The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1

242


U


ntil the end of the 19th
century, music had been
largely dictated by a tonal
system, in which keys, chords, and
scales complemented each other to
create melody and harmony that
were pleasing to the ear. Even
where dissonant, or unsettling,
passages were used in a piece of
music, it was still resolved onto a
consonant, or harmonious, chord.
The seeds for the unraveling
of this tonal tradition were sown
by Richard Wagner. In his operas,
especially Tristan und Isolde (1859),
Wagner undermined the concept of
music written in one key by moving
through a range of different, often
unrelated, keys, without settling on
any one, and introducing dissonant
chords for dramatic effect. A few
decades later, Arnold Schoenberg

and other composers, including
Alexander Scriabin and Béla
Bartók, started to experiment
further, escaping from traditional
harmony, and chords and melodies
based on diatonic (major and minor)
scales, instead exploring more
dissonant 12-note chromatic scales.
The Austrian composer and critic
Joseph Marx coined the term
“atonality” for this music, which
had no recognizable tonality, or key.
Schoenberg gave it full rein in the
works of his middle period (roughly
1908–1921), of which Pierrot lunaire
is arguably the most influential.

Tonality taken to the limit
The use of chromatic scales to
create new harmonies had become
the norm among composers at the
end of the 19th century, especially
in Austria and Germany. But in
the early years of the new century,
Schoenberg came to realize that
tonality, the system of major and
minor scales that had formed the
basis of Western music since

PIERROT LUNAIRE, OP. 21


IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Atonality

BEFORE
1865 Richard Wagner’s opera
Tristan und Isolde is first
performed—a turning point in
the move away from tonality.

1894 French composer Claude
Debussy uses ambiguous
harmonies and fluid harmonic
progressions in his Prélude à
l’après-midi d’un faune.

1899 Schoenberg stretches
the bounds of tonality to its
limits in his string sextet
Verklärte Nacht, Op. 4.

AFTER
1917–1922 In his Five Sacred
Songs, Op. 15, Austrian
composer Anton Webern uses
a similar small ensemble to
that of Pierrot lunaire and
develops many of the same
compositional techniques.

1921–1923 The Suite for
Piano, Op. 25, is the first of
Schoenberg’s works to use
his 12-tone serial method
of composition throughout.

1922 French composer Edgard
Va rèse’s Offrandes for soprano
and chamber orchestra has its
premiere in New York.

1965 An ensemble, the Pierrot
Players, later known as the
Fires of London, is founded to
perform Pierrot lunaire and
other new works.

Arnold Schoenberg poses with
his second wife, Gertrud, and their
children, in 1950. Gertrud wrote the
libretto for Schoenberg’s one-act opera
Von heute auf morgen (1928–1930).

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