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Tag: digital scores (Page 9 of 22)

Newly Digitized: Schubert Early Editions, Liszt Arrangements

As I’ve mentioned in earlier posts, one of the Music Library’s ongoing digitization projects has been built around first and early editions from the Packard Humanities Institute Music Collection, which includes the world’s largest collection of Schubert first editions outside of Vienna. Nearly 170 of those editions are now part of our Digital Scores and Libretti; recent additions include these copies of “Erlkönig,” “An die Nachtigall,” “An Sylvia,” and others, as well as a set of Franz Liszt’s piano arrangements of Schubert’s Lieder.


Franz Schubert, Erlkönig. Merritt Room Mus 800.1.746.5 PHI (click to enlarge)

Franz Schubert, Erlkönig. Merritt Room Mus 800.1.746.5 PHI (click to enlarge)

  • Erlkönig
    Erlkönig : 1tes Werk / Ballade von Göthe; in Musik gesetzt und Seiner Exzellenz dem hochgebohrnen Herrn Herrn Moritz Grafen von Dietrichstein in tiefer Ehrfurcht gewidmet von Franz Schubert. Wien: in Comission bey Cappi und Diabelli, [1821].
    Merritt Room Mus 800.1.746.5 PHI
  • Songs. Selections
    Der Schmetterling und Die Berge / von Friedrich Schlegel. An den Mond / von Fr. v. Hölty; in Musik gesetzt für eine Singstimme mit Pianoforte Begleitung von Franz Schubert; 57tes Werk. [1st ed.] Wien: Thad. Weigl, [1826].
    Merritt Room Mus 800.1.732.6 PHI
  • Songs. Selections
    Heimliches Lieben; Das Weinen; Vor meiner Wiege / von Leitner. An Sylvia / von Shakespeare; in Musik gesetz für eine Singstimme mit Begleitung des Piano-forte von Franz Schubert. Wien: A. Diabelli, [1828].
    Merritt Room Mus 800.1.732.10 PHI
  • Songs. Selections
    An die Nachtigall; Wiegenlied / von Claudius. Iphigenia / von Mayrhofer; für eine Singstimme mit Begl. des Piano-Forte; in Musik gesetzt von Franz Schubert; 98tes Werk. Wien: A. Diabelli, [1829].
    Merritt Room Mus 800.1.744 PHI
  • Songs. Selections
    Drey Gedichte: in Musik gesetzt für eine Singstimme mit Begleitung des Pianoforte: 111tes Werk / von Franz Schubert. [1st ed.] Wien: J. Czerny, [1829].
    Merritt Room Mus 800.1.735.15 PHI

Franz Schubert, Title page, Lob der Thränen, transcribed for piano by Franz Liszt. Merritt Room Mus 737.1.455 PHI (click to enlarge)

Franz Schubert, Title page, Lob der Thränen, transcribed for piano by Franz Liszt. Merritt Room Mus 737.1.455 PHI (click to enlarge)

Songs. Selections; arranged
Lieder / von Fr. Schubert; für das Piano-forte übertragen von Fr. Liszt. Wien: T. Haslinger; Wien: A. Diabelli, [1830s].
Merritt Room Mus 737.1.455 PHI

16 of the more than 60 Lieder arrangements made by Franz Liszt in the mid-19th century, in editions published by Diabelli and Haslinger.

  • Diabelli editions
    Contents: Sey mir gegrüsst — Auf dem Wasser zu singen : Barcarolle — Erlkönig — Meeresstille — Frühlingsglaube — Gretchen am Spinnrade — Ständchen von Shakespeare — Die Forelle — Der Wanderer.
  • Haslinger editions
    Contents: Lob der Thränen — Aufenthalt ; Am Meer (aus Schwanengesang) — Der Lindenbaum (aus Winterreise) — Liebesbotschaft ; Aufenthalt (T.H.7684) ; Ständchen = Sérénade (aus Schwanengesang).

