Type: | Lied |
Composer: | Richard Strauss |
Translation: | Cecilia or Cecily |
Catalogue: | TrV 170 |
Opus: | 27, No. 2 |
Dedication: | Pauline de Ahna, composer's wife. |
Text: | Poem by Heinrich Hart |
Language: | German |
Composed: | September 9, 1894 |
Scoring: | Voice and piano |
"Cäcilie", Op. 27 No. 2, is the second in a set of four songs composed by Richard Strauss in 1894.
The words are from a love poem "Cäcilie" written by Heinrich Hart (1855–1906), a German dramatic critic and journalist who also wrote poetry. It was written for the poet's wife Cäcilie.
pronounced as /de/, or UK English as "Cecilia".
Strauss composed the song at Marquartstein on 9 September 1894.[1], the day before his wedding to the soprano Pauline de Ahna. All four of the Opus 27 songs, including Cäcilie were given as a wedding present to her.
The song was originally written with piano accompaniment in the key of E major, but later orchestrated in his 'heroic' key of E. The instrumentation is: 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B, 2 bassoons, 4 horns in E, 2 trumpets in E, 3 trombones, tuba, 3 timpani, harp and the orchestral string section.[2]
The tempo direction is "Sehr lebhaft und drängend".[3]
Strauss, in his rich and lively orchestration, included parts for a solo string player from each section.
The change of key a semitone down from E to E explains why, from bar 34 on the violas are asked to play the note B, a semitone below the lowest note normally possible on the instrument; and at this point Strauss asks half the violas to tune this string down a semitone.[4] For the same reason the full score, bar 39, gives the second flute the note B, a semitone lower than its normal lowest note.
The other songs of Strauss' Opus 27:
There are many recordings of this, one of Strauss's most popular songs. Richard Strauss recorded it in once in 1944, accompanying the Austrian soprano Maria Reining on the piano.[6]