The rose, occupying a unique place in the cultural code of the West and the East, has inspired composers and musicians for centuries. Its image in music is polyphonic: it is a symbol of love, passion, and beauty, a symbol of the fleetingness of life, sorrow, and loss (rosa alba, the fading rose), and a religious symbol (Rosary, the rose as an attribute of the Virgin Mary). Tracing the evolution of "rose" works, one can observe the change of musical epochs and styles — from baroque opera to heavy metal.
"Rosamunde" by Franz Schubert. The music for the eponymous play (1823) contains one of the most famous instrumental fragments in history — "Ballet Music No. 2" (often simply called "Music from 'Rosamunde'"). The gentle, lyrical melody became Schubert's calling card, although it does not directly mention the rose — the name of the heroine translates as "rose of the world."
"Der Rose Pilgerfahrt" ("The Journey of the Rose"), op. 112 by Robert Schumann (1851). A large-scale vocal-symphonic poem on the text of Moritz Horne. This allegorical story about a rose turned into a girl by a fairy who passes through human life, love, death, and returns to the heavenly garden. The work reflects the romantic idea of the deification of nature.
The opera "Carmen" by Georges Bizet (1875). Here, the rose is a key dramatic symbol. In the tarot scene, the card "Queen of Spades" predicts death, followed by "The Rose... Ah, yes! Love!" ("La rose... Ah! oui, l'amour!"). The flower becomes a harbinger of a fatal, deadly passion. Later, in the famous "Flower aria" ("La fleur que tu m'avais jetée"), José sings about the fading rose thrown at him by Carmen, which preserved its aroma in the prison as a symbol of unextinguishable memory of love.
The ballet "The Sleeping Beauty" by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1889). The fairy of the Sirens gives the princess Aurora (whose name comes from the Latin aureus — "golden," but associated with the flower) the magic of beauty, like that of the rose. The climax is the famous waltz "The Rose" from the first scene of Act I — elegant, blooming, becoming one of the most recognizable waltzes in world music.
"The Red Rose" by Robert Schumann on the verses of Robert Burns (in the cycle "Mirtles," 1840). A vivid example of a romantic miniature, where the rose is the embodiment of passion: "Red, like a rose, a crimson rose" ("Mein rothes Röslein").
Russian romance. The image of the rose is widely represented in urban and gypsy romance ("Only once in life there are meetings...", "A long road..." — "Those were the days"). Here, the rose often symbolizes lost, fleeting love and nostalgia.
"Roses of Picardy" (1916) — an English song from the time of World War I, which became the unofficial anthem of British soldiers. The rose here is a symbol of peaceful life, loved ones left at home, and hope for return. This is an example where the flower becomes a national emotional anchor.
Interesting fact: Composer Antonín Dvořák wrote a cycle of "Ten Biblical Songs" (1894). Song No. 7, "At the Rivers of Babylon," contains the line "The roses turned into thorns" — a powerful biblical image used to express deep sorrow and decline.
In the 20th century, the rose gained new, often contradictory meanings.
"La Vie en rose" (1945) by Édith Piaf. A love anthem that needs no introduction, seen through rose-colored glasses. The rose here is not a specific flower, but a metaphor for the rosy light that colors the world when seeing a loved one.
"The Rose" (1979) by Bette Midler. The soundtrack to the eponymous film, a song-parable. The rose is a symbol of a fragile, beautiful heart capable of loving despite fear and pain. The line "Just remember in the winter / Far beneath the bitter snows / Lies the seed that with the sun's love / In the spring becomes the rose" is a powerful metaphor for hope and rebirth.
The band "Guns N' Roses". The name itself, combining weapons and a flower, became a cultural code of the era. This is a symbiosis of aggression, rebellion ("guns") and vulnerability, beauty, and love ("roses"). Their ballad "November Rain" (with a clip where guitarist Slash plays a solo in front of a church covered with roses) and the epic "Don't Cry" cemented the rose as a symbol of romantic, but doomed glamour of hard rock in the 80s and 90s.
"Kino" — "Star by the Name of the Sun" (1989). Although the rose is not mentioned directly, the line "White snow, gray ice / On the cracked earth. / With a patchwork quilt on it / The city in the road loop" contrasts with the final: "Star by the Name of the Sun." In the cultural context, this "star" is often associated with the red rose as a symbol of fragile, but burning hope and love that remains in the cold world. This is an interpretation, but it has firmly entered the perception of the song.
Composer John Cage wrote the piece "4'33""", but also created the cycle "Europeans," where quotes, including those related to roses, are used within his philosophy of chance.
In flamenco, there is a style (palo) "Rosario," dedicated to the Virgin Mary Rosary, where the guitar and singing imitate prayer beads, each bead being a rose.
Music compositions related to roses form a continuous "rose line" in the history of culture. From Schumann's mystical allegory and Bize's tragic emblem to Midler's metaphor of conquering love and Guns N' Roses' emblem of rebellious glamour — the rose demonstrates its amazing adaptability as a symbol.
It is capable of expressing:
Pure lyricism (romances, Tchaikovsky's waltz).
Tragic fatalism ("Carmen").
Socio-historical nostalgia ("Roses of Picardy").
Pop-culture mythology (80s ballads).
This evolution shows that great symbols do not become outdated. They merely change their clothing in new sound clothes, from harpsichord to electric guitar, continuing to speak to man in the language of eternal themes: love, death, hope, and memory. The rose in music is not just a flower, but a universal semiotic tool with which composers encode the most complex human emotions, making the abstract tangible and the ephemeral eternal, as art.
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