Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Illustrations
- Foreword by Graham Johnson
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Index of Solo Song Opuses published in Brahms's Lifetime
- Table of Poets’ Lifespans
- Map 1: The German Empire 1864–1871
- Map 2: Poets’ Main Areas of Activity
- Guide to Poet Entries
- Brahms's Poets: From Willibald Alexis to Josef Wenzig
- Willibald Alexis [Wilhelm Häring] (1798 Breslau – 1871 Arnstadt, SW of Leipzig)
- Hermann Allmers (1821 Rechtenfleth – 1902 Rechtenfleth)
- Friedrich Bodenstedt (1819 Peine – 1892 Wiesbaden)
- Clemens Brentano (1778 Ehrenbreitstein, nr Koblenz – 1842 Aschaffenburg, nr Frankfurt)
- Carl Candidus (1817 Bischweiler, Alsace – 1871 Crimea)
- Hugo Conrat (1845 Breslau – 1906 Berlin)
- Georg Friedrich Daumer (1800 Nuremberg – 1875 Würzburg)
- Joseph von Eichendorff (1788 Lubowitz, Upper Silesia – 1857 Neiße, Upper Silesia)
- Eduard Ferrand [Eduard Schulz] (1813 Landsberg – 1842 Berlin)
- Paul Fleming (1609 Hartenstein, nr Zwickau – 1640 Hamburg)
- Adolf Frey (1855 Aarau – 1920 Zurich)
- Emanuel Geibel (1815 Lübeck – 1884 Lübeck)
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 Frankfurt am Main – 1832 Weimar)
- Melchior Grohe (1829 Mannheim – 1906 Naples)
- Klaus Groth (1819 Heide – 1899 Kiel)
- Otto Friedrich Gruppe (1804 Danzig – 1876 Berlin)
- Friedrich Halm [Eligius Freiherr von Münch-Bellinghausen] (1806 Krakow – 1871 Vienna)
- Friedrich Hebbel (1813 Wesselburen – 1863 Vienna)
- Heinrich Heine (1797 Düsseldorf – 1856 Paris)
- Paul Heyse (1830 Berlin – 1914 Munich)
- Heinrich Hoffmann [von Fallersleben] (1798 Fallersleben – 1874 Corvey)
- Ludwig Christian Heinrich Hölty (1748 Mariensee nr Hanover – 1776 Hanover)
- Max Kalbeck (1850 Breslau – 1921 Vienna)
- Siegfried Kapper (1821 Prague – 1879 Pisa)
- Gottfried Keller (1819 Zurich – 1890 Zurich)
- August Kopisch (1799 Breslau – 1853 Berlin)
- Franz Kugler (1808 Stettin – 1858 Berlin)
- Karl Lemcke (1831 Schwerin – 1913 Munich)
- Detlev von Liliencron (1844 Kiel – 1909 Alt-Rahlstedt, Hamburg)
- Hermann Lingg (1820 Lindau – 1905 Munich)
- Alfred Meissner (1822 Teplitz – 1885 Bregenz)
- Eduard Mörike (1804 Ludwigsburg – 1875 Stuttgart)
- August von Platen (1796 Ansbach – 1835 Syracuse)
- Christian Reinhold [Reinhold Köstlin] (1813 Tübingen – 1856 Tübingen)
- Robert Reinick (1805 Danzig – 1852 Dresden)
- Johann Baptist Rousseau (1802 Bonn – 1867 Cologne)
- Friedrich Rückert (1788 Schweinfurt – 1866 Neuses nr Coburg)
- Adolf Friedrich von Schack (1815 Schelfstadt nr Schwerin – 1894 Rome)
- Max von Schenkendorff (1783 Tilsit – 1817 Koblenz)
- Hans Schmidt (1854 Fellin – 1923 Riga)
- Felix Schumann (1854 Düsseldorf – 1879 Frankfurt)
- Karl Simrock (1802 Bonn – 1876 Bonn)
- Theodor Storm (1817 Husum – 1888 Hademarschen)
- Ludwig Tieck (1773 Berlin – 1853 Berlin)
- Ludwig Uhland (1787 Tübingen – 1862 Tübingen)
- Josef Wenzig (1807 Prague – 1876 Turnau)
- Select Bibliography
- Index of Brahms's Musical Works
- General Index
Adolf Frey (1855 Aarau – 1920 Zurich)
from Brahms's Poets: From Willibald Alexis to Josef Wenzig
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 September 2019
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Illustrations
- Foreword by Graham Johnson
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Index of Solo Song Opuses published in Brahms's Lifetime
- Table of Poets’ Lifespans
- Map 1: The German Empire 1864–1871
- Map 2: Poets’ Main Areas of Activity
- Guide to Poet Entries
- Brahms's Poets: From Willibald Alexis to Josef Wenzig
- Willibald Alexis [Wilhelm Häring] (1798 Breslau – 1871 Arnstadt, SW of Leipzig)
- Hermann Allmers (1821 Rechtenfleth – 1902 Rechtenfleth)
- Friedrich Bodenstedt (1819 Peine – 1892 Wiesbaden)
- Clemens Brentano (1778 Ehrenbreitstein, nr Koblenz – 1842 Aschaffenburg, nr Frankfurt)
- Carl Candidus (1817 Bischweiler, Alsace – 1871 Crimea)
- Hugo Conrat (1845 Breslau – 1906 Berlin)
- Georg Friedrich Daumer (1800 Nuremberg – 1875 Würzburg)
- Joseph von Eichendorff (1788 Lubowitz, Upper Silesia – 1857 Neiße, Upper Silesia)
- Eduard Ferrand [Eduard Schulz] (1813 Landsberg – 1842 Berlin)
- Paul Fleming (1609 Hartenstein, nr Zwickau – 1640 Hamburg)
- Adolf Frey (1855 Aarau – 1920 Zurich)
