Romantic classical music: the best pieces inspired by love

Planning a Valentine's dinner with your loved one? Here are our favourite pieces of romantic classical music that will set the mood

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Published: February 2, 2024 at 2:46 pm

You’ve lit the candles, have the champagne ready and the oysters are on ice. Now all it needs is a little classical music to make your Valentine's Day supper just perfect. May we, then, suggest the following pieces of romantic classical music to accompany your love-filled evening…?

Best romantic classical music inspired by love

Price: Adoration

Given the prejudice that she encountered throughout her career, on account of both her race and her gender, one can assume that the American composer Florence Price was made of tough, gritty stuff. Despite this, her music regularly displays an abundance of joie-de-vivre, charm and warmth. Written in 1951, two years before her death, her Adoration implies a loving fondness built up through the years rather than the full fire of youthful passion. Though Price wrote the four-minute work for solo stringed instrument and piano, there are lovely arrangements for string ensemble and for organ.

We named Florence Price one of the best female composers ever and one of the greatest black composers of all time.

Wagner: ‘Träume’ from Wesendonck Lieder

In 1849 Wagner and his wife Minna fled Germany to stay with his patron Otto Wesendonck and his wife Mathilde. Although he later denied it, Wagner and Mathilde appear to have fallen deeply in love, causing a 10-year separation between Wagner and his wife.

Wesendonck Lieder, songs written to the words of five poems by Mathilde are some of his most beautiful compositions, and he himself said ‘I have done nothing better than these songs.’ My favourite of these songs is 'Träume', because it floors me every time.

Elgar: Salut d’amour

Musical expressions of love don’t have to be long, grandiloquent affairs. Elgar’s Salut d’amour does the trick in just two-and-a-half minutes. We know from various cryptic messages left on his manuscripts that Elgar could be a soppy old soul, and this touchingly simple work for violin and piano was given by the composer to Alice, his wife to be, as an engagement present in September 1888 – ‘Carice’, the dedicatee at the top of the score, is a conflation of her two first names, Caroline and Alice. Romantic classical music at its soppiest.

Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet

The most famous love story of all has inspired many a composer, from Berlioz and Gounod to Prokofiev and, in the guise of West Side Story, Bernstein. Sure the most lushly romantic take on the Bard, however, has to be Tchaikovsky’s fantasy-overture of 1886. Though the work’s 20-or-so minutes include flashing swords and, of course, a mournful finale, by far its best known moment is the gloriously sweeping love theme at its heart, a staple of film scores and TV adverts over the years.

Wagner: Tristan und Isolde: Prelude und Liebestod

If you and your beloved are planning a really, really long Valentine’s Day dinner – around four hours or so – then playing the whole of Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde should have the music pretty much covered. Alternatively, there’s the Prelude und Liebestod, which distils the sumptuousness of Wagner’s 1865 opera into around 20 minutes or so. Opening with the famous ‘Tristan chord’, this is a wonderful wallow in the rich orchestral sound that depicts the infatuation of the two title characters, incurred by drinking a love potion. Perfect with a glass or several of heady red. A sumptuous piece of romantic music to pop on in the background of any Valentine's dinner.

Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 2

Thanks in part to Brief Encounter, Rachmaninov’s Second Piano Concerto will forever inevitably be associated with romance – the work can be heard through much of David Lean’s 1945 film, as Laura Jesson (Celia Howard) and Alec Harvey (Trevor Howard) meet by chance at Carnforth Station and begin a friendship that forever teeters on the brink of full-blown romance.

OK, so he’s pompous and she’s drippy, but we still find ourselves urging them to get together. In particular, it’s the work’s dreamy central Adagio sostenuto that really pulls at the heart strings, both on screen and in the concert hall.

