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Franz Schubert

Franz Peter Schubert (German: [ˈfʁant͡s ˈpeːtɐ ˈʃuːbɐt]; 31 January 1797 – 19 November 1828) was an Austrian composer of the late Classical and early Romantic eras. Despite his short lifetime, Schubert left behind a vast oeuvre, including more than 600 secular vocal works (mainly lieder), seven complete symphonies, sacred music, operas, incidental music, and a large body of piano and chamber music. His major works include "Erlkönig" (D. 328), the Piano Quintet in A major, D. 667 (Trout Quintet), the Symphony No. 8 in B minor, D. 759 (Unfinished Symphony), the "Great" Symphony No. 9 in C major, D. 944, the String Quintet (D. 956), the three last piano sonatas (D. 958–960), the opera Fierrabras (D. 796), the incidental music to the play Rosamunde (D. 797), and the song cycles Die schöne Müllerin (D. 795) and Winterreise (D. 911).

Oil painting of Franz Schubert by Wilhelm August Rieder (1875), made from his own 1825 watercolour portrait

Born in the Himmelpfortgrund suburb of Vienna, Schubert showed uncommon gifts for music from an early age. His father gave him his first violin lessons and his elder brother gave him piano lessons, but Schubert soon exceeded their abilities. In 1808, at the age of eleven, he became a pupil at the Stadtkonvikt school, where he became acquainted with the orchestral music of Joseph Haydn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Ludwig van Beethoven. He left the Stadtkonvikt at the end of 1813 and returned home to live with his father, where he began studying to become a schoolteacher. Despite this, he continued his studies in composition with Antonio Salieri and still composed prolifically. In 1821, Schubert was admitted to the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde as a performing member, which helped establish his name among the Viennese citizenry. He gave a concert of his works to critical acclaim in March 1828, the only time he did so in his career. He died eight months later at the age of 31, the cause officially attributed to typhoid fever, but believed by some historians to be syphilis.

Appreciation of Schubert's music while he was alive was limited to a relatively small circle of admirers in Vienna, but interest in his work increased greatly in the decades following his death. Felix Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann, Franz Liszt, Johannes Brahms and other 19th-century composers discovered and championed his works. Today, Schubert is ranked among the greatest composers in the history of Western classical music and his work continues to be admired and widely performed.

Biography

Early life and education

Franz Peter Schubert was born in Himmelpfortgrund (now a part of Alsergrund), Vienna, Archduchy of Austria, on 31 January 1797, and baptized in the Catholic Church the following day.[1] He was the twelfth child of Franz Theodor Florian Schubert (1763–1830) and Maria Elisabeth Katharina Vietz (1756–1812).[2] Schubert's immediate ancestors came originally from the province of Zuckmantel in Austrian Silesia.[3] His father, the son of a Moravian peasant, was a well-known parish schoolmaster, and his school in Lichtental (in Vienna's ninth district) had numerous students in attendance.[4] He came to Vienna from Zukmantel in 1784 and was appointed schoolmaster two years later.[3] His mother was the daughter of a Silesian master locksmith and had been a housemaid for a Viennese family before marriage. Of Franz Theodor and Elisabeth's fourteen children (one of them illegitimate, born in 1783),[5] nine died in infancy.

 
The house in which Schubert was born, today Nußdorfer Straße 54

At the age of five, Schubert began to receive regular lessons from his father, and a year later he was enrolled at his father's school.[6] Although it is not known exactly when he received his first musical instruction, he was given piano lessons by his brother Ignaz, but they lasted for a very short time as Schubert excelled him within a few months.[7] Ignaz later recalled:

I was amazed when Franz told me, a few months after we began, that he had no need of any further instruction from me, and that for the future he would make his own way. And in truth his progress in a short period was so great that I was forced to acknowledge in him a master who had completely distanced and outstripped me, and whom I despaired of overtaking.[8]

His father gave him his first violin lessons when he was eight years old, training him to the point where he could play easy duets proficiently.[9] Soon after, Schubert was given his first lessons outside the family by Michael Holzer, organist and choirmaster of the local parish church in Lichtental. Holzer would often assure Schubert's father, with tears in his eyes, that he had never had such a pupil as Schubert,[8] and the lessons may have largely consisted of conversations and expressions of admiration.[10] Holzer gave the young Schubert instruction in piano and organ as well as in figured bass.[8] According to Holzer, however, he did not give him any real instruction as Schubert would already know anything that he tried to teach him; rather, he looked upon Schubert with "astonishment and silence".[9] The boy seemed to gain more from an acquaintance with a friendly apprentice joiner who took him to a neighbouring pianoforte warehouse where Schubert could practise on better instruments.[11] He also played viola in the family string quartet, with his brothers Ferdinand and Ignaz on first and second violin and his father on the cello. Schubert wrote his earliest string quartets for this ensemble.[12]

Young Schubert first came to the attention of Antonio Salieri, then Vienna's leading musical authority, in 1804, when his vocal talent was recognized.[12] In November 1808, he became a pupil at the Stadtkonvikt (Imperial Seminary) through a choir scholarship. At the Stadtkonvikt, he was introduced to the overtures and symphonies of Mozart, the symphonies of Joseph Haydn and his younger brother Michael Haydn, and the overtures and symphonies of Beethoven, a composer for whom he developed admiration.[13][14] His exposure to these and other works, combined with occasional visits to the opera, laid the foundation for a broader musical education.[15] One important musical influence came from the songs by Johann Rudolf Zumsteeg, an important composer of lieder. The precocious young student "wanted to modernize" Zumsteeg's songs, as reported by Joseph von Spaun, Schubert's friend.[16] Schubert's friendship with Spaun began at the Stadtkonvikt and lasted throughout his short life. In those early days, the financially well-off Spaun furnished the impoverished Schubert with much of his manuscript paper.[15]

In the meantime, Schubert's talent began to show in his compositions; Salieri decided to start training him privately in music theory and composition. According to Ferdinand, the boy's first composition for piano was a Fantasy for four hands; his first song, Klagegesang der Hagar, would be written a year later.[17] Schubert was occasionally permitted to lead the Stadtkonvikt's orchestra,[18] and it was the first orchestra he wrote for. He devoted much of the rest of his time at the Stadtkonvikt to composing chamber music, several songs, piano pieces and, more ambitiously, liturgical choral works in the form of a "Salve Regina" (D 27), a "Kyrie" (D 31), in addition to the unfinished "Octet for Winds" (D 72, said to commemorate the 1812 death of his mother),[19] the cantata Wer ist groß? for male voices and orchestra (D 110, for his father's birthday in 1813), and his first symphony (D 82).[20]

Teacher at his father's school

 
Possible portrait of the young Franz Schubert c. 1814, attributed to Josef Abel

At the end of 1813, Schubert left the Stadtkonvikt and returned home for teacher training at the St Anna Normal-hauptschule. In 1814, he entered his father's school as the teacher of the youngest pupils. For over two years, young Schubert endured severe drudgery.[21] There were, however, compensatory interests even then: for example, Schubert continued to take private lessons in composition from Salieri, who gave him more actual technical training than any of his other teachers, before they parted ways in 1817.[18]

In 1814, Schubert met a young soprano named Therese Grob, daughter of a local silk manufacturer, and wrote several of his liturgical works (including a "Salve Regina" and a "Tantum Ergo") for her; she was also a soloist in the premiere of his Mass No. 1 (D. 105) in September[22] 1814.[21] Schubert wanted to marry her, but was hindered by the harsh marriage-consent law of 1815[23] requiring an aspiring bridegroom to show he had the means to support a family.[24] In November 1816, after failing to gain a musical post in Laibach (now Ljubljana, Slovenia), Schubert sent Ms. Grob's brother Heinrich a collection of songs retained by the family into the twentieth century.[25]

One of Schubert's most prolific years was 1815. He composed over 20,000 bars of music, more than half of which were for orchestra, including nine church works (despite his being an agnostic),[26][27] a symphony, and about 140 Lieder.[28] In that year, he was also introduced to Anselm Hüttenbrenner and Franz von Schober, who would become his lifelong friends. Another friend, Johann Mayrhofer, was introduced to him by Spaun in 1815.[29]

Throughout 1815, Schubert lived at home with his father. He continued to teach at the school and give private musical instruction, earning enough money for his basic needs, including clothing, manuscript paper, pens, and ink, but with little to no money left over for luxuries.[30] Spaun was well aware that Schubert was discontented with his life at the schoolhouse, and was concerned for Schubert's development intellectually and musically. In May 1816, Spaun moved from his apartment in Landskrongasse (in the inner city) to a new home in the Landstraße suburb; one of the first things he did after he settled into the new home was to invite Schubert to spend a few days with him. This was probably Schubert's first visit away from home or school.[31] Schubert's unhappiness during his years as a schoolteacher possibly showed early signs of depression, and it is virtually certain that Schubert suffered from cyclothymia throughout his life.[32]

In 1989 the musicologist Maynard Solomon suggested that Schubert was erotically attracted to men,[33] a thesis that has been heatedly debated.[34][35] The musicologist and Schubert expert Rita Steblin has said that he was "chasing women".[36] The theory of Schubert's sexuality or "Schubert as Other" has continued to influence current scholarship.[37]

Support from friends

 
Caricature of Johann Michael Vogl and Franz Schubert by Franz von Schober (1825)

Significant changes happened in 1816. Schober, a student and of good family and some means, invited Schubert to lodge with him at his mother's house. The proposal was particularly opportune, for Schubert had just made the unsuccessful application for the post of Kapellmeister at Laibach, and he had also decided not to resume teaching duties at his father's school. By the end of the year, he became a guest in Schober's lodgings.[38] For a time, he attempted to increase the household resources by giving music lessons, but they were soon abandoned, and he devoted himself to composition.[39] "I compose every morning, and when one piece is done, I begin another."[40] During this year, he focused on orchestral and choral works, although he also continued to write Lieder.[41] Much of this work was unpublished, but manuscripts and copies circulated among friends and admirers.[42]

In early 1817, Schober introduced Schubert to Johann Michael Vogl, a prominent baritone twenty years Schubert's senior. Vogl, for whom Schubert went on to write a great many songs, became one of Schubert's main proponents in Viennese musical circles. Schubert also met Joseph Hüttenbrenner (brother of Anselm), who also played a role in promoting his music.[43] These, and an increasing circle of friends and musicians, became responsible for promoting, collecting, and, after his death, preserving his work.[44] Heinrich Anschütz wrote in his memoirs that Schubert was an active member of the so-called Unsinnsgesellschaft (Nonsense Society), and various scholars agree with this.[45][46]

In late 1817, Schubert's father gained a new position at a school in Rossau, not far from Lichtental. Schubert rejoined his father and reluctantly took up teaching duties there. In early 1818, he applied for membership in the prestigious Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde, intending to gain admission as an accompanist, but also so that his music, especially the songs, could be performed in the evening concerts. He was rejected on the basis that he was "no amateur", although he had been employed as a schoolteacher at the time and there were professional musicians already among the society's membership.[47][48] However, he began to gain more notice in the press, and the first public performance of a secular work, an overture performed in February 1818, received praise from the press in Vienna and abroad.[49]

Schubert spent the summer of 1818 as a music teacher to the family of Count Johann Karl Esterházy at their château in Zseliz (now Želiezovce, Slovakia). The pay was relatively good, and his duties teaching piano and singing to the two daughters were relatively light, allowing him to compose happily. Schubert may have written his Marche Militaire in D major (D. 733 no. 1) for Marie and Caroline, in addition to other piano duets.[50] On his return from Zseliz, he took up residence with his friend Mayrhofer.[48]

During the early 1820s, Schubert was part of a close-knit circle of artists and students who had social gatherings together that became known as Schubertiads. Many of them took place in Ignaz von Sonnleithner's large apartment in the Gundelhof (Brandstätte 5, Vienna). The tight circle of friends with which Schubert surrounded himself was dealt a blow in early 1820. Schubert and four of his friends were arrested by the Austrian police, who (in the aftermath of the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars) were on their guard against revolutionary activities and suspicious of any gathering of youth or students. One of Schubert's friends, Johann Senn, was put on trial, imprisoned for over a year, and then permanently forbidden to enter Vienna. The other four, including Schubert, were "severely reprimanded", in part for "inveighing against [officials] with insulting and opprobrious language".[51] While Schubert never saw Senn again, he did set some of his poems, Selige Welt (D. 743) and Schwanengesang (D 744), to music. The incident may have played a role in a falling-out with Mayrhofer, with whom he was living at the time.[52]

Schubert, who was only a little more than five feet tall,[53] was nicknamed "Schwammerl" by his friends, which Gibbs describes as translating to "Tubby" or "Little Mushroom".[54] "Schwamm" is German (in the Austrian and Bavarian dialects) for mushroom; the ending "-erl" makes it a diminutive. Gibbs also claims he may have occasionally drunk to excess, noting that references to Schubert's heavy drinking "... come not only in later accounts, but also in documents dating from his lifetime."[55]


Musical maturity

The compositions of 1819 and 1820 show a marked advance in development and maturity of style.[39] The unfinished oratorio Lazarus (D. 689) was begun in February; later followed, among some smaller works, by the hymn "Der 23. Psalm" (D. 706), the octet "Gesang der Geister über den Wassern" (D. 714), the Quartettsatz in C minor (D. 703), and the Wanderer Fantasy in C major for piano (D. 760). In 1820, two of Schubert's operas were staged: Die Zwillingsbrüder (D. 647) appeared at the Theater am Kärntnertor on 14 June, and Die Zauberharfe (D. 644) appeared at the Theater an der Wien on 21 August.[56] Hitherto, his larger compositions (apart from his masses) had been restricted to the amateur orchestra at the Gundelhof (Brandstätte 5, Vienna), a society which grew out of the quartet-parties at his home. Now he began to assume a more prominent position, addressing a wider public.[56] Publishers, however, remained distant, with Anton Diabelli hesitantly agreeing to print some of his works on commission.[57] The first seven opus numbers (all songs) appeared on these terms; then the commission ceased, and he began to receive parsimonious royalties.[58] The situation improved somewhat in March 1821 when Vogl performed the song "Erlkönig" (D. 328) at a concert that was extremely well received.[59] That month, Schubert composed a Variation on a Waltz by Diabelli (D 718), being one of the fifty composers who contributed to the Vaterländischer Künstlerverein publication.

