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  1. 16 de mai. de 2024 · Arnold Schoenberg (born September 13, 1874, Vienna, Austria—died July 13, 1951, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) was an Austrian-American composer who created new methods of musical composition involving atonality, namely serialism and the 12-tone row.

  2. Há 3 dias · For Schoenberg the pedagogue and polemicist alike, analysis thus played a crucial part in conceptualizing, articulating, and communicating musical knowledge. Yet for all the prominence of analysis in Schoenberg’s thinking, his precise understanding of the subject is difficult to pin down.

  3. 26 de mai. de 2024 · To the occasional listener of symphony concerts, Arnold Schönberg (1874-1951) is generally known as one of the boldest modernists in music history. What surprises many people who take a closer look at his biography, however, is that he was anything but politically progressive.

  4. 13 de mai. de 2024 · Schoenberg’s inspiration for Transfigured Night was a poem written three years earlier by Richard Dehmel. Inhabiting a shadowy, Freudian landscape, it outlines the moving conversation of a man and woman as they walk through moonlit woods on a cold, clear night.

  5. 30 de mai. de 2024 · When Alban Berg was accepted by Arnold Schoenberg as a private student in 1904, he could not have foreseen just how profoundly the experience would change his life and art—and the course of 20th century music.

  6. 30 de mai. de 2024 · The roots of serialism can be traced back to the innovative mind of Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg. Dissatisfied with the constraints of tonality and seeking new avenues of expression, Schoenberg introduced his twelve-tone technique around 1921.

  7. 13 de mai. de 2024 · Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951)—composer, music theorist, teacher, writer, and painter—was famously obsessed with numerology. We get a hint of Schoenberg’s fascination in the full title of his “Pierrot lunaire” song cycle: “Three Times Seven Poems from Albert Giraud’s ‘Pierrot Lunaire.’”