majeur, Op. 61Symphonie no. 3 en mi bémol majeur "Rhénane", Op. 97Symphonie no. 4 en ré mineur, Op. 120The Bride of Messina overture, Op.100Tragödie I, Op.64 no.3Tragödie II, Op.64 no.3Trio pour piano, violon et violoncelle no. 1 en ré mineur, Op.63Trio pour piano, violon et violoncelle no. 2 en fa majeur, Op.80Trio pour piano, violon et violoncelle no. 3 en sol mineur, Op.110Trois Romances, Op.94Vier Klavierstücke, Op.32Vier doppelchörige Gesänge, Op.141Violin Concerto in D minor: LangsamÉtudes en forme de variations sur un thème de Beethoven WoO 31Études symphoniques, Op.13Études symphoniques, Op.13: 5 variations posthumes