Art song
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An art song is a vocal music composition, usually written for one singer with piano accompaniment. By extension, the term "art song" is used to refer to the genre of such songs. Aficionados of the genre consider art songs (when written by the right hands) to be among the highest forms of art, unsurpassed in sophistication, subtlety and dramatic truth.
Although categorizing a piece of vocal music as art song rather than as another type of song (such as a folk song, or an aria) can be difficult sometimes, most art songs are
- settings of lyric poetry
- not part of a staged work (such as an opera or a musical)
- intended for performance as part of a recital or other relatively formal social occasion
Exceptions can be found to any of these rules. Although piano accompaniment is usual, the singer may be accompanied by instrumental forces of any number, including a full orchestra. A guitar, a harp or a string quartet are some of the more common accompaniments. Songs may be written to be performed in a group to form a narrative or dramatic whole, comprising a song cycle.
A folk song can form the basis of an art song, but a composer must reinvent it with respect to one or more of form, harmony, melody, rhythm or sonority. Aaron Copland and Benjamin Britten are two composers famous for their arrangements of respective American and British folk songs.
An art song can be in any language, although English songs, French chansons, German lieder, and Italian canzoni are the most numerous. The Austrian composer Franz Schubert is considered the greatest art song composer of all. Despite a brief life, Schubert created an impressive output of some 600 lieder, including "Der Erlkönig", "Die Forelle", and "Gretchen am Spinnrade" as well as the two cycles, "Winterreise" and "Die Schöne Müllerin".
Even though classical vocalists generally embark on successful performing careers as soloists by seeking out opera engagements, a number of today's most prominent singers have built their careers primarily by singing art songs, including Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Thomas Quasthoff, Ian Bostridge, Matthias Goerne, Susan Graham, and Elly Ameling.
[edit] Prominent composers of art songs
Austrian
German
- Ludwig van Beethoven
- Johann Carl Gottfried Loewe
- Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel
- Felix Mendelssohn
- Robert Schumann
- Clara Schumann
- Johannes Brahms
- Richard Strauss
- Arnold Schoenberg
- Kurt Weill
French
- Hector Berlioz
- Charles Gounod
- Pauline García-Viardot
- César Franck
- Georges Bizet
- Henri Duparc
- Gabriel Fauré
- Claude Debussy
- Maurice Ravel
- Darius Milhaud
- Francis Poulenc
British
- John Dowland
- Thomas Campion
- Henry Purcell
- Frederick Delius
- Ralph Vaughan Williams
- Roger Quilter
- John Ireland
- Ivor Gurney
- Peter Warlock
- Michael Head
- Gerald Finzi
- Benjamin Britten
Italian
- Claudio Monteverdi
- Gioachino Rossini
- Gaetano Donizetti
- Francesco Tosti
- Ottorino Respighi
- Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco
- Luciano Berio
Eastern European
- Franz Liszt - Hungary (born Hungarian, but more accurately a cosmopolitan native of Europe at large)
- Antonín Dvořák - Czechoslovakia
- Leoš Janáček - Czechoslovakia
- Béla Bartók - Hungary
- Zoltán Kodály - Hungary
- Frédéric Chopin - Poland
Nordic
- Edvard Grieg - Norway
- Jean Sibelius - Finland
- Yrjo Kilpinen - Finland
- Wilhelm Stenhammar - Sweden
- Hugo Alfvén - Sweden
- Carl Nielsen - Denmark
Russian
- Mikhail Glinka
- Alexander Borodin
- César Cui
- Modest Mussorgsky
- Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
- Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
- Sergei Rachmaninoff
- Sergei Prokofiev
- Igor Stravinsky
- Dmitri Shostakovich
American
- Amy Marcy Cheney Beach
- Arthur Farwell
- Charles Ives
- Charles Griffes
- Ernst Bacon
- Ned Rorem
- Samuel Barber
- Aaron Copland
- Lee Hoiby
- William Bolcom
- Daron Hagen

