Classical Music | Piano Music

Robert Schumann

Arabesque in C Major, Op. 18  Play

Regulo Martinez-Anton Piano

Recorded on 11/09/2009, uploaded on 05/18/2017

Musician's or Publisher's Notes

Having left Leipzig for Vienna in the fall of 1838, Robert Schumann found himself separated from his fiancée Clara. Though geographically separated from her, Robert continued to communicate with her in letter and, even more touchingly, in music. While it would be nigh impossible now to uncover whether the piano compositions that followed Schumann's arrival in Vienna were his way of remaining, not physically but in spirit, close to Clara, it is at least a safe assumption that they were, in part, just that.

Of those compositions, the Arabeske in C major of 1839 lends itself quite well to that interpretation. Cast in a rather straightforward rondo form, it alternates wistful passages with more intense and extroverted episodes. The lyrical opening melody in C major frames two minor key episodes—the first in E minor and the second in A minor. The episodes, though quite different in character, take their material directly from the C major principal theme. After the final statement of the principal melody, a beautiful Epilogue commences, ultimately drawing the work to a close with a final echo of the C major melody.

The title “Arabeske” comes from a more generic term to denote a florid design in the fine arts or other ornamental objects such as rugs, mosaics, etc. When applied to music, it is often used, as in this case, with short compositions for piano. While the structure of Schumann's Arabeske adheres closely to Classical standards, it is mainly its melodic and harmonic ornamentation that justifies the title of “Arabeske.”       Joseph DuBose

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Arabeske in C major, Op. 18                     Robert Schumann

During the year of 1839, Robert Schumann was in the throws of a tumultuous romance with pianist Clara Wieck. Her father vehemently opposed anything that might interfere with his daughter's career as a pianist and strongly disapproved of the match. As a result, the young lovers were forced to live apart, communicating only through letters and in Schumann’s own music. This has been proposed as an explanation for the Arabeske, which alternates passages of wistful longing with more robust, declamatory episodes.      gulo Martínez-Antón