Like Schoenberg, both composers were generally nonpracticing members of their religions, and developed instead their own brands of spirituality. |
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The extensive notes by player and writer Loren Schoenberg are, as ever, accessibly erudite. |
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Most people know Georg Matthias Monn's concerto in the realization by Arnold Schoenberg. |
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By age 19, she had begun concertizing in Prague, performing the standard repertoire, as well as Schoenberg and Busoni. |
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As Schoenberg said, atonality is rejected not because it is ugly, but because it is misunderstood. |
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That year saw the first Festival with Lord Harewood as director, and the featured composer was Schoenberg. |
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He also for a brief time came under the influence of Schoenberg and wrote serial music, all of which he destroyed. |
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In this respect he forms the link between Wagner and Schoenberg, who was soon to complete the destruction of classical tonal harmony. |
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The Adagio section has some lush, fluorescent sounds, in which Schoenberg flirts with major tonalities and then destroys them. |
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The intended cycle was, like Schoenberg, for string sextet and using Richard Dehmel's poems. |
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The student has picked up a mannerism or trick, perhaps from a film or pop source, whose real origin is Schoenberg or Messiaen. |
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The documentary section is dominated by a complete translation of the 1912 Festschrift, the first discrete publication devoted to Schoenberg. |
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Schoenberg opened the flood gates of creative invention and, along the way, may have driven a schism between composers and their audiences. |
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In time the best of Schoenberg will, of course, survive and time will discover the proper values. |
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The composer began as a Schoenberg disciple and produced a lovely piano concerto in the dodecaphonic style. |
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The tragic irony here for an artist like Schoenberg was that the only way to realize art's concept, autonomy, meant that he had to indirectly affirm the system he was fleeing. |
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Schoenberg never intended the 12-note technique to exclude possible tonal implications, and his use of hexachords is a close analogy to tonal practice. |
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This process could not go on indefinitely, and in 1908 Schoenberg made the break into atonality, abandoning the attempt to fit atonal harmonies into tonal forms. |
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Not for a further 25 years did Dallapiccola summon up the courage to write to Schoenberg and explain how that evening had been a defining moment in his life. |
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An example of how Modernist art can be both revolutionary and yet be related to past tradition, is the music of the composer Arnold Schoenberg. |
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Spiegel caught the names Schoenberg, Webern, and Berg, whom he gathered were a kind of upscale Tinker to Evers to Chance. |
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The atonality of the music of Schoenberg and his contemporaries was, in part, a reaction to the horrors of World War I and its aftermath. |
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They sang outdoors in front of the Schoenberg Palace in Vienna and in front of the Golden Roof in Innsbruck. |
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At the beginning of the 20th century, according to Matthews, it appeared that Holst might follow Schoenberg into late Romanticism. |
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Largely self-taught, he claimed to have been influenced by Schoenberg, Messiaen, and the musique concrete movement. |
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Furthermore, it must be noted that Schoenberg also wrote tonal music throughout his career. |
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Julie Brown's Schoenberg and Redemption newly testifies to the power of a composer's self-expressive prose. |
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Two colossal works by Verdi and Schoenberg explore the power, the meaning and the consequences of religious belief. |
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Marx Schoenberg and Morris Marks were partisan Republicans who sought their political fortunes in a parish where African Americans comprised the large majority of voters. |
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And then there was Arnold Schoenberg who introduced a new form of music. |
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Schoenberg sounded as brilliant as Strauss and as rich as Brahms. |
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