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{{italic title}}
[[File:JohannesBrahms.jpg|thumb|267x267px]]
{{Infobox musical composition
| name = ''Liebeslieder Waltzes''
| type =
| composer = [[Johannes Brahms]]
| image = Brahms c. 1872.jpg
| alt =
| caption = The composer ca. 1872
| translation = Liebeslieder Waltzes
| opus = 52
| text = from ''Polydora'' by [[Georg Friedrich Daumer]]
| language = German
| composed = {{Start date|1868}}
| dedication =
| performed =
| movements = 18
| scoring = four vocal parts and four-hand piano
}}

[[Johannes Brahms]]' '''''Liebeslieder Waltzes''''' ('''''Liebeslieder-Walzer''''') are distributed across two [[opus number]]s: Op.&nbsp;52 and Op. 65 (''[[Neue Liebeslieder]]''). The waltzes are a collection of love songs in [[Ländler]] style for voices and [[piano four hands]]. The lyrics for the ''Liebeslieder'' come from [[Georg Friedrich Daumer]]'s ''Polydora'', a collection of folk songs and love poems. While there is no concrete record indicating the exact inspiration for the Waltzes, there is speculation that Brahms' motivation for the songs was his frustrated love for pianist and composer [[Clara Schumann]].<ref name=":0" />


[[Johannes Brahms]]' '''''Liebeslieder Waltzes''''' are distributed across two opus numbers: 52 and [[Neue Liebeslieder|65]]. The waltzes are a collection of love songs in [[Ländler]] style for voices and four hands piano. The lyrics for the Liebeslieder come from [[Georg Friedrich Daumer]]'s ''Polydora ''collection of folk songs and love poems. While there is no concrete record indicating the exact inspiration for the Waltzes, there is speculation that Brahms' motivation for the songs was his frustrated love for pianist [[Clara Schumann]], composer Robert Schumann's wife.<ref name=":0" />
==Background==
==Background==
===External influences===
===External influences===
The discussion of influence as it pertains to Brahms and the Liebeslieder Walzer op. 52 refers to the inspiration that a composer draws from an admired predecessor, which was commonplace among writers, artists, and composers of the 19th century.<ref name=":2">Rosen, Charles. "Influence: Plagiarism And Inspiration." 19th-century music 4.2 (1980): 87–100. Print.
The discussion of influence as it pertains to Brahms and the Liebeslieder Walzer Op.&nbsp;52 refers to the inspiration that a composer draws from an admired predecessor, which was commonplace among writers, artists, and composers of the 19th century.<ref name=":2">Rosen, Charles. "Influence: Plagiarism And Inspiration." 19th-century music 4.2 (1980): 87–100. Print.
</ref> To contextualize influence, many relevant theorists will cite [[Harold Bloom]], author of [[The Anxiety of Influence]]. According to Hussey, Bloom asserts, “all poets must deal with the anxiety that they feel toward their most admired predecessors. The predecessor, whose work inspired the later poet to pursue literary composition, is now the object of both envy and admiration from the later poet, who fears the precursor has left nothing else to be said”.<ref name=":1">Hussey, William Gregory. Compositional Modeling, Quotation, and Multiple Influence Analysis in the Works of Johannes Brahms: An Application of Harold Bloom’s Theory of Influence to Music. Ph.D. diss. University of Texas at Austin, 1997.</ref> In other words, composers feel a more urgent need to create original work that equals the merit of those of the preceding tradition. Rosen refers to Brahms as a “master of allusion” to other composers, further arguing that one cannot begin to understand Brahms’s work without an awareness of the contributing influences, which were a “necessary fact of creative life” for the composer.<ref name=":2" />
</ref> To contextualize influence, many relevant theorists will cite [[Harold Bloom]], author of ''[[The Anxiety of Influence]]''. According to Hussey, Bloom asserts, "all poets must deal with the anxiety that they feel toward their most admired predecessors. The predecessor, whose work inspired the later poet to pursue literary composition, is now the object of both envy and admiration from the later poet, who fears the precursor has left nothing else to be said".<ref name=":1">Hussey, William Gregory. Compositional Modeling, Quotation, and Multiple Influence Analysis in the Works of Johannes Brahms: An Application of Harold Bloom's Theory of Influence to Music. Ph.D. diss. University of Texas at Austin, 1997.</ref> In other words, composers feel a more urgent need to create original work that equals the merit of those of the preceding tradition. Rosen refers to Brahms as a "master of allusion" to other composers, further arguing that one cannot begin to understand Brahms's work without an awareness of the contributing influences, which were a "necessary fact of creative life" for the composer.<ref name=":2" />


One composer in particular who influenced Brahms, specifically within the Liebeslieder Walzer op. 52 was [[Franz Schubert]]. Brahms’s admiration of Schubert becomes apparent when looking at early performances of Schubert’s pieces and the tendency to study, at length, the composer’s works.<ref name=":1" /> According to Brodbeck, Schubert influenced Brahms’s Liebeslieder Walzer op. 52 through similarities to the 20 Ländler. First, Brahms sought to have his waltzes performed in informal musical evening settings similar to those intended for Schubert’s dances.<ref name=":3">Brodbeck, David Lee. Brahms as Editor and Composer: His Two Editions of Ländler by Schubert and His First Two Cycles of Waltzes, Opera 39 and 52. Ph.D. diss. University of Pennsylvania, 1984.</ref> Another reference to Schubert is the “Im ländler tempo” marking in op. 52, alluding to the 20 Ländler directly.<ref name=":3" /> Furthermore, the date of composition of the Liebeslieder Walzer’s composition suggests that Brahms had completed the editing of the 20 Ländler before starting his work on his own waltzes.<ref name=":3" /> Also, a specific request by Brahms to have each of his movements copied onto a separate sheet of paper demonstrates, to an extent, his uncertainty of how to order such seemingly unrelated pieces. This suggestion reflects a struggle similar to that which he faced in establishing an order for Schubert’s dances.<ref name=":3" />
One composer in particular who influenced Brahms, specifically within the Liebeslieder Walzer Op.&nbsp;52 was [[Franz Schubert]]. Brahms's admiration of Schubert becomes apparent when looking at early performances of Schubert's pieces and the tendency to study, at length, the composer's works.<ref name=":1" /> According to Brodbeck, Schubert influenced Brahms's Liebeslieder Walzer Op.&nbsp;52 through similarities to the [[Twenty Ländler]]. First, Brahms sought to have his waltzes performed in informal musical evening settings similar to those intended for Schubert's dances.<ref name=":3">Brodbeck, David Lee. Brahms as Editor and Composer: His Two Editions of Ländler by Schubert and His First Two Cycles of Waltzes, Opera 39 and 52. Ph.D. diss. University of Pennsylvania, 1984.</ref> Another reference to Schubert is the "Im ländler tempo" marking in Op.&nbsp;52, alluding to the Twenty Ländler directly.<ref name=":3" /> Furthermore, the date of composition of the Liebeslieder Walzer's composition suggests that Brahms had completed the editing of the Twenty Ländler before starting his work on his own waltzes.<ref name=":3" /> Also, a specific request by Brahms to have each of his movements copied onto a separate sheet of paper demonstrates, to an extent, his uncertainty of how to order such seemingly unrelated pieces. This suggestion reflects a struggle similar to that which he faced in establishing an order for Schubert's dances.<ref name=":3" />