 
Watercolour of Franz Schubert by Wilhelm August Rieder (1825)

The production of the two operas turned Schubert's attention more firmly than ever in the direction of the stage, where, for a variety of reasons, he was almost completely unsuccessful. All in all, he embarked on twenty stage projects, each of them failures that were quickly forgotten. In 1822, Alfonso und Estrella was rejected, partly owing to its libretto (written by Schubert's friend Franz von Schober).[60] In 1823, Fierrabras (D 796) was rejected: Domenico Barbaia, impresario for the court theatres, largely lost interest in new German opera due to the popularity of Rossini and the Italian operatic style, and the failure of Carl Maria von Weber's Euryanthe.[61] Die Verschworenen (The Conspirators, D 787) was prohibited by the censor (apparently because of its title),[62] and Rosamunde, Fürstin von Zypern (D 797) was withdrawn after two nights, owing to the poor quality of the play for which Schubert had written incidental music.[58]

Despite his operatic failures, Schubert's reputation was growing steadily on other fronts. In 1821, the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde finally accepted him as a performing member, and the number of performances of his music grew remarkably.[63] These performances helped Schubert's reputation grow rapidly among the members of the Gesellschaft[63] and established his name.[60] Some of the members of the Gesellschaft, most notably Ignaz von Sonnleithner and his son Leopold von Sonnleithner, had a sizeable influence on the affairs of the society, and as a result of that and of Schubert's growing reputation, his works were included in three major concerts of the Gesellschaft in 1821. In April, one of his male-voice quartets was performed, and in November, his Overture in E minor (D. 648) received its first public performance;[63] at a different concert on the same day as the premiere of the Overture, his song Der Wanderer (D. 489) was performed.[60]

In 1822, Schubert made the acquaintance of both Weber and Beethoven, but little came of it in either case;[58] however, Beethoven is said to have acknowledged the younger man's gifts on a few occasions. On his deathbed, Beethoven is said to have looked into some of the younger man's works and exclaimed: "Truly, the spark of divine genius resides in this Schubert!" Beethoven also reportedly predicted that Schubert "would make a great sensation in the world," and regretted that he had not been more familiar with him earlier; he wished to see his operas and works for piano, but his severe illness prevented him from doing so.[64]


Last years and masterworks

 
Franz Schubert by Josef Kriehuber (1846)

Despite his preoccupation with the stage, and later with his official duties, Schubert wrote much music during these years.[58] He completed the Mass in A-flat major, (D. 678) in 1822, and later that year embarked suddenly on a work which more decisively than almost any other in those years showed his maturing personal vision, the Symphony in B minor, known as the Unfinished Symphony (D. 759).[65] The reason he left it unfinished – after writing two movements and sketches some way into a third – continues to be discussed and written about, and it is also remarkable that he did not mention it to any of his friends, even though, as Brian Newbould notes, he must have felt thrilled by what he was achieving.[66] In 1823, Schubert wrote his first large-scale song cycle, Die schöne Müllerin (D. 795), setting poems by Wilhelm Müller.[67] This series, together with the later cycle Winterreise (D. 911, also setting texts of Müller in 1827) is widely considered one of the pinnacles of Lieder.[68] He also composed the song Du bist die Ruh' (You are rest and peace,[69] D. 776) during this year. Also in that year, symptoms of syphilis first appeared.[70]

In 1824, he wrote the Variations in E minor for flute and piano; Trockne Blumen, a song from the cycle Die schöne Müllerin; and several string quartets. He also wrote the Sonata in A minor for arpeggione and piano (D. 821) at the time when there was a minor craze over that instrument.[71] In the spring of that year, he wrote the Octet in F major (D. 803), a sketch for a "Grand Symphony," and in the summer went back to Zseliz. There he became attracted to Hungarian musical idiom and wrote the Divertissement à la hongroise in G minor for piano duet (D. 818) and the String Quartet in A minor Rosamunde (D. 804).[58] It has been said that he held a hopeless passion for his pupil, the Countess Caroline Esterházy,[72] but the only work that bears a dedication to her is his Fantasia in F minor for piano duet (D. 940). This dedication, however, can only be found in the first edition and not in Schubert's autograph.[73][74][75] His friend Eduard von Bauernfeld penned the following verse, which appears to reference Schubert's unrequited sentiments:

In love with a Countess of youthful grace,
—A pupil of Galt's; in desperate case
Young Schubert surrenders himself to another,
And fain would avoid such affectionate pother[76]

The setbacks of previous years were compensated by the prosperity and happiness of 1825. Publication had been moving more rapidly, the stress of poverty was for a time lightened, and in the summer he had a pleasant holiday in Upper Austria where he was welcomed with enthusiasm.[58] It was during this tour that he produced the seven-song cycle Fräulein am See, based on Walter Scott's The Lady of the Lake, and including "Ellens Gesang III" ("Hymn to the Virgin") (D. 839, Op. 52, No. 6); the lyrics of Adam Storck's German translation of the Scott poem are now frequently replaced by the full text of the traditional Roman Catholic prayer Hail Mary (Ave Maria in Latin), but for which the Schubert melody is not an original setting. The original only opens with the greeting "Ave Maria", which also recurs only in the refrain.[77] In 1825, Schubert also wrote the Piano Sonata in A minor (D 845, first published as op. 42), and began the Symphony in C major (Great C major, D. 944), which was completed the following year.[78]

 
Portrait of Franz Schubert by Franz Eybl (1827)

From 1826 to 1828, Schubert resided continuously in Vienna, except for a brief visit to Graz, Austria, in 1827. In 1826, he dedicated a symphony (D. 944, that later came to be known as the Great C major) to the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde and received an honorarium in return.[79] The String Quartet No. 14 in D minor (D. 810), with the variations on Death and the Maiden, was written during the winter of 1825–1826, and first played on 25 January 1826. Later in the year came the String Quartet No. 15 in G major, (D 887, first published as op. 161), the Rondo in B minor for violin and piano (D. 895), Rondeau brillant, and the Piano Sonata in G major, (D 894, first published as Fantasie in G, op. 78). He also produced in 1826 three Shakespearian songs, of which "Ständchen" (D. 889) and "An Sylvia" (D. 891) were allegedly written on the same day, the former at a tavern where he broke his afternoon's walk, the latter on his return to his lodging in the evening.[80]

The works of his last two years reveal a composer entering a new professional and compositional stage.[81] Although parts of Schubert's personality were influenced by his friends, he nurtured an intensely personal dimension in solitude; it was out of this dimension that he wrote his greatest music.[82] The death of Beethoven affected Schubert deeply,[83] and may have motivated Schubert to reach new artistic peaks. In 1827, Schubert wrote the song cycle Winterreise (D. 911), the Fantasy in C major for violin and piano (D. 934, first published as op. post. 159), the Impromptus for piano, and the two piano trios (the first in B-flat major (D. 898), and the second in E-flat major, (D. 929);[84] in 1828 the cantata Mirjams Siegesgesang (Victory Song of Miriam, D 942) on a text by Franz Grillparzer, the Mass in E-flat major (D. 950), the Tantum Ergo (D. 962) in the same key, the String Quintet in C major (D. 956), the second "Benedictus" to the Mass in C major (D. 961), the three final piano sonatas (D. 958, D. 959, and D. 960), and the collection 13 Lieder nach Gedichten von Rellstab und Heine for voice and piano, also known as Schwanengesang (Swan-song, D. 957).[85] (This collection – which includes settings of words by Heinrich Heine, Ludwig Rellstab, and Johann Gabriel Seidl – is not a true song cycle like Die schöne Müllerin or Winterreise.[86]) The Great C major symphony is dated 1828, but Schubert scholars believe that this symphony was largely written in 1825–1826 (being referred to while he was on holiday at Gastein in 1825—that work, once considered lost, is now generally seen as an early stage of his C major symphony) and was revised for prospective performance in 1828. The orchestra of the Gesellschaft reportedly read through the symphony at a rehearsal, but never scheduled a public performance of it. The reasons continue to be unknown, although the difficulty of the symphony is the possible explanation.[87] In the last weeks of his life, he began to sketch three movements for a new Symphony in D major (D 936A);[88] In this work, he anticipates Mahler's use of folksong-like harmonics and bare soundscapes.[89] Schubert expressed the wish, were he to survive his final illness, to further develop his knowledge of harmony and counterpoint, and had actually made appointments for lessons with the counterpoint master Simon Sechter.[90]

On 26 March 1828, the anniversary of Beethoven's death, Schubert gave, for the only time in his career, a public concert of his own works.[91] The concert was a success popularly and financially,[91] even though it would be overshadowed by Niccolò Paganini's first appearances in Vienna shortly after.[92]

 
Schubert's glasses


Final illness and death

 
Memorial at the Kalvarienberg Church, Hernals
 
The site of Schubert's first tomb at Währing

In the midst of this creative activity, his health deteriorated. By the late 1820s, Schubert's health was failing and he confided to some friends that he feared that he was near death. In the late summer of 1828, he saw the physician Ernst Rinna, who may have confirmed Schubert's suspicions that he was ill beyond cure and likely to die soon.[93] Some of his symptoms matched those of mercury poisoning (mercury was then a common treatment for syphilis, again suggesting that Schubert suffered from it).[94] At the beginning of November, he again fell ill, experiencing headaches, fever, swollen joints, and vomiting. He was generally unable to retain solid food and his condition worsened. Five days before Schubert's death, his friend the violinist Karl Holz and his string quartet visited to play for him. The last musical work he had wished to hear was Beethoven's String Quartet No. 14 in C-sharp minor, Op. 131; Holz commented: "The King of Harmony has sent the King of Song a friendly bidding to the crossing".[95]

Schubert died in Vienna, aged 31, on 19 November 1828, at the apartment of his brother Ferdinand. The cause of his death was officially diagnosed as typhoid fever, though other theories have been proposed, including the tertiary stage of syphilis.[93] Although there are accounts by his friends that indirectly imply that he was syphilitic, the symptoms of his final illness do not correspond with tertiary syphilis. Six weeks before his death, he walked 42 miles in three days, ruling out musculoskeletal syphilis. In the month of his death, he composed his last work, "Der Hirt Auf Den Felsen", making neurosyphilis unlikely. Finally, meningo-vascular syphilis is unlikely because it presents as progressive stroke-like picture, and Schubert had no neurological manifestation until his final delirium, which started only two days before his death. This, and the fact that his final illness was characterized by gastrointestinal symptoms (namely vomiting), led Robert L. Rold to argue that his final illness was a gastrointestinal one, like salmonella or indeed typhus.[96] Eva M. Cybulska goes further and says that Schubert's syphilis is a conjecture. His multi-system signs and symptoms, she says, could point at a number of different illness such as leukaemia, anaemia, or Hashimoto's thyroiditis, and that many tell-tale signs of syphilis — chancre, mucous plaques, rash on the thorax, pupil abnormality, dysgraphia — were absent. She argues that the syphilis diagnosis originated with Schubert's biographer Otto Deutsch in 1907, based on the aforementioned indirect references by his friends, and uncritically repeated ever since.[97]

It was near the grave of Beethoven, whom he had admired all his life, that Schubert was buried at his own request, in the village cemetery of Währing on the edge of the Vienna Woods.[98] A year earlier he had served as a torchbearer at Beethoven's funeral.

In 1872, a memorial to Franz Schubert was erected in Vienna's Stadtpark.[98] In 1888, both Schubert's and Beethoven's graves were moved to the Zentralfriedhof where they can now be found next to those of Johann Strauss II and Johannes Brahms.[99] Anton Bruckner was present at both exhumations, and he reached into both coffins and held the revered skulls in his hands.[100] The cemetery in Währing was converted into a park in 1925, called the Schubert Park, and his former grave site was marked by a bust. His epitaph, written by his friend, the poet Franz Grillparzer, reads: Die Tonkunst begrub hier einen reichen Besitz, aber noch viel schönere Hoffnungen ("The art of music has here interred a precious treasure, but yet far fairer hopes").

Music

Schubert was remarkably prolific, writing over 1,500 works in his short career. His compositional style progressed rapidly throughout his short life.[101] The largest number of his compositions are songs for solo voice and piano (roughly 630).[102] Schubert also composed a considerable number of secular works for two or more voices, namely part songs, choruses and cantatas. He completed eight orchestral overtures and seven complete symphonies, in addition to fragments of six others. While he composed no concertos, he did write three concertante works for violin and orchestra. Schubert wrote a large body of music for solo piano, including eleven incontrovertibly completed sonatas and at least eleven more in varying states of completion,[a] numerous miscellaneous works and many short dances, in addition to producing a large set of works for piano four hands. He also wrote over fifty chamber works, including some fragmentary works. Schubert's sacred output includes seven masses, one oratorio and one requiem, among other mass movements and numerous smaller compositions.[103] He completed only eleven of his twenty stage works.[104]

Style

In July 1947 the Austrian composer Ernst Krenek discussed Schubert's style, abashedly admitting that he had at first "shared the wide-spread opinion that Schubert was a lucky inventor of pleasing tunes ... lacking the dramatic power and searching intelligence which distinguished such 'real' masters as J. S. Bach or Beethoven". Krenek wrote that he reached a completely different assessment after a close study of Schubert's pieces at the urging of his friend and fellow composer Eduard Erdmann. Krenek pointed to the piano sonatas as giving "ample evidence that [Schubert] was much more than an easy-going tune-smith who did not know, and did not care, about the craft of composition." Each sonata then in print, according to Krenek, exhibited "a great wealth of technical finesse" and revealed Schubert as "far from satisfied with pouring his charming ideas into conventional moulds; on the contrary he was a thinking artist with a keen appetite for experimentation."[105]

Instrumental music, stage works and church music

That "appetite for experimentation" manifests itself repeatedly in Schubert's output in a wide variety of forms and genres, including opera, liturgical music, chamber and solo piano music, and symphonic works. Perhaps most familiarly, his adventurousness is reflected in his notably original sense of modulation; for example, the second movement of the String Quintet (D. 956), which is in E major, features a central section in the distant key of F minor.[106] It also appears in unusual choices of instrumentation, as in the Sonata in A minor for arpeggione and piano (D. 821), or the unconventional scoring of the Trout Quintet (D. 667) for piano, violin, viola, cello, and double bass, whereas conventional piano quintets are scored for piano and string quartet.

