Introduction
(born Vienna, 31 January 1797; died there, 19 November 1828).
The son of a schoolmaster, he showed an extraordinary childhood aptitude
for music, studying the piano, violin, organ, singing and harmony and,
while a chorister in the imperial court chapel, composition with Salieri
(1808-13). By 1814 he had produced piano pieces settings of Schiller and
Metastasio, string quartets, his first symphony and a three-act opera.
Although family pressure dictated that he teach in his father's school,
he continued to compose prolifically; his huge output of 1814-15 includes
Gretchen am Spinnrade and Erlkönig (both famous for their text-painting)
among numerous songs, besides two more symphonies, three masses and four
stage works. From this time he enjoyed the companionship of several friends,
especially Josef von Spaun, the poet Johann Mayrhofer and the law student
Franz von Schober. Frequently gathering for domestic evenings of Schubert's
music (later called 'Schubertiads'), this group more than represented the
new phenomenon of an educated, musically aware middle class: it gave him
an appreciative audience and influential contacts (notably the Sonnleithners
and the baritone J.M. Vogl), as well as the confidence, in 1818, to break
with schoolteaching. More songs poured out, including Der Wanderer
and Die Forelle, and instrumental pieces - inventive piano sonatas,
some tuneful, Rossinian overtures, the Fifth and Sixth Symphonies began
to show increased harmonic subtlety. He worked briefly as music master
to the Esterházy family, finding greater satisfaction writing songs,
chamber music (especially the 'Trout' Quintet) and dramatic music. Die
Zwillingsbrüder (for Vogl) was only a small success, but brought
some recognition and led to the greater challenge of Die Zauberharfe.
In 1820-21 aristocratic patronage, further introductions and new friendships
augured well. Schubert's admirers issued 20 of his songs by private subscription,
and he and Schober collaborated on Alfonso und Estrella (later said
to be his favourite opera). Though full of outstanding music, it was rejected.
Strained friendships, pressing financial need and serious illness - Schubert
almost certainly contracted syphilis in late 1822 - made this a dark period,
which however encompassed some remarkable creative work: the epic 'Wanderer'
Fantasy for piano, the passionate, two movement Eighth Symphony ('Unfinished'),
the exquisite Schöne Müllerin song cycle, Die Verschworenen
and the opera Fierabras (full of haunting music if dramatically
ineffective). In 1824 he tumed to instrumental forms, producing the a Minor
and d Minor ('Death and the Maiden') string quartets and the lyrically
expansive Octet for wind and strings; around this time he at least sketched,
probably at Gmunden in summer 1825, the 'Great' C Major Symphony. With
his reputation in Vienna steadily growing (his concerts with Vogl were
renowned, and by 1825 he was negotiating with four publishers), Schubert
now entered a more assured phase. He wrote mature piano sonatas, notably
the one in a Minor, some magnificent songs and his last, highly characteristic
String Quartet, in G Major. 1827-8 saw not only the production of Winterreise
and two piano trios but a marked increase in press coverage of his music;
and he was elected to the Vienna Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde. But though
he gave a full-scale public concert in March 1828 and worked diligently
to satisfy publishers - composing some of his greatest music in his last
year, despite failing health - appreciation remained limited. At his death,
aged 31, he was mourned not only for his achievement but for 'still fairer
hopes'.
Schubert's fame was long limited to that of a songwriter, since the
bulk of his large output was not even published, and some not even performed,
until the late 19th century. Yet, beginning with the Fifth Symphony and
the 'Trout' Quintet, he produced major instrumental masterpieces. These
are marked by an intense lyricism (often suggesting a mood of near-pathos),
a spontaneous chromatic modulation that is surprising to the ear yet clearly
purposeful and often beguilingly expressive, and, not least, an imagination
that creates its own formal structures. His way with sonata form, whether
in an unorthodox choice of key for secondary material (Symphony in b Minor,
'Trout' Quintet) or of subsidiary ideas for the development, makes clear
his maturity and individuality. The virtuoso 'Wanderer' Fantasy is equally
impressive in its structure and use of cyclic form, while the String Quartet
in G Major explores striking new sononties and by extension an emotional
range of a violence new to the medium. The greatest of his chamber works
however is acknowledged to be the String Quintet in C Major, with its rich
sonorities, its intensity and its lyricism, and in the slow movement depth
of feeling engendered by the sustained outer sections (with their insistent
yet varied and suggestive accompanying ngures) embracing a central impassioned
section in F minor. Among the piano sonatas, the last three, particularly
the noble and spacious one in B-flat, represent another summit of achievement.
His greatest orchestral masterpiece is the 'Great' C Major Symphony, with
its remarkable formal synthesis, striking rhythmic vitality, felicitous
orchestration and sheer lyric beauty.
Schubert never abandoned his ambition to write a successful opera. Much
of the music is of high quality (especially in Alfonso und Estrella,
Fierabras
and the attractive Easter oratorio Lazarus, closely related to the
operas), showing individuality of style in both accompanied recitative
and orchestral colour if little sense of dramatic progress. Among the choral
works, the partsongs and the masses rely on homophonic texture and bold
harmonic shifts for their effect; the masses in A-flat and E-flat are particularly
successful.
Schubert effectively established the German lied as a new art form in
the 19th century. He was helped by the late 18th-century outburst of lyric
poetry and the new possibilities for picturesque accompaniment offered
by the piano, but his own genius is by far the most important factor. The
songs fall info four main structural groups - simple strophic, modified
strophic, through-composed (e.g. Die junge Nonne) and the 'scena'
type (Der Wanderer); the poets range from Goethe, Schiller and Heine
to Schubert's own versifying friends. Reasons for their abiding popularity
rest not only in the direct appeal of Schubert's melody and the general
attractiveness of his idiom but also in his unfailing ability to capture
musically both the spirit of a poem and much of its external detail. He
uses harmony to represent emotional change (passing from minor to major,
magically shifting to a 3rd-related key, tenuously resolving a diminished
7th, inflecting a final strophe to press home its climax) and accompaniment
figuration to illustrate poetic images (moving water, shimmering stars,
a church bell). With such resources he found innumerable ways to illuminate
a text, from the opening depiction of morning in Ganymed to the
leaps of anguish in Der Doppelgänger.
Schubert's discovery of Wilhelm Müller's narrative lyrics gave
rise to his further development of the lied by means of the song cycle.
Again, his two masterpieces were practically without precedent and have
never been surpassed. Both identify nature with human suffering, Die
schöne Müllerin evoking a pastoral sound-language of walking,
flowing and flowering, and Winterreise a more intensely Romantic,
universal, profoundly tragic quality.
Extracted with permission from
The Grove Concise Dictionary of Music
edited by Stanley Sadie
© Macmillan Press Ltd., London. |
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© 1 February 1996
Last Revision - 25 August 1999
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