Widmung

by Ernst von Dohnányi

Romantic Character Piece Advanced
Composed 1905
Published 1905
Duration 2 min

Instrumentation

Piano

Collections

Musical Terms (3)

  • Winterreigen English
    Op. 13 (1905), ten bagatelles for piano, each with a programmatic title evoking a character at a winter gathering. The set is one of the most charming examples of the character-piece cycle in Hungarian piano music. The individual pieces vary from the tender dedication of the opening Widmung to the comic energy of Marsch der lustigen Brüder and Tolle Gesellschaft, the graceful Valse aimable, the exotic Sphärenmusik, and the quietly touching Morgengrauen (Dawn) and Postludium that close the set. The title alludes to Schubert's song cycle but the mood is social and warmly affectionate rather than tragic.
    These are intimate pieces that reward a chamber-music touch — a clean, singing tone, clear voicing, and rhythmic wit in the dance pieces. Avoid heaviness: the Marsch should be humorous, not martial; the Valse aimable should be genuinely amiable and light. The Widmung and Morgengrauen call for a warm, inner-voiced singing tone. The set can be performed complete as a cycle or individual pieces can be extracted as encores.
  • Brahmsian tradition in Hungarian music English
    Dohnányi represents the strongest line of Brahmsian influence in Hungarian music, contrasting sharply with the folk-music-based nationalism of his contemporaries Bartók and Kodály. While Bartók sought to transform the language of Western art music by immersion in genuine peasant folk music, Dohnányi remained committed to the Austro-German tradition of absolute music — formal rigour, thematic development, harmonic richness — while incorporating a Hungarian flavour through melodic inflection, scale patterns, and rhythmic character rather than direct folk quotation. The result is a body of work that sits squarely in the central European late Romantic tradition but with a distinctly personal and, at its best, Hungarian warmth.
    Understanding Dohnányi as a Brahmsian — not as a Hungarian nationalist in the Bartók mould — changes the interpretive approach entirely. The formal structures are clear and need to be heard as such: sonata-form expositions should establish their two themes clearly, developments should feel genuinely developmental, and recapitulations should carry the weight of having arrived. The Hungarian flavour is in the melodic character and ornamentation, not in dramatic rhythmic discontinuity. Think of the rhapsodies as concert pieces in the tradition of Brahms's Op. 79, not as Hungarian folk fantasies.
  • Dohnányi's piano style English
    Ernst von Dohnányi was one of the supreme pianist-composers of the early 20th century, the heir to a tradition running from Beethoven through Brahms and Clara Schumann. His piano writing combines Brahmsian harmonic richness and structural weight with a personal singing tone and a gift for brilliance that reflects his years on the concert stage. Unlike Liszt's operatic display or Debussy's impressionistic colour, Dohnányi's piano music is fundamentally absolute — built on clearly argued musical discourse, thorough motivic development, and a deeply lyrical melodic gift. He was a devoted teacher at the Budapest Academy (where his pupils included Géza Anda and Annie Fischer) and his 1929 Essential Finger Exercises remain standard practice material.
    Dohnányi's music rewards Brahmsian piano technique: a full, singing tone produced by arm weight through the fingers rather than percussive attack. The passagework — scales, arpeggios, double thirds — should be clean and expressive, not merely mechanical. In the lyrical writing, let the melodic line sing over the accompaniment with a cantabile warmth that reflects his post-Romantic temperament. Avoid excessive rubato: Dohnányi was known as a pianist of great clarity and architectural command, and the formal structures should be felt even in the most expressive passages.

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