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Die Einsame (from Vier Notturnos, Op. 22, no. 1)
The Lonely Maiden
Composed by Heinrich von Herzogenberg Edited by Richard Bloesch Series Editor: William Hatcher Voicing: SATB Instrumentation: keyboard Catalog number: AMP 0044 Price: $1.50 This poem has a curious history. It appeared first in Eichendorffs short story “Das Schloss Dürande” (The Castle of Dýrande), where it is sung by the hunter Renald, who is waiting in the forest to take revenge against his master, the count of Duürande, for his supposed dishonoring of Renald's sister Gabriele. When the poem was published in the 1841 edition of the collected poems, it became the third poem in the four-poem cycle Die Einsame, and was completely transformed in meaning. It now described the secret thoughts of a woman, thoughts which are revealed only in the fourth poem (“Im beschränkten Kreis der Hügel”-not set by Herzogenberg) as thoughts of unrequited love. The poem, along with two other poems of Eichendorff set by Herzogenberg in the Vier Notturnos (“Wie schön, hier zu verträumen,” and “Die Nacht”), is typical of the romantic poet's obsession with the symbol of “night.” According to Edward F. Kravitt, “the role of night in German romanticism is crucial....Romanticists equated day with reason and society's conventions, and night with romance and escape from those conventions.”1 Herzogenberg's setting is dominated by rippling sixteenth-note figuration in the piano part, which surely is meant to evoke the rustling forest, the swaying treetops, and the running brooks.
Joseph von Eichendorff (1788-1857) Heinrich von Herzogenberg (1843-1900) Herzogenberg was born in Graz, Austria, and came of a noble family. He began to study law and philosophy in 1861 at the University of Vienna, but in the next year gave up his law studies to become a composition pupil of Felix Otto Dessoff, a professor at the Conservatory. In the same year (1862), Brahms left his birthplace, Hamburg, and came to live in Vienna. Herzogenberg occasionally encountered Brahms at Dessoff's house, and soon devoted himself to the promotion of Brahms': music. Herzogenberg, who in some early compositions followed the lead of Wagner and the New German School, soon felt he was on the wrong path. He embarked upon a daunting course of theoretical study, taking J .S. Bach as his model. For four years, he worked in Graz as a freelance composer, but then moved to Leipzig, where he founded (on January 31, 1875) the Leipzig Bach Society, along with Philipp Spitta and several others. In 1885 he was appointed professor of composition at the Berlin Hochschule fur Musik. The death of his wife, Elisabeth, in 1892, was a heavy blow; he consequently buried himself in his work and produced his Totenfeier, Op. 80, a sacred cantata for soloists, chorus, and orchestra - a worthy monument to her memory. His finest sacred works were composed in these last years of his life: Die Geburt Christi, Op. 90, Die Passion, Op. 93, and the Erntefeier, Op. 104. He died at Wiesbaden on October 9, 1900, having survived Elisabeth by eight, and Brahms by three years. Herzogenberg garnered a quite undeserved reputation as a dry, pedantic contrapuntist. The blame for the fact that his works never achieved much success during his lifetime may be laid partially a the feet of Johannes Brahms, who, although a close friend, never took Herzogenberg seriously as a composer. On the other hand, Brahms valued enormously the criticism of his own work by Elisabeth, Heinrich's wife. Today Herzogenberg's reputation is being steadily rehabilitated. One is impressed, first of all, by the sheer quantity of music that flowed from his pen. All branches of music, except opera, are represented in his output; his published compositions number to Op. 109. In addition to many concert works with sacred texts, he composed short liturgical works for the Protestant liturgy (although he remained a Catholic throughout his life). He wrote also many secular part songs, with and without accompaniment, for mixed, men's, and women's choirs. He composed three impressive string quartets and interesting piano variations (e.g., a set of variations on a theme of Brahms). We are now in a position to see that Herzogenberg was independent in his thought, while using a general Brahmsian surface (much as Mozart, even in his greatest works, built upon the foundation of the prevailing style of his period, especially that of Haydn). The Vier Notturnos (1876) show Herzogenberg's art in all its youthful freshness. The music does reflect influences from both Schumann and Brahms, but, upon closer examination, it also reveals the hand of a master composer, a considerable poet in sound. It is not too much to claim, I think, that this Op. 22 choral set is the equal of the best secular part songs by Schumann, Brahms, or Mendelssohn. It is great music by any acknowledged standard. Richard J. Bloesch The English translations suitable for singing were prepared by Richard Bloesch and Harris Loewen. The source of this edition is the original publication of the work by Breitkopf in 1876, a copy of which is located in the Music Division of the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. The autograph manuscript of this work has not been discovered. Revisions to the original edition: consistent application of vocal slurs to melismatic passages. recording performed by University of Louisiana at Lafayette Chorale |
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