Brahms’s experience in editing Schubert’s 20 Ländler is important in understanding the ideas of influence relevant to 19th century composers. This experience was merely editorial, as Brahms used his own “compositional and aesthetic preferences” to organize pieces that “Schubert never intended to be performed together” into a coherent order.<ref name=":3" /> Due to the initial, unrelated nature of these dances, Brahms was able to extend the work of an admired predecessor by, in a sense, making original work out of those pieces which already existed, therefore reverting the direction of influence from successor back to predecessor. However, as Brahms shifts from editor of the 20 Ländler to composer of the Liebeslieder Walzer op. 52, he replicates his editorial behavior by composing eighteen movements that seemed to function autonomously. Brahms ordered them into a whole piece that is a sum of what were, initially, unrelated parts. This behavior, as it relates to the 20 Ländler and the Liebeslieder Walzer op. 52, allows Brahms to give what theorist Bloom would believe to be “deeper meaning” to his editorial and compositional work through establishing a clear, influential relationship between the two works through their similarity.<ref name=":1" /> In addition, this accomplishes the challenges of originality and creativity that composers faced from their talented predecessors, relieving Bloom’s so-called “anxiety of influence”.<ref name=":1" /> Overall, external influence from the 20 Ländler not only shaped the Liebeslieder Walzer from a compositional perspective, but also added a sense of depth, significance, and credibility to Brahms’s repertoire.
Brahms's experience in editing Schubert's Twenty Ländler is important in understanding the ideas of influence relevant to 19th century composers. This experience was merely editorial, as Brahms used his own "compositional and aesthetic preferences" to organize pieces that "Schubert never intended to be performed together" into a coherent order.<ref name=":3" /> Due to the initial, unrelated nature of these dances, Brahms was able to extend the work of an admired predecessor by, in a sense, making original work out of those pieces which already existed, therefore reverting the direction of influence from successor back to predecessor. However, as Brahms shifts from editor of the Twenty Ländler to composer of the Liebeslieder Walzer Op.&nbsp;52, he replicates his editorial behavior by composing eighteen movements that seemed to function autonomously. Brahms ordered them into a whole piece that is a sum of what were, initially, unrelated parts. This behavior, as it relates to the Twenty Ländler and the Liebeslieder Walzer Op.&nbsp;52, allows Brahms to give what theorist Bloom would believe to be "deeper meaning" to his editorial and compositional work through establishing a clear, influential relationship between the two works through their similarity.<ref name=":1" /> In addition, this accomplishes the challenges of originality and creativity that composers faced from their talented predecessors, relieving Bloom's so-called "anxiety of influence".<ref name=":1" /> Overall, external influence from the Twenty Ländler not only shaped the Liebeslieder Walzer from a compositional perspective, but also added a sense of depth, significance, and credibility to Brahms's repertoire.


==Reception==
==Reception==


===Historical===
===Historical===
In his lifetime, Brahms was well respected, which is particularly due to his works composed between 1863 and 1871, or his “unsettled years, before he established his residence in Vienna.<ref name=":0">Avins, Styra. “Brahms, Johannes. The Oxford Companion to Music: Oxford University Press. Edited by Allison Latham. http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199579037.001.0001/acref-9780199579037-e-940</ref> The Liebeslieder Waltzes were completed in 1869 and were first performed January 5, 1870.<ref name="Bozarth">Bozarth, George S., and Walter Frisch. “Brahms, Johannes. Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online: Oxford University Press.</ref>
In his lifetime, Brahms was well respected, which is particularly due to his works composed between 1863 and 1871, or his "unsettled years," before he established his residence in Vienna.<ref name=":0">Avins, Styra. "Brahms, Johannes." The Oxford Companion to Music: Oxford University Press. Edited by Allison Latham. http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199579037.001.0001/acref-9780199579037-e-940</ref> The Liebeslieder Waltzes were completed in 1869 and were first performed January 5, 1870.<ref name="Bozarth">Bozarth, George S., and Walter Frisch. "Brahms, Johannes." Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online: Oxford University Press.</ref>
One of the earlier reviews from London in 1877 suggest that the audience greatly enjoyed Brahms’ work. Although there were initial criticisms regarding the “ad libitum” of voices and “lack of melodic flow” through the eighteen movements,<ref>Anonymous. “A New Work By Johannes Brahms. The Musical World, vol. 55, issue 2 (1877): 69–69.</ref> the [[London]] concert of the Liebeslieder Waltzes went on to be among one of the most liked performances of the year<ref>Anonymous. “Popular Concerts of 1877. The Musical World, vol. 55, issue 6 (1877): 102–102.</ref>
One of the earlier reviews from London in 1877 suggest that the audience greatly enjoyed Brahms' work. Although there were initial criticisms regarding the "ad libitum" of voices and "lack of melodic flow" through the eighteen movements,<ref>Anonymous. "A New Work By Johannes Brahms." The Musical World, vol. 55, issue 2 (1877): 69–69.</ref> the [[London]] concert of the Liebeslieder Waltzes went on to be among the most liked performances of the year<ref>Anonymous. "Popular Concerts of 1877." The Musical World, vol. 55, issue 6 (1877): 102–102.</ref>
One aspect of the Liebeslieder Waltzes that possibly contributed to the work’s reception was that Brahms composed them with reference to [[Johann Strauss II|Johann Strauss]] who was considered the “Waltz King. With such another well-known composer attached to the work the audience would have enjoyed the tribute.
One aspect of the Liebeslieder Waltzes that possibly contributed to the work's reception was that Brahms composed them with reference to [[Johann Strauss II|Johann Strauss]] who was considered the "Waltz King." With such another well-known composer attached to the work the audience would have enjoyed the tribute.
To some, Brahms revived chamber music.<ref name="Bozarth"/> Liebeslieder exemplifies this in both Op. 52 and Brahms’ later arrangement for four-hand piano, Op 52a, written and premiered in 1874.<ref name="Bozarth"/> Other arrangements of the Liebeslieder Waltzes appear in 1870 when Brahms was pressured by [[Ernst Rudorff]] to create an orchestral arrangement, which he premiered on March 19, 1870. It contained eight pieces from Op. 52 and one piece that was later included in the [[Neue Liebeslieder, op. 65 (Brahms)|Neue Liebeslieder, Op. 65]]. The orchestral version was not published until 1938.<ref name="Brodbeck">Brodbeck, David. “Liebeslieder Walzer (1869). American Symphony Orchestra. http://americansymphony.org/?s=liebeslieder+walzer (accessed September 18, 2013).</ref>
To some, Brahms revived chamber music.<ref name="Bozarth"/> Liebeslieder exemplifies this in both Op.&nbsp;52 and Brahms' later arrangement for four-hand piano, Op.&nbsp;52a, written and premiered in 1874.<ref name="Bozarth"/> Other arrangements of the Liebeslieder Waltzes appear in 1870 when Brahms was pressured by [[Ernst Rudorff]] to create an orchestral arrangement, which he premiered on March 19, 1870. It contained eight pieces from Op. 52 and one piece that was later included in the [[Neue Liebeslieder, op. 65 (Brahms)|Neue Liebeslieder, Op.&nbsp;65]]. The orchestral version was not published until 1938.<ref name="Brodbeck">Brodbeck, David. "Liebeslieder Walzer (1869)." American Symphony Orchestra. http://americansymphony.org/?s=liebeslieder+walzer (accessed September 18, 2013).</ref>
Brahms referred to the Liebeslieder as “pretty concert numbers” in a letter written to his publisher, [[Fritz Simrock]], in 1870.<ref name="Brodbeck"/>
Brahms referred to the Liebeslieder as "pretty concert numbers" in a letter written to his publisher, [[Fritz Simrock]], in 1870.<ref name="Brodbeck"/>