Although Schubert was clearly influenced by the Classical sonata forms of Beethoven and Mozart, his formal structures and his developments tend to give the impression more of melodic development than of harmonic drama.[107] This combination of Classical form and long-breathed Romantic melody sometimes lends them a discursive style: his Great C Major Symphony was described by Robert Schumann as running to "heavenly lengths".[108]

Lieder and art songs

It was in the genre of the Lied that Schubert made his most indelible mark. Leon Plantinga remarks that "in his more than six hundred Lieder he explored and expanded the potentialities of the genre, as no composer before him."[109] Prior to Schubert's influence, Lieder tended toward a strophic, syllabic treatment of text, evoking the folksong qualities engendered by the stirrings of Romantic nationalism.[110]

 
Autograph of Die Nebensonnen (The Sun dogs) from Winterreise

Among Schubert's treatments of the poetry of Goethe, his settings of "Gretchen am Spinnrade" (D. 118) and "Der Erlkönig" (D. 328) are particularly striking for their dramatic content, forward-looking uses of harmony, and use of eloquent pictorial keyboard figurations, such as the depiction of the spinning wheel and treadle in the piano in "Gretchen" and the furious and ceaseless gallop in "Erlkönig".[111] He composed music using the poems of myriad poets, with Goethe, Mayrhofer, and Schiller the most frequent, and others, including Heinrich Heine, Friedrich Rückert, and Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff. Of particular note are his two song cycles on the poems of Wilhelm Müller, Die schöne Müllerin and Winterreise, which helped to establish the genre and its potential for musical, poetic, and almost operatic dramatic narrative. His last collection of songs, published in 1828 after his death, Schwanengesang, is also an innovative contribution to German Lieder literature, as it features poems by different poets, namely Ludwig Rellstab, Heine, and Johann Gabriel Seidl. The Wiener Theaterzeitung, writing about Winterreise at the time, commented that it was a work that "none can sing or hear without being deeply moved".[112]

Antonín Dvořák wrote in 1894 that Schubert, whom he considered one of the truly great composers, was clearly influential on shorter works, especially Lieder and shorter piano works: "The tendency of the romantic school has been toward short forms, and although Weber helped to show the way, to Schubert belongs the chief credit of originating the short models of piano forte pieces which the romantic school has preferably cultivated.... Schubert created a new epoch with the Lied.... All other songwriters have followed in his footsteps."[113]

Publication – catalogue

 
Interior of museum at Schubert's birthplace, Vienna, 1914

When Schubert died he had around 100 opus numbers published, mainly songs, chamber music and smaller piano compositions.[114] Publication of smaller pieces continued (including opus numbers up to 173 in the 1860s, 50 instalments with songs published by Diabelli and dozens of first publications Peters),[115] but the manuscripts of many of the longer works, whose existence was not widely known, remained hidden in cabinets and file boxes of Schubert's family, friends, and publishers.[116] Even some of Schubert's friends were unaware of the full scope of what he wrote, and for many years he was primarily recognized as the "prince of song", although there was recognition of some of his larger-scale efforts.[117] In 1838 Robert Schumann, on a visit to Vienna, found the dusty manuscript of the C major Symphony (D. 944) and took it back to Leipzig where it was performed by Felix Mendelssohn and celebrated in the Neue Zeitschrift. An important step towards the recovery of the neglected works was the journey to Vienna which the music historian George Grove and the composer Arthur Sullivan made in October 1867.[58] The travellers unearthed the manuscripts of six of the symphonies, parts of the incidental music to Rosamunde, the Mass No. 1 in F major (D. 105), and the operas Des Teufels Lustschloss (D. 84), Fernardo (D. 220), Der vierjährige Posten (D. 190), and Die Freunde von Salamanka (D. 326), and several other unnamed works. With these discoveries, Grove and Sullivan were able to inform the public of the existence of these works; in addition, they were able to copy the fourth and sixth symphonies, the Rosamunde incidental music, and the overture to Die Freunde von Salamanka.[116] This led to more widespread public interest in Schubert's work.[118]

Complete editions

 
Lithograph of Franz Schubert by Josef Kriehuber (1846)

From 1884 to 1897, Breitkopf & Härtel published Franz Schubert's Works, a critical edition including a contribution made – among others – by Johannes Brahms, editor of the first series containing eight symphonies.[119] The publication of the Neue Schubert-Ausgabe by Bärenreiter started in the second half of the 20th century.[120]

Deutsch catalogue

Since relatively few of Schubert's works were published in his lifetime, only a small number of them have opus numbers assigned, and even in those cases, the sequence of the numbers does not give a good indication of the order of composition. Austrian musicologist Otto Erich Deutsch (1883–1967) is known for compiling the first comprehensive catalogue of Schubert's works. This was first published in English in 1951 (Schubert Thematic Catalogue) and subsequently revised for a new edition in German in 1978 (Franz Schubert: Thematisches Verzeichnis seiner Werke in chronologischer Folge – Franz Schubert: Thematic Catalogue of his Works in Chronological Order).[121]

Numbering issues

Confusion arose quite early over the numbering of Schubert's late symphonies. Schubert's last completed symphony, the Great C major D 944, was assigned the numbers 7, 8, 9 and 10, depending on publication. Similarly the Unfinished D 759 has been indicated with the numbers 7, 8, and 9.[122]

The order usually followed for these late symphonies by English-language sources is:

An even broader confusion arose over the numbering of the piano sonatas, with numbering systems ranging from 15 to 23 sonatas.

Instruments

Among pianos Schubert had access to were a Benignus Seidner piano (now displayed at the Schubert Geburtshaus in Vienna) and an Anton Walter & Sohn piano (today in the collection of the Vienna Kunsthistorisches Museum). Schubert was also familiar with instruments by Viennese piano builder Conrad Graf.[123]

Recognition

A feeling of regret for the loss of potential masterpieces caused by Schubert's early death at age 31 was expressed in the epitaph on his large tombstone written by Grillparzer: "Here music has buried a treasure, but even fairer hopes."[124] Some prominent musicians share a similar view, including the pianist Radu Lupu, who said: "[Schubert] is the composer for whom I am really most sorry that he died so young. ... Just before he died, when he wrote his beautiful two-cello String Quintet in C, he said very modestly that he was trying to learn a little more about counterpoint, and he was perfectly right. We'll never know in what direction he was going or would have gone."[125] However, others have expressed disagreement with this early view. For instance, Robert Schumann said: "It is pointless to guess at what more [Schubert] might have achieved. He did enough; and let them be honoured who have striven and accomplished as he did",[126] and the pianist András Schiff said that: "Schubert lived a very short life, but it was a very concentrated life. In 31 years, he lived more than other people would live in 100 years, and it is needless to speculate what could he have written had he lived another 50 years. It's irrelevant, just like with Mozart; these are the two natural geniuses of music."[127]

The Wiener Schubertbund, one of Vienna's leading choral societies, was founded in 1863, whilst the Gründerzeit was taking place. The Schubertbund quickly became a rallying point for schoolteachers and other members of the Viennese middle class who felt increasingly embattled during the Gründerzeit and the aftermath of the Panic of 1873. In 1872, the dedication of the Schubert Denkmal, a gift to the city from Vienna's leading male chorus, the Wiener Männergesang-Verein, took place; the chorus performed at the event.[128] The Denkmal was designed by Austrian sculptor Carl Kundmann and is located in Vienna's Stadtpark.

Schubert's chamber music continues to be popular. In a survey conducted by the ABC Classic FM radio station in 2008, Schubert's chamber works dominated the field, with the Trout Quintet ranked first, the String Quintet in C major ranked second, and the Notturno in E-flat major for piano trio ranked third. Furthermore, eight more of his chamber works were among the 100 ranked pieces: both piano trios, the String Quartet No. 14 (Death and the Maiden), the String Quartet No. 15, the Arpeggione Sonata, the Octet, the Fantasie in F minor for piano four-hands, and the Adagio and Rondo Concertante for piano quartet.[129]

The New York Times' chief music critic Anthony Tommasini, who ranked Schubert as the fourth greatest composer, wrote of him:

You have to love the guy, who died at 31, ill, impoverished and neglected except by a circle of friends who were in awe of his genius. For his hundreds of songs alone – including the haunting cycle Winterreise, which will never release its tenacious hold on singers and audiences – Schubert is central to our concert life... Schubert's first few symphonies may be works in progress. But the Unfinished and especially the Great C major Symphony are astonishing. The latter one paves the way for Bruckner and prefigures Mahler.[130]

Tributes by other musicians

 
Schubert at the Piano by Gustav Klimt (1899)

From the 1830s through the 1870s, Franz Liszt transcribed and arranged several of Schubert's works, particularly the songs. Liszt, who was a significant force in spreading Schubert's work after his death, said Schubert was "the most poetic musician who ever lived."[131] Schubert's symphonies were of particular interest to Antonín Dvořák. Hector Berlioz and Anton Bruckner acknowledged the influence of the Great C Major Symphony.[132] It was Robert Schumann who, having seen the manuscript of the Great C Major Symphony in Vienna in 1838, drew it to the attention of Mendelssohn, who led the first performance of the symphony, in a heavily abridged version, in Leipzig in 1839.[133]

In the 20th century, composers such as Richard Strauss, Anton Webern, Benjamin Britten, George Crumb, and Hans Zender championed or paid homage to Schubert in some of their works. Britten, an accomplished pianist, accompanied many of Schubert's Lieder and performed many piano solo and duet works.[132] German electronic music group Kraftwerk has a track titled Franz Schubert on their 1977 album Trans-Europe Express.[134]

Commemorations

In 1897, the 100th anniversary of Schubert's birth was marked in the musical world by festivals and performances dedicated to his music. In Vienna, there were ten days of concerts, and the Emperor Franz Joseph gave a speech recognising Schubert as the creator of the art song, and one of Austria's favourite sons.[135][136]Karlsruhe saw the first production of his opera Fierrabras.[137]

In 1928, Schubert Week was held in Europe and the United States to mark the centenary of the composer's death. Works by Schubert were performed in churches, in concert halls, and on radio stations. A competition, with top prize money of $10,000 and sponsorship by the Columbia Phonograph Company, was held for "original symphonic works presented as an apotheosis of the lyrical genius of Schubert, and dedicated to his memory".[138] The winning entry was Kurt Atterberg's sixth symphony.[138]

In film and television

Schubert has featured as a character in several films including Schubert's Dream of Spring (1931), Gently My Songs Entreat (1933), Serenade (1940), The Great Awakening (1941), It's Only Love (1947), Franz Schubert (1953), Das Dreimäderlhaus (1958), and Mit meinen heißen Tränen (1986). Schubert's music has also been featured in numerous post-silent era films, including Walt Disney's Fantasia (1940), which features Ave Maria (D. 839);[139] and the biographical film Carrington (1995), which features the second movement of the String Quintet in C major (D. 956),[140] as well as the English version of The Adventures of Milo and Otis (1989), which features Serenade and Auf dem Wasser zu singen (D. 774).

Schubert's String Quartet No. 15 in G is featured prominently in the Woody Allen film Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989). The Piano Quintet in A major, D. 667 (Trout Quintet) is featured in the 2011 film Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows by Guy Ritchie. The music of the String Quartet No. 14 in D minor, "Death and the Maiden", is often used to accompany documentaries or films, notably the 1994 film of that name by Roman Polanski. The second movement from the Piano Trio No. 2 in E-Flat Major, Op. 100/D.929, was featured in Stanley Kubrick's 1975 film Barry Lyndon.

Schubert's life was covered in the documentary Franz Peter Schubert: The Greatest Love and the Greatest Sorrow by Christopher Nupen (1994),[141] and in the documentary Schubert – The Wanderer by András Schiff and Mischa Scorer (1997), both produced for the BBC.[127][142] "Great Performances," "Now Hear This: The Schubert Generation Series," hosted by Scott Yoo, explored commentary and performances by contemporary musician admirers.[143]

Footnotes

  1. ^ D 537, 568, 575, 664, 784, 845, 850, 894, 958, 959, 960 incontrovertibly complete; D 157, 279, 459, 557, 566 as further sonatas whose completeness has been debated; D 571, 613, 625, 655, 769A, 840 as further unfinished sonatas; and many other possible sonata fragments and isolated movements possibly associated with some of the above-listed sonatas.

