'''Lied''' (plural '''Lieder''') is a German word, meaning literally "
song"; among English speakers, however, the word is used primarily as a term for
European
classical music songs, also known as
art songs. More accurately, the term perhaps is best used to describe specifically songs set to a German poem of reasonably high literary aspirations, most notably during the nineteenth century, beginning with Franz Schubert and culminating with Hugo Wolf. Typically, ''Lieder'' are arranged for a single singer and
piano. Sometimes ''Lieder'' are gathered in a ''Liederkreis'' or "
song cycle" — a series of songs (generally three or more) tied by a single narrative or theme. The composers
Franz Schubert and
Robert Schumann are most closely associated with this genre of classical music.
History
For
German speakers the term ''Lied'' has a long history ranging from
12th century troubadour songs (''
Minnesang'') via folk songs (''Volkslieder'') and church hymns (''Kirchenlieder'') to 20th-century workers songs (''Arbeiterlieder'') or
protest songs (''Kabarettlieder, Protestlieder'').
In
Germany, the great age of song came in the
19th century. German and
Austrian composers had written music for voice with keyboard before this time, but it was with the flowering of
German literature in the
Classical and
Romantic eras that composers found high inspiration in
poetry that sparked the genre known as the ''Lied''. The beginnings of this tradition are seen in the songs of
Mozart and
Beethoven, but it is with
Schubert that a new balance is found between words and music, a new absorption into the music of the sense of the words.
Schubert wrote over 600 songs, some of them in sequences or
song cycles that relate a story — adventure of the soul rather than the body. The tradition was continued by
Schumann,
Brahms, and
Hugo Wolf, and on into the
20th century by
Strauss and
Mahler. The body of song created in the ''Lied'' tradition, like that of the
Italian madrigal three centuries before, represents one of the richest products of human sensibility.
Other national traditions
The ''Lied'' tradition is closely linked with the
German language. But there are parallels elsewhere, noticeably in
France, with the melodies of such composers as
Berlioz,
Fauré,
Debussy and
Francis Poulenc, and in
Russia, with the songs of
Mussorgsky and
Rachmaninov in particular.
England too had a flowering of song in the
20th century represented by
Vaughan Williams and
Benjamin Britten.
The Polish composer
Stanisław Moniuszko (1819 - 1872) composed 278 songs. 276 were compiled in 12 booklets called The Home Songbook (Śpiewnik Domowy). The songs were set to poems by the most famous Polish poets of that time, such as
Adam Mickiewicz.
Bibliography
Hallmark, Rufus, ed. ''German Lieder in the Nineteenth Century''. New York: Schirmer, 1996.
Parsons, James, ed. ''The Cambridge Companion to the Lied''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
[1]
External links
★
The Lied and Art Song Texts Page