Composer: | Anton Bruckner |
Key: | A-flat major, |
Catalogue: | WAB 87 |
Type: | Secular choral work |
Text: | Franz Grillparzer |
Language: | German |
Dedication: | Wilhelm Ritter von Hartel |
Vocal: | choir and tenor soloist |
(Dreaming and being awake), WAB 87, is a song, which Anton Bruckner composed in 1890 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Franz Grillparzer's birth.
Bruckner composed the song on 15 December 1890. The text is from the end of Act I of Franz Grillparzer's drama German: Der Traum ein Leben.[1] [2] [3]
The piece was performed under Bruckner's baton at the German: Grillparzer-Feier, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Grillpatzer's birth (15 January 1891) by the German: Wiener Akademisches Gesangverein (Academic singers association of Vienna) with Franz Schaumann (tenor) in the ballroom of the university of Vienna. Bruckner dedicated the composition to his housemate Wilhelm Ritter von Hartel, the rector of the university of Vienna.[1] [2] The piece, of which the original manuscript is stored in the archive of the performing choir (current name: German: Universitätssängerschaft 'Barden zu Wien'), was published in 1891 by Theodor Rättig, Vienna without Bruckner's assignment.[2]
Because of the encountered performance difficulties (humming voices), [4] Bruckner revised the composition slightly on 4 February 1892.[1] [2] The song is issued in Band XXIII/2, No. 34 of the German: Gesamtausgabe.[5]
The work uses a text from the end of Act I of Franz Grillparzer's drama German: Der Traum ein Leben (A dream is life):
And the love that you feel,And the good that you do,And awakening only in the sleepWhen you once rest in the grave. |
The 75-bar long work in A-B-A' form is scored in A-flat major for choir and tenor soloist.[2] [1]
The first 24 bars are sung by the choir. On bar 25 ("Und die Liebe, die du fühlest"), the text is taken over in D-flat major by the tenor soloist with accompaniment of humming voices. From bar 44 ("wenn du einst im Grabe ruhst."), the song is taken over by the choir. From bar 52, the choir repeats the first strophe.[2] [1]
There are two recordings of Träumen und Wachen: