The
art
song became its own special category of vocal music -
separate from folk song, operatic aria, and popular song. It was very
lyrical. Composers made great strides during this time period to closely
associate the text or words of a piece with its musical counterpart.
Melody
The art song was
poetic in nature, and its tones were more lyrical than the dramatic tones of
an opera. An art song would turn written poetry into something tangible that
could be emotionalized through its music. Its goal was to turn specific
words or phrases into a musical scene.
Accompaniment
The piano
helped to add more emotion into the Romantic art song. The accompaniment
enhanced the mood and meaning of the text by harmonic, rhythmic, and melodic
material independent of the voice part. It also provided harmonic and
melodic support to the voice. It also served to punctuate the poetic form by
interludes between stanzas and lines of the poem.
Form
Poetic structure is
responsible for the musical form of a song. Two basic forms are
through-composed
form and
strophic
form. Through-composed form is different for each stanza and the music
closely follows changing ideas and moods in the poem. In strophic form, each
stanza of the poem is set to the same music, whereas modified strophic form
involves consecutive stanzas playing modified versions of the same music.
There are other musical forms that are partly strophic, where some stanzas
have the same music, while others have different music.
Song Cycle
The song cycle
is a group of poems by one poet set to music by a composer. The song cycle
has a central idea or mood.