References

Notes

  1. ^ Duncan (1905), p. 2
  2. ^ McKay (1996), p. 2
  3. ^ a b Kreissle (1869), p. 1
  4. ^ Wilberforce (1866), p. 2: "the school was much frequented"
  5. ^ Steblin, Rita (2001). "Franz Schubert – das dreizehnte Kind", Wiener Geschichtsblätter [de], 245–265
  6. ^ Hadow 1911, p. 383.
  7. ^ McKay (1996), p. 11
  8. ^ a b c Kreissle (1869), p. 5
  9. ^ a b Duncan (1905), p. 3
  10. ^ Brown (1983), pp. 2–3
  11. ^ Wilberforce (1866), p. 3
  12. ^ a b Gibbs (2000), p. 26
  13. ^ McKay (1996), p. 22
  14. ^ Duncan (1905), pp. 5–7
  15. ^ a b Duncan (1905), p. 7
  16. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 29
  17. ^ Kreissle (1869), p. 6
  18. ^ a b Duncan (1905), p. 9
  19. ^ Frost (1915), p. 9
  20. ^ Duncan (1905), p. 10
  21. ^ a b Duncan (1905), pp. 13–14
  22. ^ Benedikt, Erich. "Notizen zu Schuberts Messen. Mit neuem Uraufführungsdatum der Messe in F-Dur", Österreichische Musikzeitschrift 52, 1–2/1997, p. 64
  23. ^ Steblin (1998)
  24. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 39
  25. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 64
  26. ^ McKay (1996), p. 308
  27. ^ Hutchings (1967), p. 166: "The unctuous style we hear every Christmas is found in church music by Schubert and the Chevalier Neukomm, both known in private letters to be agnostic."
  28. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 40
  29. ^ Gramit (1997), p. 108
  30. ^ McKay (1996), p. 55
  31. ^ McKay (1996), p. 59
  32. ^ McKay (1996), p. 138
  33. ^ Solomon, M. (Spring 1989): "Franz Schubert and the Peacocks of Benvenuto Cellini. 19th-Century Music, vol. 12, pp. 193–206.
  34. ^ "Schubert: Music, Sexuality, Culture." 19th-Century Music, 1993, 17:3–101.
  35. ^ "Schubert à la Mode", The New York Review of Books, 20 October 1994
  36. ^ Steblin, Rita (1993): "The Peacock's Tale: Schubert's Sexuality Reconsidered." 19th-Century Music. Berkeley, California: Univ. of California Press, ISSN 0148-2076, ZDB-ID 4395712, T 17., 1, pp. 5–33; Steblin, Rita (1996), Babette und Therese Kunz: neue Forschungen zum Freundeskreis um Franz Schubert und Leopold Kupelwieser, Wien: Vom Pasqualatihaus. ISBN 978-3-901254-16-1; Steblin, Rita (1997): "Schubert's 'Nina' and the True Peacocks". The Musical Times 138, pp. 13–19; Steblin, Rita (1998): Die Unsinnsgesellschaft: Franz Schubert, Leopold Kupelwieser und ihr Freundeskreis. Böhlau. ISBN 978-3-205-98820-5; Steblin, Rita (2001): "Schubert's Problematic Relationship with Johann Mayrhofer: New Documentary Evidence". Barbara Haggh (ed.): Essays on Music and Culture in Honor of Herbert Kellman. Paris-Tours: Minerve, pp. 465–495; Steblin, Rita (2008), "Schubert's Pepi: His Love Affair with the Chambermaid Josepha Pöcklhofer and Her Surprising Fate". The Musical Times, pp. 47–69.
  37. ^ Horton, Julian (2015). Schubert. Routledge, pages xi–xvii
  38. ^ McKay (1996), p. 68
  39. ^ a b Hadow 1911, p. 384.
  40. ^ Duncan (1905), p. 26
  41. ^ McKay (1996), p. 56
  42. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 44
  43. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 66
  44. ^ Duncan (1905), pp. 90–93
  45. ^ Steblin, Rita (1998). Die Unsinnsgesellschaft: Franz Schubert, Leopold Kupelwieser und ihr Freundeskreis (in German). Erich Benedikt. Wien: Böhlau. p. 1. ISBN 3-205-98820-5. OCLC 40519173.
  46. ^ Dürhammer, Ilija (1999). Schuberts literarische Heimat: Dichtung und Literatur-Rezeption der Schubert-Freunde. Wien: Böhlau. pp. 79–91, 235–245. ISBN 3-205-99051-X. OCLC 49416312.
  47. ^ McKay (1996), 75
  48. ^ a b Newbould (1999) pp. 69–72
  49. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 59
  50. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 235
  51. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 67
  52. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 68
  53. ^ McKay (1996), p. 70
  54. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 7
  55. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 97
  56. ^ a b Austin (1873), pp. 46–47
  57. ^ Wilberforce (1866), pp. 90–92
  58. ^ a b c d e f g Hadow 1911, p. 385.
  59. ^ Wilberforce (1866), p. 25
  60. ^ a b c Newbould (1999), p. 173
  61. ^ Denny (1997), pp. 245–246
  62. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 111
  63. ^ a b c McKay (1996), p. 101
  64. ^ Thayer (1921), pp. 299–300
  65. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 182
  66. ^ Newbould (1999), pp. 182–183
  67. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 215
  68. ^ Dirda, Michael (4 February 2015). "Ian Bostridge's 'Schubert's Winter Journey examines the composer's melancholy work". The Washington Post. Retrieved 8 February 2015. Franz Schubert's Winterreise is the greatest, and the most bleakly melancholy, of all song cycles.
  69. ^ Reed (1997), pp. 208–209
  70. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 210
  71. ^ Newbould (1999), pp. 221–225
  72. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 260
  73. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 218
  74. ^ Schubert, Franz. "Fantasie f-Moll". schubert-online.at. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  75. ^ Schubert, Franz (1976). Kahl, Willi (ed.). Fantasie f-Moll. München: G. Henle Verlag. pp. Preface. ISMN 979-0-2018-0180-3.
  76. ^ Duncan (1905), p. 99
  77. ^ Emmons (2006), p. 38
  78. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 228
  79. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 254
  80. ^ Smith & Carlson (1995), p. 78
  81. ^ Gibbs (1999), p. 62
  82. ^ McKay (1996), p. 268
  83. ^ McKay (1996), p. 276
  84. ^ Newbould (1999) pp. 261–263
  85. ^ Newbould (1999) pp. 270–274
  86. ^ McKay (1996), p. 313: "That Schubert in no way considered the songs as a cycle is confirmed by his letter to Probst of 2 October mentioning that he had recently written 'several songs by Heine'."
  87. ^ Griffel (1997), p. 203
  88. ^ Newbould (1999), p. 385
  89. ^ (1999), p. 385, and comments in the liner notes to the CD recording issued on Hyperion Records
  90. ^ Schonberg (1997), p. 130
  91. ^ a b Newbould (1999), pp. 265–266
  92. ^ Gibbs (1997), p. 44
  93. ^ a b Newbould (1999), p. 275.
  94. ^ Gibbs (2000), pp. 168–169
  95. ^ Deutsche (1998), p. 300
  96. ^ Rold, Robert L. (1995). "Schubert and Syphilis". Journal of Medical Biography. 3 (4): 232–235. doi:10.1177/096777209500300409. PMID 11616366.
  97. ^ Cybulska, Eva Maria (2019). "The Myth of Schubert's Syphilis: A Critical Approach". Music and Medicine. 11 (1): 44–47. doi:10.47513/mmd.v11i1.647. S2CID 151254154.
  98. ^ a b Duncan (1905), pp. 79–80
  99. ^ Gibbs (2000), p. 197
  100. ^ Tom Service, "Sex, death and dissonance: the strange, obsessive world of Anton Bruckner", The Guardian, 1 April 2014. Retrieved 11 August 2020
  101. ^ Gammond (1982), p. 143, discussing in particular his chamber music
  102. ^ Gibbs (1997), p. 21
  103. ^ Ewen (2007), p. 384
  104. ^ McKay, Elizabeth (1997). Franz Schubert. In: The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. London and New York: Macmillan
  105. ^ Lev.
  106. ^ Gammond (1982), p. 117
  107. ^ Gammond (1982), pp. 76–81
  108. ^ Brown (2002), p. 630
  109. ^ Plantinga (1984), p. 117
  110. ^ (1984), pp. 107–117
  111. ^ Swafford (1992), p. 211
  112. ^ Gammond (1982), pp. 153–156
  113. ^ Dvořák (1894), pp. 344–345
  114. ^ Deutsch 1978, p. 668[incomplete short citation]
  115. ^ Deutsch 1978, pp. 668–669[incomplete short citation]
  116. ^ a b Kreissle (1869), pp. 297–332, in which Grove recounts his visit to Vienna.
  117. ^ Gibbs (2000), pp. 61–62
  118. ^ See e.g. Kreissle (1869), p. 324, where Grove describes current (1860s) interest in Schubert's work, and Gibbs (1997), pp. 250–251, describing the size and scope of the 1897 Schubert centennial commemorations.
  119. ^ Deutsch (1995), p. xiii
  120. ^ . Bärenreiter Verlag. Archived from the original on 20 July 2018. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  121. ^ See Deutsch (1995)
  122. ^ See #Numbering of symphonies
  123. ^ "Jeffrey Dane – The Composers' Pianos". www.collectionscanada.gc.ca. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
  124. ^ Duncan (1905), p. 80
  125. ^ Montparker, Carol (May–June 1981). "Radu Lupu: Acclaim in Spite of Himself". Clavier. p. 13.
  126. ^ Gibbs (1997), p. 18
  127. ^ a b Schubert – The Wanderer.
  128. ^ Botstein (1997), p. 35
  129. ^ "The Classical Music Chamber Music 100". Australian Broadcasting Co. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  130. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (21 January 2011). "The Greatest Composers – A Top 10 List". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 August 2017.
  131. ^ Liszt (1989), p. 144
  132. ^ a b Newbould (1999), pp. 403–404
  133. ^ Brown (1983), p. 73
  134. ^ Simpson, Dave (7 May 2020). "Kraftwerk: their 30 greatest songs, ranked!". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  135. ^ Rodenberg (1900), p. 118
  136. ^ The Musical Times, February 1897, p. 113
  137. ^ Gibbs (1997), p. 318
  138. ^ a b . Time. 3 December 1928. Archived from the original on 5 May 2009. Retrieved 8 April 2009.
  139. ^ Gabler, Jay. "From 'Bald Mountain' to 'Ave Maria': The hell-to-heaven 'Fantasia' climax". Retrieved 5 August 2018.
  140. ^ Schroeder (2009), pp. 272–274.
  141. ^ "Franz Peter Schubert: The Greatest Love and the Greatest Sorrow". BBC Four. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  142. ^ Schiff András filmje Schubertről [András Schiff tells about Schubert] on YouTube
  143. ^ Now Hear This "The Schubert Generation", PBS, September 25, 2020. Retrieved January 16, 2022.

Sources and further reading

Works by Otto Erich Deutsch

Otto Erich Deutsch, working in the first half of the 20th century, was probably the preeminent scholar of Schubert's life and music. In addition to the catalogue of Schubert's works, he collected and organized a great deal of material about Schubert, some of which remains in print.

19th- and early 20th-century scholarship

  • Austin, George Lowell (1873). The Life of Franz Schubert. Shepard and Gill. ISBN 978-0-404-12856-2. OCLC 4450950.
  • Duncan, Edmondstoune (1905). Schubert. J.M. Dent. ISBN 978-1-4437-8279-1. OCLC 2058050.
  • Dvořák, Antonín (July 1894). "Franz Schubert". Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine. Cairns Collection of American Women Writers. 48 (3). OCLC 4279873.
  • Frost, Henry Frederic (1915). Schubert. Scribner. OCLC 45465176.
  • Grove, George; Fuller-Maitland, John Alexander (1908). Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Vol. 4. Macmillan. OCLC 407077.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHadow, William Henry (1911). "Schubert, Franz Peter". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 383–386.
  • Kreissle von Hellborn, Heinrich (1869) [1865]. The Life of Franz Schubert. Vol. 1. Translated by Coleridge, Arthur Duke. Longmans, Green, and Company. The first full-length biography of Schubert (volume 1).
  • Kreissle von Hellborn, Heinrich (1869) [1865]. The Life of Franz Schubert. Vol. 2. Translated by Coleridge, Arthur Duke. Longmans, Green, and Co. The first full-length biography of Schubert (volume 2).
  • Rodenberg, Julius; Pechel, Rudolf (1900). Deutsche Rundschau, volume 102 (Jan–Mar 1900) (in German). Gebrüder Paetel. OCLC 1566444.
  • Thayer, Alexander Wheelock; Krehbiel, Henry E.; Deiters, Hermann; Riemann, Hugo (1921). The Life of Ludwig van Beethoven. Vol. 3. New York: The Beethoven Association. OCLC 422583.
  • Wilberforce, Edward (1866). Franz Schubert: A Musical Biography. London: W. H. Allen & Co. [ISBN unspecified]
  • "Volume 38". The Musical Times. Novello. 38. February 1897. OCLC 1608351.

Modern scholarship

Numbering of symphonies

The following sources illustrate the confusion around the numbering of Schubert's late symphonies. The B minor Unfinished Symphony is variously published as No. 7 and No. 8, in both German and English.

  • Schubert, Franz (1996). Symphony, No 7, D 759, B minor, Unfinished (in German). Bärenreiter. OCLC 39794412. German-language publication of the Unfinished Symphony score as No. 7.
  • Schubert, Franz (2008). Symphony No. 7 in B minor D 759 Unfinished Symphony. Eulenburg Audio+Score Series. Eulenburg. ISBN 978-3-7957-6529-3. English-language publication of the Unfinished Symphony score as No. 7.
  • Schubert, Franz; Reichenberger, Teresa (1986). Symphony No. 8 in B minor, D. 759 Unfinished (Paperback). ISBN 978-3-7957-6278-0. English-language publication of the Unfinished Symphony score as No. 8.

