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Kinderszenen

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Kinderszenen
by Robert Schumann
First edition title page
EnglishScenes from Childhood
Opus15
PeriodRomantic period
Composed1838
Movements13 pieces
ScoringSolo piano

Kinderszenen[a] (German pronunciation: [ˈkɪndɐˌst͡seːnən], "Scenes from Childhood"), Op. 15, by Robert Schumann, is a set of thirteen pieces of music for piano written in 1838.

History and description

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Schumann wrote 30 movements for this work but chose 13 for the final version. The unused movements were later published in Bunte Blätter, Op. 99, and Albumblätter, Op. 124.[1] Schumann initially intended to publish Kinderszenen together with Novelletten (Opus 21); the shared literary theme is suggested by the original title Kindergeschichten (Children's Tales). He told his wife Clara that the "thirty small, droll things", most of them less than a page in length, were inspired by her comment that he sometimes seemed "like a child". He described them in 1840 as "more cheerful, gentler, more melodic" than his earlier works.[2]

Movement No. 7 of the work, Träumerei, is one of Schumann's best known pieces; it is the opening and closing musical theme of the 1947 Hollywood film Song of Love,[3] and Träumerei is the title of a 1944 German biographical film on Schumann.[4] In Russia, a hummed choral a cappella version became known as mourning music, being played annually during the Minute of Silence on Victory Day.[5]

Originally called Leichte Stücke ("Easy Pieces"), the section titles were only added after the completion of the composition, and Schumann described them as "nothing more than delicate hints for execution and interpretation".[6] Timothy D. Taylor, however, has discussed the choice of titles for this work in the context of the changing situation of music culturally and economically, stating that the final movement, entitled Der Dichter spricht (The Poet Speaks), marked a realisation among composers that, due to the decline of patronage structures in the 19th century, their musical works must take on new meanings.[7]

There is no known complete manuscript of Kinderszenen.[8]

Pieces

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Title Key Play
1. Von fremden Ländern und Menschen
Of Foreign Lands and Peoples
G major
2. Kuriose Geschichte
A Curious Story
[b]
D major
3. Hasche-Mann
Blind Man's Buff
B minor
4. Bittendes Kind
Pleading Child
D major
5. Glückes genug
Happy Enough
D major
6. Wichtige Begebenheit
An Important Event
A major
7. Träumerei
Dreaming
F major
8. Am Kamin
At the Fireside
[c]
F major
9. Ritter vom Steckenpferd
Knight of the Hobbyhorse
C major
10. Fast zu ernst
Almost Too Serious
G minor
11. Fürchtenmachen
Frightening
E minor – G major
12. Kind im Einschlummern
Child Falling Asleep
E minor - E major
13. Der Dichter spricht
The Poet Speaks
G major

Recordings

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Pianist Piano Label Recording year
Jörg Demus Conrad Graf (c. 1835) SKC 1979
Penelope Crawford Conrad Graf (1835) Musica Omnia 2014
Richard Burnett Conrad Graf (1841) FSM 1982
Eric Zivian Franz Rausch (1841) Avie Records 2011
Jan Vermeulen Johann Nepomuk Tröndlin (1830–1835) Accent 2010
Andreas Staier Erard (1837) Harmonia Mundi 2007
Yuan Sheng Streicher (1846) Piano Classics 2018
Piet Kuijken Streicher (1850) Fuga Libera 2007, 2009
Byron Schenkman Streicher (1875)

Notes

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  1. ^ Original spelling: Kinderscenen
  2. ^ Original spelling: Curiose Geschichte
  3. ^ Original spelling: Am Camin

References

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  1. ^ Polansky, Robert (Spring 1978). "The Rejected Kinderscenen of Robert Schumann's Opus 15". Journal of the American Musicological Society. 31 (1): 126–131. doi:10.1525/jams.1978.31.1.03a00070. JSTOR 831388.
  2. ^ Jensen, Eric Frederick (16 January 2012). Schumann. Oxford University Press. pp. 162–. ISBN 978-0-19-983068-8 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ "Träumerei" played by Katharine Hepburn in the film Song of Love on YouTube
  4. ^ Träumerei at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  5. ^ Минута молчания памяти павших (1968) [A moment of silence in memory of the fallen] on YouTube
  6. ^ Thorpe, Day (December 1990). "Music Reviews: Kinderszenen, Op. 15; Album für die Jugend, Op. 68 by Robert Schumann, Otto von Irmer, Walther Lampe". Notes. Second Series. 11 (4): 605–606. doi:10.2307/893060. JSTOR 893060.
  7. ^ Taylor, Timothy D. (December 1990). "Aesthetic and Cultural Issues in Schumann's Kinderszenen". International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music. 21 (2): 161–178. doi:10.2307/837021. JSTOR 837021.
  8. ^ Sams, Eric (1974). "Review: Schuman Scenes – Kinderszenen, Op. 15, by Schumann, Franzpeter Goebels". The Musical Times. 115 (1572): 146. doi:10.2307/955016. JSTOR 955016.
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