Clara Wieck-Schumann (1819–1896), who married Robert Schumann in 1840, was a fascinating artistic figure – both as a pianist and as a composer. While her legendary virtuosity has faded away for ever, her works still live. Clara already began composing when she was a child: her opus 1 (of a total of 23 opera) was published when she was a mere 11 years old. This volume contains a selection of some of her most valuable compositions for piano, including a very worthwhile, hitherto unpublished “Romance”.
Content/Details
- Level of difficulty (Explanation)
- Other titles with this level of difficulty
- Quatre Pièces caractéristiques op. 5
- Soirées musicales (no. 1, 2, 4, 5) op. 6
Youtube
Preface
This collection is intended to present a representative cross-section of the piano compositions of Clara Wieck-Schumann. Separate pieces gathered under a single opus number have been kept in their original context. The only exception to this rule is the six Soirées musicales op. 6, of which only four have been included, among them nos. 2 and 5 which were quoted by Robert … more
Critical Commentary
About the composer

Clara Wieck-Schumann
She was an outstanding pianist and composer whose work was in no way inferior to that of her male contemporaries. Until 1840 she primarily composed virtuosic pieces for her own concert use; after that time came numerous songs, chamber music with piano, arrangements, and cadenzas for concerti by Beethoven and Mozart.
1819 | Born in Leipzig on September 13, the daughter of the piano pedagogue Friedrich Wieck, from whom she received piano instruction from an early age. After her parents’ divorce in 1824, she remains with her father. |
1828 | Concert debut in Leipzig; composition studies with Weinlig, Dorn, and Dehn. First piano soiree in 1830. |
from 1831 | Publication of the Quatre Polonaises, Op. 1, and of other virtuosic piano pieces for her own use. |
from 1832 | Tours with her father to Paris and other cities. Studies in theory and composition with Reissiger in Dresden. |
1835 | Valses romantiques, Op. 4, after the example of Carl Maria von Weber. Premiere by Mendelssohn of her Piano Concerto, Op. 7. |
1838 | Appointed imperial and royal chamber virtuoso in Vienna, in gratitude for which she composes “Souvenir de Vienne,” Op. 9. |
1840 | Marriage to Robert Schumann. |
1841 | Many songs, some together with Robert, are published (Op. 12). Piano Sonata in G minor (1841/42) |
1844 | Concert tour to Russia. |
1844/45 | Moves to Dresden. |
1846 | Piano Trio in G minor, Op. 17, uses polyphonic compositional techniques. |
1850 | Relocation to Düsseldorf. |
1853 | Final compositions. |
1856 | Death of Robert. Numerous tours until 1891. |
1878 | Piano instructor at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt am Main. |
1881–93 | Editor of Robert Schumann’s oeuvre (with Brahms and others). |
1891 | Final public performance, conclusion of her teaching career. |
1896 | Death in Frankfurt am Main on May 20. |