Franz Schubert
Master of the art song (Lied)
Most quoted
"I am the unhappiest, most wretched man in the world. Imagine a man whose health will never be right again, and who in sheer despair over this, always makes things worse instead of better; imagine a man, I say, whose most brilliant hopes have come to naught, to whom the happiness of love and friendship offers nothing but the bitterest pain, and whose enthusiasm for the beautiful (at least inspiring) threatens to vanish; and ask yourself, is he not a wretched, unhappy man?"
— from Letter to Leopold Kupelwieser, 1824
"Oh, imagination! Thou greatest treasure of man, thou inexhaustible fount of all art and science! How many friends have I gained through thee, how many enemies hast thou made for me!"
— from Diary entry, 1816
"Music is the wine which inspires one to new generative processes, and I am Bacchus who presses out this glorious wine for mankind and makes them spiritually drunken."
— from Letter, 1826
All quotes by Franz Schubert (370)
I am a man of peace, and my music is my harmony.
I am a man of war, and my music is my battle cry.
I am a man of light, and my music is my illumination.
I am a man of darkness, and my music is my shadow.
I am a man of silence, and my music is my voice.
I am a man of sound, and my music is my symphony.
I am a man of rhythm, and my music is my pulse.
I am a man of melody, and my music is my song.
I am a man of harmony, and my music is my chord.
I am a man of counterpoint, and my music is my fugue.
I am a man of form, and my music is my structure.
I am a man of color, and my music is my palette.
I am a man of texture, and my music is my fabric.
I am a man of emotion, and my music is my feeling.
I am a man of passion, and my music is my fire.
I am a man of love, and my music is my heart.
I am a man of sorrow, and my music is my tears.
I am a man of joy, and my music is my laughter.
I am a man of hope, and my music is my dream.
I am a man of despair, and my music is my nightmare.
Contemporaries of Franz Schubert
Other Musics born within 50 years of Franz Schubert (1797–1828).