Die Nacht (Strauss) Explained

German: Die Nacht|italic=no
Type:Lied
Composer:Richard Strauss
Image Upright:0.8
Translation:The Night
Catalogue:TrV 141
Opus:10
Dedication:Heinrich Vogl
Text:Poem by Hermann von Gilm
Language:German
Composed:1885
Scoring:Voice and piano

"" ("The Night") is an art song composed by Richard Strauss in 1885, setting a poem by the Austrian poet Hermann von Gilm. It was included in the first collection of songs Strauss ever published, as Op. 10 in 1885 (which included also "Zueignung"). The song is written for voice and piano.

Composition history

In 1882, his friend Ludwig Thuile introduced Strauss to the poetry of Gilm contained in the volume (last leaves), published in the year of the poet's death (and the composer's birth) 1864, which contained the poem Die Nacht.[1] The Opus 10 songs were all intended for the tenor voice.[2] Alan Jefferson wrote:

Die Nacht is a song of trembling and yearning, a song tinged with fear that the night, which takes away the familiar shapes of daylight, will also steal the beloved...Strauss manages to convey the manner in which the all-embracing power of night is stealing so mercilessly over everything: first by the a powerful (though gentle) rhythmic beat; and then by the minor seconds (two adjacent black and white notes put down together) which create the effect of merging two objects into one until they resolve into something else, musically as well as visually...Die Nacht is a supreme example of Strauss's art.[3]

Norman Del Mar notes that the opening musical phrase for the line "" is very similar to the "wonderful oboe solo from Don Juan, to be composed five years later".[4]

Strauss recorded the song twice with himself at the piano: in 1919 with the Baritone Heinrich Schlusnus, and again for a 1942 wartime radio broadcast from Vienna with tenor Anton Dermota.[5]

References

NotesSources

Notes and References

  1. Del Mar, pp. 264–7.
  2. Del Mar, p. 267
  3. jefferson page 98-9.
  4. Del Mar, page 266
  5. Getz, page 376.
  6. Jefferson, page 99.