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Fröhlich: String Quartets

ÜBER allen Gipfeln ist Ruh [Lieder vo...

Friedrich Theodor Fröhlich: Romantisc...

HEIMAT - Friedrich Theodor Fröhlich: ...

Hyperions Schicksalslied

Fröhlich: Complete String Quartets

Fröhlich: String Quartets

Friedrich Theodor Fröhlich: Christmas...

Wonne der Einsamkeit

Fröhlich: Complete String Quartets

Biography

Shortly after he took his own life at the young age of 33, Friedrich Theodor Fröhlich and his work began to be understood and appreciated at the depth that the frustrated musician had once hoped for; his tune Wem Gott will rechte Gunst erweisen became a well-known folk song, and he was eventually praised as one of the finest Swiss Romantics. Although he did compose several orchestral, chamber, and piano works, his most numerous were pieces for voice, of which his choral tunes were outnumbered by those for solo voice. In many of his Lieder, like Robert Schumann, Fröhlich drew upon the texts of J. Kerner, F. Rückert and W. Müller. Trained as a lawyer, Fröhlich studied music seriously in Berlin with the composer and conductor Bernhard Klein and C.F. Zelter (one of Mendelssohn's teachers) in 1826, with the monetary support of the government of Aarau. Despite having a few of his compositions published shortly thereafter and having gained appointments at Singakademie and the Aarau cantonal school and teachers' college, lack of connection with and acceptance by close musical circles pushed him toward suicide, leaving his wife of four years, Ida von Klitzing, a widow in 1836. His piano music was published the following year by Walter Frey and Willi Schuh in Zurich. M. Shirai can be heard performing Fröhlich's Rückkehr in dir Heimat on a 1994 Capriccio recording.