Tag: Twelve-tone music

  • Schoenberg: Beyond the Twelve-Tone Legend

    Schoenberg: Beyond the Twelve-Tone Legend

    Okay, pointy heads! It’s back to school – the Second Viennese School – for the birthday of Arnold Schoenberg.

    The dour high priest of twelve-tone music was full of surprises. I venture to guess that many would be nonplussed to learn that the greatest prophet of dodecaphonic music claimed artistic kinship with Johannes Brahms. But then, some conductors (notably Karajan and Solti) have tried to interpret him that way. Even so, he remains one of the most hated composers among concertgoers who prefer programs of unsullied Beethoven and Dvořák.

    Schoenberg may have preached the death of tonality, but he composed at least three Romantic masterpieces, “Verklärte Nacht” (“Transfigured Night”), “Pelleas und Melisande,” and the opulent oratorio “Gurrelieder,” before venturing into Expressionism with works like his Chamber Symphony No. 1. In the meantime, he also orchestrated his share of Viennese operettas and arranged Strauss waltzes for performance by his friends.

    By the time he came to America, Schoenberg was probably the least “popular” composer in the world (if one of the most influential), but at his new home in Los Angeles his tennis partner was none other than George Gershwin. The two also shared a love of painting.

    Adding to this “beautiful mountain” of contradictions, Schoenberg, like that other titan of 20th century music, Igor Stravinsky, made a game attempt to break into films. He was courted to write music for the 1937 big screen adaptation of Pearl Buck’s “The Good Earth,” but his proposed fee of $50,000 put an end to that.

    Schoenberg did once prophesy that one day “grocer’s boys would whistle serial music on their rounds.” Maybe he actually meant cereal music. While to my knowledge that has yet to pass, I did once catch myself walking down the street humming the Golden Calf music from “Moses und Aron.”

    Happy birthday, Arnold Schoenberg!


    Schoenberg remembers his friend, George Gershwin

    Gershwin films Schoenberg

    Schoenberg home movies (Gershwin appears at the 30-second mark)

    Schoenberg in private

    Schoenberg on Alban Berg

    “Gurrelieder,” Part I (1900-03, 1910)

    Chamber Symphony No. 1 (1909)

    “Pierrot Lunaire” (1912)

    “Variations for Orchestra” (1926-8), conducted by Bruno Maderna

    “Moses und Aron” (1930-32), The Golden Calf

    A kinder, gentler Schoenberg – the Suite for String Orchestra (1935)


    TWELVE IMAGES FOR TWELVE TONES: As this gallery demonstrates, Schoenberg wasn’t always the grim, humorless figure his portraits would suggest (images identified when you click through)

  • Schoenberg Riddle Mystery Enigma

    Schoenberg Riddle Mystery Enigma

    Winston Churchill’s assessment of Russia in 1939 could have just as easily been applied to Arnold Schoenberg. He was a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma – a man cloaked in irony and contradiction.

    For one thing, his very name, “Schoenberg,” translates as “beautiful mountain,” yet those who would characterize his music as such are distinctly in the minority.

    He was the greatest prophet of dodecaphonic music, who claimed an artistic kinship with Johannes Brahms.

    He preached the death of tonality, even as he orchestrated his share of Viennese operettas and arranged Strauss waltzes for performance by his friends.

    He was a Jew, who converted to Lutheranism, but swung back hard to Judaism, in defiance of Hitler, with the rise of the Nazis.

    He was probably the least “popular” composer in the world, but his tennis partner was none other than George Gershwin. The two also shared a love of painting.

    Schoenberg was a triskaidekaphobe, who died on Friday the 13th. It was all right to count to twelve, apparently, but never to thirteen.

    Adding to this beautiful mountain of contradictions, Schoenberg, like that other titan of 20th century music, Igor Stravinsky, wound up living in Hollywood.

