SCHOENBERG, ARNOLD

ärˈnôlt shönˈbĕrkh, 1874–1951, Austrian composer, b. Vienna. Before he became a U.S. citizen in 1941 he spelled his name Schönberg. He revolutionized modern music by abandoning tonality and developing a twelve-tone, "serial" technique of composition (see serial music). Except for periods in Berlin (1901–3; 1911–18), he lived in Vienna until 1925. In 1918 he founded his famous private seminar in composition and the Society for Private Musical Performances, at which neither critics nor applause were allowed. Though he himself had little formal instruction in music, teaching was a major activity throughout his life. Among his many students the most noted were Alban Berg and Anton von Webern. He taught at the Prussian Academy of Fine Arts in Berlin from 1925 to 1933, when he fled the Nazis, emigrated to the United States, and taught for a year at the Malkin Conservatory, Boston. He then went to Hollywood and was professor of music at the Univ. of Southern California (1935–36) and the Univ. of California at Los Angeles (1936–44).

In his early works—Verklärte Nacht (1899), a string sextet; Gurrelieder (1900–1), a cantata for chorus and orchestra; and Pelleas und Melisande (1902–3), a symphonic poem—Schoenberg expanded the chromatic style established by Wagner and Mahler. His later works are thinner in texture and highly contrapuntal. In 1908 in a set of piano pieces and the song cycle Das Buch der hängenden Gärten, to poems of Stefan George, he completely abandoned tonality (see atonality). His use of Sprechstimme, halfway between song and speech, caused a sensation at the first performance in 1912 of the song cycle Pierrot Lunaire. The twelve-tone technique he devised, used to some extent in five piano pieces and a Serenade in 1923, was first employed throughout a work in the Suite for Piano (1924). Though he did not invent serial technique, he established it as an important organizational device in music. His other works include two chamber symphonies (1906; 1906–40) and Variations for Orchestra (1928); string quartets, a woodwind quintet (1924), and Suite for 7 Instruments (1926); a violin concerto (1936) and a piano concerto (1942); the monodrama Erwartung (1909) and an unfinished opera, Moses und Aron (1932–51; produced 1957), considered his masterpiece; Ode to Napoleon (1942), to Byron's poem, for male speaker, piano and strings; A Survivor from Warsaw (1947), for narrator, chorus and orchestra; and Fantasia (1949), for violin and piano.

See his Style and Idea (tr. 1951) and Structural Functions of Harmony (tr. 1954); biographies by H. H. Stuckenschmidt (tr. 1959), A. Payne (1968), and W. Reich (tr. 1971); studies by G. Perle (rev. ed. 1968), B. Boretz (1968), C. Rosen (1981), and A. Shawn (2002).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Schoenberg Arnold  - 1027 results

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THE ARNOLD SCHOENBERG COMPANION Arnold Schoenberg circa 1948. Photograph by Florence Homolka. Reproduced courtesy of the Arnold Schoenberg Institute, Los Angeles. THE ARNOLD SCHOENBERG COMPANION...
The Atonal Music of Arnold Schoenberg Eugene Delacroix, Jacob Wrestling...Resource. The Atonal Music of ARNOLD SCHOENBERG 1908-1923 BRYAN R. SIMMS...Bryan R. The atonal music of Arnold Schoenberg, 1908-1923 / Bryan R. Simms...
THE WORKS OF ARNOLD SCHOENBERG THE WORKS OF ARNOLD SCHOENBERG A Catalogue of his Compositions, Writings and...was to lay a foundation for further research on Arnold Schoenbergs personality and work. The Academy of Arts in Berlin...
...Recollections Photograph from The Arnold Schoenberg Institute Archives Los Angeles, California Arnold Schoenberg SCHOENBERG REMEMBERED...Schoenberg remembered. 1. Schoenberg, Arnold, 1894-1951. 2. Composers...
...NOTE 13 I. ARNOLD SCHOENBERG 15 II. THE...shows how it has been presented and developed. ARNOLD SCHOENBERG I Arnold Schoenberg Arnold Schoenberg was born in Vienna on...
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journal articles on: Schoenberg Arnold  - 59 results

