Until 1839, Schumann had published only works for the piano; yet the year before, he had admitted to his fiancée Clara Wieck that the instrument was ?becoming too confining for me.? Then in February 1840 he wrote: ?Since yesterday morning I?ve written nearly 27 pages of music (something new), of which I can say only that I was laughing and crying for joy the whole time ? what bliss it is to be able to write for the voice.?
Having exhausted the piano?s potential, Schumann was now seeking new means of expression. Creativity continued unabated: 1840 became his miraculous ?Year of Song?.
By June he had completed the Liederkreis Op.24 and the cycles Myrthen, the second Liederkreis Op.39 and Dichterliebe; Frauenliebe und -leben followed in July. There were numerous further cycles, all of them modelled on Beethoven?s and Schubert?s examples; often, though, Schumann would impose a sense of unity upon the different poems not through a developing story but through similarity of mood. This is particularly true of the Op.39 Liederkreis. Schumann wrote it immediately after a visit to Clara: it was, he said, ?my most romantic music ever?.