The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1

244 PIERROT LUNAIRE, OP. 21


The resulting music chimed well
with expressionism and had a
disturbing, often nightmarish effect.
Where Wagner’s unresolved
harmonies evoked anticipation,
yearning, or unrequited love,
Schoenberg’s created anxiety and
apprehension. Rather than express
emotions, his atonality dealt with
psychological states. Schoenberg
would have been aware of the
research being carried out in
Vienna at the time by the founder
of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud.

The unsettling nature of the
free chromaticism employed by
Schoenberg is due largely to its
lack of formal structure; without
some kind of organization or sense
of progression, it is unpredictable
and offers little relief or resolution.
Schoenberg, nevertheless, felt the
need to harness this freedom to
avoid a musical anarchy that could
limit his expressive range. He
turned to some pre-classical formal
structures in which the emphasis
was more on counterpoint than
harmony. These included imitative
devices, such as canons and
fugues, as well as simple forms,
such as the rondo and passacaglia
(a style using the repetition of
a theme or sequence of chords
over which there are certain
variations). Within these structures,
Schoenberg used as his building
blocks small fragments or motifs
that consisted of a handful of notes

with a distinctive structure of tone
intervals, which could then be
subjected to freer atonal treatment.

A new music takes shape
In 1912, the Viennese actress
Albertine Zehme commissioned
Schoenberg to write a song cycle,
setting verses from Pierrot lunaire:
rondels bergamasques by Belgian
symbolist poet Albert Giraud.
Schoenberg chose 21 of Giraud’s
50 poems for his Pierrot lunaire,
using the German translation by
Otto Erich Hartleben. He saw the
work, though, not as a collection
of songs sung in sequence but as a
melodrama. It was to be a dramatic
recitation accompanied by a small
ensemble of instruments, in a
“light, ironical, satirical tone,”
with echoes of both the Italian
comedy form commedia dell’arte,
from which the Pierrot character
originated, and contemporary
cabaret performances.
The poems present surreal
and often grotesque glimpses of
the world of the commedia dell’arte.
Their mystical quality is matched
by Schoenberg’s settings. Without
tonality, the music creates an

Pierrot and Columbine, played by
Alexander Zaitsev and Mara Galeazzi,
look to the moon in a production of
Pierrot lunaire at the Royal Opera
House, London, in 2007.

With a grotesque giant
bow, Pierrot scratches on
his viola. Like the stork
on one leg, He bleakly
plucks a pizzicato.
Albert Giraud

To call any relation
of tones atonal is as
little justified as to
designate a relation
of colors aspectral or
acomplementary. Such an
antithesis does not exist.
Arnold Schoenberg

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