Franz Schubert
Born 31 January 1797.
Today and tonight we dedicate it to his genius...
n a short lifespan of less than 32 years, Schubert was a prolific composer, writing some 600 Lieder, nine symphonies (including the famous "Unfinished Symphony"), liturgical music, operas, some incidental music and a large body of chamber
and solo piano music. Appreciation of Schubert's music during his
lifetime was limited, but interest in his work increased significantly
in the decades following his death. Franz Liszt, Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms and Felix Mendelssohn,
among others, discovered and championed his works in the 19th century.
Today, Schubert is seen as one of the leading exponents of the early Romantic era in music and he remains one of the most frequently performed composers.
From 1826 to 1828, Schubert resided continuously in Vienna, except for a brief visit to Graz
in 1827. The history of his life during these three years was
comparatively uninteresting, and is little more than a record of his
compositions. In 1826, he dedicated a symphony (D. 944, that later came to be known as the "Great") to the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde and received an honorarium in return.
In the spring of 1828, he gave, for the only time in his career, a
public concert of his own works, which was very well received. The compositions themselves are a sufficient biography. The String Quartet 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 in G major, (D. 887, Op. 161), the "Rondeau brillant" for piano and violin (D. 895, Op. 70), and the Piano Sonata in G (D. 894, Op. 78) (first published under the title "Fantasia in G"). To these should be added the three Shakespearian songs, of which "Hark! Hark! the Lark" (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.
In 1827, Schubert wrote the song cycle Winterreise (D. 911), a colossal peak in art song ("remarkable" was the way it was described at the Schubertiades), the Fantasia for piano and violin in C (D. 934), the Impromptus for piano, and the two piano trios (the first in B flat (D. 898), and the second in E flat, D. 929); in 1828 the Mirjams Siegesgesang (Song of Miriam, D. 942) on a text by Franz Grillparzer, the Mass in E-flat (D. 950), the Tantum Ergo (D. 962) in the same key, the String Quintet in C (D. 956), the second Benedictus to the Mass in C, the three final piano sonatas (D.958, D.959 and D.960), and the collection of songs published posthumously as Schwanengesang ("Swan-song", D. 957).
This collection, while not a true song cycle, retains a unity of style
amongst the individual songs, touching depths of tragedy and of the
morbidly supernatural which had rarely been plumbed by any composer in
the century preceding it.
Six of these are set to words by Heinrich Heine, whose Buch der Lieder appeared in the autumn. The Symphony No. 9
(D. 944) 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, now
is generally seen as an early stage of his C major symphony) and was
revised for prospective performance in 1828. This huge, Beethovenian
work was declared "unplayable" by a Viennese orchestra.
This was a fairly unusual practice for Schubert, for whom publication,
let alone performance, was rarely contemplated for most of his
larger-scale works during his lifetime. In the last weeks of his life,
he began to sketch three movements for a new Symphony in D.
In the midst of this creative activity, his health deteriorated. The cause of his death was officially diagnosed as typhoid fever, though other theories have been proposed, including the tertiary stage of syphilis. 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, the composer saw court physician Ernst
Rinna, who may have confirmed Schubert's suspicions that he was ill
beyond cure and likely to die soon.
Some of his symptoms matched those of mercury poisoning (mercury was then a common treatment for syphilis, again suggesting that Schubert suffered from it).
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. Schubert died in
Vienna, at age 31, on 19 November 1828, at the apartment of his brother
Ferdinand. The last musical work he had wished to hear was Beethoven's String Quartet No. 14 in C sharp minor, Op. 131;
his friend, violinist Karl Holz, who was present at the gathering, 5
days before Schubert's death, commented: "The King of Harmony has sent
the King of Song a friendly bidding to the crossing".
It was next to Beethoven, whom he had admired all his life, that
Schubert was buried by his own request, in the village cemetery of Währing.
In 1872, a memorial to Franz Schubert was erected in Vienna's Stadtpark. 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.
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.
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