===Current===
===Current===
The Liebeslieder Waltzes continue to be performed quite frequently, with at least four performances in 2013 alone<ref>“Brahms’ ‘Liebeslieder Waltzes.’” St. Martin’s Chamber Choir [Event Announcement]. Denver 365: Events, Brahms’ “Liebeslieder Waltzes.” http://www.denver.org/events/detail?e=3820&t= (accessed September 18, 2013).</ref><ref>“Liebeslieder Waltzes with Stanford Chorale.” Stanford Arts Institute, Stanford University. http://artsinstitute.stanford.edu/events/liebeslieder-re-for-liebeslieder-waltzes-with-stanford-chorale/ (accessed September 18, 2013).</ref><ref>Brofman, Mike. “Brooklyn Art Song Society Presents: Clara, Robert, and Johannes Part II [Publicity Announcement].” FortGreene-ClintonHill Patch, Events: Arts & Entertainment. Posted September 3, 2013. http://fortgreene.patch.com/groups/events/p/brooklyn-art-song-society-presents-clara-robert-and-johannes-part-ii_eb213b04 (accessed September 18, 2013).</ref><ref>“San Francisco City Chorus: Brahms Liebeslieder Waltzes.” SFGate: San Francisco Events, San Francisco Choral/Vocalist Events, San Francisco City Chorus: Brahms Liebeslieder Waltzes, San Francisco Chronicle. Hearst Communications Inc. http://events.sfgate.com/san_francisco_ca/events/show/323313203-san-francisco-city-chorus-brahms-liebeslieder-waltzes (accessed September 18, 2013).</ref> The “ad libitum” of the original score allows for different ensemble sizes to perform the Liebeslieder Waltzes Op. 52 as opposed to the Liebeslieder Waltzes, Op. 65, which is usually performed solely by a choir; there is also versatility found in the opus with the four-hand arrangement of Liebeslieder Waltzes Opus 52a and the elimination of a vocal ensemble. The sixth and eleventh movements are some of the better-known pieces from the work due to their adaptation to choral works.<ref name="Biddlecombe">Biddlecombe, Tucker. Email Correspondence. September 25, 2013.</ref>
The Liebeslieder Waltzes continue to be performed quite frequently. The "ad libitum" of the original score allows for different ensemble sizes to perform the Liebeslieder Waltzes Op. 52 as opposed to the Liebeslieder Waltzes, Op. 65, which is usually performed solely by a choir; there is also versatility found in the opus with the four-hand arrangement of Liebeslieder Waltzes Opus 52a and the elimination of a vocal ensemble. The sixth and eleventh movements are some of the better-known pieces from the work due to their adaptation to choral works.<ref name="Biddlecombe">Biddlecombe, Tucker. Email Correspondence. September 25, 2013.</ref>
The Liebeslieder Waltzes suit current day audiences because of the brevity of the movements along with the novelty of the work within Brahms’ outpourings. The movements are all relatively short and encompass a variety of emotions and moods. It also is a distinct piece since Brahms did not regularly compose for small vocal ensembles and piano.<ref name="Biddlecombe"/> Brahms usually wrote vocal – particularly choral – pieces for choir and organ or choir and orchestra,<ref name="Biddlecombe"/> thus the presence of a piano accompaniment in the Liebeslieder Waltzes adds to the uniqueness of the piece.
The Liebeslieder Waltzes suit current day audiences because of the brevity of the movements along with the novelty of the work within Brahms' outpourings. The movements are all relatively short and encompass a variety of emotions and moods. It also is a distinct piece since Brahms did not regularly compose for small vocal ensembles and piano.<ref name="Biddlecombe"/> Brahms usually wrote vocal – particularly choral – pieces for choir and organ or choir and orchestra,<ref name="Biddlecombe"/> thus the presence of a piano accompaniment in the Liebeslieder Waltzes adds to the uniqueness of the piece.


