Herbstkummer, WAB 72 explained

Key:E minor
Catalogue:WAB 72
Type:Lied
Text:"Ernst"
Language:German
Vocal:Solo voice
Instrumental:Piano

("Autumnal sorrow"), WAB 72 is a lied composed by Anton Bruckner in 1864.

History

Bruckner composed the lied on the text of "Ernst", in April 1864 during his stay in Linz. It is not known for which purpose the lied was composed.[1] [2] [3]

The original manuscript is lost, but a copy of it is stored in the archive of the German: Österreichische Nationalbibliothek. A transcription by Emil Posch is also found in the city archive of Linz.[1] [2] In 1930, the work was published in Band III/2, pp. 152–157 of the Göllerich/Auer biography.[1] The song is issued in Band XXIII/1, No. 3 of the German: Gesamtausgabe.[4]

Text

The song uses a text by "Ernst".[5]

The flowers fade, the summer is over,The leaves blow away. It clouds over my mind.A little rose, which I brought inside in the summer,Will, I thought, survive the winter.The little birds sang, the grove listened,The little deer sprang in the moonshine,The many little flowers bloomed in the valley,Of which the little rose was my favourite.

The autumn has come, the storm roars,The air has faded, the winter began.I would not lament over storms and snow,If the little rose would stand the icy ache.O, spare the frail one, the lovely child,Roar around the oak instead, wind

Bloom, little rose, without scare, guarded with love,Until the winter is over and May laughs again!

Music

The 62-bar long work in E minor is scored for solo voice and piano.[1] The emotional mood of the romantic text is outlined by triplet figures on the piano, chromatic developments, fermata, pauses and the contrast E major/E minor.[2]

Discography

There are four recordings of Herbstkummer:

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. C. Van Zwol, p. 717
  2. U. Harten, p. 196
  3. C. Howie, Chapter III, p. 117
  4. http://www.mwv.at/TextBruckner/Katalog/liederWelt.htm Gesamtausgabe – Lieder für Gesang und Klavier
  5. Not further identified. It could be Wenzel Karl Ernst (1830-1910) or Hans Ernst. See: C. van Zwol p. 717.