Scriabin: Poem of Ecstasy

Where Laura Jesson and Alec Harvey fear to venture, Scriabin goes in headlong in his Poem of Ecstasy. With its orchestral climaxes – screaming trumpets and all – and score markings including ‘very perfumed’, ‘with a feeling of growing intoxication’ and ‘with a sensual pleasure becoming more and more ecstatic’, it’s not too tricky to guess what the Russian composer was getting at in the symphonic poem he initially titled ‘Orgiastic Poem’. One for the end of the evening, we think.

Franck: Piano Quintet

When Franck composed the Piano Quintet he was 57 and had been a professor at the Paris Conservatoire for some years. He developed strong feelings for his organ and composition student, Augusta Holmès.

However, he had competition from many others who had fallen in love with her, including Saint-Saëns, who had proposed to her several times. Franck was married, so couldn’t act on his feelings, so instead poured his emotions into the Piano Quintet, a work dedicated to Saint-Saëns.

Fauré: ‘L’hiver a cessé’ from La Bonne Chanson

The overarching theme of these choices seems to that composers cannot seem to be faithful! Fauré spent the summer with the banker Sigismond Bardac and his wife Emma, a soprano. Fauré fell completely in love with her, despite the fact that she went on to marry Debussy. Emma worked closely with Fauré, singing new material for him each day. He dedicated this set of songs to her.

Mahler: Adagietto from Symphony No. 5

This was famously written as a declaration of love to Alma, who Mahler would soon marry. She was excellent at getting married – and also consequently pretty good at having affairs. However, this piece was composed at the beginning of their relationship before the affairs began.

The conductor Willem Mengelberg, a close friend, annotated in his score of the Fifth Symphony: ‘This Adagietto was a declaration of love to Alma! In place of a letter, he sent her this in manuscript form, not adding a further word.’

Brahms: Intermezzo Op. 118 No. 2

The whole Brahms/Clara Schumann did-he-didn’t-he thing will probably never definitely be answered, but there’s no question there was a lot of love and respect between them. Brahms’s Six Pieces Op. 118 were dedicated to Clara and this Intermezzo in A is one of the most beautiful pieces in the set.

‘My Beloved Clara, I wish I could write to you as tenderly as I love you and tell you all the good things that I wish you. You are so infinitely dear to me, dearer than I can say. I should like to spend the whole day calling you endearing names and paying you compliments without ever being satisfied.’

Listen to Fenella Humphreys's romantic choices here:

Janáček: String Quartet No. 2, ‘Intimate Letters’

Janáček’s Second String Quartet was written towards the end of his life, and in it he reflects on his long friendship with Kamila Stösslová, married and 38 years younger than him. They exchanged over 700 letters during their friendship, and it is these which give the work its title.

‘You stand behind every note, you, living, forceful, loving. The fragrance of your body, the glow of your kisses – no, really of mine. Those notes of mine kiss all of you. They call for you passionately…’

Berlioz: Un Bal (A Ball) from Symphonie Fantastique

When he was 24, Berlioz went to a performance of Hamlet, where he fell distractedly in love with the actress Harriett Smithson. He sent her love letters which she ignored. At a further attempt to capture her attention, Berlioz poured his broken heart into Symphonie Fantastique.

She later listened to the piece, realised he was rather talented, and married him the following year. Unfortunately, they probably should have left their relationship within the brilliant symphony because the marriage became increasingly miserable and they eventually separated.

Read more about the love story behind Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique here.

We named the best recordings of Symphonie fantastique here.

Schumann: Kreisleriana

Kreisleriana was written incredibly in only four days in 1838 as a dedication to his wife Clara. At this point in their relationship she had accepted his offer of marriage and they were in the process of fighting her father who was opposed to them. Eventually they took him to court, the judge ruled in their favour, and the happy couple married the day before Clara’s 21st birthday.

In the end, Schumann dedicated Kreisleriana to Chopin who apparently commented favourably only on the design of the title page…

Benjamin Britten: Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo

Britten’s first full song cycle for his partner, the tenor Peter Pears, written as a love letter to him. A tribute of romantic music from one lover to another.

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