==Musical components==
==Musical components==
The Liebeslieder Waltzes are a collection of love songs written in a popular style that do not lose Brahms’ compositional complexity.<ref name="Brodbeck"/> Scored for piano 4 hands and voices ad libitum, the piece can easily accommodate many different sized ensembles. The words are taken from Daumer’s Polydora, also the material for his [[Sixteen Waltzes, Op. 39 (Brahms)|op. 39 Waltzes]] and op. 65 [[Neue Liebeslieder|Neue Liebeslieder Waltzes]]. Although today they are part of the standard choral repertoire, Brahms more likely intended them to be played in parlors or informal home gatherings rather than in concert halls.<ref>. Meyer, Leonard B., Eugene Narmour, and Ruth A. Solie. 1988. Explorations in music, the arts, and ideas: essays in honor of Leonard B. Meyer. Stuyvesant: Pendragon Press. 411–437.</ref> Immediately successful, these waltzes were responsible for much of his personal wealth, and solidified his reputation with the general music-buying public in Vienna and Europe.<ref name="Olsen, Glen p. 52">Olsen, Glen. “The "Liebeslieder Walzer," op. 52, of Johannes Brahms: Rhythmic and Metric Features, and Related Conducting Gestures. Choral Journal 42.2 (Sep 2001): 9–15.</ref>
The Liebeslieder Waltzes are a collection of love songs written in a popular style that do not lose Brahms' compositional complexity.<ref name="Brodbeck"/> Scored for piano four hands and voices ad libitum, the piece can easily accommodate many different sized ensembles. The words are taken from Daumer's ''Polydora'', also the material for the [[Neue Liebeslieder|Neue Liebeslieder Waltzes, Op.&nbsp;65]]. Although today they are part of the standard choral repertoire, Brahms more likely intended them to be played in parlors or informal home gatherings rather than in concert halls.<ref>. Meyer, Leonard B., Eugene Narmour, and Ruth A. Solie. 1988. Explorations in music, the arts, and ideas: essays in honor of Leonard B. Meyer. Stuyvesant: Pendragon Press. 411–437.</ref> Immediately successful, these waltzes were responsible for much of his personal wealth, and solidified his reputation with the general music-buying public in Vienna and Europe.<ref name="Olsen, Glen p. 52">Olsen, Glen. "The "Liebeslieder Walzer," op. 52, of Johannes Brahms: Rhythmic and Metric Features, and Related Conducting Gestures." Choral Journal 42.2 (Sep 2001): 9–15.</ref>


===Table===
===Table===
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|+''Liebeslieder Walzer'', Op.&nbsp;52<ref name="stark">Stark, Lucien. 1998. Brahms's vocal duets and quartets with piano: a guide with full texts and translations. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 29–47.</ref>
! Title !! Tempo !! Form !! Voices !! Key !! Approximate duration
|-
|-
| 1. ''Rede, Mädchen'' || ''Im Ländler-Tempo'' || Rounded binary || SATB || E major || 1:20
! Title !! Tempo !! Form !! Voices !! Key !! Approximate Duration
|-
|-
| 1. Rede, Mädchen || ''Im Ländler-Tempo'' || Rounded Binary || SATB || E Major || 1'20
| 2. ''Am Gesteine rauscht die Flut'' || || Binary || SATB || A minor || 0:45
|-
|-
| 2. Am Gesteine rauscht die Flut || || Binary || SATB || A minor || 0'45
| 3. ''O die Frauen'' || || Binary || TB || B{{music|b}} major || 1:00
|-
|-
| 3. O die Frauen || || Binary || TB || B flat Major || 1'00
| 4. ''Wie des Abends schöne Röte'' || || Binary || SA || F major || 0:50
|-
|-
| 4. Wie des Abends schöne Röte || || Binary || SA || F Major || 0'50
| 5. ''Die grüne Hopfenranke'' || || Binary || SATB || A minor || 1:45
|-
|-
| 5. Die grüne Hopfenranke || || Binary || SATB || A minor || 1'45
| 6. ''Ein kleiner, hübscher Vogel'' || ''Grazioso'' || Rondo || SATB || A major || 2:35
|-
|-
| 6. Ein kleiner, hübscher Vogel || ''Grazioso'' || Rondo || SATB || A Major || 2'35
| 7. ''Wohl schön bewandt war es'' || || Binary || S(A) || C minor || 1:10
|-
|-
| 7. Wohl schön bewandt war es || || Binary || S (A) || C minor || 1'10
| 8. ''Wenn so lind dein Auge mir'' || || Binary || SATB || A{{music|b}} major || 1:30
|-
|-
| 8. Wenn so lind dein Auge mir || || Binary || SATB || A flat Major || 1'30
| 9. ''Am Donaustrande'' || || Rounded binary || SATB || E major || 2:10
|-
|-
| 9. Am Donaustrande || || Rounded Binary || SATB || E Major || 2'10
| 10. ''O wie sanft die Quelle'' || || Binary || SATB || G major || 0:55
|-
|-
| 10. O wie sanft die Quelle || || Binary || SATB || G Major || 0'55
| 11. ''Nein, es ist nicht auszukommen'' || || Rounded binary || SATB || C minor || 0:52
|-
|-
| 11. Nein, es ist nicht auszukommen || || Rounded Binary || SATB || C minor || 0'52
| 12. ''Schlosser auf, und mache Schlösser'' || || Binary || SATB || C minor || 0:45
|-
|-
| 12. Schlosser auf, und mache Schlösser || || Binary || SATB || E flat Major || 0'45
| 13. ''Vögelein durchrauscht die Luft'' || || Binary || SA || A{{music|b}} major || 0:45
|-
|-
| 13. Vögelein durchrauscht die Luft || || Binary || SA || A flat Major || 0'45
| 14. ''Sieh, wie ist die Welle klar'' || || Binary || TB || E{{music|b}} major || 0:50
|-
|-
| 14. Sieh, wie ist die Welle klar || || Binary || TB || E flat Major || 0'50
| 15. ''Nachtigall, sie singt so schön'' || || Binary || SATB || A{{music|b}} major || 1:20
|-
|-
| 15. Nachtigall, sie singt so schön || || Binary || SATB || A flat Major || 1'20
| 16. ''Ein dunkeler Schacht ist Liebe'' || ''Lebhaft ''(lively) || Binary || SATB || F minor || 1:20
|-
|-
| 16. Ein dunkeler Schacht ist Liebe || ''Lebhaft ''(lively) || Binary || SATB || F minor || 1'20
| 17. ''Nicht wandle, mein Licht'' || ''Mit Ausdruck'' (with expression) || Binary || T || D{{music|b}} major || 1:55
|-
|-
| 17. Nicht wandle, mein Licht || ''Mit Ausdruck'' (with expression) || Binary || T || D flat Major || 1'55
| 18. ''Es bebet das Gesträuche'' || ''Lebhaft ''(lively) || Rounded Binary || SATB || D{{music|b}}/C{{music|#}} major || 1:25
|-
|}
| 18. Es bebet das Gesträuche || ''Lebhaft ''(lively) || Rounded Binary || SATB || D flat/C sharp Major || 1'25
|}<ref name="stark">Stark, Lucien. 1998. Brahms's vocal duets and quartets with piano: a guide with full texts and translations. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 29–47.</ref>