External links

Recordings

Sheet music

franz, schubert, schubert, redirects, here, another, composer, with, similar, name, françois, schubert, other, uses, schubert, disambiguation, franz, peter, schubert, german, ˈfʁant, ˈpeːtɐ, ˈʃuːbɐt, january, 1797, november, 1828, austrian, composer, late, cla. Schubert redirects here For another composer with a similar name see Francois Schubert For other uses see Schubert disambiguation Franz Peter Schubert German ˈfʁant s ˈpeːtɐ ˈʃuːbɐt 31 January 1797 19 November 1828 was an Austrian composer of the late Classical and early Romantic eras Despite his short lifetime Schubert left behind a vast oeuvre including more than 600 secular vocal works mainly lieder seven complete symphonies sacred music operas incidental music and a large body of piano and chamber music His major works include Erlkonig D 328 the Piano Quintet in A major D 667 Trout Quintet the Symphony No 8 in B minor D 759 Unfinished Symphony the Great Symphony No 9 in C major D 944 the String Quintet D 956 the three last piano sonatas D 958 960 the opera Fierrabras D 796 the incidental music to the play Rosamunde D 797 and the song cycles Die schone Mullerin D 795 and Winterreise D 911 Oil painting of Franz Schubert by Wilhelm August Rieder 1875 made from his own 1825 watercolour portrait Born in the Himmelpfortgrund suburb of Vienna Schubert showed uncommon gifts for music from an early age His father gave him his first violin lessons and his elder brother gave him piano lessons but Schubert soon exceeded their abilities In 1808 at the age of eleven he became a pupil at the Stadtkonvikt school where he became acquainted with the orchestral music of Joseph Haydn Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven He left the Stadtkonvikt at the end of 1813 and returned home to live with his father where he began studying to become a schoolteacher Despite this he continued his studies in composition with Antonio Salieri and still composed prolifically In 1821 Schubert was admitted to the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde as a performing member which helped establish his name among the Viennese citizenry He gave a concert of his works to critical acclaim in March 1828 the only time he did so in his career He died eight months later at the age of 31 the cause officially attributed to typhoid fever but believed by some historians to be syphilis Appreciation of Schubert s music while he was alive was limited to a relatively small circle of admirers in Vienna but interest in his work increased greatly in the decades following his death Felix Mendelssohn Robert Schumann Franz Liszt Johannes Brahms and other 19th century composers discovered and championed his works Today Schubert is ranked among the greatest composers in the history of Western classical music and his work continues to be admired and widely performed Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Teacher at his father s school 1 3 Support from friends 1 4 Musical maturity 1 5 Last years and masterworks 1 6 Final illness and death 2 Music 2 1 Style 2 1 1 Instrumental music stage works and church music 2 1 2 Lieder and art songs 2 2 Publication catalogue 2 2 1 Complete editions 2 2 2 Deutsch catalogue 2 2 3 Numbering issues 2 3 Instruments 3 Recognition 3 1 Tributes by other musicians 3 2 Commemorations 3 3 In film and television 4 Footnotes 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Sources and further reading 6 External links 6 1 Recordings 6 2 Sheet musicBiography EditEarly life and education Edit Franz Peter Schubert was born in Himmelpfortgrund now a part of Alsergrund Vienna Archduchy of Austria on 31 January 1797 and baptized in the Catholic Church the following day 1 He was the twelfth child of Franz Theodor Florian Schubert 1763 1830 and Maria Elisabeth Katharina Vietz 1756 1812 2 Schubert s immediate ancestors came originally from the province of Zuckmantel in Austrian Silesia 3 His father the son of a Moravian peasant was a well known parish schoolmaster and his school in Lichtental in Vienna s ninth district had numerous students in attendance 4 He came to Vienna from Zukmantel in 1784 and was appointed schoolmaster two years later 3 His mother was the daughter of a Silesian master locksmith and had been a housemaid for a Viennese family before marriage Of Franz Theodor and Elisabeth s fourteen children one of them illegitimate born in 1783 5 nine died in infancy The house in which Schubert was born today Nussdorfer Strasse 54 At the age of five Schubert began to receive regular lessons from his father and a year later he was enrolled at his father s school 6 Although it is not known exactly when he received his first musical instruction he was given piano lessons by his brother Ignaz but they lasted for a very short time as Schubert excelled him within a few months 7 Ignaz later recalled I was amazed when Franz told me a few months after we began that he had no need of any further instruction from me and that for the future he would make his own way And in truth his progress in a short period was so great that I was forced to acknowledge in him a master who had completely distanced and outstripped me and whom I despaired of overtaking 8 His father gave him his first violin lessons when he was eight years old training him to the point where he could play easy duets proficiently 9 Soon after Schubert was given his first lessons outside the family by Michael Holzer organist and choirmaster of the local parish church in Lichtental Holzer would often assure Schubert s father with tears in his eyes that he had never had such a pupil as Schubert 8 and the lessons may have largely consisted of conversations and expressions of admiration 10 Holzer gave the young Schubert instruction in piano and organ as well as in figured bass 8 According to Holzer however he did not give him any real instruction as Schubert would already know anything that he tried to teach him rather he looked upon Schubert with astonishment and silence 9 The boy seemed to gain more from an acquaintance with a friendly apprentice joiner who took him to a neighbouring pianoforte warehouse where Schubert could practise on better instruments 11 He also played viola in the family string quartet with his brothers Ferdinand and Ignaz on first and second violin and his father on the cello Schubert wrote his earliest string quartets for this ensemble 12 Young Schubert first came to the attention of Antonio Salieri then Vienna s leading musical authority in 1804 when his vocal talent was recognized 12 In November 1808 he became a pupil at the Stadtkonvikt Imperial Seminary through a choir scholarship At the Stadtkonvikt he was introduced to the overtures and symphonies of Mozart the symphonies of Joseph Haydn and his younger brother Michael Haydn and the overtures and symphonies of Beethoven a composer for whom he developed admiration 13 14 His exposure to these and other works combined with occasional visits to the opera laid the foundation for a broader musical education 15 One important musical influence came from the songs by Johann Rudolf Zumsteeg an important composer of lieder The precocious young student wanted to modernize Zumsteeg s songs as reported by Joseph von Spaun Schubert s friend 16 Schubert s friendship with Spaun began at the Stadtkonvikt and lasted throughout his short life In those early days the financially well off Spaun furnished the impoverished Schubert with much of his manuscript paper 15 In the meantime Schubert s talent began to show in his compositions Salieri decided to start training him privately in music theory and composition According to Ferdinand the boy s first composition for piano was a Fantasy for four hands his first song Klagegesang der Hagar would be written a year later 17 Schubert was occasionally permitted to lead the Stadtkonvikt s orchestra 18 and it was the first orchestra he wrote for He devoted much of the rest of his time at the Stadtkonvikt to composing chamber music several songs piano pieces and more ambitiously liturgical choral works in the form of a Salve Regina D 27 a Kyrie D 31 in addition to the unfinished Octet for Winds D 72 said to commemorate the 1812 death of his mother 19 the cantata Wer ist gross for male voices and orchestra D 110 for his father s birthday in 1813 and his first symphony D 82 20 Teacher at his father s school Edit Possible portrait of the young Franz Schubert c 1814 attributed to Josef Abel At the end of 1813 Schubert left the Stadtkonvikt and returned home for teacher training at the St Anna Normal hauptschule In 1814 he entered his father s school as the teacher of the youngest pupils For over two years young Schubert endured severe drudgery 21 There were however compensatory interests even then for example Schubert continued to take private lessons in composition from Salieri who gave him more actual technical training than any of his other teachers before they parted ways in 1817 18 In 1814 Schubert met a young soprano named Therese Grob daughter of a local silk manufacturer and wrote several of his liturgical works including a Salve Regina and a Tantum Ergo for her she was also a soloist in the premiere of his Mass No 1 D 105 in September 22 1814 21 Schubert wanted to marry her but was hindered by the harsh marriage consent law of 1815 23 requiring an aspiring bridegroom to show he had the means to support a family 24 In November 1816 after failing to gain a musical post in Laibach now Ljubljana Slovenia Schubert sent Ms Grob s brother Heinrich a collection of songs retained by the family into the twentieth century 25 One of Schubert s most prolific years was 1815 He composed over 20 000 bars of music more than half of which were for orchestra including nine church works despite his being an agnostic 26 27 a symphony and about 140 Lieder 28 In that year he was also introduced to Anselm Huttenbrenner and Franz von Schober who would become his lifelong friends Another friend Johann Mayrhofer was introduced to him by Spaun in 1815 29 Throughout 1815 Schubert lived at home with his father He continued to teach at the school and give private musical instruction earning enough money for his basic needs including clothing manuscript paper pens and ink but with little to no money left over for luxuries 30 Spaun was well aware that Schubert was discontented with his life at the schoolhouse and was concerned for Schubert s development intellectually and musically In May 1816 Spaun moved from his apartment in Landskrongasse in the inner city to a new home in the Landstrasse suburb one of the first things he did after he settled into the new home was to invite Schubert to spend a few days with him This was probably Schubert s first visit away from home or school 31 Schubert s unhappiness during his years as a schoolteacher possibly showed early signs of depression and it is virtually certain that Schubert suffered from cyclothymia throughout his life 32 In 1989 the musicologist Maynard Solomon suggested that Schubert was erotically attracted to men 33 a thesis that has been heatedly debated 34 35 The musicologist and Schubert expert Rita Steblin has said that he was chasing women 36 The theory of Schubert s sexuality or Schubert as Other has continued to influence current scholarship 37 Support from friends Edit Caricature of Johann Michael Vogl and Franz Schubert by Franz von Schober 1825 Significant changes happened in 1816 Schober a student and of good family and some means invited Schubert to lodge with him at his mother s house The proposal was particularly opportune for Schubert had just made the unsuccessful application for the post of Kapellmeister at Laibach and he had also decided not to resume teaching duties at his father s school By the end of the year he became a guest in Schober s lodgings 38 For a time he attempted to increase the household resources by giving music lessons but they were soon abandoned and he devoted himself to composition 39 I compose every morning and when one piece is done I begin another 40 During this year he focused on orchestral and choral works although he also continued to write Lieder 41 Much of this work was unpublished but manuscripts and copies circulated among friends and admirers 42 In early 1817 Schober introduced Schubert to Johann Michael Vogl a prominent baritone twenty years Schubert s senior Vogl for whom Schubert went on to write a great many songs became one of Schubert s main proponents in Viennese musical circles Schubert also met Joseph Huttenbrenner brother of Anselm who also played a role in promoting his music 43 These and an increasing circle of friends and musicians became responsible for promoting collecting and after his death preserving his work 44 Heinrich Anschutz wrote in his memoirs that Schubert was an active member of the so called Unsinnsgesellschaft Nonsense Society and various scholars agree with this 45 46 In late 1817 Schubert s father gained a new position at a school in Rossau not far from Lichtental Schubert rejoined his father and reluctantly took up teaching duties there In early 1818 he applied for membership in the prestigious Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde intending to gain admission as an accompanist but also so that his music especially the songs could be performed in the evening concerts He was rejected on the basis that he was no amateur although he had been employed as a schoolteacher at the time and there were professional musicians already among the society s membership 47 48 However he began to gain more notice in the press and the first public performance of a secular work an overture performed in February 1818 received praise from the press in Vienna and abroad 49 Schubert spent the summer of 1818 as a music teacher to the family of Count Johann Karl Esterhazy at their chateau in Zseliz now Zeliezovce Slovakia The pay was relatively good and his duties teaching piano and singing to the two daughters were relatively light allowing him to compose happily Schubert may have written his Marche Militaire in D major D 733 no 1 for Marie and Caroline in addition to other piano duets 50 On his return from Zseliz he took up residence with his friend Mayrhofer 48 During the early 1820s Schubert was part of a close knit circle of artists and students who had social gatherings together that became known as Schubertiads Many of them took place in Ignaz von Sonnleithner s large apartment in the Gundelhof Brandstatte 5 Vienna The tight circle of friends with which Schubert surrounded himself was dealt a blow in early 1820 Schubert and four of his friends were arrested by the Austrian police who in the aftermath of the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars were on their guard against revolutionary activities and suspicious of any gathering of youth or students One of Schubert s friends Johann Senn was put on trial imprisoned for over a year and then permanently forbidden to enter Vienna The other four including Schubert were severely reprimanded in part for inveighing against officials with insulting and opprobrious language 51 While Schubert never saw Senn again he did set some of his poems Selige Welt D 743 and Schwanengesang D 744 to music The incident may have played a role in a falling out with Mayrhofer with whom he was living at the time 52 Schubert who was only a little more than five feet tall 53 was nicknamed Schwammerl by his friends which Gibbs describes as translating to Tubby or Little Mushroom 54 Schwamm is German in the Austrian and Bavarian dialects for mushroom the ending erl makes it a diminutive Gibbs also claims he may have