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Schubert

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58
PAGES
~58 min
READING TIME
English
LANGUAGE
Published 1957 Penguin Highbridge (Aud) 27 views
ISBN
9639059994, 9789639059993
Editions
Audio Cd
Paperback
27 views
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About Author

Franz Schubert

Franz Schubert (31 January 1797 – 19 November 1828), a Viennese composer of the late Classical to early Romantic eras, left a very extensive body of work notwithstanding his short life. He wrote over 1,500 items, or, when collections, cycles and variants are grouped, some thousand compositions. The largest group are his over six hundred Lieder for solo voice and piano. He composed nearly as many piano pieces, and further some 150 part songs, some 40 liturgical compositions (including several masses) and around 20 stage works like operas and incidental music. His orchestral output includes thirteen symphonies (seven completed) and several overtures.

Description

Brilliant, soulful, poor, and doomed to a short life, Franz Peter Schubert (1797-1828) in many ways embodied the Romantic era in which he lived. In this vibrant biographical novel, Peter Hartling brings the composer to life as a man of exquisite sensitivity, passionate extremes, and a profound sense of rootlessness much like the famous wanderers of his musical creations. The deftly interwoven description and dialogue recreate Schubert's family, education, friendships, loves, and the exciting milieu of Vienna during the Napoleonic era, where Schubert was introduced to the many works of his contemporaries, including Beethoven, Rossini, Salieri, Schiller, and Goethe. Interspersed throughout the story are twelve vignettes, or "musical moments," each capturing a particular stage in Schubert's brief life. The young composer worked at a feverish pace, setting words to music in minutes, and the number of beautiful pieces he could produce in a single day astonished even musically sophisticated Vienna. Many compositions were of unparalleled emotional intensity, including the Trout Quintet, "Great" C Major Symphony, Wanderer fantasy, and Winterreise. As his circle of admirers in Vienna gradually widened, he was often asked to play the piano and to sing at Schubertiads, special evenings devoted to his music, which might begin as informal concerts and end with dancing. But these gatherings were isolated moments of gaiety in Schubert's otherwise tragic life. Although romantic love is a major theme in many of Schubert's works, and he clearly enjoyed the company of women, his two great loves were never realized. He first fell in love with a soprano named Therese Grob and, later, with his student, the young countess Karoline Esterhazy, whom he dared not even approach. Instead the socially awkward, self-conscious musician resigned himself to one or more loveless affairs. The novel closes as it opens - with a poignant dream sequence in which the narrator finds himself among Schubert's friends, intently listening as their friend Franz plays the piano.

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