WEBERN: Symphony, Op. 21 / Six Pieces, Op. 6 / Concerto for Nine Instruments, Op. 24
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Anton Webern (1883-1945) Symphony Six Pieces for Large Orchestra Anton von Webern was born in Vienna on 3rd December, 1883, and died at Mittersill on 15th...
Anton Webern (1883-1945)
Symphony Six Pieces for Large Orchestra
Anton von Webern was born in Vienna on 3rd December,
1883, and died at Mittersill on 15th September, 1945. He
was Arnold Schoenberg's most devoted pupil from 1904,
and the closest friend of his fellow pupil, Alban Berg.
After Schoenberg's emigration to America in 1933, and
Berg's tragically premature death in 1935, Webern lost
his two most valued colleagues.
Much of the 'life' and personality of Webern remains
largely enigmatic. The sudden death of his mother, the
traumatic event of his early maturity, eventually
compelled him to seek psychiatric help from Dr Alfred
Adler, Freud's ex-colleague. In general Webern seems to
have given more of his time to teaching and to arranging
the works of others than to the creation of his own. His
career as a composer, in any case, invoked a chronicle of
ridicule by audiences and invective by the press. He was
temperamentally too different from Mahler to follow his
dictum: "I run with my head against the wall, but it is the
wall which will crack". It seems that Webern became
increasingly reclusive, and, as a tinkerer, progressively
more compulsive. His sketchbooks teem with corrections,
redrafted beginnings, revised revisions.
Webern was a devout Catholic, but also a nature
mystic ('nature is supernatural'). However subtle and
sophisticated his music, Webern himself was more a
rustic--two of his early works employ cowbells, as well
as mandolin and guitar--than a cosmopolitan. He spoke a
Tyrolese dialect and, except for Church Latin, no word of
any foreign language. Revered by all who knew him as
humble, kind, gentle, he was intransigent in musical
matters. He was also known as the most meticulous and
exacting of conductors. The young Webern held posts as
repetiteur and assistant conductor in the opera houses of
Danzig and Dresden, but resigned, unable to bear the
schlock repertory he was required to direct. For brief
periods in the 1920s and 1930s, he held two significant
conducting positions in Vienna, as director of a choral
society and conductor of the Arbeiter Konzerte (Workers'
Symphony Concerts). After a short term with the former,
he resigned because the organization refused to accept a
Jewish vocal soloist. He wrote to Schoenberg, in Boston,
about feeling a sense of the most vehement aversion
against my own race because of the anti-Semitism of so
many of its members.
Webern's cultural world was purely German, and he
seems to have had no prescience of the impending horrors
of the National Socialist Party, even though it had
classified his own music as 'degenerate' and forbidden its
performance and publication. His career with the
Workers' Concerts had been successful and his
performances were enthusiastically received, but when
one of the players publicly criticized his rehearsal
procedures, Webern abruptly departed. Long before the
Anschluss (1938), he was dismissed from his teaching
position at the Vienna Israelite Institution for the Blind.
The main source of his income thereafter was from
private teaching, a few random conducting
engagements--in London (the BBC), Zurich, Berlin,
Barcelona--and from such publisher's jobs as arranging,
proof-reading, and evaluating (mostly rejecting) new
music submitted for approval.
On 31st March, 1945, a few days before the Red
Army entered Vienna, the 61-year-old Webern purchased
a train ticket from Neulengbach to Mittersill, a village in
the Pinzgau Mountains in western Austria, where he
hoped to find refuge for himself and his family in the
home of one of his sons-in-law. On arrival there,
exhausted and suffering from dysentery and malnutrition,
Webern had to share a small house with sixteen other
people.
When the U.S. Army occupied the region, during the
summer of 1945, a detachment was assigned to curtail
black-marketing activities in Mittersill between the
people and its own forces. On 15th September, 1945, after
Webern had dined at the home of his daughter, Christine
Mattel, he stepped outside to smoke what could only have
been a contraband cigar provided by her husband, Bruno
Mattel, whom the Americans arrested on charges of illicit
trafficking in food. Apparently not understanding a
"hands-up" order by an American soldier posted outside
the building, Webern lighted a match, whereupon the
guard shot him three times in the chest and abdomen. But
several contradictory versions of this unwitnessed
brutality have been published. A Gregorian Requiem
Mass was held in Mittersill's small church, and five
persons followed the coffin to the cemetery. I paid my
respects there in May 1954.
