Composer
Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951); AUT/USA
Loading, please wait...
Arnold Schoenberg remains one of the most controversial figures in the history of music. From the final years of the nineteenth century to the period following the World War II, Schoenberg produced music of great stylistic diversity, inspiring fanatical devotion from students, admiration from peers like Mahler, Strauss, and Busoni, riotous anger from conservative Viennese audiences, and unmitigated hatred from his many detractors.
Born in Vienna on 13 September 1874, into a family that was not particularly musical, Schoenberg was largely self-taught as a musician. An amateur cellist, he demonstrated from early age a particular aptitude for composition. He received rudimentary instruction in harmony and counterpoint from Oskar Adler and studied composition briefly with Alexander Zemlinsky, his eventual brother-in-law. Early in his career, Schoenberg took jobs orchestrating operettas, but most of his life was spent teaching, both privately and at various institutions, and composing. His moves between teaching jobs were as much a result of seeking respite from the bouts of ill health which hampered him as they were due to his being offered a position.
The composer's early works bear the unmistakable stamp of high German Romanticism, perhaps nowhere more evident than in his first important composition, Verklärte Nacht, Op. 4 (1899). With works like the Five Orchestral Pieces (1909) and the epochal Pierrot lunaire (1912), Schoenberg embarked upon one of the most influential phases of his career. Critics reviled this "atonal" (Schoenberg preferred "pantonal") music, whose structure does not include traditional tonality. Still, the high drama and novel expressive means of Schoenberg's music also inspired a faithful and active following. Most notable among Schoenberg's disciples were Alban Berg and Anton Webern, both of whom eventually attained stature equal to that of their famous mentor. These three composers—the principal figures of the so-called Second Viennese School—were the central force in the development of atonal and 12-tone music in the first half of the twentieth century and beyond.
Schoenberg's Suite for Piano (1921-1923) occupies a place of central importance in the composer's catalogue as his first completely 12-tone composition. Though the 12-tone technique represents only a single, and by no means predominant, aspect of the composer's style, it remains the single characteristic mostly closely associated with his music. Schoenberg made repeated, though varied, use of the technique across the spectrum of genres, from chamber works like the String Quartet No. 4 (1936) and the Fantasy for Violin and Piano (1949) to orchestral works like the Violin Concerto (1935-1936) and the Piano Concerto (1942), to choral works like A Survivor from Warsaw (1947).
Schoenberg fled the poisonous political atmosphere of Europe in 1933 and spent the remainder of his life primarily in the United States, becoming a naturalized citizen in 1941. During this phase of his career, he at times returned to frank tonality, as in the Theme and Variations for band (1943), reaffirming his connection to the great German musical heritage that extended back to Bach. For Schoenberg, the dissolution of tonality was a logical and inevitable step in the evolution of Western music. Despite a steady stream of critical brickbats throughout his entire career, the composer, whose life inspired one of twentieth century's great novels, Thomas Mann's Doctor Faustus, persisted in his aims, insisting that his music was the result of an overwhelming creative impulse. Though debate over the man and his music rages on, Schoenberg is today acknowledged as one of the most significant figures in music history. The composer, a well-known triskaidekaphobe, died in Los Angeles, CA, on July 13, 1951.
© AMG, All Music Guide
|
Arnold Schoenberg remains one of the most controversial figures in the history of music. From the final years of the... More
|
-
Stage Works
200 tracks
-
Piano Works
222 tracks
- Fragments of Piano Pieces
6 tracks
- Fünf Klavierstücke
5 tracks
- 3 Klavierstücke (early work)
3 tracks
- 6 Little Pieces, Op.19
76 tracks
- Organ Sonata (fragments of 2 movements)
2 tracks
- 6 Pieces, for 4 hands (3 pieces lost)
1 track
- 3 Pieces, Op.11
37 tracks
- 5 Pieces, Op.23
26 tracks
- 2 Pieces, Op.33
12 tracks
- Suite for Piano, Op.25
53 tracks
- Variations on a Recitative in D-, for organ, Op.40
1 track
- Fragments of Piano Pieces
-
Orchestral Works
