"Muss i denn"
Song
LanguageSwabian German
Published1827
GenreFolk song
Songwriter(s)Friedrich Silcher

"Muss i denn" (German for "must I, then") is a German folk-style song in the Swabian German dialect that has passed into tradition. The present form dates back to 1827, when it was written and made public by Friedrich Silcher.[1]

The melody and some verses of this song became widely known through Elvis Presley's adaptation "Wooden Heart" in 1960, as well as Joe Dowell's version in 1961, becoming one of the most widely known German songs ever.[2]

History

"Muss i denn" is about a man – originally a journeyman embarking to his traditional "Wanderjahr" journey – who has to leave the woman he loves and vows to remain faithful until he is back to marry her. It first appeared on page sixteen of Friedrich Silcher's collection of popular songs, Volkslieder, gesammelt und für vier Männerstimmen gesetzt, Opus 8, Nr. 12 (folk songs, collected and set for four male voices). The origin of the song, however, is obscure and the original text was not recorded. Silcher mentioned to Ludwig Uhland that the melody was "an old melody from Württemberg".[1]

The song became famous beginning in the mid-19th century. It soon was especially well-liked among the German military as well as among excursion groups and thus was early on considered a patriotic song. It also became popular among German merchant seamen as a capstan shanty, and has been played as a naval quick march since the days of the Imperial German Navy. An early English translation titled "Must I, then? Must I, then? From the town must I, then?" was made by Henry William Dulcken in 1856.[3]

Some "Muss i denn" versions were widely popularized in the 20th century; those interpreted by German-American actress Marlene Dietrich[4] and by French singer Mireille Mathieu and Greek singer Nana Mouskouri deserve mention.[5] The latter also sings English words (though not a translation) to the tune, under the title "There's a Time".

Lyrics

Melody

The melody as given in Silcher's publication is as follows:[2]


\new Staff
<<
  \new Voice \relative c' {
    \autoBeamOff
    \language "deutsch"
    \tempo "Moderato"
    \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"clarinet"
    \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t
    \tempo 4 = 60
    \key a \major
    \time 2/4 \partial 8
      a'16 h cis8 cis16 e d8 d16 [( fis )] e8 e16 d cis4
      e8\p e16 d cis8 cis16\mf [( e )] d8 d h e cis4 r8
      a16 h cis8 cis16 e d8 d16 fis e8 e16 [(d)] cis4
      e8\p e16 [(d)] cis8 cis16\mf e d8 d h e cis4 r8
    \repeat volta 2 {
      a16 cis h8. cis16 d8 h cis8. d16 e8
      e16 e fis8 fis\< a\! gis16\> [( fis )]\! e4 r8
      a,16 cis e8 e16 fis e8 e16 a
      e8 e16 [( d )] cis4 e8\p e16 [( d )] cis8 cis16\mf e
      d8 d h e cis4 r8
    }
  }

  \addlyrics {
    Muss i denn, muss i denn
    zum Stä -- dte -- le naus,
    Stä -- dte -- le naus,
    und du, mein Schatz, bleibst hier?
    \set ignoreMelismata = ##t
    Wenn i komm, wenn i komm,
    wenn i wie -- drum komm, _ wie -- drum komm, _
    kehr i ein mein Schatz, bei dir.
    Kann i glei' net all -- weil bei dir seyn,
    han i doch mein Freud' an _ dir.
    Wenn i komm, wenn i komm,
    wenn i wie -- drum _ komm, wie -- drum _ komm,
    kehr i ein mein Schatz bei dir.
  }
>>

Bibliography

  • Tobias Widmaier: "Von Silcher zu Elvis. Metamorphosen eines schwäbischen 'Volksliedes'". In: Vom Minnesang zur Popakademie. Musikkultur in Baden-Württemberg. Katalog zur Großen Landesaustellung Baden-Württemberg 2010, edited by the Badischen Landesmuseum Karlsruhe. Karlsruhe 2010, pp. 347–50.
  • August Holder: "'Muss i denn, muss i denn zum Städtele naus'. Ein schwäbischer Beitrag zur Naturgeschichte der Volksliederdichtung". In: Alemannia 19 (1892), pp. 144–148.

References

  1. 1 2 August Bopp, Friedrich Silcher, 1916
  2. 1 2 "Muss i denn, muss i denn zum Städtele naus" by Tobias Widmaier (2010)] in: Populäre und traditionelle Lieder. Historisch-kritisches Liederlexikon des Deutschen Volksliedarchivs
  3. Works by Henry William Dulcken at Project Gutenberg
  4. "Muss i denn" version by Marlene Dietrich on YouTube
  5. Nana Mouskouri: "Muss i denn" on YouTube
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