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An die Musik : ウィキペディア英語版 | An die Musik
Franz Schubert composed his lied "An die Musik" (German for "To Music") in March 1817 for solo voice and piano, with text from a poem by his friend Franz von Schober. In the Deutsch catalog of Schubert's works it is number 547, or D547. The original key is D major.〔Reed, ''Schubert Song Companion, p. 36〕 It was published in 1827 as Opus 88 No. 4 by Weigl. Schubert dedicated the song to the Viennese piano virtuoso Albert Sowinsky on April 24, 1827, a decade after he composed it.〔Fischer-Dieskau, p. 246〕 A hymn to the art of music, it is one of the best-known songs by Schubert. Its greatness and popularity are generally attributed to its harmonic simplicity, sweeping melody, and a strong bass line that effectively underpins the vocal line.〔Reed, ''Schubert Song Companion, p. 37〕 ==Text==
The poem was not included in the collected editions of Schober's poems, but there is a handwritten copy of it in Vienna.〔 It resembles the second canto of Ernst Schulze's poem ''Die bezauberte Rose'' (The Enchanted Rose), a poem also known to Schubert as a possible basis for an opera; however, it was published in 1818, so it is unlikely that there was any connection between them for the composer.〔
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