occasionally drunk to excess noting that references to Schubert s heavy drinking come not only in later accounts but also in documents dating from his lifetime 55 Musical maturity Edit The compositions of 1819 and 1820 show a marked advance in development and maturity of style 39 The unfinished oratorio Lazarus D 689 was begun in February later followed among some smaller works by the hymn Der 23 Psalm D 706 the octet Gesang der Geister uber den Wassern D 714 the Quartettsatz in C minor D 703 and the Wanderer Fantasy in C major for piano D 760 In 1820 two of Schubert s operas were staged Die Zwillingsbruder D 647 appeared at the Theater am Karntnertor on 14 June and Die Zauberharfe D 644 appeared at the Theater an der Wien on 21 August 56 Hitherto his larger compositions apart from his masses had been restricted to the amateur orchestra at the Gundelhof Brandstatte 5 Vienna a society which grew out of the quartet parties at his home Now he began to assume a more prominent position addressing a wider public 56 Publishers however remained distant with Anton Diabelli hesitantly agreeing to print some of his works on commission 57 The first seven opus numbers all songs appeared on these terms then the commission ceased and he began to receive parsimonious royalties 58 The situation improved somewhat in March 1821 when Vogl performed the song Erlkonig D 328 at a concert that was extremely well received 59 That month Schubert composed a Variation on a Waltz by Diabelli D 718 being one of the fifty composers who contributed to the Vaterlandischer Kunstlerverein publication Watercolour of Franz Schubert by Wilhelm August Rieder 1825 The production of the two operas turned Schubert s attention more firmly than ever in the direction of the stage where for a variety of reasons he was almost completely unsuccessful All in all he embarked on twenty stage projects each of them failures that were quickly forgotten In 1822 Alfonso und Estrella was rejected partly owing to its libretto written by Schubert s friend Franz von Schober 60 In 1823 Fierrabras D 796 was rejected Domenico Barbaia impresario for the court theatres largely lost interest in new German opera due to the popularity of Rossini and the Italian operatic style and the failure of Carl Maria von Weber s Euryanthe 61 Die Verschworenen The Conspirators D 787 was prohibited by the censor apparently because of its title 62 and Rosamunde Furstin von Zypern D 797 was withdrawn after two nights owing to the poor quality of the play for which Schubert had written incidental music 58 Despite his operatic failures Schubert s reputation was growing steadily on other fronts In 1821 the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde finally accepted him as a performing member and the number of performances of his music grew remarkably 63 These performances helped Schubert s reputation grow rapidly among the members of the Gesellschaft 63 and established his name 60 Some of the members of the Gesellschaft most notably Ignaz von Sonnleithner and his son Leopold von Sonnleithner had a sizeable influence on the affairs of the society and as a result of that and of Schubert s growing reputation his works were included in three major concerts of the Gesellschaft in 1821 In April one of his male voice quartets was performed and in November his Overture in E minor D 648 received its first public performance 63 at a different concert on the same day as the premiere of the Overture his song Der Wanderer D 489 was performed 60 In 1822 Schubert made the acquaintance of both Weber and Beethoven but little came of it in either case 58 however Beethoven is said to have acknowledged the younger man s gifts on a few occasions On his deathbed Beethoven is said to have looked into some of the younger man s works and exclaimed Truly the spark of divine genius resides in this Schubert Beethoven also reportedly predicted that Schubert would make a great sensation in the world and regretted that he had not been more familiar with him earlier he wished to see his operas and works for piano but his severe illness prevented him from doing so 64 Last years and masterworks Edit Franz Schubert by Josef Kriehuber 1846 Despite his preoccupation with the stage and later with his official duties Schubert wrote much music during these years 58 He completed the Mass in A flat major D 678 in 1822 and later that year embarked suddenly on a work which more decisively than almost any other in those years showed his maturing personal vision the Symphony in B minor known as the Unfinished Symphony D 759 65 The reason he left it unfinished after writing two movements and sketches some way into a third continues to be discussed and written about and it is also remarkable that he did not mention it to any of his friends even though as Brian Newbould notes he must have felt thrilled by what he was achieving 66 In 1823 Schubert wrote his first large scale song cycle Die schone Mullerin D 795 setting poems by Wilhelm Muller 67 This series together with the later cycle Winterreise D 911 also setting texts of Muller in 1827 is widely considered one of the pinnacles of Lieder 68 He also composed the song Du bist die Ruh You are rest and peace 69 D 776 during this year Also in that year symptoms of syphilis first appeared 70 In 1824 he wrote the Variations in E minor for flute and piano Trockne Blumen a song from the cycle Die schone Mullerin and several string quartets He also wrote the Sonata in A minor for arpeggione and piano D 821 at the time when there was a minor craze over that instrument 71 In the spring of that year he wrote the Octet in F major D 803 a sketch for a Grand Symphony and in the summer went back to Zseliz There he became attracted to Hungarian musical idiom and wrote the Divertissement a la hongroise in G minor for piano duet D 818 and the String Quartet in A minor Rosamunde D 804 58 It has been said that he held a hopeless passion for his pupil the Countess Caroline Esterhazy 72 but the only work that bears a dedication to her is his Fantasia in F minor for piano duet D 940 This dedication however can only be found in the first edition and not in Schubert s autograph 73 74 75 His friend Eduard von Bauernfeld penned the following verse which appears to reference Schubert s unrequited sentiments In love with a Countess of youthful grace A pupil of Galt s in desperate case Young Schubert surrenders himself to another And fain would avoid such affectionate pother 76 The setbacks of previous years were compensated by the prosperity and happiness of 1825 Publication had been moving more rapidly the stress of poverty was for a time lightened and in the summer he had a pleasant holiday in Upper Austria where he was welcomed with enthusiasm 58 It was during this tour that he produced the seven song cycle Fraulein am See based on Walter Scott s The Lady of the Lake and including Ellens Gesang III Hymn to the Virgin D 839 Op 52 No 6 the lyrics of Adam Storck s German translation of the Scott poem are now frequently replaced by the full text of the traditional Roman Catholic prayer Hail Mary Ave Maria in Latin but for which the Schubert melody is not an original setting The original only opens with the greeting Ave Maria which also recurs only in the refrain 77 In 1825 Schubert also wrote the Piano Sonata in A minor D 845 first published as op 42 and began the Symphony in C major Great C major D 944 which was completed the following year 78 Portrait of Franz Schubert by Franz Eybl 1827 From 1826 to 1828 Schubert resided continuously in Vienna except for a brief visit to Graz Austria in 1827 In 1826 he dedicated a symphony D 944 that later came to be known as the Great C major to the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde and received an honorarium in return 79 The String Quartet No 14 in D minor D 810 with the variations on Death and the Maiden was written during the winter of 1825 1826 and first played on 25 January 1826 Later in the year came the String Quartet No 15 in G major D 887 first published as op 161 the Rondo in B minor for violin and piano D 895 Rondeau brillant and the Piano Sonata in G major D 894 first published as Fantasie in G op 78 He also produced in 1826 three Shakespearian songs of which Standchen D 889 and An Sylvia D 891 were allegedly written on the same day the former at a tavern where he broke his afternoon s walk the latter on his return to his lodging in the evening 80 The works of his last two years reveal a composer entering a new professional and compositional stage 81 Although parts of Schubert s personality were influenced by his friends he nurtured an intensely personal dimension in solitude it was out of this dimension that he wrote his greatest music 82 The death of Beethoven affected Schubert deeply 83 and may have motivated Schubert to reach new artistic peaks In 1827 Schubert wrote the song cycle Winterreise D 911 the Fantasy in C major for violin and piano D 934 first published as op post 159 the Impromptus for piano and the two piano trios the first in B flat major D 898 and the second in E flat major D 929 84 in 1828 the cantata Mirjams Siegesgesang Victory Song of Miriam D 942 on a text by Franz Grillparzer the Mass in E flat major D 950 the Tantum Ergo D 962 in the same key the String Quintet in C major D 956 the second Benedictus to the Mass in C major D 961 the three final piano sonatas D 958 D 959 and D 960 and the collection 13 Lieder nach Gedichten von Rellstab und Heine for voice and piano also known as Schwanengesang Swan song D 957 85 This collection which includes settings of words by Heinrich Heine Ludwig Rellstab and Johann Gabriel Seidl is not a true song cycle like Die schone Mullerin or Winterreise 86 The Great C major symphony is dated 1828 but Schubert scholars believe that this symphony was largely written in 1825 1826 being referred to while he was on holiday at Gastein in 1825 that work once considered lost is now generally seen as an early stage of his C major symphony and was revised for prospective performance in 1828 The orchestra of the Gesellschaft reportedly read through the symphony at a rehearsal but never scheduled a public performance of it The reasons continue to be unknown although the difficulty of the symphony is the possible explanation 87 In the last weeks of his life he began to sketch three movements for a new Symphony in D major D 936A 88 In this work he anticipates Mahler s use of folksong like harmonics and bare soundscapes 89 Schubert expressed the wish were he to survive his final illness to further develop his knowledge of harmony and counterpoint and had actually made appointments for lessons with the counterpoint master Simon Sechter 90 On 26 March 1828 the anniversary of Beethoven s death Schubert gave for the only time in his career a public concert of his own works 91 The concert was a success popularly and financially 91 even though it would be overshadowed by Niccolo Paganini s first appearances in Vienna shortly after 92 Schubert s glasses Final illness and death Edit Memorial at the Kalvarienberg Church Hernals The site of Schubert s first tomb at Wahring In the midst of this creative activity his health deteriorated By the late 1820s Schubert s health was failing and he confided to some friends that he feared that he was near death In the late summer of 1828 he saw the physician Ernst Rinna who may have confirmed Schubert s suspicions that he was ill beyond cure and likely to die soon 93 Some of his symptoms matched those of mercury poisoning mercury was then a common treatment for syphilis again suggesting that Schubert suffered from it 94 At the beginning of November he again fell ill experiencing headaches fever swollen joints and vomiting He was generally unable to retain solid food and his condition worsened Five days before Schubert s death his friend the violinist Karl Holz and his string quartet visited to play for him The last musical work he had wished to hear was Beethoven s String Quartet No 14 in C sharp minor Op 131 Holz commented The King of Harmony has sent the King of Song a friendly bidding to the crossing 95 Schubert died in Vienna aged 31 on 19 November 1828 at the apartment of his brother Ferdinand The cause of his death was officially diagnosed as typhoid fever though other theories have been proposed including the tertiary stage of syphilis 93 Although there are accounts by his friends that indirectly imply that he was syphilitic the symptoms of his final illness do not correspond with tertiary syphilis Six weeks before his death he walked 42 miles in three days ruling out musculoskeletal syphilis In the month of his death he composed his last work Der Hirt Auf Den Felsen making neurosyphilis unlikely Finally meningo vascular syphilis is unlikely because it presents as progressive stroke like picture and Schubert had no neurological manifestation until his final delirium which started only two days before his death This and the fact that his final illness was characterized by gastrointestinal symptoms namely vomiting led Robert L Rold to argue that his final illness was a gastrointestinal one like salmonella or indeed typhus 96 Eva M Cybulska goes further and says that Schubert s syphilis is a conjecture His multi system signs and symptoms she says could point at a number of different illness such as leukaemia anaemia or Hashimoto s thyroiditis and that many tell tale signs of syphilis chancre mucous plaques rash on the thorax pupil abnormality dysgraphia were absent She argues that the syphilis diagnosis originated with Schubert s biographer Otto Deutsch in 1907 based on the aforementioned indirect references by his friends and uncritically repeated ever since 97 It was near the grave of Beethoven whom he had admired all his life that Schubert was buried at his own request in the village cemetery of Wahring on the edge of the Vienna Woods 98 A year earlier he had served as a torchbearer at Beethoven s funeral In 1872 a memorial to Franz Schubert was erected in Vienna s Stadtpark 98 In 1888 both Schubert s and Beethoven s graves were moved to the Zentralfriedhof where they can now be found next to those of Johann Strauss II and Johannes Brahms 99 Anton Bruckner was present at both exhumations and he reached into both coffins and held the revered skulls in his hands 100 The cemetery in Wahring was converted into a park in 1925 called the Schubert Park and his former grave site was marked by a bust His epitaph written by his friend the poet Franz Grillparzer reads Die Tonkunst begrub hier einen reichen Besitz aber noch viel schonere Hoffnungen The art of music has here interred a precious treasure but yet far fairer hopes Music EditSee also List of compositions by Franz Schubert by genre and List of compositions by Franz Schubert Schubert was remarkably prolific writing over 1 500 works in his short career His compositional style progressed rapidly throughout his short life 101 The largest number of his compositions are songs for solo voice and piano roughly 630 102 Schubert also composed a considerable number of secular works for two or more voices namely part songs choruses and cantatas He completed eight orchestral overtures and seven complete symphonies in addition to fragments of six others While he composed no concertos he did write three concertante works for violin and orchestra Schubert wrote a large body of music for solo piano including eleven incontrovertibly completed sonatas and at least eleven more in varying states of completion a numerous miscellaneous works and many short dances in addition to producing a large set of works for piano four hands He also wrote