The Symphony has become the best known of
Webern's twelve-tone pieces (unfortunately in poor
performances), partly because of its spaciousness and
sense of continuity. The first of the two movements, in
ternary sonata form, marked Adagio: Ruhig schreitend, is
a double canon displaying simultaneously both horizontal
and vertical symmetries, mirrors and palindromes. To the
listener's satisfaction, both halves of the movement are
repeated. The beginning of the second half is a fourvoiced
mirror canon. The theme of the second movement,
marked Sehr ruhig, with the title Variations, is stated in
the winds. It is followed by eight discrete variations and a
Coda, each division being established by changes of
instrumentation and other contrasting features. A slowertempo
Debussy-like figure, motivically, harmonically
(tonally), and in sonority (winds and harp), separates the
third and the fourth variations. The Coda frames a solo
violin phrase in both primary and retrograde forms. The
performance of this movement at Webern's metronomic
tempi may be the first to realise the music as it was
intended to be heard.
The first performance of Five Canons on Latin Texts,
Op. 16, took place in New York on 8th May, 1951. The
odd-numbered canons are three-voiced, the evennumbered
two-voiced. Christus factus est, for soprano,
clarinet, and bass clarinet and the last-composed of the
five, was completed on 12th November, 1924. The text is
the Gradual from the Solemn Evening Mass for Maundy
Thursday. Dormi Jesu was composed in July 1923. The
text, a lullaby, is from Des Knaben Wunderhorn. The
antiphon Crux fidelis, a prayer to the Cross, completed on
8th August, 1923, was the second of the cycle in order of
composition. The music is a straight three-part canon for
voice, clarinet, and bass clarinet, on a text taken from the
Solemn Liturgy for Good Friday. Asperges me, the third
piece in the cycle in the order of composition, was
composed on 21st August, 1923. This two-part canon for
voice and bass clarinet has a text used to accompany the
sprinklng of Holy Water at the beginning of the Mass.
The antiphon Crucem tuam adoramus, for voice, clarinet,
and bass clarinet, was completed on 29th October, 1924.
Again the text is taken from the Liturgy for Good Friday.
The music for Drei Volkstexte apparently baffled
Webern's own publisher, Universal Edition, Vienna.
Theorists have shown special interest in it because the
second and third songs represent Webern's first attempt to
incorporate principles of Schoenberg's so-called twelvetone
technique, most obviously in repeating notes before
moving to other ones. The twelve notes of the chromatic
scale are exposed in the first instrumental and vocal
phrase. Webern's manuscript clearly specifies that the
order of the second and third songs should be reversed,
the one with viola would naturally come between the two
songs with violin, an instruction followed in the present
recording, but not in the posthumously published score.
The first of the Three Songs for soprano, piccolo
clarinet and guitar, Op. 18, is one of Webern's most
lighthearted creations, as indicated by the vocal 'en
pointe' dancing. The music of the second song is
intensely dramatic, with the climax on the soprano's high
D for the word Vater, followed by a shift of mood for the
Father's final declaration. In the Latin third song the vocal
intervals are extremely wide, many of them greater than
an octave, and some more than two octaves. Moreover,
most of them are legato. This is Webern delirando, the
Romantic nature poet at an emotional peak.
The Trio, Op. 20, marks the largest step in Webern's
evolution and is now acclaimed as one of his greatest
creations. It is all ongoing movement, development and
exploration in accordance with purely musical ideas. The
work is as close as Webern ever came to his goal of 'large
form', but, like all of his pieces, it remains a miniature.
As with the Choruses, Op. 19, the Trio, and the
Symphony, Webern struggled over the question of
whether to give his Quartet, Op. 22, a third movement,
two-movement pieces being a cornerstone of his aesthetic
philosophy at the time. On 9th September, 1930, he wrote
to Alban Berg: "I almost find the work complete by
reason of the perfect opposition provided by the great
contrast inherent in two already finished movements".
Now, more than seventy years later, the Quartet is widely
recognized as the "coolest" music Webern ever wrote.
The Variations for Piano, Op. 27, were begun on
14th October, 1935, and completed on 14th August, 1936,
though the MS is dated 5th September, 1936. This last of
Webern's works to be published in his lifetime once again
reverses the order of the movements: the third, the
variations, composed first, became the second, and the
second the prelude. He compared the first, in classic ABA
form, to a Brahms Intermezzo, but admitted that the
second movement had been inspired by the second
movement of Beethoven's Sonata Op. 109 and the Arietta
from the Sonata Op. 111. The third movement comprises
five variations and a Coda, in which the last note is
distinguished as, simply, the lowest note in the piece. The
fourth variation is, in one sense, the most rhythmically
remarkable that Webern ever wrote, the music being in
syncopated single notes. The listener should beat single
quarters to him- or herself throughout the syncopated
suspensions.
The Six Pieces, Op. 6, an early work for a large
orchestra that never plays together in its entirety, has
become Webern's most popular work. In the fourth and
longest movement, titled Marcia funebre in the original
version, the string section does not play at all, but only
wind instruments and percussion, and in the deafening
crescendo with which the piece ends, the percussion plays
alone, perhaps for the first time in European music. Part
of the allure of the orchestration lies in the use of solo
instruments in unusual registers: the flute at the beginning
of the first piece; the piccolo, the high muted horn, the low
muted trumpet in the fourth; and in the last the handful of
muted tuba notes floating up like bubbles from the bottom
of a tank. The dynamic level is almost always soft, and the
brass and strings, solo and tutti, are generally muted.
