Der Hirt auf dem Felsen, song setting by Austrian composer Franz Schubert with text by German poet Wilhelm Müller and German playwright Helmina von Chézy. The song was composed in 1828 barely a month before Schubert’s death at age 31, and it is one of his grandest. Atypically, singer and piano are joined by solo clarinet.
Schubert composed “Der Hirt auf dem Felsen” specifically for the noted soprano Anna Milder-Hauptmann, in appreciation of her artistry and in gratitude for her—ultimately unsuccessful—attempt to get one of his operas staged in Berlin.
“Der Hirt” is longer than most of Schubert’s songs, almost a quarter hour in length. The clarinet begins before the singer, provides numerous interludes between verses, and often picks up phrases from the singer’s music, providing an echolike effect.
In Müller’s first two verses, a shepherd laments the distance between him and his beloved. Next comes Chézy’s two-stanza contribution, a first-person reflection on loneliness and grief. The concluding stanza, another by Müller, celebrates the arrival of spring. Schubert’s music masterfully conveys those evolving feelings: it is languid and generally lower pitched at the start, then dancing and moving higher in pitch toward the song’s exuberant and hopeful conclusion.