Robert Schumann (1810-1856)
Abegg-Variations • Novelletten • Drei Fantasiestücke
Until he was thirty, Schumann wrote keyboard music
almost exclusively, music which expressed the broad
range of his thoughts and feelings and the passionate and
reflective aspects of his personality. Through the
influence of his parents he learned much about literature,
especially the poetic works of Goethe and Byron. His illfated
attempt to attend law school, at his mother’s
insistence, was soon abandoned in favour of the
irresistible attraction to music.
Schumann was always intrigued with games and
puzzles, particularly when he could include them in his
own music. His first published work, the Abegg
Variations of 1830, reflects this fascination with
puzzles. The variations take their title from the name of
a young pianist, Mme. Meta Abegg, whom Schumann
met in early 1830. This is a set of variations with a
theme based on the letters of her surname, in German
notation A - B flat - E - G - G. The theme is in waltz
tempo. This may be simple on its opening presentation,
but the three variations are quite complex and brilliant.
The theme is marked Animato, presented in a gentle
theme in triple metre. The first variation is more stormy
with rapid passage-work, and with the rising motif then
inverted creating a capricious nuance of harmony. The
second features a syncopated rhythm, perhaps
expressing a light-hearted conversation. The third
variation starts in a running style with rapid triplet
figures in the right hand, marked corrente, suggesting a
happy young boy running around playfully. A middle
section, in cantabile style, in a Sicilian rhythm, almost
serves as a fourth variation, but builds up to the
conclusion. The Finale, marked alla Fantasia in 6/8
metre, features chromatic descending passages, and
could be considered a fifth variation in which Schumann
expresses his dreams and expectations. In the middle of
the finale, Schumann brings the music to a stop and
presents two chords marked ad libitum. The second
chord contains the notes of the Abegg theme, and
Schumann releases each of these notes in turn until only
a solitary G is left echoing quietly. As each note is
released, it is as though his friends are leaving one by
one until he is alone. Suddenly the theme from the finale
returns and rushes away excitedly, ending in both a
sophisticated but innocently humorous mode.
In Novelletten, Op. 21, written in 1838, the title,
rooted in the word “novel” here becomes a collection of
story-like short pieces. Schumann wrote in his letter to
Clara describing his new composition, referring jokingly
to the well-known soprano Clara Novello:
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“Then again, I have written such a frightful
amount of music for you over the past three
weeks – pranks, Egmontian tales, family scenes
with fathers, a wedding, in short, extremely
engaging things. I gave this piece the title
Novelletten because your name is Clara and
Wiecketten does not sound good enough.”
(Letter to Clara Wieck, February, 1838)
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Schumann also features Florestan and Eusebius, the
characters borrowed from the works of E.T.A.
Hoffmann. Florestan plays the rôle of the extrovert,
contrasted with the introverted gentle character of
Eusebius. The first section, Markiert und kräftig
(Marked and strong), in F major, is a powerful march in
full chords with lyrical contrasting trios. In the
polyphonic chorale-style third section each voice
alternates the melodic line. This is followed by the D
major Äußerst rasch und mit Bravour (Very fast and
bravura), in three-part form. The semiquavers in the first
section suggest dashing horses contrasted with playful
girls in paradise in the middle section. In the first edition
the title of Sarrasin and Suleika, a reference to Goethe’s
Westöstlichen Divan, appears. The third part, Leicht und
mit Humor (Lightly with humour), in D major, begins
with dancing fairies in staccato chords, but changes to a
battlefield in the central Intermezzo. This was first
published separately in a musical supplement to
Schumann’s Zeitschrift für Musik with a quotation from
the opening of the witches’ scene at the start of Macbeth.
This is followed by a section marked Ballmäßig, Sehr
munter (Dancing, very lively), in D major, a Viennesestyle
waltz with cross-rhythms and lively syncopations,
and a middle section which suggests a conversation
between a couple. The D major Rauschend und festlich
(Rustling and Festive) is in rondo form and suggests a
festive wedding scene for him and Clara, but his future
father-in-law, who opposed their marriage, appears
several times in the intervening sections, clouding the
festive atmosphere. The sixth part, Sehr lebhaft, mit
vielem Humor (Very lively with great humour) is in A
major. The movement opens with a simple folk-tune but
gradually increases in intensity through a modulating
melody. Here Florestan dominates, although Eusebius
appears just before the final chord and the section closes
quietly. This leads to a passage marked Äußerst rasch
(Very fast), in E major and in three-part form. This
begins with a fast waltz contrasted with a cantabile
section, Etwas langsamer (Somewhat slower). The
section marked Sehr lebhaft (Very lively), in F sharp
minor, is the longest and most episodic. The aggressive
theme suggests a man forcing his way through a storm,
interrupted by a short gallop, the first Trio in D flat
major, a childhood reminiscence. After another stormy
episode, the horns announce a triumph over the storm in
the second Trio. One episode, Noch lebhafter (Still
livelier) includes what Schumann described as Stimme
aus der Ferne (A voice from afar), quoting a theme from
Clara Wieck’s Notturno in her Soirées musicales. In
Fortsetzung und Schluss (Continuation and Ending), the
mood changes into a festive carnival, returning to the
first theme for a majestic ending.
Five years before his death Schumann wrote a set of
three pieces, Drei Fantasiestücke, Op. 111, revealing his
deeply troubled emotions and his deteriorating health
and spirits. Played without pause, the pieces are strongly
connected by the tonalities, C minor in the first, A flat
major partly with C minor in the second, and C minor in
the third. The first, marked Sehr rasch, mit
leidenschaftlichem Vortrag, (Very fast with passionate
presentation) is an agitated piece, with its sighing motifs
and continuous arpeggios, suggesting a man crying in
despair as he rushes through a dark forest. The second
piece, Ziemlich langsam, (Somewhat slowly), features
an expressive chordal song, very Schubertian in
character, with a more agitated middle section, then
returning to the song. The melody resembles his
Liebeslied from the Dichterliebe. The third, Kräftig und
sehr markiert, (Strong and well-marked), is a robust
march with a melody alternating between soprano and
alto lines, framing a trio with repeated chords answered
by graceful mystical descending arpeggios, a texture
which then returns in the coda.
Kotaro Fukuma and Karen Knowlton, with
assistance from Sarah-Theresa Yoshiko Murakami