Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
Nearly all of Schumann's music contains or derives from words, whether as texts, titles, programmes or epigraphs. It is also famous for its structure of music qua mosaic, an aggregation of small-scale motifs. Now, surely these two basic facts about Schumann—his obviously verbal content, his obviously motivic form—may well be related? He works by way of motto-themes, I suggest, because that is literally what they are—mottoes turned into themes.
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3 Jugendbriefe, p. 16.Google Scholar
4 Wolfgang Boetticher, Robert Schumann, Berlin, 1941, p. 159.Google Scholar
5 Jugendbriefe, p. 82.Google Scholar
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8 Jugendbriefe, p. 155.Google Scholar
9 Briefe, p. 40.Google Scholar
10 Wolfgang Gertler, Schumann in seinen frūhen Klavierwerken, Wolfeabüttel, 1931, p. 60.Google Scholar
11 Jugendbriefe, p. 200.Google Scholar
12 Ibid., p. 167.Google Scholar
13 Ibid., p. 166.Google Scholar
14 Robert Schumanns gesammelte Schriften über Musik und Musiker, 5th edn., ed. Martin Kreisig, Leipzig, 1914, i. 201, 256 &c.Google Scholar
15 Boetticher, Schumann, p. 319; as Gerald Abraham has pointed out (Schumann: A Symposium, London, 1952, p. 193), the theme in question is an analogue of Papillons, No. 1.Google Scholar
16 Briefe, p. 225.Google Scholar
17 Cf. Mosco Carner in Schumann: A Symposium, pp. 191–2.Google Scholar
18 Ibid., p. 180.Google Scholar
19 Politische Fastenpredigten, Tubingen, 1817, section V.Google Scholar
20 Gasammelte Schriften, i. 202 &c.Google Scholar
21 Cf. Schubert, D. 365, ban 9–10, and Schumann, Carnaval, bars 10–11.Google Scholar
22 Berthold Litzmann, Clara Schumann, Leipzig, 1902–8, i. 255.Google Scholar
23 The Thematic Process in Music, New York, 1951, pp. 35–55; see also pp. 95–99 on the Piano Concerto, and pp. 295–7 on the First Symphony.Google Scholar
24 Cf. Robert Schauffler, Florestan: The Life and Work of Robert Schumann, New York, 1945, pp. 296–317.Google Scholar
25 Robert Schumann, Zürich, 1949, p. 145.Google Scholar
26 Paula & Walter Rehberg, Robert Schumann, Zurich, 1954, p. 476.Google Scholar
27 ‘A Schumann Mystery’, The Musical Times, cv (1964), 574–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
28 Litzmann, Clara Schumann, pp. 169, 179, 184.Google Scholar
29 Apparently Erwin Bodky used to tell his students in Berlin between the wars that this basic shape was in fact Schumann's Clara theme.Google Scholar
30 Litzmann, op. cit, ii. 30.Google Scholar
31 Johann Ludwig Klueber, Kryptographik, Tübingen, 1809. Further see the author's forthcoming article, ‘A Schumann Primer?’, to appear in The Musical Times.Google Scholar
32 Robert Schumann, Berlin, 1920, p. 69.Google Scholar
33 Schumann: A Symposium, p. 229.Google Scholar
34 ‘Der Himmel hat cine Träne geweint’, Op. 37, No. 1.Google Scholar
35 Notably in Philosophy in a New Key, New York, 1942, and Feeling and Form, London, 1953.Google Scholar
36 Briefe, p. 391.Google Scholar
37 Ibid., pp. 397 ff.Google Scholar
38 Johannes Brahms im Briefwechsel mit Joseph Joachim, ed. Andreas Moser, Berlin, 1908, i. 130–31.Google Scholar