===Rhythm===
===Rhythm===
The set opens with the quintessential [[waltz]] rhythm: the “oom-pah-pah” of the bass note played on beat one followed the chord on beats two and three.<ref name="stark"/> Brahms never strays too far from this familiar idiom, and the simple, easy to sing folk melodies allow his work to stay grounded as he adds more rhythmic complexity.<ref name="Brodbeck"/> Brahms is known for his unique manipulation of time, particularly his use of [[syncopation]] and [[hemiola]]s. This begins right away as a subtle hemiola creeps into the first stanza.<ref name="Olsen, Glen p. 52">Olsen, Glen. “The "Liebeslieder Walzer," op. 52, of Johannes Brahms: Rhythmic and Metric Features, and Related Conducting Gestures.” Choral Journal 42.2 (Sep 2001): 9–15.</ref> Waltz 2 broadens this with a hemiola lasting throughout the song: the piano plays a {{music|time|3|4}} accompaniment to the {{music|time|3|2}} melody in the [[tenor]]. In waltzes 8, 10, 13, and 15 as well, lines are barred to imply a different meter than the standard {{music|time|3|4}} waltz meter Brahms used as a template.<ref name="stark" />
The set opens with the quintessential [[waltz]] rhythm: the "oom-pah-pah" of the bass note played on beat one followed the chord on beats two and three.<ref name="stark"/> Brahms never strays too far from this familiar idiom, and the simple, easy to sing folk melodies allow his work to stay grounded as he adds more rhythmic complexity.<ref name="Brodbeck"/> Brahms is known for his unique manipulation of time, particularly his use of [[syncopation]] and [[hemiola]]s. This begins right away as a subtle hemiola creeps into the first stanza.<ref name="Olsen, Glen p. 52"/> Waltz 2 broadens this with a hemiola lasting throughout the song: the piano plays a {{music|time|3|4}} accompaniment to the {{music|time|3|2}} melody in the [[tenor]]. In waltzes 8, 10, 13, and 15 as well, lines are barred to imply a different meter than the standard {{music|time|3|4}} waltz meter Brahms used as a template.<ref name="stark" />


Another time manipulation used here is his [[Meter (music)|metric displacement]], or the shift away from an established barline. This very subtle alteration is seen most notably fifth waltz, where the second piano part begins on the anacrusis with two descending quarter notes.<ref name="stark"/> This pattern of emphasis on the third beat continues as the primo piano enters. When the voices finally enter with an emphasis on beat one, the listener’s perception of the barline shifts.<ref name="Olsen, Glen p. 52"/> The quarter note-half note pattern that waltz 5 is built upon is commonly used by Brahms, usually to symbolize the loneliness of separation.<ref name="stark"/> This pattern appears periodically throughout the set, for instance making up much of waltz 7.
Another time manipulation used here is his [[Meter (music)|metric displacement]], or the shift away from an established barline. This very subtle alteration is seen most notably fifth waltz, where the second piano part begins on the anacrusis with two descending quarter notes.<ref name="stark"/> This pattern of emphasis on the third beat continues as the primo piano enters. When the voices finally enter with an emphasis on beat one, the listener's perception of the barline shifts.<ref name="Olsen, Glen p. 52"/> The quarter note-half note pattern that waltz 5 is built upon is commonly used by Brahms, usually to symbolize the loneliness of separation.<ref name="stark"/> This pattern appears periodically throughout the set, for instance making up much of waltz 7.


===Ordering===
===Ordering===
Brahms wrote the waltzes rather quickly in the summer of 1868 as an unordered set of dances, with little regard for their ultimate arrangement.<ref name="Brodbeck"/> Likely he thought a home performer would simply pick and choose their favorites to be performed. The uncertainty of the ordering, grouping, and number of volumes lead to lengthy correspondence with his publisher, [[Simrock]], with changes made up until the first performance, and within his own copy of the published first edition.<ref name="Brodbeck"/>
Brahms wrote the waltzes rather quickly in the summer of 1869 as an unordered set of dances, with little regard for their ultimate arrangement.<ref name="Brodbeck"/> Likely he thought a home performer would simply pick and choose their favorites to be performed. The uncertainty of the ordering, grouping, and number of volumes lead to lengthy correspondence with his publisher, [[Simrock]], with changes made up until the first performance, and within his own copy of the published first edition.<ref name="Brodbeck"/>


