Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Playing Schumann Again for the First Time
View through CrossRef
How can one learn to improvise convincingly within the context of the nineteenth-century piano repertoire? And why is it important to improvise on this repertoire in the twenty-first century? Taking the music of Robert Schumann (1810−56) as a departure point, Playing Schumann Again for the First Time proposes an answer to these questions through methods towards a pianistic practice that is driven by experimentation and strives to continually find more layers where improvisation can take place, both in sounding musical practice and in notation. These practice-based methods are contextualized by a discussion of the presence of improvisation in Western classical musical practice in the nineteenth century. They are then substantiated by an argument to use improvisation as a tool for rethinking the current performance practice of nineteenth-century music. Improvisation itself and the concepts driving this term will also be addressed: improvisation in musical performance will be described as a process guided by a feedback loop between mimesis and morphosis with which the practitioner engages using his or her individual cognitive and embodied approach to listening, forgetting, and conceptualizing; the results of which bear his or her own sonic signature. The knowledge gained in this project lies within the realm of what will be described as improvisation as practice, a category of improvisational behavior that circumvents the need to be presented as art and is rather intended for the development of one’s own music-making.
Title: Playing Schumann Again for the First Time
Description:
How can one learn to improvise convincingly within the context of the nineteenth-century piano repertoire? And why is it important to improvise on this repertoire in the twenty-first century? Taking the music of Robert Schumann (1810−56) as a departure point, Playing Schumann Again for the First Time proposes an answer to these questions through methods towards a pianistic practice that is driven by experimentation and strives to continually find more layers where improvisation can take place, both in sounding musical practice and in notation.
These practice-based methods are contextualized by a discussion of the presence of improvisation in Western classical musical practice in the nineteenth century.
They are then substantiated by an argument to use improvisation as a tool for rethinking the current performance practice of nineteenth-century music.
Improvisation itself and the concepts driving this term will also be addressed: improvisation in musical performance will be described as a process guided by a feedback loop between mimesis and morphosis with which the practitioner engages using his or her individual cognitive and embodied approach to listening, forgetting, and conceptualizing; the results of which bear his or her own sonic signature.
The knowledge gained in this project lies within the realm of what will be described as improvisation as practice, a category of improvisational behavior that circumvents the need to be presented as art and is rather intended for the development of one’s own music-making.
Related Results
Scenen aus Goethes Faust: A performer's analysis.
Scenen aus Goethes Faust: A performer's analysis.
Robert Schumann's dramatic music remains, for the most part, undiscovered and therefore performed infrequently. Genoveva, Das Paradies und die Peri, Manfred, and Scenen aus Goethes...
Search for Martian Schumann Resonances
Search for Martian Schumann Resonances
On Earth, electric discharges in thunderstorms produce ELF waves in the Earth-ionosphere waveguide that circles the globe. These waves give rise to Schumann resonances in the waveg...
Listening in London
Listening in London
Abstract
Chapter 5 explores the reception of the Leipzig chamber works within nineteenth-century London. Questions about whether the music was more conservative or p...
Singing and Playing - A Kodály Approach to Cello Playing
Singing and Playing - A Kodály Approach to Cello Playing
Alice Andreani - Classical Cello
Research Supervisor: Daniel Salbert
Research Title: "Singing and Playing - A Kodály Approach to Cello Playing".
Research Question: “What are th...
Clara Schumann
Clara Schumann
Clara Schumann, née Wieck (b. 1819–d. 1896), ranks among the most important musical artists of the 19th century. As composer, she published twenty-one numbered compositions—includi...
Schumann’s Struggle with Goethe’s Faust
Schumann’s Struggle with Goethe’s Faust
Robert Schumann had a long and complicated relationship with Goethe’s Faust, as is reflected in the compositional history of his Scenen aus Goethe’s Faust (Scenes from Goethe’s Fau...
„Robert Schumann und Clara Wieck gegen Friedrich Wieck, Vater der Mitklägerin”. Zwischen Erwartungen und Liebe – zum Bild der Vater – Tochter Beziehung am Beispiel von Clara Schumann und Friedrich Wieck
„Robert Schumann und Clara Wieck gegen Friedrich Wieck, Vater der Mitklägerin”. Zwischen Erwartungen und Liebe – zum Bild der Vater – Tochter Beziehung am Beispiel von Clara Schumann und Friedrich Wieck
Clara and Robert Schumann are the most famous nineteenth-century artistic couple. In the background of their life story there is, probably, the most famous dispute in music history...

