Many
folk and
popular songs are strophic in form, including the
twelve-bar blues,
ballads,
hymns and chants. Examples include "
Barbara Allen", "
Erie Canal", "
Michael, Row the Boat Ashore", and "
Oh! Susanna" (A = verse & chorus). Traditional and modern Country songs like "
This land is your land" is also a strophic form. Many
classical art songs are also composed in strophic form, from the 17th century French
air de cour to 19th century German
lieder and beyond.
Haydn used the strophic variation form in many of his string quartets and a few of his symphonies, employed almost always in the slow second movement.
Franz Schubert composed many important strophic lieder, including settings of both narrative poems and simpler, folk-like texts, such as his "
Heidenröslein" and "Der Fischer". Several of the songs in his
song cycle Die schöne Müllerin use strophic form. ==See also==