Conversations Within and Between Two Early Lieder of Schubert
ORCID
Sobaskie: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9083-3425
MSU Affiliation
College of Education; Department of Music
Creation Date
2026-04-29
Abstract
Biographical background and musical analysis reveal a remarkable relationship between Franz Schubert's early lieder 'An die Geliebte' and 'An die Nachtigall'. In 'An die Geliebte', tonal ambiguity underscores the indeterminate nature of its narrative, permitting multiple coexistent and contrasting expressive meanings while favouring an ironic interpretation and an intriguing subtext. In 'An die Nachtigall', whose introduction and first phrase are similar to the opening of 'An die Geliebte', multiple expressive meanings also may be discerned, including an ironic interpretation that emerges when the song is considered in the context of its predecessor. Proceeding from a prior discussion of these lieder by Susan Youens, this essay will reveal unsuspected layers of meaning and a contextual process that unfolds in these unassuming yet engaging songs of Schubert, which uniquely converse with one another and frame an important episode in the composer's life.
Publication Date
3-28-2016
Publication Title
Nineteenth-Century Music Review
Publisher
Cambridge University Press; Durham University; Centre for Nineteenth-Century Music
First Page
83
Last Page
102
Recommended Citation
Sobaskie, James William. “Conversations within and between Two Early Lieder of Schubert.” Nineteenth-Century Music Review 13.1 (2016): 83–102.