Arnold Schönberg
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Arnold Schoenberg has exercised very considerable influence over the course of music in the 20th century, particularly through his development and promulgation of theories of composition in which unity in a work is provided by the use of a determined series, usually consisting of the twelve possible different semitones, their order also inverted or taken in retrograde form, and in transposed versions. Schoenberg's earlier compositions are post-romantic in character, followed by a period in which he developed his theories of atonality, music without a key or tonal centre. Born in Vienna in 1874, he spent his early career in Berlin, until the rise to power of Hitler made it necessary to leave Germany and find safety in America, where he died in 1951. With his pupils Anton Webern and Alban Berg, both of whom he outlived, he represents a group of composers known as the Second Viennese School. MIDI FILE - Klavierstuecke op.19 No.2 (1'04'')
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Schoenberg's most important opera is Moses und Aron, of which he completed only two of the three acts. Gurrelieder, written between 1901 and 1903, is a
work of Wagnerian proportions and mood, for solo voices, large
chorus and orchestra. Solo songs range from the 1909 settings of Stefan George in Das Buch der haengenden Garten (The Book of the Hanging Garden) to the cabaret songs he wrote for the Berlin Ueberbrettl in his earlier years. The Pierrot lunaire, a study of madness, based on German
translations of seven poems by Albert Giraud and using Sprechgesang, words half spoken,
half sung, was completed in 1912. In addition to four string quartets and a late string trio, Schoenberg's post-romantic Verklaerte Nacht of 1899 is particularly noteworthy.
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