Of all the one-hit wonders in classical music, Max Bruch is perhaps one of the most unjustly stereotyped. Dogged by the monumental, inescapable success of his First Violin Concerto, Bruch spent much of his career composing a wealth of gorgeous, masterfully crafted music that he felt, with some justification, was unfairly ignored. He was a composer of profound melodic gifts, a staunch defender of Romantic tradition in an age rushing toward modernism. And while he could be famously cantankerous about his lot in life—once griping that he had to hear his own G-minor concerto "till I was sick of it"—his passion for beautiful, lyrical expression never waned. The gorgeous Canzone, Op. 55, for cello and orchestra, is a perfect case in point.
The work was composed in 1891, a period of creative richness for Bruch. He had recently completed his popular Scottish Fantasy and was still basking in the success of his beloved Kol Nidrei, another celebrated work for cello and orchestra. For the Canzone, Bruch turned to the same esteemed cellist who had premiered Kol Nidrei: Robert Hausmann. Hausmann was a titan of the cello, a member of the legendary Joachim Quartet and the man for whom Johannes Brahms would later write his "Double" Concerto. This connection to Brahms provides a rather amusing, if slightly unfortunate, anecdote.
Bruch, for all his talent, lived perpetually in the shadow of Brahms. He admired and, to a certain degree, envied his contemporary’s staggering success. After Brahms died in 1897, the conductor of the Breslau orchestra programmed a memorial concert featuring one of Brahms’s major works. Bruch, who was the honorary president of the concert society, was incensed. He furiously wrote to the conductor, insisting that his own cantata, Gesang der Parzen—which happened to be set to the same Goethe text as Brahms's famous choral work—was a far more fitting tribute. "So in Breslau... they are throwing me on the scrap heap," he fumed. The conductor politely disagreed, and the concert went on as planned, with Brahms’s music. This episode, while revealing Bruch’s prickly personality, also underscores the immense pressure he felt. It is in more intimate, lyrical works like the Canzone that we hear Bruch escape from such worldly frustrations and simply indulge his genius for melody.
The title, Canzone (Italian for "song"), perfectly encapsulates the work's spirit. It is, from beginning to end, a sustained song for the cello. Inspired by a now-lost Celtic folk melody, the piece is a single movement of heartfelt, unabashed lyricism. Bruch dispenses with flashy virtuosic display, instead asking the soloist to be a poet, a singer spinning a tale of gentle melancholy and nostalgic beauty.
The work opens with a brief orchestral introduction, setting a tender, almost reverent atmosphere before the cello enters with the main theme. This melody is pure Bruch: spacious, noble, and imbued with a deep, sighing Romanticism. The orchestration is a model of transparency and taste. Bruch expertly uses the woodwinds, particularly the clarinets and flutes, to echo and support the cello's voice, creating a warm, luminous halo of sound around the soloist. The orchestra never overwhelms; it is a sensitive partner in this intimate conversation.
The form is simple, following a broad ABA structure. The central section offers a brief, gentle increase in emotional temperature, the cello’s line soaring into its upper register with a touch more urgency. But the prevailing mood is one of tranquil reflection. The piece winds down to a serene conclusion, with the cello revisiting the opening theme, now hushed and contemplative, before ascending to a final, ethereal harmonic.
The Canzone is a musical gem, a work that reminds us that Max Bruch was far more than the composer of a single concerto. It is a moment of pure, lyrical introspection—a quiet song in a noisy world, and a testament to a composer whose greatest gift was, quite simply, beauty.