Title: The Spirit of Romanticism
1The Spirit of Romanticism
Music, of all the liberal arts, has the greatest
influence over the passions.
2Romantic vs. Classical(1820-1900) (1750-1825)
- Subjective Objective
- Strangeness Order
- Wonder vs. Poise
- Ecstasy
Serenity
3French RevolutionLiberty, Equality, Fraternity
- Transfer of power to the middle class
- Technological advances of the Industrial
Revolution - Emphasized the individual
Jean-Jacques RousseauPhilosopher 1712 - 1778
Never exceed your rights, and they will soon
become unlimited.
4Art
- Intensely emotional expression
- Awareness of themselves as individuals apart from
all others.
5Orphan Girl at the CemeteryEugène Delacroix
(1798-1863)
6Sketch for The Death of Sardanapalus Female
Nude, killed from behind
7The Death of Sardanapal1827
8UprisingHonoré Daumier(1808-1879)
9Poetry/Literature
- Fanciful subjects
- Passionate
- Picturesque
- Emotional expressioneternal longing, regret for
lost happiness of childhood - Edgar Allen Poe, Hawthorne
10Developments in the Romantic Period
- Improved, affordable musical instruments (Indus.
Rev.) - Orchestras grew along w/levels of expression
- Use of folklore, rise of nationalism
- ExoticismInterested in fairy tales of Asia/Far
East
11The Music
- Long, melodic lines
- Highly emotional, expressive
- Forms changed
- Nineteenth-century music was linked to dreams and
passions, to profound meditations on life and
death, human destiny, God and nature, pride in
ones country, desire for freedom, the political
struggles of the age, the ultimate triumph of
good over evil.
12The Romantic Musician
- Musical life centers on concert hall.
- Performers met their audiences as equals.
- Many became as popular as rock-n-roll stars.
- Printed music now available.
- Affordable concert life.
- Performers also became educators.
13Art Song
- German Lied (song), plural Lieder
- Worked well with piano
- Favorite themes of songs love, longing, and
beauty of nature - Famous composers Schubert, Schumann, Wolf,
Brahms - Strophic, modified strophic, or through-composed
- Song cycles
- Favored Poets Heinrich Heine (1797-1856) and
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)
14Franz Schubert1797-1828
15SchubertNo one understands anothers grief, no
one understands anothers joy. . . . My music is
the product of my talent and my misery. And that
which I have written in my greatest distress is
what the world seems to like best.
- Wrote chambers music, piano works
- Wrote more than 600 lieder and several song
cycles - Used piano effectively
16The Legend of The Erlking1860, Moritz von Schwind
- Schuberts Erlkönig (Erlking) 1815
- --Through-composed Lied
- --Use of piano for effect
- --Poem by Goethe
- --Solo voice and piano
- --Schnell (Allegro)
- --Performed by one voice
- Narrator middle register, minor mode
- Father low register, minor mode
- Son high register, minor mode
- Erlking medium range, major mode
17Robert Schumann(1810-1856)
18SchumannMusic is to me the perfect expression
of the soul.
- Wrote four symphonies, piano music, chamber
music, and approximately 300 Lieder - Established an important literary magazine New
Journal for Music - 1840 year of his marriage to Clara, and Year of
the Song. His songs often reflect a womans
point of view. He wrote A Womans Love and
Life. - Piano pieces some large cycles, often attaches
literary meaning
19A Poets Love (Dichterliebe)
- Song cycle, in the year 1840
- 16 poems of Heine
- Songs in cycle go from happiness to despair.
- A Poets Love (Dichterliebe), No. 1
- Strophic form (2 strophes)
- Expressive piano part