lied

lied
lied1
/luyd/, v.
pt. and pp. of lie1.
lied2
/leed/; Ger. /leet/, n., pl. lieder /lee"deuhr/; Ger. /lee"deuhrdd/.
a typically 19th-century German art song characterized by the setting of a poetic text in either strophic or through-composed style and the treatment of the piano and voice in equal artistic partnership: Schubert lieder.
[1850-55; < G]

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German song, particularly an art song for voice and piano of the late 18th or the 19th century.

The Romantic movement fostered serious popular poetry by poets such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Composers often set such poetry to folk-influenced music, but the lied could also be highly sophisticated and even experimental. At first generally performed at private social gatherings, it eventually moved into the concert-hall repertoire. The most influential and prolific lied composer was Franz Schubert, who wrote more than 600; Robert Schumann, Felix Mendelssohn, Johannes Brahms, Hugo Wolf, Gustav Mahler, and Richard Strauss are most prominent in the lied's subsequent history.

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▪ German song
plural  Lieder,  

      any of a number of particular types of German song, as they are referred to in English and French writings. The earliest so-called lieder date from the 12th and 13th centuries and are the works of minnesingers (minnesinger), poets and singers of courtly love (Minne). Many surviving Minnelieder reflect southern German origins and are written in a group of manuscripts of somewhat later date. These songs occur in a number of forms based on poetic models. The lied proper, like many other forms, commonly comprises two sections, the first phrase of music (a) repeated with different words, and the second phrase (B), again with different words aaB. This is the Bar form much favoured by German composers and often expanded in various ways.

      The monophonic (single melodic line) Minnelieder are virile, abounding in small leaps; they are attractively contoured and make use of modal scales (melodic patterns characteristic of medieval and Renaissance music until the advent of the major–minor scale system). Because musical notation of this period is not precise regarding rhythmic values, the rhythmic interpretation of Minnelieder is controversial. Among important minnesingers (some of the lesser nobility) are Walther von der Vogelweide, Tannhäuser, Wolfram von Eschenbach, and Neidhart von Reuenthal, the first three known today through the operas of Richard Wagner.

      The 14th century brought a decline of the monophonic lied and the introduction of polyphonic lieder for two or more voices or voice and instruments. One of the most popular polyphonic lieder is the two-voice “Wach auff myn Hort” (“Awake, my darling”) by Oswald of Wolkenstein (1377–1455).

      The 15th century saw a flowering of polyphonic lieder for as many as four voices singing together. These polyphonic settings, unlike the courtly Minnelieder, are addressed to educated scholars and clergy as well as nobles. Bar form and romantic texts predominate, and through-composed pieces (i.e., devoid of sectional repetition) occur. The tunes are usually sung by the middle part (tenor); often the parts accompanying the tenor are played on instruments. The tenor melody is often a preexistent, familiar one, not a tune newly composed for the polyphonic lied. Franco-Flemish influences appear in the relations among the parts (usually three); sometimes the texture is chordal, otherwise one part may imitate the melody of another voice for part of a phrase. When three parts are present, whether sung or played and sung, the tenor and top part (descant) form a harmonic unity, while the third part (countertenor) skips between and below the other two.

      Polyphonic lieder reached a climax in the mid-16th century with the songs of Ludwig Senfl (Senfl, Ludwig) and his contemporaries. The invention of printing helped disseminate the secular polyphonic lieder, and many of the most popular ones were turned into sacred pieces by simply substituting a new text. Thus lieder became important vehicles for spreading Protestantism. By the late Renaissance (c. 1580), lieder were composed deliberately in an Italian style: textures often chordal, phrases of regular length and well-articulated, melodies in the top part with the words carefully declaimed. Under the influence of the new madrigal (a polyphonic Italian secular form), the old lied tradition decayed.

      The 19th century saw German composers again turning to lied production. Late 18th- and early 19th-century Romanticism gave great impetus to serious popular poetry, and many poems of such masters as Goethe were set by lied composers. Franz Schubert (Schubert, Franz), who composed more than 600 lieder, Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms, and Hugo Wolf are among the finest 19th-century lied composers. Although the verse in lieder often was mediocre, for the Romantics, poetry and music were of equal importance. Romantic lieder are generally for a solo voice with piano accompaniment, which often required a virtuoso technique. The songs were primarily salon music: individual lieder lack the scope of contemporary opera arias, but are more intimate and emotionally refined. Composers often wrote cycles of lieder, all related by a single topic but giving scope for considerable musical development. A lied may be either through-composed or strophic, i.e., repeating the music for each new stanza of the poem. Occasionally lieder are arranged for accompaniment by full orchestra or, in the case of several lied cycles, for chamber ensemble of reduced strings and winds.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • lied — lied …   Dictionnaire des rimes

  • LIED — Voulant définir le lied par une formule lapidaire, Vincent d’Indy le décrit comme «l’expression musicale concise d’un fait ou d’un sentiment». Définition incomplète, en ce qu’elle omet ce qui est l’essence même du lied: condensé homogène de… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • lied — LIED, lieduri, s.n. Compoziţie muzicală (vocală) cu caracter liric, făcută pe textul unei poezii scurte. [pr.: lid] – Din germ. Lied. Trimis de LauraGellner, 23.05.2004. Sursa: DEX 98  LIED s. (muz.) cântec. (Un lied de G. Enescu.) Trimis de… …   Dicționar Român

  • Lied — das; (e)s, er; 1 eine Melodie, die man zusammen mit einem Text singt <ein einstimmiges, mehrstimmiges, lustiges Lied; ein Lied singen, anstimmen, summen, trällern; die Strophen eines Liedes> || K : Liedtext; Liederbuch || K: Kinderlied,… …   Langenscheidt Großwörterbuch Deutsch als Fremdsprache

  • Lied — Sn std. (8. Jh.), mhd. liet, ahd. liod, lioth, as. lioth Stammwort. Aus g. * leuda n. Liedstrophe , Pl. Lied , auch in anord. ljóđ, ae. lēoþ; die Existenz im Gotischen ist aus liuþon lobsingen u.a. zu folgern. Herkunft unklar. Vielleicht gehört… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • Lied — (l[=e]t), n.; pl. {Lieder} (l[=e] d[ e]r). [G.] (Mus.) A lay; a German song. It differs from the French {chanson}, and the Italian {canzone}, all three being national. [1913 Webster] The German Lied is perhaps the most faithful reflection of the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • lied — sb., en, er, erne (solosang med klaverakkompagnement), i sms. lied el. lieder , fx lied(er)aften …   Dansk ordbog

  • Lied — [Basiswortschatz (Rating 1 1500)] Auch: • Song Bsp.: • Ich mag dieses alte Lied. • Kennst du dieses Lied? …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • lied — (n.) German romantic song, 1852, from Ger. Lied, lit. song, from M.H.G. liet, from O.H.G. liod, from P.Gmc. *leuthan (see LAUD (Cf. laud)). Hence Liederkranz, in reference to German singing societies, lit. garland of songs …   Etymology dictionary

  • Lied — Lied, 1) ursprünglich Strophe; ist schon in frühester Zeit 2) Dichtung u. unterschied sich von Leich so, daß das L. aus Strophen einer u. derselben Art, der Leich aus Strophen verschiedener Art gebildet ist. Da die deutsche Dichtung vor dem 12.… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Lied — im weitesten Sinne des Wortes ist jede für den Vortrag (sei es Gesang, sei es Rezitation) bestimmte, mit lyrischen Bestandteilen versehene Dichtung; so entstanden die großen Volksepen der meisten Kulturvölker aus einzelnen Liedern, die von… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

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