Schoenberg's serial odyssey : the evolution of his twelve-tone method, 1914-1928
著者
書誌事項
Schoenberg's serial odyssey : the evolution of his twelve-tone method, 1914-1928
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1992, c1990
- :pbk
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注記
Bibliography: p. [187]-189
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
More than sixty years have passed since Arnold Schoenberg revealed the new method of twelve-tone composition which was to establish his position as a revolutionary. Far from being restrictive, the 12-tone method inspired Schoenberg to compose some of his most enduring masterpieces. Furthermore it has proved to be one of the most influential ideas in the history of music. Even Stravinsky, his former rival and regarded by many as the antithesis of serialism, astounded the musical world by adopting the method in his own works in the 1950s. In spite of the central importance of Schoenberg's ideas, relatively little has been written until now about the evolution of his method and the refinement of his technique. Haimo explores this aspect, drawing on Schoenberg's papers, sketches, and manuscripts as well as published scores. The book traces the development of his form from its rudimentary beginnings in 1914 to the highly refined works of his mature 12-tone period, revealing that through his merciless self-criticism the composer systematically sought ways to transform his idea until it embraced the motives, phrases, harmony, melody, and metre, developing variation and form of his music.
This study should be of interest to music analysts and theorists, musicologists and students of 20th-century music.
目次
- The 12-tone odyssey
- Schoenberg's mature twelve-tone style
- before the beginning - "Die Jakobsleiter" and other incomplete compositions, 1914-1918
- the formation of the 12-tone idea, 1920-1923
- ambitious projects - the wind quintet, Op. 26 and the suite, Op. 29, 1923-1926
- further refinements - the choral pieces, Opp. 27 and 28, 1925
- the art of 12-tone composition - the string quartet No. 3 and the variations for orchestra, 1926-1928
- epilogue - Op.32 and beyond.
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