

Franz Schreker
Vom ewigen Leben
Short instrumentation: 2 3 3 2 - 4 2 3 0 - timp, perc(3), hp, cel, harm, sax, str
Duration: 20'
Text von: Walt Whitman
Solos:
soprano
Instrumentation details:
1st flute (+picc)
2nd flute (+picc)
1st oboe
2nd oboe
3rd oboe (+c.a)
1st clarinet in A (+cl(Bb))
2nd clarinet in A (+cl(Bb))
bass clarinet in Bb
tenor saxophone in Bb (+alto sax(Eb))
1st bassoon
2nd bassoon
1st horn in F
2nd horn in F
3rd horn in F
4th horn in F
1st trumpet in C
2nd trumpet in C
1st trombone
2nd trombone
3rd trombone
timpani
percussion(3)
harp
celesta
harmonium
violin I
violin II
viola
violoncello
contrabass
Schreker - Vom ewigen Leben for soprano and orchestra
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Franz Schreker
2 lyrische GesängeOrchestration: for high voice and piano
Type: Noten
Language: Deutsch
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Audio preview
Work introduction
Schreker's last songs, written in 1923, were two „lyrische Gesänge" on texts drawn from Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass completed late in 1923. The Whitman songs are by any standard extraordinary works which, taken together - as they must be - more closely resemble a lyric cantata than the traditional Lied. Perhaps recognizing as much, Schreker avoided the question of genre in his 1927 orchestration of the work and simply titled the piece Vom ewigen Leben. This work occupies a world apart from Schreker's previous songs and operas. Perhaps stylistically closest to Carlotta's ecstatic monologues in Die Gezeichneten, the Whitman songs are remarkable for the exceptionally pliant vocal writing, the subtle interplay of lines between voice and accompaniment, and the masterful shaping of the whole, including Schreker's judicious adaptation of the text which is drawn from Hans Reisinger's elegant 1922 translation of the Whitman verses.
Although Schreker would write music more dissonantly „atonal", no other of his works more convincingly maps out the terrain beyond late-Romantic chromaticism and toward a new, modally inflected tonal harmony. The Whitman songs, an isolated miracle with no antecedent or successor in Schreker's oeuvre, belong to the most exquisite lyric expressions of the twentieth-century literature and bring to a luminous climax his own richly rewarding body of lyric works.