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Kommt ein Vogel geflogen

"Kommt ein Vogel geflogen" ("A Bird Comes Flying") is a German-language Volkslied and love song from Lower Austria. While it was passed down orally, probably in dialect, some text first appeared in print in 1807. Six stanzas appeared in a Posse mit Gesang by Karl von Holtei in Berlin in 1824 and made the song popular. In arrangements, it also became a children's song. Siegfried Ochs treated the melody humorously to variations for piano, imitating different styles of classical composers.

History

"Kommt ein Vogel geflogen" was sung and orally transmitted in Lower Austria, probably in dialect. Two stanzas of its text appeared in 1807 in Tyrol dialect, with a melody different from the one that became popular, published by . The song became known by inclusion in a Liederposse, a play with songs entitled Die Wiener in Berlin (The Viennese in Berlin) by Karl von Holtei which premiered in Berlin in 1824. It used the now popular melody with a note in the libretto "in bekannter Weise", which suggests that the melody was already known. Von Holtei probably had heard the song in Vienna.

The melody is similar to the Volkslied "Und die Würzburger Glöckli", which is known only from 1830. In arrangements, the song also became a children's song.

Original text

Von Holtei's Posse mit Gesang of 1824 is written in stylized Austrian dialect. The Prussian author was aware of his limitations, and noted:

It is not known which parts of the text were added by Holtei. The fifth stanza was most likely written by him, because it makes sense only in connection with the plot of the play. The second stanza was often omitted in later editions.

The original text from the 19th century addresses a girlfriend ("Diandl", "Schatzerl"). A boy, speaking in the first person, received a note from a girl carried by a little bird, and requests the bird to return a greeting and a kiss to the distant girl.

Many editions from the 19th century seem to go back to Holtei's tradition.

Children's song

The text was changed from around 1911, addressing the mother instead of a beloved, such as in a singspiel for children Johann Lewalter and :

Melody

Arrangements

Siegfried Ochs wrote variations for piano, S kommt ein Vogel geflogen im Stile bekannter Meister, imitating the style of composers such as Johann Sebastian Bach, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven and Richard Wagner. The humorous variations were also arranged for orchestra.

References

Further reading

  • Otto Erich Deutsch: "Kommt a Vogerl geflogen". Woher und wohin? In: Österreichische Musikzeitschrift, 13 (1958), pp. 253–257.
  • : " 'Kommt a Vogerl geflogen' als slawischer Kinderreigen." In: Jahrbuch für Volksliedforschung, 8 (1951), pp. 224–228, .

External links