- Emanuel Geibel (1815 Lübeck – 1884 Lübeck)
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 Frankfurt am Main – 1832 Weimar)
- Melchior Grohe (1829 Mannheim – 1906 Naples)
- Klaus Groth (1819 Heide – 1899 Kiel)
- Otto Friedrich Gruppe (1804 Danzig – 1876 Berlin)
- Friedrich Halm [Eligius Freiherr von Münch-Bellinghausen] (1806 Krakow – 1871 Vienna)
- Friedrich Hebbel (1813 Wesselburen – 1863 Vienna)
- Heinrich Heine (1797 Düsseldorf – 1856 Paris)
- Paul Heyse (1830 Berlin – 1914 Munich)
- Heinrich Hoffmann [von Fallersleben] (1798 Fallersleben – 1874 Corvey)
- Ludwig Christian Heinrich Hölty (1748 Mariensee nr Hanover – 1776 Hanover)
- Max Kalbeck (1850 Breslau – 1921 Vienna)
- Siegfried Kapper (1821 Prague – 1879 Pisa)
- Gottfried Keller (1819 Zurich – 1890 Zurich)
- August Kopisch (1799 Breslau – 1853 Berlin)
- Franz Kugler (1808 Stettin – 1858 Berlin)
- Karl Lemcke (1831 Schwerin – 1913 Munich)
- Detlev von Liliencron (1844 Kiel – 1909 Alt-Rahlstedt, Hamburg)
- Hermann Lingg (1820 Lindau – 1905 Munich)
- Alfred Meissner (1822 Teplitz – 1885 Bregenz)
- Eduard Mörike (1804 Ludwigsburg – 1875 Stuttgart)
- August von Platen (1796 Ansbach – 1835 Syracuse)
- Christian Reinhold [Reinhold Köstlin] (1813 Tübingen – 1856 Tübingen)
- Robert Reinick (1805 Danzig – 1852 Dresden)
- Johann Baptist Rousseau (1802 Bonn – 1867 Cologne)
- Friedrich Rückert (1788 Schweinfurt – 1866 Neuses nr Coburg)
- Adolf Friedrich von Schack (1815 Schelfstadt nr Schwerin – 1894 Rome)
- Max von Schenkendorff (1783 Tilsit – 1817 Koblenz)
- Hans Schmidt (1854 Fellin – 1923 Riga)
- Felix Schumann (1854 Düsseldorf – 1879 Frankfurt)
- Karl Simrock (1802 Bonn – 1876 Bonn)
- Theodor Storm (1817 Husum – 1888 Hademarschen)
- Ludwig Tieck (1773 Berlin – 1853 Berlin)
- Ludwig Uhland (1787 Tübingen – 1862 Tübingen)
- Josef Wenzig (1807 Prague – 1876 Turnau)
- Select Bibliography
- Index of Brahms's Musical Works
- General Index
Summary
‘Meine Lieder’ Op. 106 no. 4 (comp. summer 1888, publ. Oct. 1888)
BRAHMS met Adolf Frey through two Swiss friends: Widmann and Keller. Widmann found Frey ‘highly talented’, and turned to him to correct linguistic and metric errors in his own work. Keller and Frey first encountered one another on 22 June 1876 at the annual celebration of the four hundredth anniversary of the Siege of Murten by Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy. Brahms greatly admired Keller, and Simrock drew his attention to Frey's account of that poet's decline and death in the Deutsche Rundschau in November 1890. Equally, in his 1903 biography of Arnold Böcklin, Frey mentioned the visits of Brahms and his friend the violinist Friedrich Hegar, thus recalling the net of friendships across music and art.
Upon Widmann's request, Keller encouraged the younger man; Frey called him ‘Meister Gottfried’ and the relationship was like that of Brahms and the young composers who venerated him. Widmann was also the go-between for Frey and Brahms. Brahms's copy of Frey's Gedichte contains a card stating ‘Ueberreicht von dem Verfasser’ (‘given by the author’); ‘Meine Lieder’ is unmarked but copied into Brahms's notebook. This was the result of Widmann's encouragement; he wrote to Frey on 13 July 1888:
I already did the main thing last summer, which is to show your poems to the honoured and great musician; he has them and [Conrad Ferdinand] Meyer's with him for a week in Thun. But I will draw them to his attention again as soon as he is with me in Bern and I myself am settled there.
Widmann's intervention worked, since a month later, on 14 August 1888, he reported to Frey that Brahms had made a setting and sent it to Simrock. He continued: ‘Altogether, Brahms spoke very warmly about the excellence of your poetry collection, without specifically emphasising whether the poems were settable.’ Brahms requested that Widmann send Frey a copy of the published song that autumn, spurring Frey to write more texts for musical setting. When Frey received Op. 106, he was not even sure whether it would be appropriate to write Brahms a letter of thanks.
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- Information
- Brahms and His PoetsA Handbook, pp. 119 - 124Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2017