Webern began his Four Pieces for Violin and Piano,
Op. 7, in June 1910, but did not complete the definitive
version until 1914. The music has been described as
consisting of "wide intervallic leaps, frequent tempo
shifts, changes of dynamic levels.... The slow, subdued
first and third pieces alternate with the dramatic,
dynamically explosive second and fourth."
Composed two weeks before the beginning of World
War I, the Three Pieces for Violoncello and Piano,
Op. 11, specimens of contrasting sound effects in
Webern's "aphoristic" style, had to wait ten years for its
first public performance, in Mainz, 2nd December, 1924.
The conciseness and concentration of expression are
unprecedented.
The Concerto for 9 Instruments has become
Webern's most popular chamber-music opus. He
encountered a "writer's block" after completing the first
movement and the composition of the whole work took
two years. The music is more stripped, simpler, more
purely essential than anything composed before this date.
Most famously is the newest element in the third
movement, the silent first beat continuing over several
bars at the end but always maintaining the sensation of the
"off-beat." The instrumentation is schematic and
notational but with an effect of the purification never
before achieved.
Schubert composed his set of six German Dances in
the Esterhazy castle in Zseliz, Hungary, in October 1824
for his piano pupil, the eighteen-year-old Countess
Caroline Esterhazy. His four-hand Fantasy in F minor is
dedicated to her as well as several other works composed
between 1815 and 1828. The Dances manuscript was
found in the legacy of a niece of Caroline's mother,
Countess Almasy, whose two daughters entrusted it to
their music teacher c. 1866. After its rediscovery in 1930,
Webern, with incomparable sensitivity, arranged it for
small orchestra. A dozen or so years earlier he had
arranged the piano accompaniments of five Schubert
songs and three Schubert piano sonatas for small
orchestra.
R. C.
Symphony, Op. 21 (more info)
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I. Ruhig, schreitend - 7:31
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II. Variationen - 2:32
5 Canons on Latin Texts, Op. 16 (more info)
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Christus factus est - 0:36
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Dormi Jesu - 1:04
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Crux fidelis - 0:53
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Asperges me - 0:38
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Crucem tuam adoramus - 0:29
3 Volkstexte (Traditional Rhymes), Op. 17 (more info)
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Armer Sunder, du - 0:50
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Heiland, unsre Missetaten - 0:48
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Liebste Jungfrau, wir sind dein - 0:56
3 Songs, Op. 18 (more info)
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Schatzerl klein - 1:08
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Erlosung (from Des Knaben Wunderhorn) - 1:17
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Ave Regina coelorum - 1:34
String Trio, Op. 20 (more info)
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I. Sehr langsam - 3:55
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II. Sehr getragen und ausdrucksvoll - 5:55
Quartet, Op. 22 (more info)
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I. Sehr massig - 3:02
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II. Sehr schwungvoll - 2:26
Variations for Piano, Op. 27 (more info)
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I. Sehr massig - 1:56
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II. Sehr schnell - 0:42
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III. Ruhig fliessend - 3:22
6 Pieces, Op. 6 (revised version) (more info)
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I. Langsam - 1:25
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II. Bewegt - 1:24
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III. Massig - 1:07
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IV. Sehr massig - 4:43
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V. Sehr langsam - 2:46
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VI. Langsam - 1:42
4 Pieces for Violin and Piano, Op. 7 (more info)
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I. Sehr langsam - 1:22
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II. Rasch - 1:37
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III. Sehr langsam - 1:43
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IV. Bewegt - 0:59
3 Pieces for Cello and Piano, Op. 11 (more info)
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I. Massige - 1:04
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II. Sehr bewegt - 0:24
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III. Ausserst ruhig - 0:59
Concerto for Nine Instruments, Op. 24 (more info)
Composed by:
Anton Webern
Christopher Gekker, trumpet
David Fedele, flute
Stephen Gosling, piano
Charles Neidich, clarinet
James Pugh, trombone
Sunghae Anna Lim, violin
Stephen Taylor, oboe
Richard O'Neill, viola
William Purvis, horn
Recording date: 2003-2004
Produced by:
Brown, Silas
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I. Etwas lebhaft - 2:51
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II. Sehr langsam - 2:40
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II. Sehr rasch - 1:21
Deutsche Tanze, D. 820 (orch. A. Webern) (more info)
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I. -- - 1:06
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II. -- - 1:31
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III. -- - 1:31
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IV. -- - 1:14
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V. -- - 1:39
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VI. -- - 2:28