-Kerry Masteller

Newly Digitized Manuscript: Peter von Winter, Fratelli Rivali, Act I

Peter von Winter (1754-1825), violinist, conductor, and composer, began writing music for the stage in the early 1780s; his initial foray into opera came at Munich’s Nationaltheater in 1782. Even after his appointment to positions in the electoral court (as assistant Kapellmeister in 1787, and Kapellmeister in 1798), he continued to supply works for Munich’s stages and maintained a second, peripatetic career in the theatre, taking multiple, years-long leaves in the 1790s and 1800s to compose for opera houses around Europe. The products of these journeys included well-reviewed opere seria for London, tepidly-recieved tragédies lyriques for Paris, a Singspiel sequel to Die Zauberflöte (Das Labyrinth oder Der Kampf mit den Elementen, Vienna, 1798), and works fusing multiple styles, like his greatest success, Das unterbrochene Opferfest (Vienna, 1796).1


Peter von Winter, "Qual diletto in sen m'inonda," Fratelli Rivali, seq. 103-104. Merritt Room Mus 867.3.602 (click to enlarge)

Peter von Winter, “Qual diletto in sen m’inonda,” Fratelli Rivali, seq. 103-104. Merritt Room Mus 867.3.602 (click to enlarge)

  • [Fratelli rivali. Act 1]. I fratelli rivali / musica [di?] sigr Pietro Winter. L’autunno 1793. Merritt Mus 867.3.602

Between 1791 and 1794, Winter’s travels took him to Naples and Venice, where he supplied works for performances at San Carlo and San Benedetto. This working manuscript of the first act of Peter von Winter’s I Fratelli Rivali was likely prepared for the opera’s premiere at Venice’s San Benedetto in November, 1793. The score not only shows evidence of extensive revisions to both text and music, but also contains some of the annotations – such as stage directions – necessary for its production.


Peter von Winter, "Amor in questo secolo," Fratelli Rivali, seq. 58. Merritt Room Mus 867.3.602 (click to enlarge)

Peter von Winter, “Amor in questo secolo,” Fratelli Rivali, seq. 58. Merritt Room Mus 867.3.602 (click to enlarge)

The manuscript is written in multiple hands, including that of Winter and at least one copyist. Although their handwriting is fairly similar, it seems likely that the copyist was responsible for transcribing most of the music and text, including clefs, key signatures, and much of the instrumentation. Some of the arias, including Silvio’s cavatina “Qual diletto in sen mi’nonda,” do appear to be primarily in Winter’s hand. This is unquestionably still a working draft of the score: small corrections to the music are visible throughout, while at the close of Dorinda’s aria “Amor in questo secolo,” Winter’s completion of the instrumental parts spills past the copyist’s vocal line and the printed staves, reaching into the margin and nearly to the edge of the page.


Peter von Winter, Scenes 3 and 4, Fratelli Rivali, seq. 49. Merritt Room Mus 867.3.602 (click to enlarge)

Peter von Winter, Scenes 3 and 4, Fratelli Rivali, seq. 49. Merritt Room Mus 867.3.602 (click to enlarge)

Meanwhile, in contrast to the compressed, delicate, even scratchy notation of the vocal numbers – written in several different inks now varying in color from black or brown to a faded grey – the recitatives are uniformly set down in a much looser hand, written with a broader pen nib and the same shade of ink (and on pages much more frequently splattered with water, paint, or ink wash). Whether this implies that they were all added to this draft at close to the same time is a question for further investigation.

With its clear picture of a work still very much in progress, this manuscript offers an intriguing look at the business of creating opera for the late-18th century stage.

-Kerry Masteller


1. Abert, Anna Amalie and Paul Corneilson. “Winter, Peter,” Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press, Web. 11 Sep. 2013. http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.ezp-prod1.hul.harvard.edu/subscriber/article/grove/music/30421 (Harvard access).

Tyler, Linda. “Winter, Peter,” The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Ed. Stanley Sadie. Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 11 Sep. 2013. http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.ezp-prod1.hul.harvard.edu/subscriber/article/grove/music/O011520 (Harvard access).

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