Premium Only Content
Robert Schumann - Scenes from Childhood, Op 15 I Of Foreign Lands And Peoples
Robert Schumann - Scenes from Childhood, Op 15 I Of Foreign Lands And Peoples
Performed by Donald Betts
🔔 🔔 🔔
If you appreciate my work, please push 👍 and subscribe to my YouTube channel in one click https://tinyurl.com/msfrb6wn 😉
Robert Schumann (8 June 1810 – 29 July 1856) was a German composer, pianist, and influential music critic. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest composers of the Romantic era. Schumann left the study of law, intending to pursue a career as a virtuoso pianist. His teacher, Friedrich Wieck, a German pianist, had assured him that he could become the finest pianist in Europe, but a hand injury ended this dream. Schumann then focused his musical energies on composing.
In 1840, Schumann married Clara Wieck, after a long and acrimonious legal battle with her father, Friedrich, who opposed the marriage. A lifelong partnership in music began, as Clara herself was an established pianist and music prodigy. Clara and Robert also maintained a close relationship with German composer Johannes Brahms.
Until 1840, Schumann wrote exclusively for the piano. Later, he composed piano and orchestral works, and many Lieder (songs for voice and piano). He composed four symphonies, one opera, and other orchestral, choral, and chamber works. His best-known works include Carnaval, Symphonic Studies, Kinderszenen, Kreisleriana, and the Fantasie in C. Schumann was known for infusing his music with characters through motifs, as well as references to works of literature. These characters bled into his editorial writing in the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik (New Journal for Music), a Leipzig-based publication that he co-founded.
Schumann suffered from a mental disorder that first manifested in 1833 as a severe melancholic depressive episode—which recurred several times alternating with phases of "exaltation" and increasingly also delusional ideas of being poisoned or threatened with metallic items. What is now thought to have been a combination of bipolar disorder and perhaps mercury poisoning led to "manic" and "depressive" periods in Schumann's compositional productivity. After a suicide attempt in 1854, Schumann was admitted at his own request to a mental asylum in Endenich near Bonn. Diagnosed with psychotic melancholia, he died of pneumonia two years later at the age of 46, without recovering from his mental illness.
(Source: Wikipedia)
-
21:46
The Best of Classical Music
2 years agoMaurice Ravel - Piano Concerto for the Left Hand
396 -
1:23:41
Game On!
21 hours ago $8.42 earnedNetflix NFL Christmas Games Preview and Predictions!
46.7K9 -
2:05:07
Darkhorse Podcast
1 day agoWhy Trump Wants Greenland: The 257th Evolutionary Lens with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying
282K451 -
8:50:58
Right Side Broadcasting Network
1 day ago🎅 LIVE: Tracking Santa on Christmas Eve 2024 NORAD Santa Tracker 🎅
315K45 -
2:48
Steven Crowder
1 day agoCROWDER CLASSICS: What’s This? | Nightmare Before Kwanzaa (Nightmare Before Christmas Parody)
300K12 -
33:49
Quite Frankly
1 day agoThe Christmas Eve Midnight Telethon
107K22 -
2:12:46
Price of Reason
1 day agoAmber Heard BACKS Blake Lively Lawsuit Against Justin Baldoni! Is Disney CEO Bob Iger in TROUBLE?
60.9K24 -
1:01:17
The StoneZONE with Roger Stone
19 hours agoChristmas Edition: Why the Panama Canal is Part of the America First Agenda | The StoneZONE
131K47 -
18:12:15
LFA TV
1 day agoLFA TV CHRISTMAS EVE REPLAY
145K19 -
13:32
Scammer Payback
20 hours agoChanging the Scammer's Desktop Background to his Location
14.5K4