DIFFERENTIAL TYPOLOGIES OF IGOR STRAVINSKY AND ARNOLD SCHOENBERG, REVEALED BY THE MUSIC ON PSALM TEXTS

Author(s):  
Alexandra Belibou
2012 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Grimley

Carl Nielsen’s music for Sophus Michaelis’ festival play Cupid and the Poet , written in 1930 for the 125th anniversary of H C Andersen’s birth, is one of his most immediately engaging but neglected late scores. The story of an old poet whose heart is pierced by Cupid, disguised as a bedraggled young boy, suggests an obviously autobiographical interpretation, which locates Carl Nielsen once more in the familiar surroundings of his native land. But the overture, which has gained some mileage as an independent concert piece, is startlingly cosmopolitan, and invites a number of more searching analytical interpretations, especially in the light of other pieces such as the Sixth Symphony and the two Wind Concertos. In this paper, I will offer a close reading of the overture, drawing particular attention to the (ambivalent) presence of Carl Nielsen’s European modernist contemporaries Arnold Schoenberg and Igor Stravinsky among the work’s richly complex array of musical characters.


Tempo ◽  
1965 ◽  
pp. 22-27

Gottfried von Einem Der Zerrissene (Willi Schuh)Arnold Schoenberg Six Pieces Op. 35 (Anthony Payne)Humphrey Searle Fifth Symphony (Robert Henderson)Igor Stravinsky Abraham and Isaac (Everett Helm)


1953 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-62
Author(s):  
Joseph Yasser ◽  
Arnold Schoenberg
Keyword(s):  

During his lifetime, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844–1908) was a composer whose work had great influence not only in his native Russia but also internationally. While he remains well-known in Russia—where many of his fifteen operas and various orchestral pieces are still in the standard repertoire—very little of his work is performed in the West today beyond Scheherezade and arrangements of The Flight of the Bumblebee. In Western writings, he appears mainly in the context of the Mighty Handful, a group of five Russian composers to which he belonged at the outset of his career. This book finally gives the composer center stage and due attention. In this book, Rimsky-Korsakov's major operas, The Snow Maiden, Mozart and Salieri, and The Golden Cockerel, receive multifaceted exploration and are carefully contextualized within the wider Russian culture of the era. The discussion of these operas is accompanied and enriched by the composer's letters to Nadezhda Zabela-Vrubel, the distinguished soprano for whom he wrote several leading roles. Other chapters look at more general aspects of Rimsky-Korsakov's work and examine his far-reaching legacy as a professor of composition and orchestration, including his impact on his most famous pupil Igor Stravinsky.


Author(s):  
Martin Iddon ◽  
Philip Thomas

The book is a comprehensive examination of John Cage’s seminal Concert for Piano and Orchestra. It places the piece into its many contexts, examining its relationship with Cage’s compositional practice of indeterminacy more generally, the importance of Cage’s teacher, Arnold Schoenberg, on the development of his structural thought, and the impact of Cage’s (mis)understanding of jazz. It discusses, on the basis of Cage’s sketches and manuscripts, the compositional process at play in the piece. It details the circumstances of the piece’s early performances—often described as catastrophes—its recording and promotion, and the part it played in Cage’s (successful) hunt for a publisher. It examines in detail the various ways in which Cage’s pianist of choice, David Tudor, approached the piece, differing according to whether it was to be performed with an orchestra, alongside Cage delivering the lecture, ‘Indeterminacy’, or as a piano solo to accompany Merce Cunningham’s choreography Antic Meet. It demonstrates the ways in which, despite indeterminacy, the instrumental parts of the piece are amenable to analytical interpretation, especially through a method which exposes the way in which those parts form a sort of network of statistical commonality and difference, analysing, too, the pianist’s part, the Solo for Piano, on a similar basis, discussing throughout the practical consequences of Cage’s notations for a performer. It shows the way in which the piece played a central role, first, in the construction of who Cage was and what sort of composer he was within the new musical world but, second, how it came to be an important example for professional philosophers in discussing what the limits of the musical work are.


Per Musi ◽  
2013 ◽  
pp. 75-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos de Lemos Almada

Integrando um amplo projeto de pesquisa que visa elaborar uma metodologia analítica específica para os procedimentos de variação progressiva, o presente estudo examina a possibilidade de existência de, por assim dizer, transmissão hereditária (extraopus) na construção da ideia primordial (ou Grundgestalt) de uma peça musical. Para isso, é analisada a primeira das Quatro Canções op.2, de Alban Berg, cuja Grundgestalt apresenta-se como um complexo formado por várias transformações de elementos-chave extraídos de três obras: Tristão e Isolda de Richard Wagner, a Primeira Sinfonia de Câmara op.9 de Arnold Schoenberg e a Sonata para Piano op.1, do próprio Berg.


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