The waltzes exist today in a single set of 18, but it is evident that Brahms made accommodations for the possibility of two books of nine waltzes, or even three books of six waltzes, giving numbers 6, 9, and 18 a particular sense of closure in their phrasing, gestures, and structure. Along with the opening dance and number 11, these three are the only waltzes in the set to introduce a more complex formal structure. 1, 9, and 18 are in [[rounded binary form]] and 6 is a [[rondo]], while the rest of the Liebeslieder adhere to the simpler [[binary form]] more often found in folk-song transcriptions.<ref name="stark"/> The longer, more structured patterns give a sense of drama befitting a closing number, particularly (as in 6) when they end with a satisfying return to the home key.<ref name="stark"/> The closing gestures are most apparent in 9, which would have served as an ending in both the two-book and three-book versions of the set (in his tripartite plan, Brahms reordered the middle book to close with 9).<ref name="Brodbeck"/> This was also the waltz that Brahms chose to end his arrangement for choir and orchestra.<ref name="Brodbeck"/> The waltz returns to [[E major]], the key that started the set, and ends with a descending melodic line, a [[decrescendo]], [[ritardando]], and a [[fermata]], all things that unmistakably signify an ending.
The waltzes exist today in a single set of 18, but it is evident that Brahms made accommodations for the possibility of two books of nine waltzes, or even three books of six waltzes, giving numbers 6, 9, and 18 a particular sense of closure in their phrasing, gestures, and structure. Along with the opening dance and number 11, these three are the only waltzes in the set to introduce a more complex formal structure. 1, 9, and 18 are in [[rounded binary form]] and 6 is a [[rondo]], while the rest of the Liebeslieder adhere to the simpler [[binary form]] more often found in folk-song transcriptions.<ref name="stark"/> The longer, more structured patterns give a sense of drama befitting a closing number, particularly (as in 6) when they end with a satisfying return to the home key.<ref name="stark"/> The closing gestures are most apparent in 9, which would have served as an ending in both the two-book and three-book versions of the set (in his tripartite plan, Brahms reordered the middle book to close with 9).<ref name="Brodbeck"/> This was also the waltz that Brahms chose to end his arrangement for choir and orchestra.<ref name="Brodbeck"/> The waltz returns to [[E major]], the key that started the set, and ends with a descending melodic line, a [[decrescendo]], [[ritardando]], and a [[fermata]], all things that unmistakably signify an ending.


===Versions===
===Versions===
Due to the piece’s popularity and playability, many versions and transcriptions of the Libeslieder Waltzes exist. Opus 52a, for piano duet without voices was published in 1874, with minor additions and intricacies added to the original piano lines.<ref name="stark"/> Brahms also published a version for voices with piano solo in 1875.<ref name="stark"/> Conductor [[Ernst Rudorff]] convinced Brahms to create an arrangement of the waltzes for voice and small orchestra for a performance in 1870, although this version was not published until 1938.<ref name="stark"/> The orchestral version does not contain the complete set of waltzes, but instead numbers 1, 2, 4, 6, 5, a song that would later become waltz 9 in his [[Neue Liebeslieder|Neue Liebeslieder Waltze]]<nowiki/>s, 11, 8, and 9.<ref name="stark"/> Friedrich Hermann also created a transcription of the Liebeslieder Waltzes for strings alone in 1889.<ref>Godell, Tom.”Dances from the heart of Europe. American Record Guide 67.1 (Jan/Feb 2004): 196–197.</ref>
Due to the piece's popularity and playability, many versions and transcriptions of the Libeslieder Waltzes exist. Opus 52a, for piano duet without voices was published in 1874, with minor additions and intricacies added to the original piano lines.<ref name="stark"/> Brahms also published a version for voices with piano solo in 1875.<ref name="stark"/> Conductor [[Ernst Rudorff]] convinced Brahms to create an arrangement of the waltzes for voice and small orchestra for a performance in 1870, although this version was not published until 1938.<ref name="stark"/> The orchestral version does not contain the complete set of waltzes, but instead numbers 1, 2, 4, 6, 5, a song that would later become waltz 9 in his [[Neue Liebeslieder|Neue Liebeslieder Waltzes]], 11, 8, and 9.<ref name="stark"/> Friedrich Hermann also created a transcription of the Liebeslieder Waltzes for strings alone in 1889.<ref>Godell, Tom."Dances from the heart of Europe." American Record Guide 67.1 (Jan/Feb 2004): 196–197.</ref> In 2019, the Liebeslieder Waltzes, op. 52, received a new orchestration of the 4-hand accompaniment. This version is for choir and 10 instrumentalists. Composed by J. A. Kawarsky, it is published by GIA press.

Ref. Bibl. Marina Caracciolo, "Brahms e il Walzer. Storia e lettura critica". Lucca, Libreria Musicale Italiana, 2004, {{ISBN|978-88-7096-362-5}}


Ref. Bibl. Marina Caracciolo, "Brahms e il Walzer. Storia e lettura critica". Lucca, Libreria Musicale Italiana, 2004, ISBN 978-88-7096-362-5
==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


{{Johannes Brahms}}
{{Johannes Brahms}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Compositions by Johannes Brahms]]
[[Category:Lieder composed by Johannes Brahms]]
[[Category:Waltzes]]

Latest revision as of 22:06, 27 June 2022

Liebeslieder Waltzes
by Johannes Brahms
The composer ca. 1872
EnglishLiebeslieder Waltzes
Opus52
Textfrom Polydora by Georg Friedrich Daumer
LanguageGerman
Composed1868 (1868)
Movements18
Scoringfour vocal parts and four-hand piano

Johannes Brahms' Liebeslieder Waltzes (Liebeslieder-Walzer) are distributed across two opus numbers: Op. 52 and Op. 65 (Neue Liebeslieder). The waltzes are a collection of love songs in Ländler style for voices and piano four hands. The lyrics for the Liebeslieder come from Georg Friedrich Daumer's Polydora, a collection of folk songs and love poems. While there is no concrete record indicating the exact inspiration for the Waltzes, there is speculation that Brahms' motivation for the songs was his frustrated love for pianist and composer Clara Schumann.[1]

Background

[edit]

External influences

[edit]

The discussion of influence as it pertains to Brahms and the Liebeslieder Walzer Op. 52 refers to the inspiration that a composer draws from an admired predecessor, which was commonplace among writers, artists, and composers of the 19th century.[2] To contextualize influence, many relevant theorists will cite Harold Bloom, author of The Anxiety of Influence. According to Hussey, Bloom asserts, "all poets must deal with the anxiety that they feel toward their most admired predecessors. The predecessor, whose work inspired the later poet to pursue literary composition, is now the object of both envy and admiration from the later poet, who fears the precursor has left nothing else to be said".[3] In other words, composers feel a more urgent need to create original work that equals the merit of those of the preceding tradition. Rosen refers to Brahms as a "master of allusion" to other composers, further arguing that one cannot begin to understand Brahms's work without an awareness of the contributing influences, which were a "necessary fact of creative life" for the composer.[2]

