Schwanengesang

Schwanengesang ("Swan song") is the title of a posthumous collection of songs by Franz Schubert.

Unlike the earlier Die schöne Müllerin and Winterreise, it uses poems by three poets, Ludwig Rellstab (1799–1860), Heinrich Heine (1797–1856) and Johann Gabriel Seidl (1804-1875). Schwanengesang has the number D 957 in the Deutsch catalogue. Schwanengesang was composed 1828 and published in 1829 just a few months after the composer's death on November 19, 1828.

The collection was named by its first publisher Tobias Haslinger, presumably wishing to present it as Schubert's final musical testament to the world.

In the original manuscript in Schubert's hand, the first 13 songs were copied in a single sitting, on consecutive manuscript pages, and in the standard performance order. All the song titles are by Schubert, as Heine did not give names to the poems. (Reed 259) However, it's not clear that Schubert intended it to be a cycle at all, or if he did, that he completed it before he died. It may have been Tobias Haslinger, Schubert's publisher, who conceived of it as a cycle, or attempted to finish an incomplete work by adding Taubenpost onto the end. So most people consider Haslinger's published version 'the' version, and that's how it's performed today. Taubenpost is considered to be Schubert's last Lied.

Franz Liszt later transcribed these songs for solo piano.

Schubert also set to music a poem named Schwanengesang by Johann Senn, unrelated to this collection (number D744 in the Deutsch catalogue).

Contents

An Uncertain Cycle

In 1828, October 2, Schubert (after the manuscript had been written) offered the Heine set of poems to a Leipzig publisher by the name of Probst. We can assume, then, that Schubert - at least in the beginning - intended to publish the sets separately. In addition to this, the order of the songs as they appear in the manuscript is different from that of the poems as Heine published them, which does create continuity problems.[1] It was customary for Schubert to respect the poet's sequence, which creates the probability that the manuscript may not represent the definite order of the songs and that Heine's arrangement (numbers 3, 5, 4, 6, 2, 1) may be the intended order of performance.[1] The Seidl song, Die Taubenpost, has no connection at all to the rest of the cycle and was appended by Haslinger at the end to round up all of Schubert's last compositions.[1]

Content

The songs of Schwanengesang, as found in Schubert's manuscript:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Reed, John. The Schubert Song Companion. Mandolin: Manchester, 1997, ISBN 1901341003. pages 259-260

External links