291 tracks
- Concertos
50 tracks
-
Other Orchestral Works
241 tracks
- Accompaniment to a Film-Scene (Begleitungssik zu einer Lichtspielszene), Op.34mu
2 tracks
- Chamber Symphony No.1 in E, Op.9
20 tracks
- Chamber Symphony No.2 in Eb-, Op.38
8 tracks
- Komm, Gott Schöpfer, heiliger Geist (trans. from Bach)
1 track
- Pelleas und Melisande (symphonic poem), Op.5
48 tracks
- Piano Quartet No.1 in G- for Orchestra (trans. from Brahms)
4 tracks
- 5 Pieces for Orchestra, Op.16
11 tracks
- Prelude and Fugue in Eb (trans. from Bach)
5 tracks
- Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele (trans. from Bach)
1 track
- String Quartet No.2, arranged for soprano and strings (arr. from Op.10)
13 tracks
- Suite in G for String Orchestra
10 tracks
- Theme and Variations, for wind band in G-, Op.43a
13 tracks
- Variations for Orchestra, Op.31
60 tracks
- Verklärte Nacht, for string orchestra (arr. from String Sextet, Op.4)
35 tracks
- 11 Waltzes for String Orchestra
10 tracks
- Accompaniment to a Film-Scene (Begleitungssik zu einer Lichtspielszene), Op.34mu
- Concertos
-
Chamber Works
154 tracks
- Die eiserne Brigade, march for 2 violins, viola, violoncello and piano
1 track
- Fantasy for Violin and Piano, Op.47
10 tracks
- Fragment for Violin and Piano
1 track
- Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte, for narrator, piano and strings, Op.41
1 track
- Quintet for Winds, Op.26
20 tracks
- Serenade for baritone and septet, Op.24
14 tracks
- Sonnenschein, for two violins
1 track
- String Quartet in D
4 tracks
- String Quartet No.1 in D-, Op.7
8 tracks
- String Quartet No.2 in F#-, for soprano and string quartet, Op.10
4 tracks
- String Quartet No.3, Op.30
8 tracks
- String Quartet No.4, Op.37
8 tracks
- String Trio, Op.45
22 tracks
- Suite, septet in Eb, Op.29
12 tracks
- Theme and Variations in G-, for wind ensemble, Op.43a
3 tracks
- Untitled piece in D-, for violin and piano
2 tracks
- Verklärte Nacht, for string sextet, Op.4
34 tracks
- Weihnachtsmusik (Musique de Noël), for 2 violins, cello, piano and harmonium
1 track
- Die eiserne Brigade, march for 2 violins, viola, violoncello and piano
-
Vocal Works
312 tracks
- Songs and Song Cycles
150 tracks
- Am Strande, song for voice and piano
1 track
- 2 Ballads, for voice and piano, Op.12
4 tracks
- The Book of the Hanging Gardens (song cycle for voice and piano), Op.15
45 tracks
- Brettl-Lieder (Cabaret Songs)
24 tracks
- 4 Folk Song Arrangements, for voice and piano
4 tracks
- Gedenken ('Es steht sein Bild noch immer da'), song for voice and piano
2 tracks
- Herzgewächse, for soprano, celesta, harp, and harmonium, Op.20
3 tracks
- Lied der Waldtaube, for mezzo soprano and 17 instruments (arr. from 'Gurrelieder')
2 tracks
- 4 Orchestral Songs, Op.22
4 tracks
- 6 Orchestral Songs, Op.8
11 tracks
- Schilflied: Drüben geht die Sonne scheiden, song for voice and piano
1 track
- 3 Songs, for alto or bass and piano, Op.48
3 tracks
- 6 Songs, for mezzo-soprano or baritone and piano, Op.3
9 tracks
- 2 Songs, for voice and piano, Op.14
4 tracks
- 2 Songs, for voice and piano, Op.1
2 tracks
- 4 Songs, for voice and piano, Op.2
20 tracks
- 8 Songs, for voice and piano, Op.6
11 tracks
- Am Strande, song for voice and piano
-
Choral Works
162 tracks
- A Survivor from Warsaw, for narrator, male chorus and orchestra, Op.46
3 tracks
- De Profundis, Op.50b
2 tracks
- Die Jacobsleiter (Jacob's Ladder; oratorio)
11 tracks
- Dreimal tausend Jahre, Op.50a
1 track
- Ei du Lütte, partsong for male chorus
1 track
- 3 Folksongs
3 tracks
- 3 German Folksongs, Op.49
3 tracks
- Gurrelieder (oratorio) for 5 soloists, reciter, chorus, and orchestra
115 tracks
- Kol Nidre, for narrator, chorus and orchestra, Op.39
3 tracks
- Peace on Earth (Friede auf Erden), for chorus and chamber ensemble, Op.13
4 tracks
- 4 Pieces, for chorus and ensemble, Op.27
4 tracks
- 6 Pieces, for male chorus, Op.35
7 tracks
- Prelude, for wordless chorus and orchestra (for collaborative cantata "Genesis Suite"), Op.44
2 tracks
- 3 Satires, for chorus and instruments, Op.28
3 tracks
- A Survivor from Warsaw, for narrator, male chorus and orchestra, Op.46
- Songs and Song Cycles
Below are works by A.Schoenberg that every music lover should explore:
- Stage Works
- Piano Works
- 6 Little Pieces, Op.19
76 tracks
- 3 Pieces, Op.11
37 tracks
- 6 Little Pieces, Op.19
- Orchestral Works
- Chamber Works
- Verklärte Nacht, for string sextet, Op.4
34 tracks
- Verklärte Nacht, for string sextet, Op.4
- Vocal Works



Click on a category to view the list of works
Files of this type are not available at this time.