One composer in particular who influenced Brahms, specifically within the Liebeslieder Walzer Op. 52 was Franz Schubert. Brahms's admiration of Schubert becomes apparent when looking at early performances of Schubert's pieces and the tendency to study, at length, the composer's works.[3] According to Brodbeck, Schubert influenced Brahms's Liebeslieder Walzer Op. 52 through similarities to the Twenty Ländler. First, Brahms sought to have his waltzes performed in informal musical evening settings similar to those intended for Schubert's dances.[4] Another reference to Schubert is the "Im ländler tempo" marking in Op. 52, alluding to the Twenty Ländler directly.[4] Furthermore, the date of composition of the Liebeslieder Walzer's composition suggests that Brahms had completed the editing of the Twenty Ländler before starting his work on his own waltzes.[4] Also, a specific request by Brahms to have each of his movements copied onto a separate sheet of paper demonstrates, to an extent, his uncertainty of how to order such seemingly unrelated pieces. This suggestion reflects a struggle similar to that which he faced in establishing an order for Schubert's dances.[4]

Brahms's experience in editing Schubert's Twenty Ländler is important in understanding the ideas of influence relevant to 19th century composers. This experience was merely editorial, as Brahms used his own "compositional and aesthetic preferences" to organize pieces that "Schubert never intended to be performed together" into a coherent order.[4] Due to the initial, unrelated nature of these dances, Brahms was able to extend the work of an admired predecessor by, in a sense, making original work out of those pieces which already existed, therefore reverting the direction of influence from successor back to predecessor. However, as Brahms shifts from editor of the Twenty Ländler to composer of the Liebeslieder Walzer Op. 52, he replicates his editorial behavior by composing eighteen movements that seemed to function autonomously. Brahms ordered them into a whole piece that is a sum of what were, initially, unrelated parts. This behavior, as it relates to the Twenty Ländler and the Liebeslieder Walzer Op. 52, allows Brahms to give what theorist Bloom would believe to be "deeper meaning" to his editorial and compositional work through establishing a clear, influential relationship between the two works through their similarity.[3] In addition, this accomplishes the challenges of originality and creativity that composers faced from their talented predecessors, relieving Bloom's so-called "anxiety of influence".[3] Overall, external influence from the Twenty Ländler not only shaped the Liebeslieder Walzer from a compositional perspective, but also added a sense of depth, significance, and credibility to Brahms's repertoire.

Reception

[edit]

Historical

[edit]

In his lifetime, Brahms was well respected, which is particularly due to his works composed between 1863 and 1871, or his "unsettled years," before he established his residence in Vienna.[1] The Liebeslieder Waltzes were completed in 1869 and were first performed January 5, 1870.[5] One of the earlier reviews from London in 1877 suggest that the audience greatly enjoyed Brahms' work. Although there were initial criticisms regarding the "ad libitum" of voices and "lack of melodic flow" through the eighteen movements,[6] the London concert of the Liebeslieder Waltzes went on to be among the most liked performances of the year[7] One aspect of the Liebeslieder Waltzes that possibly contributed to the work's reception was that Brahms composed them with reference to Johann Strauss who was considered the "Waltz King." With such another well-known composer attached to the work the audience would have enjoyed the tribute. To some, Brahms revived chamber music.[5] Liebeslieder exemplifies this in both Op. 52 and Brahms' later arrangement for four-hand piano, Op. 52a, written and premiered in 1874.[5] Other arrangements of the Liebeslieder Waltzes appear in 1870 when Brahms was pressured by Ernst Rudorff to create an orchestral arrangement, which he premiered on March 19, 1870. It contained eight pieces from Op. 52 and one piece that was later included in the Neue Liebeslieder, Op. 65. The orchestral version was not published until 1938.[8] Brahms referred to the Liebeslieder as "pretty concert numbers" in a letter written to his publisher, Fritz Simrock, in 1870.[8]

Current

[edit]

The Liebeslieder Waltzes continue to be performed quite frequently. The "ad libitum" of the original score allows for different ensemble sizes to perform the Liebeslieder Waltzes Op. 52 as opposed to the Liebeslieder Waltzes, Op. 65, which is usually performed solely by a choir; there is also versatility found in the opus with the four-hand arrangement of Liebeslieder Waltzes Opus 52a and the elimination of a vocal ensemble. The sixth and eleventh movements are some of the better-known pieces from the work due to their adaptation to choral works.[9] The Liebeslieder Waltzes suit current day audiences because of the brevity of the movements along with the novelty of the work within Brahms' outpourings. The movements are all relatively short and encompass a variety of emotions and moods. It also is a distinct piece since Brahms did not regularly compose for small vocal ensembles and piano.[9] Brahms usually wrote vocal – particularly choral – pieces for choir and organ or choir and orchestra,[9] thus the presence of a piano accompaniment in the Liebeslieder Waltzes adds to the uniqueness of the piece.

Musical components

[edit]

The Liebeslieder Waltzes are a collection of love songs written in a popular style that do not lose Brahms' compositional complexity.[8] Scored for piano four hands and voices ad libitum, the piece can easily accommodate many different sized ensembles. The words are taken from Daumer's Polydora, also the material for the Neue Liebeslieder Waltzes, Op. 65. Although today they are part of the standard choral repertoire, Brahms more likely intended them to be played in parlors or informal home gatherings rather than in concert halls.[10] Immediately successful, these waltzes were responsible for much of his personal wealth, and solidified his reputation with the general music-buying public in Vienna and Europe.[11]

Table

[edit]
Liebeslieder Walzer, Op. 52[12]
Title Tempo Form Voices Key Approximate duration
1. Rede, Mädchen Im Ländler-Tempo Rounded binary SATB E major 1:20
2. Am Gesteine rauscht die Flut Binary SATB A minor 0:45
3. O die Frauen Binary TB B major 1:00
4. Wie des Abends schöne Röte Binary SA F major 0:50
5. Die grüne Hopfenranke Binary SATB A minor 1:45
6. Ein kleiner, hübscher Vogel Grazioso Rondo SATB A major 2:35
7. Wohl schön bewandt war es Binary S(A) C minor 1:10
8. Wenn so lind dein Auge mir Binary SATB A major 1:30
9. Am Donaustrande Rounded binary SATB E major 2:10
10. O wie sanft die Quelle Binary SATB G major 0:55
11. Nein, es ist nicht auszukommen Rounded binary SATB C minor 0:52
12. Schlosser auf, und mache Schlösser Binary SATB C minor 0:45
13. Vögelein durchrauscht die Luft Binary SA A major 0:45
14. Sieh, wie ist die Welle klar Binary TB E major 0:50
15. Nachtigall, sie singt so schön Binary SATB A major 1:20
16. Ein dunkeler Schacht ist Liebe Lebhaft (lively) Binary SATB F minor 1:20
17. Nicht wandle, mein Licht Mit Ausdruck (with expression) Binary T D major 1:55
18. Es bebet das Gesträuche Lebhaft (lively) Rounded Binary SATB D/C major 1:25

