Ludwig Christoph Heinrich Hölty
Poet
Ludwig Christoph Heinrich Hölty
1748 - 1776Ludwig Heinrich Christoph Hölty, was German poet who is considered the most gifted lyric poet of the Göttinger Hain, a group of young poets who saw themselves as heirs of the great lyric poet Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock and whose work was characterized by love of nature and the expression of national feeling.
He was influenced by Johann Uz and Friedrich Klopstock, but his love for the Volkslied and his delight in nature preserved him from the artificiality of Uz and the unworldliness of Klopstock. A strain of melancholy runs through all his lyrics. His ballads are the pioneers of the rich ballad literature on English models, which sprang up in Germany over the next few years.
To many, the opening lines of Hölty's poem Der alte Landmann an seinen Sohn ("he Old Farmer to His Son) are the very embodiment of all Prussian virtues. This poem was set to music by Mozart to a melody adapted from the aria Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen from his 1791 opera The Magic Flute. It was played daily by the carillon of the Potsdam Garrison Church where Frederick the Great was initially buried.
Many of Hölty's poems were set to music by composers including Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Mendelssohn, and Brahms. Several streets and schools in Germany are named after him, including the Hölty-Gymnasium in Wunstorf near Hanover; in 2008, the biennial poetry prize Hölty-Preis was created in his name.
Among the many poems set by Schubert are An den Mond (D193 and D468), An die Nachtigall (D196), Blumenlied (D431), Frühlingslied (D243 and D398), Klage (D436), Mailied (D129, D199 and D202), Minnelied (D429), Die Nonne (D208), Seligkeit (D433), Totengräberlied (D38 and D44) and Winterlied (D401).
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Song List
This list is likely to be of songs that have been performed at Oxford International Song Festivals and Oxford Song events, and may not be comprehensive of this composer's compositions. This database is ever growing as a work in progress, with further songs regularly being added.
An den Mond D193 | Franz Schubert |
An den Mond (1816) D468 | Franz Schubert |
An die Apfelbäume, wo ich Julien erblickte (1815) D197 | Franz Schubert |
An die Nachtigall (1868) Op. 46 no.4 | Johannes Brahms |
An die Nachtigall (1815) D196 | Franz Schubert |
Andres Maienlied 'Hexenlied' (1828) Op. 8 no.8 | Felix Mendelssohn |
Auf den Tod einer Nachtigall (1816) D399 | Franz Schubert |
Auf den Tod einer Nachtigall (1815) D201 | Franz Schubert |
Blumenlied (1816) D431 | Franz Schubert |
Das Traumbild (1787) K530 | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart |
Der Liebende (1815) D207 | Franz Schubert |
Die Knabenzeit (1816) D400 | Franz Schubert |
Die Mainacht (1868) Op. 43 no.2 | Johannes Brahms |
Die Mainacht | Fanny Mendelssohn-Hensel |
Erntelied (1816) D434 | Franz Schubert |
Frühlingslied (1816) D398 | Franz Schubert |
Klage an den Mond (1816) D436 | Franz Schubert |
Minnelied (1816) D429 | Franz Schubert |
Minnelied (1877) Op. 71 no.5 | Johannes Brahms |
Seligkeit (1816) D433 | Franz Schubert |
Seligkeit (trans. for guitar by Bernardo Rambeaud) (1816) D433 | Franz Schubert |
Winterlied (1816) D401 | Franz Schubert |