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...Industries, Technologies Arnold Schoenberg and the Cinematic Art...interest, I am yours very truly, Arnold Schoenberg. 4 A short time later Schoenberg...Huillet film Introduction to Arnold Schoenbergs Accompaniment to a Cinematic...
...Earth Sciences, eds. A. Walden and P. Guttorp, London: Edward Arnold, pp. 220-236. _______ (1995), "Forecasting Earthquakes and...American Statistical Association, 97, 369-380. Frederic Paik Schoenberg is Assistant Professor, Department of Statistics, University...
...Dooryard Bloomd 1946 USA Germany Late Arnold Schoenberg Survivor from Warsaw 1947 USA Germany...Of Affiliation . Stanford University Press. Schoenberg, Arnold. 1949 . A Survivor From Warsaw . New York...
...Marsan. Le Monde des Livres, Dec. 14, 2001: 4. Schoenberg, Arnold Arnold Schoenbergs Journey. Allen Shawn. New York: Farrar, Straus...linked series of visits to points of interest in Schoenbergs life-- "soundings," if you will... Shawn s is...
...Nationality. California Studies in 20th-Century Music, no. 5. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Schoenberg, Arnold. 1993 2006. The Musical Idea and the Logic, Technique, and Art of Its Presentation, edited and translated by Patricia...
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magazine articles on: Schoenberg Arnold  - 55 results

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...paintings by the Viennese composer Arnold Schoenberg. This was done mainly at the...a discussion of it, placing Schoenbergs use of dissonance in the context...and by implication equating Schoenbergs dissonant aesthetic with his...
...Metropolitan Operas production of Arnold Schoenbergs rarely performed Moses und Aron...six years after his death), Schoenberg regarded the opera as his most...Levine led his orchestra through Schoenbergs gnarled polyphony with alacrity...
...musical avant-garde spearheaded by Arnold Schoenberg, the man who did most to develop...writing frequently to each other. Schoenberg also painted (his eerie self...deliciously tart remark after Schoenbergs Pierrot Lunaire had a mixed reception...
...bodies of Igor Stravinsky and Arnold Schoenberg, Sibeliuss music still commands...this tendency to some degree. Arnold Schoenberg himself never hid his contempt...it was the heroic figure of Arnold Schoenberg who brought the Mosaic tablets...
...thorny 12-tone style pioneered by Arnold Schoenberg--in a recital he was giving...to change with the advent of Arnold Schoenberg, who did nothing less than revolutionize harmonic expression. Schoenberg came of age in the Vienna of...
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newspaper articles on: Schoenberg Arnold  - 47 results

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...songs by Franz Schrecker, Alexander von Zemlinsky, Arnold Schoenberg and Alban Berg. Most American audiences have little...selections by Franz Schrecker, Alexander von Zemlinsky, Arnold Schoenberg and Alban Berg at the Austrian Embassy on Thursday...
...Britten, Boulez, Berio, Birtwistle) or an "S" (Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Stockhausen - Shostakovich struggled, but was too politically...approachable for the aforementioned bods) music of Malcolm Arnold (right) has struggled to survive, and only through the efforts...
...required six, all present in Arnold Schoenbergs Verklarte Nacht (Transfigured...thoughts, but with Verklarte Nacht, Schoenberg got it right first time round...detail registered. The piece is Schoenbergs response to a poem in which...
...the most lyrical and approachable of the three composers who made up the Second Viennese School. He, along with Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern, developed the system of composition based on the 12note technique. In many ways, it is hard...
...composing career spanned the 1920s through the late 1950s. By then, the influence of the Second Viennese School (Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg and their contemporaries) had turned the musical establishment on its collective head. Poulenc, a Parisian...
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encyclopedia articles on: Schoenberg Arnold  - 14 results

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SCHOENBERG, ARNOLD ar nolt shon berkh, 1874 1951, Austrian composer, b. Vienna. Before...and orchestra; and Pelleas und Melisande (1902 3), a symphonic poem Schoenberg expanded the chromatic style established by Wagner and Mahler...
...1883 1945, Austrian composer and conductor; pupil of Arnold Schoenberg. He conducted theater orchestras in Prague and in...of the twelve-tone technique (see atonality ) of Schoenberg that was to characterize the rest of his output...
EISLER, HANNS hans is l r, 1898 1962, German composer, pupil of Arnold Schoenberg . In 1926, he joined the German Communist party, thereafter producing protest songs and other music expressive of left-wing ideals...
...but in 1904 he became the pupil and close friend of Arnold Schoenberg. Later Berg himself taught privately in Vienna. He...atonality and later the twelve-tone technique of Schoenberg (see serial music ), although he tempered it with...
...1917 2003, American composer, b. Portland, Oreg. He studied composition in California with Henry Cowell and Arnold Schoenberg . His early work stresses percussion while combining Western, Asian, African, and Latin American rhythms and often...
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