Rhythm

[edit]

The set opens with the quintessential waltz rhythm: the "oom-pah-pah" of the bass note played on beat one followed the chord on beats two and three.[12] Brahms never strays too far from this familiar idiom, and the simple, easy to sing folk melodies allow his work to stay grounded as he adds more rhythmic complexity.[8] Brahms is known for his unique manipulation of time, particularly his use of syncopation and hemiolas. This begins right away as a subtle hemiola creeps into the first stanza.[11] Waltz 2 broadens this with a hemiola lasting throughout the song: the piano plays a 3
4
accompaniment to the 3
2
melody in the tenor. In waltzes 8, 10, 13, and 15 as well, lines are barred to imply a different meter than the standard 3
4
waltz meter Brahms used as a template.[12]

Another time manipulation used here is his metric displacement, or the shift away from an established barline. This very subtle alteration is seen most notably fifth waltz, where the second piano part begins on the anacrusis with two descending quarter notes.[12] This pattern of emphasis on the third beat continues as the primo piano enters. When the voices finally enter with an emphasis on beat one, the listener's perception of the barline shifts.[11] The quarter note-half note pattern that waltz 5 is built upon is commonly used by Brahms, usually to symbolize the loneliness of separation.[12] This pattern appears periodically throughout the set, for instance making up much of waltz 7.

Ordering

[edit]

Brahms wrote the waltzes rather quickly in the summer of 1869 as an unordered set of dances, with little regard for their ultimate arrangement.[8] Likely he thought a home performer would simply pick and choose their favorites to be performed. The uncertainty of the ordering, grouping, and number of volumes lead to lengthy correspondence with his publisher, Simrock, with changes made up until the first performance, and within his own copy of the published first edition.[8]

The waltzes exist today in a single set of 18, but it is evident that Brahms made accommodations for the possibility of two books of nine waltzes, or even three books of six waltzes, giving numbers 6, 9, and 18 a particular sense of closure in their phrasing, gestures, and structure. Along with the opening dance and number 11, these three are the only waltzes in the set to introduce a more complex formal structure. 1, 9, and 18 are in rounded binary form and 6 is a rondo, while the rest of the Liebeslieder adhere to the simpler binary form more often found in folk-song transcriptions.[12] The longer, more structured patterns give a sense of drama befitting a closing number, particularly (as in 6) when they end with a satisfying return to the home key.[12] The closing gestures are most apparent in 9, which would have served as an ending in both the two-book and three-book versions of the set (in his tripartite plan, Brahms reordered the middle book to close with 9).[8] This was also the waltz that Brahms chose to end his arrangement for choir and orchestra.[8] The waltz returns to E major, the key that started the set, and ends with a descending melodic line, a decrescendo, ritardando, and a fermata, all things that unmistakably signify an ending.

Versions

[edit]

Due to the piece's popularity and playability, many versions and transcriptions of the Libeslieder Waltzes exist. Opus 52a, for piano duet without voices was published in 1874, with minor additions and intricacies added to the original piano lines.[12] Brahms also published a version for voices with piano solo in 1875.[12] Conductor Ernst Rudorff convinced Brahms to create an arrangement of the waltzes for voice and small orchestra for a performance in 1870, although this version was not published until 1938.[12] The orchestral version does not contain the complete set of waltzes, but instead numbers 1, 2, 4, 6, 5, a song that would later become waltz 9 in his Neue Liebeslieder Waltzes, 11, 8, and 9.[12] Friedrich Hermann also created a transcription of the Liebeslieder Waltzes for strings alone in 1889.[13] In 2019, the Liebeslieder Waltzes, op. 52, received a new orchestration of the 4-hand accompaniment. This version is for choir and 10 instrumentalists. Composed by J. A. Kawarsky, it is published by GIA press.

Ref. Bibl. Marina Caracciolo, "Brahms e il Walzer. Storia e lettura critica". Lucca, Libreria Musicale Italiana, 2004, ISBN 978-88-7096-362-5

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Avins, Styra. "Brahms, Johannes." The Oxford Companion to Music: Oxford University Press. Edited by Allison Latham. http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199579037.001.0001/acref-9780199579037-e-940
  2. ^ a b Rosen, Charles. "Influence: Plagiarism And Inspiration." 19th-century music 4.2 (1980): 87–100. Print.
  3. ^ a b c d Hussey, William Gregory. Compositional Modeling, Quotation, and Multiple Influence Analysis in the Works of Johannes Brahms: An Application of Harold Bloom's Theory of Influence to Music. Ph.D. diss. University of Texas at Austin, 1997.
  4. ^ a b c d e Brodbeck, David Lee. Brahms as Editor and Composer: His Two Editions of Ländler by Schubert and His First Two Cycles of Waltzes, Opera 39 and 52. Ph.D. diss. University of Pennsylvania, 1984.
  5. ^ a b c Bozarth, George S., and Walter Frisch. "Brahms, Johannes." Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online: Oxford University Press.
  6. ^ Anonymous. "A New Work By Johannes Brahms." The Musical World, vol. 55, issue 2 (1877): 69–69.
  7. ^ Anonymous. "Popular Concerts of 1877." The Musical World, vol. 55, issue 6 (1877): 102–102.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Brodbeck, David. "Liebeslieder Walzer (1869)." American Symphony Orchestra. http://americansymphony.org/?s=liebeslieder+walzer (accessed September 18, 2013).
  9. ^ a b c Biddlecombe, Tucker. Email Correspondence. September 25, 2013.
  10. ^ . Meyer, Leonard B., Eugene Narmour, and Ruth A. Solie. 1988. Explorations in music, the arts, and ideas: essays in honor of Leonard B. Meyer. Stuyvesant: Pendragon Press. 411–437.
  11. ^ a b c Olsen, Glen. "The "Liebeslieder Walzer," op. 52, of Johannes Brahms: Rhythmic and Metric Features, and Related Conducting Gestures." Choral Journal 42.2 (Sep 2001): 9–15.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Stark, Lucien. 1998. Brahms's vocal duets and quartets with piano: a guide with full texts and translations. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 29–47.
  13. ^ Godell, Tom."Dances from the heart of Europe." American Record Guide 67.1 (Jan/Feb 2004): 196–197.