Des Dichters Abendgang Explained

Des Dichters Abendgang
Composer:Richard Strauss
Image Upright:0.7
Translation:Of the Poets evening stroll
Catalogue:TrV 200
Opus:47, No. 2
Dedication:J.C.Pflüger
Text:Ludwig Uhland
Language:German
Key:E Flat.
Composed:[1]
Scoring:Voice and Piano.

"Des Dichters Abendgang" ("The Poets Evening Stroll") is an art song composed by Richard Strauss using the text of a poem with the same name by Ludwig Uhland (1787–1862), the second in his Opus 47 collection, (TrV 200) which was published in 1900. Originally written for piano and voice, Strauss wrote an orchestral version in 1918.

Composition history

Strauss wrote the song at his home in Charlottenburg near Berlin, completing it on May 8, 1900. Strauss set five of Uhlands's poems in his Opus 47 songs. He had only recently set another Uhland poem Die Ulme zu Hirsau (opus 43/3, 1899). The poet had also been a childhood favourite of Strauss: two of his earliest Jugendlieder (childhood songs) written in 1871 were Uhland settings.[2] Strauss' tempo marking is "Sehr ruhig and feierlich" (very quiet and solemn) and his setting "is a full scale heroic song, originally composed in Strauss' heroic key of E flat".[3] The song was published in a bilingual edition with English lyrics the same year. In 1918, he wrote an orchestral version of the song, this time in the key of D flat, which was premiered on April 20, 1919, in Berlin sung by tenor Ernst Kraus with Stauss conducting the Berlin Philharmonic.[4]

Orchestral arrangement

The 1918 orchestral arrangement calls for the following instruments:

Lyrics

The poem captures the enlightenment and transcendence felt by the poet as he takes his evening stroll. The inner light guides him even when times become dark.

References

Notes

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Trenner, Page 197
  2. Jeffersson page 117.
  3. Del Mar, page 335.
  4. Trenner, page 406
  5. Translation by Constance Bache, 1900. From original Fürstner edition of Opus 47 songs.