The neglect that Franz Schubert (1797-1828) suffered for most of the
19th century now seems incredible.
None of his symphonies was performed during his lifetime (except,
perhaps, for readings at private concerts Schubert held himself) and not
one was published until some fifty years after his death.
In 1827, a music dictionary was published in which Schubert's name did
not even appear.
Part of the problem, perhaps, was that Schubert (unlike Mozart or
Beethoven) was not a virtuoso performer on any instrument, and he found no
other means of promoting himself.
And despite the fact that Schubert is widely regarded as one of the
best, if not the best, writer of melodies, most of Europe was already headed
toward the complexity and ambiguity of the high Romantic era.
Schubert was born in Lichtenthal, a suburb of Vienna, and at the age of ten
was sent to study with the local church organist, Michael Holzer, who later
wrote, "If I wished to instruct him in anything fresh, the boy already
knew it.
So I gave him no actual tuition but merely talked to him and watched
him with silent astonishment."
Every moment Schubert had to himself was spent composing, and in 1812
Salieri accepted him as a student.
Two years later, to Salieri's astonishment, the 17-year-old presented
him with the 341 pages of his fully orchestrated first opera.
Unlike Beethoven, composing came completely natural to Schubert, which
may be why he, like Saint-Saëns, is commonly regarded as having an
incredible output of music, but no revolutionary effect.
From 1814 to 1817, Schubert worked in his father's school, spending all his
spare time composing.
He gathered around him a close and influential circle of friends,
including the rich and rather disreputable Franz von Schober, the melancholy
poet Johann Mayrhofer, and the operatic baritone Michael Vogl, for whom
Schubert composed many of his more than 600 songs.
Receiving only sporadic performances in concert halls, Schubert and his
friends held private "Schubertiads" to raise money, which Schubert desperately
needed.
In the summer of 1818, he moved to Zseliz in Hungary to take up the position
of music tutor to the daughters of Count Johann Eterházy.
He returned to Vienna a year later, receiving two opera commissions
from the Court Theatre.
He received his first publishing agreement for his Erlkönig,
but these better fortunes soon fell apart.
In 1822, the Court Theatre came under Italian management as all Vienna was
in frenzy for Rossini.
Schubert immediately lost two commissions.
Around this time, he also contracted syphilis, then rife in Vienna,
and began to fail in 1823.
Despite his illness and subsequent depression, he continued on
creatively until his death in 1828 at the age of 31.
He received, however, his dying wish: he was buried next to Beethoven.
Schubert's Symphony No.6 in C, D.589 was composed between October 1817
and February 1818.
Having used a smaller orchestra for his Fifth Symphony, Schubert
returns to the larger orchestra of his first four symphonies.
It is ironic that we remember this symphony as "The Little,"
when Schubert himself dubbed it the "Grand Symphony" in his own score.
Schubert's "Friends of Music" had planned to read his Symphony No.9
"The Great" at a concert on December 14, 1828, but pronounced
the work unplayable and instead presented "The Little."
The performance, a memorial to Schubert shortly after his death, left
many Viennese concertgoers stunned at the quality of Schubert's symphonic
writing, which had gone completely unnoticed while he was alive.
As Vienna was becoming increasingly fond of Rossini and his Italian
counterparts, many Viennese composers began composing works "in the Italian
style," to keep up with demand and compete for their own place in the
concert hall.
Both of Schubert's Overtures in the Italian Style are deservedly
popular.
Both have lyric Adagio introductions followed by lively
Allegros, and are fine examples of Schubert's versatility in style
and form.
Nonetheless, Schubert's characteristic talents for writing beautiful
melodies are clearly evident.