    Both men were suspicious of the movies (and each other), yet both were hoping to break into films. Stravinsky wrote cues for “The Song of Bernadette,” “Jane Eyre,” and “The North Star” (ultimately scored by Copland). None of his music was used in the pictures – Stravinsky was too slow and demanded too much money – but some of it was recycled in his concert works.

    Likewise, Schoenberg was courted for a film adaptation of “The Good Earth,” but his proposed $50,000 fee put an end to that.

    Twelve-tone music did eventually make it into the movies, thanks to composers like Leonard Rosenman and David Raksin. Rosenman’s landmark score for “The Cobweb” (1955) is credited as the first predominantly twelve-tone score written for a motion picture. Raksin, the composer of “Laura,” also employed a tone row in the Edgar Allan Poe mystery, “The Man with a Cloak” (1951).

    Interestingly, Schoenberg, the creator of “Pierrot Lunaire” and “Moses und Aaron,” was also a great fan of Hopalong Cassidy. Like Walt Whitman, an admittedly strange comparison, Schoenberg contained multitudes.

    Happy birthday, Arnie!


    “Variations for Orchestra,” conducted by Bruno Maderna

    “Pierrot Lunaire”

    With goats!

    A kinder, gentler Schoenberg – the Suite for String Orchestra, given its premiere in Los Angeles in 1935:

    Stravinsky in Hollywood

    Schoenberg in home movies – on the tennis court, naturally – with Gershwin and others. (Gershwin appears around 2:20.)

    Leonard Rosenman’s “The Cobweb”

  • George Perle: Celebrating a Centennial of Sound

    George Perle: Celebrating a Centennial of Sound

    You might say he was a Perle among American composers.

    Today marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of George Perle. Perle was born on this date in 1915 in Bayonne, NJ, though he grew up on farms in Wisconsin and Indiana.

    Fascinated with music from the time he was a child (he was literally transfixed when he heard his aunt play a Chopin etude), his choice of career was pretty much a given. Perle attended DePaul University and took private lessons with Ernst Krenek. Among his own students was retired Princeton University professor Paul Lansky.

    Perle fell under the spell of twelve-tone masters Arnold Schoenberg, Anton Webern and Alban Berg. In 1968, he cofounded the Alban Berg Society with Igor Stravinsky and Hans F. Redlich. Arguably his greatest musicological achievements were his discoveries that Berg’s “Lulu” was not in fact a sketch, but rather three quarters finished, and that Berg’s “Lyric Suite” contains a secret program related to a clandestine love affair.

    His own music is influenced by the twelve-tone idiom, though it is weighted to his own purposes, with certain notes of the chromatic scale given precedence to create a kind of synthetic tonality. Perle’s Fourth Wind Quintet was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for music in 1986.

    Maybe his music is not for everyone, but if you’re receptive, I think you’ll find it never wears out its welcome.

    Happy birthday, George Perle!

    Six New Etudes (1984): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SxDqR_23Puo

    Adagio for Orchestra (1992): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-_PuCrsT9Q

    Perle in conversation with David Dubal! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1JGa7Jd5uEY

    Of course, you can listen to Dubal’s “The Piano Matters” Wednesday evenings at 10 and Sundays at noon at http://www.wwfm.org.

    PHOTO: Give Perle a whirl

  • Hilarious Music Theory You’ll Actually Enjoy

    Hilarious Music Theory You’ll Actually Enjoy

    I realize this is an investment of your time, but it’s actually worth it. Even if you only watch the first few minutes, and you care nothing at all for twelve-tone music, you will find it witty and informative. It’s a brilliant blend of music theory, philosophy and pure hilarity. (“Also, he was a horse-faced fascist!”). This is one talented YouTuber. If you’re not careful, you might just learn something.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4niz8TfY794

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (92) Beethoven (94) Composer (114) Film Music (117) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (185) KWAX (228) Leonard Bernstein (99) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (132) Opera (197) Philadelphia Orchestra (86) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (106) Radio (86) Ralph Vaughan Williams (85) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (101) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Receive a weekly digest every Sunday at noon by signing up here


RECENT POSTS