Symphonic Studies (Schumann)
The Symphonic Etudes, Op. 13, is a set of études for solo piano by Robert Schumann. It began in 1834 as a theme and sixteen variations on a theme by Baron von Fricken, plus a further variation on an entirely different theme by Heinrich Marschner.
Composition
The first edition in 1837 carried an annotation that the tune was "the composition of an amateur": this referred to the origin of the theme, which had been sent to Schumann by Baron von Fricken, guardian of Ernestine von Fricken, the Estrella of his Carnaval Op. 9. The baron, an amateur musician, had used the melody in a Theme with Variations for flute. Schumann had been engaged to Ernestine in 1834, only to break abruptly with her the year after. An autobiographical element is thus interwoven in the genesis of the Études symphoniques.Of the sixteen variations Schumann composed on Fricken's theme, only eleven were published by him.. The final, twelfth, published étude was a variation on the theme from the Romance Du stolzes England freue dich, from Heinrich Marschner's opera Der Templer und die Jüdin, which was based on Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe. The earlier Fricken theme occasionally appears briefly during this étude. The work was first published in 1837 as XII Études Symphoniques. Only nine of the twelve études were specifically designated as variations. The sequence was as follows:
- Theme – Andante: Grief-stricken, still.
- Etude I – Un poco più vivo: Richly contrapuntal, dynamically lush. The harmonic outline is maintained, but the variation veers sharply away from the theme in character.
- Etude II – Andante: Dark, fantasy-like, with steely melodies in the outer voices.
- Etude III – Vivace: A study in the generation of smooth, dolce, staccato sounds.
- Etude IV – Allegro marcato: Jagged and stark, rich with canonic motion.
- Etude V – Scherzando: The rhythm is as propulsive as ever, but the mood is one of vivacissimo lightness.
- Etude VI – Agitato: Chordal hijinks, leaps, and frenetic interplay between both hands come together to create a brilliant, bewildering, contrapuntally dense explosion of musical colour -- all precise as an atomic clock.
- Etude VII – Allegro molto: Schumann takes a seemingly naive idea from the second bar of the theme and goes to town with it, creating a vigorous, muscular musical gem suffused with unexpected harmonic leaps.
- Etude VIII – Sempre marcatissimo: A true compositional marvel. Canonic/fugal textures merge with dramatic, bitter, French-overture gestures, treacherous leaps, and heartbreaking harmonies. The tempo pianist chooses here allows every voice to be painstakingly singled out, and creates some genuinely transcendent moments.
- Etude IX – Presto possibile: Rapid fistfuls of chords, played with air and effortlessness, before sudden harplike figuration and a silkily eerily diminished arpeggio bring the variation to a close.
- Etude X – Allegro con energia: Pianist brings exhilarating physicality to bear on this variation, with a surging, scalar bass line set off against repeated notes in the RH.
- Etude XI – Andante espressivo: An exquisitely crafted variation, with quintet polyrhythms and stunning counterpoint sustained over a murmuration of modified Alberti bass. The textural shading which the pianist manages to pull off here is pretty incredible.
- Etude XII – Allegro brillante : Not really a variation on a theme, but a triumphant close with a march-like sense of rhythm and purpose. Measure 50 is pure fanfare: A long pedal tone in A-flat, a middle voice echoing the opening theme, and on top dotted 16ths billowing like sails in the wind. Pulled off by the pianist with inimitable swagger.
Fifteen years later, in a second edition, the 1837 title Études symphoniques became Études en forme de variations, two etudes that did not correspond to the new title were eliminated, and some revisions were made in the piano writing.
The entire work was dedicated to Schumann's English friend, the pianist and composer William Sterndale Bennett. Bennett played the piece frequently in England to great acclaim, but Schumann thought it was unsuitable for public performance and advised his wife Clara not to play it.
Character
Leaving aside the allusions to Florestan and Eusebius, all of Schumann's proposed titles show some of the essential character of Op. 13's conception. This was of 'studies' in the sense that the term had assumed in Frédéric Chopin's Op. 10, that is to say, concert pieces in which the investigation of possibilities of technique and timbre in writing for the piano is carried out; they are 'symphonic études' through the wealth and complexity of the colours evoked – the keyboard becomes an "orchestra" capable of blending, contrasting or superimposing different timbres.If etudes Nos. 3 and 9 are excluded, where the connection with the theme is tenuous, the etudes are in variation form. It was not the first time that Schumann had tackled variation form. But here the variation principle is used more as free transformation, no longer of an actual theme, but of a musical 'cell' or cells. The Études symphoniques learn the lesson of Beethoven's Diabelli Variations: the theme that acts as a unifying element is amplified and transformed, and becomes the basis from which blossoms inventions of divergent expressive character. The work also shows the influence of the Goldberg Variations, most obviously in the use of a pseudo-French overture variation, and in the use of various canonic effects.
The highly virtuosic demands of the piano writing are frequently aimed not merely at effect but at clarification of the polyphonic complexity and at delving more deeply into keyboard experimentation. The Etudes are considered to be one of the most difficult works for piano by Schumann and in Romantic literature as a whole.
Later publication history
In 1861, five years after Schumann's death, his father-in-law Friedrich Wieck published a third edition under the editorial pseudonym "DAS". This edition attempted to reconcile the differences between the earlier two, and bore both the previous titles XII Études Symphoniques and Études en forme de variations.On republishing the set in 1890, Johannes Brahms restored the five variations that had been cut by Schumann. These are now often played, but in positions within the cycle that vary somewhat with each performance; there are now twelve variations and these five so-called "posthumous" variations which exist as a supplement.
The five posthumously published sections are:
- Variation I – Andante, Tempo del tema
- Variation II – Meno mosso
- Variation III – Allegro
- Variation IV – Allegretto
- Variation V – Moderato.
Orchestrations