Schumann Cello
Zoe Knighton (cello), Amir Farid (piano)
The collaboration between cellist Zoe Knighton and pianist Amir Farid continues with a collection of short works by Clara and Robert Schumann.
Clara and Robert Schumann were the most celebrated music couple of the 19th century. They met as children when Robert was having piano lessons with Clara’s father, Friedrich Wieck. Wieck named his daughter “Clara”, meaning “brilliance”, and put everything into raising a virtuoso pianist. They married one day before her 21st birthday, together having eight children (one died in infancy).
Before their marriage she was the more famous performer. She nurtured Robert’s composition and promoted him. Giving first performances of Robert Schumann and their friend Johannes Brahms. Contrary to common belief, Clara did not abandon composition when she married Robert. The two of them composed side-by-side, sometimes publishing songs together, without specific attribution.
Believe it or not, Clara was one of, if not the first pianist to perform from memory. She earnt the majority of the money for the household and in fact, her compositions were more popular than Robert’s in her lifetime.
These three sets of songs on this CD were written in 1840 (the year of their marriage), 1844 and 1853 respectively. “I once believed that I possessed creative talent, but I have given up this idea; a woman must not desire to compose—there has never yet been one able to do it. Should I expect to be the one?”
Robert suffered an accident to one of his hands which confined him to composition. A fortuitous turn which meant he could completely focus on writing rather than performing. Well documented emotional torment plagued him for most
of his career with the exception of the first blissful year of marriage (1840) which resulted in no less than 138 songs.
The Three Fantasy Pieces, Op.73 were originally written for clarinet in 1849 and were representative of Robert having a more elastic view of how chamber works may be performed. The Five Pieces in Folk Style, Op. 102 was written one year later and represents rise in the German middle class and their appetite for house music, or music designed to be performed by amateurs in the home.
Robert died in 1856 after more than two years in a psychiatric hospital where it was advised Clara should not visit him.
***
6 Lieder, Op. 13 (Clara Schumann)
Ich stand in dunklen Träumen
Sie liebten sich beide
Liebeszauber
Der Mond kommt still gegangen
Ich hab’ in Deinem Auge
Die stille Lotosblume
3 Gedichte aus Rückerts “Liebesfrühling”, Op.12 (Clara Schumann)
Er ist gekommen in Sturm und Regen
Liebst du um Schönheit
Warum willst du and’re fragen?
Sechs Lieder aus “Jucunde” von Hermann Rollet, Op. 23 (Clara Schumann)
Was weinst du, Blümlein
An einem lichten Morgen
Geheimes Flüstern hier und dort
Auf einem grünen Hügel
Das ist ein Tag, der klingen mag
O Lust, o Lust
6 Fantasy Pieces, Op. 73 Robert Schumann
Zart und mit Ausdruck
Lebhaft, leicht
Rasch und mit Feuer
Fünf Stücke im Volkston, Op. 102 Robert Schumann
Mit Humor
Langsam
Nicht Schnell, mit viel Ton zu spielen
Nicht zu rasch
Stark und markirt
***
Move Records CD
MD 3461