over fifty chamber works including some fragmentary works Schubert s sacred output includes seven masses one oratorio and one requiem among other mass movements and numerous smaller compositions 103 He completed only eleven of his twenty stage works 104 Style Edit In July 1947 the Austrian composer Ernst Krenek discussed Schubert s style abashedly admitting that he had at first shared the wide spread opinion that Schubert was a lucky inventor of pleasing tunes lacking the dramatic power and searching intelligence which distinguished such real masters as J S Bach or Beethoven Krenek wrote that he reached a completely different assessment after a close study of Schubert s pieces at the urging of his friend and fellow composer Eduard Erdmann Krenek pointed to the piano sonatas as giving ample evidence that Schubert was much more than an easy going tune smith who did not know and did not care about the craft of composition Each sonata then in print according to Krenek exhibited a great wealth of technical finesse and revealed Schubert as far from satisfied with pouring his charming ideas into conventional moulds on the contrary he was a thinking artist with a keen appetite for experimentation 105 Instrumental music stage works and church music Edit See also Sonatas duos and fantasies by Franz Schubert List of solo piano compositions by Franz Schubert and Stage works by Franz Schubert That appetite for experimentation manifests itself repeatedly in Schubert s output in a wide variety of forms and genres including opera liturgical music chamber and solo piano music and symphonic works Perhaps most familiarly his adventurousness is reflected in his notably original sense of modulation for example the second movement of the String Quintet D 956 which is in E major features a central section in the distant key of F minor 106 It also appears in unusual choices of instrumentation as in the Sonata in A minor for arpeggione and piano D 821 or the unconventional scoring of the Trout Quintet D 667 for piano violin viola cello and double bass whereas conventional piano quintets are scored for piano and string quartet Arpeggione Sonata D 821 version for cello and piano I Allegro moderato source source Hans Goldstein cello and Clinton Adams piano Piano Sonata in B flat major D 960 I Molto moderato source source Randolph Hokanson pianoSymphony No 8 in B minor D 759 Unfinished I Allegro moderato source source Fulda Symphonic Orchestra and Simon Schindler Problems playing these files See media help Although Schubert was clearly influenced by the Classical sonata forms of Beethoven and Mozart his formal structures and his developments tend to give the impression more of melodic development than of harmonic drama 107 This combination of Classical form and long breathed Romantic melody sometimes lends them a discursive style his Great C Major Symphony was described by Robert Schumann as running to heavenly lengths 108 Lieder and art songs Edit See also List of songs by Franz Schubert and Schubert s song cycles It was in the genre of the Lied that Schubert made his most indelible mark Leon Plantinga remarks that in his more than six hundred Lieder he explored and expanded the potentialities of the genre as no composer before him 109 Prior to Schubert s influence Lieder tended toward a strophic syllabic treatment of text evoking the folksong qualities engendered by the stirrings of Romantic nationalism 110 Autograph of Die Nebensonnen The Sun dogs from Winterreise Among Schubert s treatments of the poetry of Goethe his settings of Gretchen am Spinnrade D 118 and Der Erlkonig D 328 are particularly striking for their dramatic content forward looking uses of harmony and use of eloquent pictorial keyboard figurations such as the depiction of the spinning wheel and treadle in the piano in Gretchen and the furious and ceaseless gallop in Erlkonig 111 He composed music using the poems of myriad poets with Goethe Mayrhofer and Schiller the most frequent and others including Heinrich Heine Friedrich Ruckert and Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff Of particular note are his two song cycles on the poems of Wilhelm Muller Die schone Mullerin and Winterreise which helped to establish the genre and its potential for musical poetic and almost operatic dramatic narrative His last collection of songs published in 1828 after his death Schwanengesang is also an innovative contribution to German Lieder literature as it features poems by different poets namely Ludwig Rellstab Heine and Johann Gabriel Seidl The Wiener Theaterzeitung writing about Winterreise at the time commented that it was a work that none can sing or hear without being deeply moved 112 Antonin Dvorak wrote in 1894 that Schubert whom he considered one of the truly great composers was clearly influential on shorter works especially Lieder and shorter piano works The tendency of the romantic school has been toward short forms and although Weber helped to show the way to Schubert belongs the chief credit of originating the short models of piano forte pieces which the romantic school has preferably cultivated Schubert created a new epoch with the Lied All other songwriters have followed in his footsteps 113 Publication catalogue Edit Interior of museum at Schubert s birthplace Vienna 1914 When Schubert died he had around 100 opus numbers published mainly songs chamber music and smaller piano compositions 114 Publication of smaller pieces continued including opus numbers up to 173 in the 1860s 50 instalments with songs published by Diabelli and dozens of first publications Peters 115 but the manuscripts of many of the longer works whose existence was not widely known remained hidden in cabinets and file boxes of Schubert s family friends and publishers 116 Even some of Schubert s friends were unaware of the full scope of what he wrote and for many years he was primarily recognized as the prince of song although there was recognition of some of his larger scale efforts 117 In 1838 Robert Schumann on a visit to Vienna found the dusty manuscript of the C major Symphony D 944 and took it back to Leipzig where it was performed by Felix Mendelssohn and celebrated in the Neue Zeitschrift An important step towards the recovery of the neglected works was the journey to Vienna which the music historian George Grove and the composer Arthur Sullivan made in October 1867 58 The travellers unearthed the manuscripts of six of the symphonies parts of the incidental music to Rosamunde the Mass No 1 in F major D 105 and the operas Des Teufels Lustschloss D 84 Fernardo D 220 Der vierjahrige Posten D 190 and Die Freunde von Salamanka D 326 and several other unnamed works With these discoveries Grove and Sullivan were able to inform the public of the existence of these works in addition they were able to copy the fourth and sixth symphonies the Rosamunde incidental music and the overture to Die Freunde von Salamanka 116 This led to more widespread public interest in Schubert s work 118 Complete editions Edit Lithograph of Franz Schubert by Josef Kriehuber 1846 See also Franz Schubert s Works and Neue Schubert Ausgabe From 1884 to 1897 Breitkopf amp Hartel published Franz Schubert s Works a critical edition including a contribution made among others by Johannes Brahms editor of the first series containing eight symphonies 119 The publication of the Neue Schubert Ausgabe by Barenreiter started in the second half of the 20th century 120 Deutsch catalogue Edit See also Schubert Thematic Catalogue Schubert opus Deutsch number concordance and List of compositions by Franz Schubert Since relatively few of Schubert s works were published in his lifetime only a small number of them have opus numbers assigned and even in those cases the sequence of the numbers does not give a good indication of the order of composition Austrian musicologist Otto Erich Deutsch 1883 1967 is known for compiling the first comprehensive catalogue of Schubert s works This was first published in English in 1951 Schubert Thematic Catalogue and subsequently revised for a new edition in German in 1978 Franz Schubert Thematisches Verzeichnis seiner Werke in chronologischer Folge Franz Schubert Thematic Catalogue of his Works in Chronological Order 121 Numbering issues Edit See also Schubert s symphonies Numbering issues and Sonatas duos and fantasies by Franz Schubert Numbering of the Piano Sonatas Confusion arose quite early over the numbering of Schubert s late symphonies Schubert s last completed symphony the Great C major D 944 was assigned the numbers 7 8 9 and 10 depending on publication Similarly the Unfinished D 759 has been indicated with the numbers 7 8 and 9 122 The order usually followed for these late symphonies by English language sources is No 7 E major D 729 No 8 B minor D 759 Unfinished No 9 C major D 944 Great C major No 10 D major D 936AAn even broader confusion arose over the numbering of the piano sonatas with numbering systems ranging from 15 to 23 sonatas Instruments Edit Among pianos Schubert had access to were a Benignus Seidner piano now displayed at the Schubert Geburtshaus in Vienna and an Anton Walter amp Sohn piano today in the collection of the Vienna Kunsthistorisches Museum Schubert was also familiar with instruments by Viennese piano builder Conrad Graf 123 Recognition EditA feeling of regret for the loss of potential masterpieces caused by Schubert s early death at age 31 was expressed in the epitaph on his large tombstone written by Grillparzer Here music has buried a treasure but even fairer hopes 124 Some prominent musicians share a similar view including the pianist Radu Lupu who said Schubert is the composer for whom I am really most sorry that he died so young Just before he died when he wrote his beautiful two cello String Quintet in C he said very modestly that he was trying to learn a little more about counterpoint and he was perfectly right We ll never know in what direction he was going or would have gone 125 However others have expressed disagreement with this early view For instance Robert Schumann said It is pointless to guess at what more Schubert might have achieved He did enough and let them be honoured who have striven and accomplished as he did 126 and the pianist Andras Schiff said that Schubert lived a very short life but it was a very concentrated life In 31 years he lived more than other people would live in 100 years and it is needless to speculate what could he have written had he lived another 50 years It s irrelevant just like with Mozart these are the two natural geniuses of music 127 The Schubert Denkmal The Wiener Schubertbund one of Vienna s leading choral societies was founded in 1863 whilst the Grunderzeit was taking place The Schubertbund quickly became a rallying point for schoolteachers and other members of the Viennese middle class who felt increasingly embattled during the Grunderzeit and the aftermath of the Panic of 1873 In 1872 the dedication of the Schubert Denkmal a gift to the city from Vienna s leading male chorus the Wiener Mannergesang Verein took place the chorus performed at the event 128 The Denkmal was designed by Austrian sculptor Carl Kundmann and is located in Vienna s Stadtpark Schubert s chamber music continues to be popular In a survey conducted by the ABC Classic FM radio station in 2008 Schubert s chamber works dominated the field with the Trout Quintet ranked first the String Quintet in C major ranked second and the Notturno in E flat major for piano trio ranked third Furthermore eight more of his chamber works were among the 100 ranked pieces both piano trios the String Quartet No 14 Death and the Maiden the String Quartet No 15 the Arpeggione Sonata the Octet the Fantasie in F minor for piano four hands and the Adagio and Rondo Concertante for piano quartet 129 The New York Times chief music critic Anthony Tommasini who ranked Schubert as the fourth greatest composer wrote of him You have to love the guy who died at 31 ill impoverished and neglected except by a circle of friends who were in awe of his genius For his hundreds of songs alone including the haunting cycle Winterreise which will never release its tenacious hold on singers and audiences Schubert is central to our concert life Schubert s first few symphonies may be works in progress But the Unfinished and especially the Great C major Symphony are astonishing The latter one paves the way for Bruckner and prefigures Mahler 130 Tributes by other musicians Edit Schubert at the Piano by Gustav Klimt 1899 From the 1830s through the 1870s Franz Liszt transcribed and arranged several of Schubert s works particularly the songs Liszt who was a significant force in spreading Schubert s work after his death said Schubert was the most poetic musician who ever lived 131 Schubert s symphonies were of particular interest to Antonin Dvorak Hector Berlioz and Anton Bruckner acknowledged the influence of the Great C Major Symphony 132 It was Robert Schumann who having seen the manuscript of the Great C Major Symphony in Vienna in 1838 drew it to the attention of Mendelssohn who led the first performance of the symphony in a heavily abridged version in Leipzig in 1839 133 In the 20th century composers such as Richard Strauss Anton Webern Benjamin Britten George Crumb and Hans Zender championed or paid homage to Schubert in some of their works Britten an accomplished pianist accompanied many of Schubert s Lieder and performed many piano solo and duet works 132 German electronic music group Kraftwerk has a track titled Franz Schubert on their 1977 album Trans Europe Express 134 Commemorations Edit In 1897 the 100th anniversary of Schubert s birth was marked in the musical world by festivals and performances dedicated to his music In Vienna there were ten days of concerts and the Emperor Franz Joseph gave a speech recognising Schubert as the creator of the art song and one of Austria s favourite sons 135 136 Karlsruhe saw the first production of his opera Fierrabras 137 In 1928 Schubert Week was held in Europe and the United States to mark the centenary of the composer s death Works by Schubert were performed in churches in concert halls and on radio stations A competition with top prize money of 10 000 and sponsorship by the Columbia Phonograph Company was held for original symphonic works presented as an apotheosis of the lyrical genius of Schubert and dedicated to his memory 138 The winning entry was Kurt Atterberg s sixth symphony 138 In film and television Edit Schubert has featured as a character in several films including Schubert s Dream of Spring 1931 Gently My Songs Entreat 1933 Serenade 1940 The Great Awakening 1941 It s Only Love 1947 Franz Schubert 1953 Das Dreimaderlhaus 1958 and Mit meinen heissen Tranen 1986 Schubert s music has also been featured in numerous post silent era films including Walt Disney s Fantasia 1940 which features Ave Maria D 839 139 and the biographical film Carrington 1995 which features the second movement of the String Quintet in C major D 956 140 as well as the English version of The Adventures of Milo and Otis 1989 which features Serenade and Auf dem Wasser zu singen D 774 Schubert s String Quartet No 15 in G is featured prominently in the Woody Allen film Crimes and Misdemeanors 1989 The Piano Quintet in A major D 667 Trout Quintet is featured in the 2011 film Sherlock Holmes A Game of Shadows by Guy Ritchie The music of the String Quartet No 14 in D minor Death and the Maiden is often used to accompany documentaries or films notably the 1994 film of that name by Roman Polanski The second movement from the Piano Trio No 2 in E Flat Major Op 100 D 929 was