By Rebecca Franks

Published: Monday, 05 February 2024 at 16:07 PM


Eyes meet, sparks fly – and the music plays. Lean into the tragedy: we’re here to explore the many phases of love in classical music. Whether it’s those painful stories of unrequited love, the pains of early lust or the beauty of long-term partnership, here are some of the best stories of composers writing love into their music.

From the troubadours who wandered France in the 12th and 13th centuries singing about courtly love to the starry instrumentalists recording love-themed recital albums in our time, from Arne’s comic ballad opera Love in a Village (a hit in its day) to Zemlinsky’s breakup orchestral work Die Seejungfrau, love has, one way or another, been one of the universal, timeless themes explored in western classical music.

Why is classical music so obsessed with love and romance?

Opera almost wouldn’t exist were it not for people falling in love with the wrong characters or for insatiable passion that drives them to extreme ends. Safe to say that in art as in life, love truly is all around.

We’re not talking about the love of friends, family or even nature – although there are plenty of pieces that explore those too – but romantic love, whether that’s the big, swept-off-your-feet kind or something quieter but no less strong. The sort of love that propels the dramas of Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo (which could be the first opera ever written) or Verdi’s La traviata (which we named as one of the best operas for beginners).

Or the love that’s spurred countless songs, from the amusing to the heartfelt: try Britten’s ‘Tell Me the Truth about Love’, or Poldowski’s ‘To Love’ or Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s Southern Love Songs. Perhaps it’s the kind immortalised in musical miniatures such as Liszt’s Liebesträum No. 3 (Love’s Dream) and Kreisler’s Liebesfreud (Love’s Joy). Or that turned into allegory by Palestrina in his Canticum Canticorum motets, expressing the pleasures of earthly love via ‘the divine love of Christ and his spouse, the Soul’.

Nearly every composer has something to say about the subject, not least because they so often turned their own turbulent love lives into music. No wonder there’s music that speaks to every step of a romantic relationship.

The agonising first flushes of a crush

‘Since first seeing him, I think I am blind, Wherever I look, Him only I see,’ sings the narrator of Schumann’s Frauenliebe- und Leben, a sentiment anyone who has ever had a crush will recognise (even if this 19th-century song-cycle goes on to present a decidedly patriarchal view of a woman’s loves and life).

That first flush of romance is fertile ground for composers. Think Rodolfo and Mimì in the chilly garret in Puccini’s La bohème. The poet and seamstress promptly fall in love, expressing their feelings in the rapturous duet ‘O soave fanciulla’ that closes the first act, ending with a repeated word, ‘amor’.

Or how about the most famous western tale of all-consuming love: Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet Overture-Fantasy embeds a gorgeous love theme in music of fiery tragedy. Prokofiev went one step further, writing an entire ballet in 1935. Glinting flutes and harp over a soft bed of muted strings set the dreamy mood of the ‘Balcony Scene’, blossoming into music full of wonder. It leads to a beautiful ‘Love Dance’ with soaring strings, swelling brass and harp glissandos that ends with their first kiss.