featured in Stanley Kubrick s 1975 film Barry Lyndon Schubert s life was covered in the documentary Franz Peter Schubert The Greatest Love and the Greatest Sorrow by Christopher Nupen 1994 141 and in the documentary Schubert The Wanderer by Andras Schiff and Mischa Scorer 1997 both produced for the BBC 127 142 Great Performances Now Hear This The Schubert Generation Series hosted by Scott Yoo explored commentary and performances by contemporary musician admirers 143 Footnotes Edit D 537 568 575 664 784 845 850 894 958 959 960 incontrovertibly complete D 157 279 459 557 566 as further sonatas whose completeness has been debated D 571 613 625 655 769A 840 as further unfinished sonatas and many other possible sonata fragments and isolated movements possibly associated with some of the above listed sonatas References EditNotes Edit Duncan 1905 p 2 McKay 1996 p 2 a b Kreissle 1869 p 1 Wilberforce 1866 p 2 the school was much frequented Steblin Rita 2001 Franz Schubert das dreizehnte Kind Wiener Geschichtsblatter de 245 265 Hadow 1911 p 383 McKay 1996 p 11 a b c Kreissle 1869 p 5 a b Duncan 1905 p 3 Brown 1983 pp 2 3 Wilberforce 1866 p 3 a b Gibbs 2000 p 26 McKay 1996 p 22 Duncan 1905 pp 5 7 a b Duncan 1905 p 7 Gibbs 2000 p 29 Kreissle 1869 p 6 a b Duncan 1905 p 9 Frost 1915 p 9 Duncan 1905 p 10 a b Duncan 1905 pp 13 14 Benedikt Erich Notizen zu Schuberts Messen Mit neuem Urauffuhrungsdatum der Messe in F Dur Osterreichische Musikzeitschrift 52 1 2 1997 p 64 Steblin 1998 Gibbs 2000 p 39 Newbould 1999 p 64 McKay 1996 p 308 Hutchings 1967 p 166 The unctuous style we hear every Christmas is found in church music by Schubert and the Chevalier Neukomm both known in private letters to be agnostic Newbould 1999 p 40 Gramit 1997 p 108 McKay 1996 p 55 McKay 1996 p 59 McKay 1996 p 138 Solomon M Spring 1989 Franz Schubert and the Peacocks of Benvenuto Cellini 19th Century Music vol 12 pp 193 206 Schubert Music Sexuality Culture 19th Century Music 1993 17 3 101 Schubert a la Mode The New York Review of Books 20 October 1994 Steblin Rita 1993 The Peacock s Tale Schubert s Sexuality Reconsidered 19th Century Music Berkeley California Univ of California Press ISSN 0148 2076 ZDB ID 4395712 T 17 1 pp 5 33 Steblin Rita 1996 Babette und Therese Kunz neue Forschungen zum Freundeskreis um Franz Schubert und Leopold Kupelwieser Wien Vom Pasqualatihaus ISBN 978 3 901254 16 1 Steblin Rita 1997 Schubert s Nina and the True Peacocks The Musical Times 138 pp 13 19 Steblin Rita 1998 Die Unsinnsgesellschaft Franz Schubert Leopold Kupelwieser und ihr Freundeskreis Bohlau ISBN 978 3 205 98820 5 Steblin Rita 2001 Schubert s Problematic Relationship with Johann Mayrhofer New Documentary Evidence Barbara Haggh ed Essays on Music and Culture in Honor of Herbert Kellman Paris Tours Minerve pp 465 495 Steblin Rita 2008 Schubert s Pepi His Love Affair with the Chambermaid Josepha Pocklhofer and Her Surprising Fate The Musical Times pp 47 69 Horton Julian 2015 Schubert Routledge pages xi xvii McKay 1996 p 68 a b Hadow 1911 p 384 Duncan 1905 p 26 McKay 1996 p 56 Gibbs 2000 p 44 Newbould 1999 p 66 Duncan 1905 pp 90 93 Steblin Rita 1998 Die Unsinnsgesellschaft Franz Schubert Leopold Kupelwieser und ihr Freundeskreis in German Erich Benedikt Wien Bohlau p 1 ISBN 3 205 98820 5 OCLC 40519173 Durhammer Ilija 1999 Schuberts literarische Heimat Dichtung und Literatur Rezeption der Schubert Freunde Wien Bohlau pp 79 91 235 245 ISBN 3 205 99051 X OCLC 49416312 McKay 1996 75 a b Newbould 1999 pp 69 72 Gibbs 2000 p 59 Newbould 1999 p 235 Gibbs 2000 p 67 Gibbs 2000 p 68 McKay 1996 p 70 Gibbs 2000 p 7 Gibbs 2000 p 97 a b Austin 1873 pp 46 47 Wilberforce 1866 pp 90 92 a b c d e f g Hadow 1911 p 385 Wilberforce 1866 p 25 a b c Newbould 1999 p 173 Denny 1997 pp 245 246 Gibbs 2000 p 111 a b c McKay 1996 p 101 Thayer 1921 pp 299 300 Newbould 1999 p 182 Newbould 1999 pp 182 183 Newbould 1999 p 215 Dirda Michael 4 February 2015 Ian Bostridge s Schubert s Winter Journey examines the composer s melancholy work The Washington Post Retrieved 8 February 2015 Franz Schubert s Winterreise is the greatest and the most bleakly melancholy of all song cycles Reed 1997 pp 208 209 Newbould 1999 p 210 Newbould 1999 pp 221 225 Newbould 1999 p 260 Newbould 1999 p 218 Schubert Franz Fantasie f Moll schubert online at Retrieved 27 February 2023 Schubert Franz 1976 Kahl Willi ed Fantasie f Moll Munchen G Henle Verlag pp Preface ISMN 979 0 2018 0180 3 Duncan 1905 p 99 Emmons 2006 p 38 Newbould 1999 p 228 Newbould 1999 p 254 Smith amp Carlson 1995 p 78 Gibbs 1999 p 62 McKay 1996 p 268 McKay 1996 p 276 Newbould 1999 pp 261 263 Newbould 1999 pp 270 274 McKay 1996 p 313 That Schubert in no way considered the songs as a cycle is confirmed by his letter to Probst of 2 October mentioning that he had recently written several songs by Heine Griffel 1997 p 203 Newbould 1999 p 385 1999 p 385 and comments in the liner notes to the CD recording issued on Hyperion Records Schonberg 1997 p 130 a b Newbould 1999 pp 265 266 Gibbs 1997 p 44 a b Newbould 1999 p 275 Gibbs 2000 pp 168 169 Deutsche 1998 p 300 Rold Robert L 1995 Schubert and Syphilis Journal of Medical Biography 3 4 232 235 doi 10 1177 096777209500300409 PMID 11616366 Cybulska Eva Maria 2019 The Myth of Schubert s Syphilis A Critical Approach Music and Medicine 11 1 44 47 doi 10 47513 mmd v11i1 647 S2CID 151254154 a b Duncan 1905 pp 79 80 Gibbs 2000 p 197 Tom Service Sex death and dissonance the strange obsessive world of Anton Bruckner The Guardian 1 April 2014 Retrieved 11 August 2020 Gammond 1982 p 143 discussing in particular his chamber music Gibbs 1997 p 21 Ewen 2007 p 384 McKay Elizabeth 1997 Franz Schubert In The New Grove Dictionary of Opera London and New York Macmillan Lev Gammond 1982 p 117 Gammond 1982 pp 76 81 Brown 2002 p 630 Plantinga 1984 p 117 1984 pp 107 117 Swafford 1992 p 211 Gammond 1982 pp 153 156 Dvorak 1894 pp 344 345 Deutsch 1978 p 668 incomplete short citation Deutsch 1978 pp 668 669 incomplete short citation a b Kreissle 1869 pp 297 332 in which Grove recounts his visit to Vienna Gibbs 2000 pp 61 62 See e g Kreissle 1869 p 324 where Grove describes current 1860s interest in Schubert s work and Gibbs 1997 pp 250 251 describing the size and scope of the 1897 Schubert centennial commemorations Deutsch 1995 p xiii Neue Schubert Ausgabe Barenreiter Verlag Archived from the original on 20 July 2018 Retrieved 20 July 2018 See Deutsch 1995 See Numbering of symphonies Jeffrey Dane The Composers Pianos www collectionscanada gc ca Retrieved 5 February 2021 Duncan 1905 p 80 Montparker Carol May June 1981 Radu Lupu Acclaim in Spite of Himself Clavier p 13 Gibbs 1997 p 18 a b Schubert The Wanderer Botstein 1997 p 35 The Classical Music Chamber Music 100 Australian Broadcasting Co Retrieved 24 August 2010 Tommasini Anthony 21 January 2011 The Greatest Composers A Top 10 List The New York Times Retrieved 20 August 2017 Liszt 1989 p 144 a b Newbould 1999 pp 403 404 Brown 1983 p 73 Simpson Dave 7 May 2020 Kraftwerk their 30 greatest songs ranked The Guardian Retrieved 5 September 2022 Rodenberg 1900 p 118 The Musical Times February 1897 p 113 Gibbs 1997 p 318 a b Schubert Ecstasy Time 3 December 1928 Archived from the original on 5 May 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Gabler Jay From Bald Mountain to Ave Maria The hell to heaven Fantasia climax Retrieved 5 August 2018 Schroeder 2009 pp 272 274 Franz Peter Schubert The Greatest Love and the Greatest Sorrow BBC Four Retrieved 16 June 2018 Schiff Andras filmje Schubertrol Andras Schiff tells about Schubert on YouTube Now Hear This The Schubert Generation PBS September 25 2020 Retrieved January 16 2022 Sources and further reading Edit Works by Otto Erich DeutschOtto Erich Deutsch working in the first half of the 20th century was probably the preeminent scholar of Schubert s life and music In addition to the catalogue of Schubert s works he collected and organized a great deal of material about Schubert some of which remains in print Deutsch Otto Erich Wakeling Donald R 1995 The Schubert Thematic Catalogue Courier Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 28685 3 Deutsch Otto Erich 1977 Schubert A Documentary Biography Translated by Blom Eric Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 77420 1 Deutsch Otto Erich 1998 1958 Schubert Memoirs by His Friends Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816436 4 Schubert Franz Deutsch Otto Erich 1928 Franz Schubert s Letters and Other Writings Translated by Savile Venetia A A Knopf ISBN 978 0 8369 5242 1 OCLC 891887 19th and early 20th century scholarship Austin George Lowell 1873 The Life of Franz Schubert Shepard and Gill ISBN 978 0 404 12856 2 OCLC 4450950 Duncan Edmondstoune 1905 Schubert J M Dent ISBN 978 1 4437 8279 1 OCLC 2058050 Dvorak Antonin July 1894 Franz Schubert Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine Cairns Collection of American Women Writers 48 3 OCLC 4279873 Frost Henry Frederic 1915 Schubert Scribner OCLC 45465176 Grove George Fuller Maitland John Alexander 1908 Grove s Dictionary of Music and Musicians Vol 4 Macmillan OCLC 407077 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Hadow William Henry 1911 Schubert Franz Peter In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 383 386 Kreissle von Hellborn Heinrich 1869 1865 The Life of Franz Schubert Vol 1 Translated by Coleridge Arthur Duke Longmans Green and Company The first full length biography of Schubert volume 1 Kreissle von Hellborn Heinrich 1869 1865 The Life of Franz Schubert Vol 2 Translated by Coleridge Arthur Duke Longmans Green and Co The first full length biography of Schubert volume 2 Rodenberg Julius Pechel Rudolf 1900 Deutsche Rundschau volume 102 Jan Mar 1900 in German Gebruder Paetel OCLC 1566444 Thayer Alexander Wheelock Krehbiel Henry E Deiters Hermann Riemann Hugo 1921 The Life of Ludwig van Beethoven Vol 3 New York The Beethoven Association OCLC 422583 Wilberforce Edward 1866 Franz Schubert A Musical Biography London W H Allen amp Co ISBN unspecified Volume 38 The Musical Times Novello 38 February 1897 OCLC 1608351 Modern scholarship Botstein Leon 1997 Contexts musical political and cultural In Gibbs Christopher H ed The Cambridge Companion to Schubert Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48424 4 Brown A Peter 2002 The Symphonic Repertoire Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33487 9 Brown Maurice John Edwin 1983 The New Grove Schubert New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 01683 3 OCLC 9398015 Denny Thomas A 1997 Schubert s operas In Gibbs Christopher H ed The Cambridge Companion to Schubert Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48424 4 Deutsch Otto Erich et al 1978 Franz Schubert thematisches Verzeichnis seiner Werke in chronologischer Folge Barenreiter ISBN 978 3 7618 0571 8 Emmons Shirlee Lewis Wilbur Watkin 2006 Researching the Song A Lexicon Oxford University Press US ISBN 978 0 19 515202 9 Ewen David 2007 Composers of Yesterday Vancouver Read Books ISBN 978 1 4067 5987 7 Gammond Peter 1982 Schubert London Methuen ISBN 978 0 413 46990 8 Gibbs Christopher H 1997 Introduction the elusive Schubert In Gibbs Christopher H ed The Cambridge Companion to Schubert Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48424 4 Gibbs Christopher H 2000 The Life of Schubert Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 59512 4 Gibbs Christopher H ed 1997 The Cambridge Companion to Schubert Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48424 4 Gramit David 1997 Music cultivation and identity in Schubert s circle In Gibbs Christopher H ed The Cambridge Companion to Schubert Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48424 4 Griffel L Michael 1997 Schubert s orchestral music In Gibbs Christopher H ed The Cambridge Companion to Schubert Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48424 4 Hutchings Arthur 1967 Church Music in the Nineteenth Century London Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 8371 9695 4 Lev Ray 1947 Franz Schubert Piano Sonata no 15 in C major Unfinished Allegretto in C minor Ray Lev Pianist 78 RPM United States Concert Hall Society Release B3 Liszt Franz 1989 An Artist s Journey Lettres D un Bachelier es Musique 1835 1841 Translated by Suttoni Charles University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 48510 2 McKay Elizabeth Norman 1996 Franz Schubert A Biography Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816681 8 Newbould Brian 1999 Schubert The Music and the Man University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 21957 1 Plantinga Leon 1984 Romantic Music A History of Musical Style in Nineteenth Century Europe Norton ISBN 978 0 393 95196 7 Reed John 15 August 1997 The Schubert Song Companion Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 901341 00 3 Schonberg Harold C 1997 The Lives of the Great Composers W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 03857 6 Schroeder David 2009 Our Schubert His Enduring Legacy Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6927 1 Smith Jane Stuart Carlson Betty Schaeffer Francis A 1995 The Gift of Music Great Composers and Their Influence Good News Publishers ISBN 978 0 89107 869 2 Steblin Rita 1998 Schubert s Relationship with Women An Historical Account In Newbould Brian ed Schubert Studies Ashgate pp 159 182 ISBN 978 1 85928 253 3 Steblin Rita 1998 In Defense of Scholarship and Archival Research Why Schubert s Brothers Were Allowed to Marry Current Musicology 62 7 17 Swafford Jan 1992 The Vintage Guide to Classical Music Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 679 72805 4 Uhde Jurgen Wieland Renate 2013 Schubert Spate Klaviermusik Spuren ihrer inneren Geschichte in German Barenreiter ISBN 9783761823330 Numbering of symphoniesThe following sources illustrate the confusion around the numbering of Schubert s late symphonies The B minor Unfinished Symphony is variously published as No 7 and No 8 in both German and English Schubert Franz 1996 Symphony No 7 D 759 B minor Unfinished in German Barenreiter OCLC 39794412 German language publication of the Unfinished Symphony score as No 7 Schubert Franz 2008 Symphony No 7 in B minor D 759UnfinishedSymphony Eulenburg Audio Score Series Eulenburg ISBN 978 3 7957 6529 3 English language publication of the Unfinished Symphony score as No 7 Schubert Franz Reichenberger Teresa 1986 Symphony No 8 in B minor D 759Unfinished Paperback ISBN 978 3 7957 6278 0 English language publication of the Unfinished Symphony score as No 8 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Franz Schubert Franz Schubert at the Musopen project Texts and translations of vocal music by Schubert at The LiederNet Archive Franz Schubert Museum in Hohenems Austria Discovering Schubert BBC Radio 3 Franz Schubert at the Internet Broadway Database Digital reproductions of score manuscripts and letters by Franz SchubertRecordings Edit Schubertlied de Free recordings of many Lieder by Schubert mp3 Schubert cylinder recordings from the UCSB Cylinder Audio Archive at the University of California Santa Barbara Library Sheet music Edit Schubertline co uk about 250 of Schubert s Songs Schubertline edition Free scores by Franz Schubert at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Free scores by Franz Schubert in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Free digital scores by Franz Schubert in the OpenScore Lieder Corpus Portals Classical music Opera Biography Austria Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franz Schubert amp oldid 1148531961, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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