Pista Gyerek
New member
I don't know how many of you here are familiar with Schoenberg's Quintet Op. 26 for Wind Instruments. I can't seem to find any video of performances of this engaging work.
Not that a video clip could do justice to the scope of such a composition. Generally considered the first of Schoenberg's large-scale twelve-tone works, the Quintet was intended as a dodecaphonic manifesto. In addition, Schoenberg intended to shed his reputation as the lurid expressionist of Erwartung and reinvent himself as a neo-classicist with this momentous work.
The Quintet is about forty-five minutes long, certainly a test of stamina for musicians' lungs that may explain its infrequent performance. However, Schoenberg was painting his vision of the future on a vast canvas, demonstrating the versatility of his new system, and showing off his compositional skill at the same time.
Its four-movement structure is as conventional as any of Reichas wind quintets. The opening Schwungvoll begins with a poignant theme which recurs three times in this sonata-form movement. The scherzo movement is a frantic contrapuntal ballet with a brief trio section at the three-minute mark. The slow movement is a desolate paean in Lied form to his late wife. The finale is an exciting Rondo, restating the exposed theme of the first movement in its closing minutes.
Schoenberg fans whove never heard the Quintet Op. 26 are missing a key work in his career. And anyone who still dismisses Schoenberg as a talentless crank may be surprised by the creativity and sensitivity in this composition, as well as its classically comprehensible form.
Not that a video clip could do justice to the scope of such a composition. Generally considered the first of Schoenberg's large-scale twelve-tone works, the Quintet was intended as a dodecaphonic manifesto. In addition, Schoenberg intended to shed his reputation as the lurid expressionist of Erwartung and reinvent himself as a neo-classicist with this momentous work.
The Quintet is about forty-five minutes long, certainly a test of stamina for musicians' lungs that may explain its infrequent performance. However, Schoenberg was painting his vision of the future on a vast canvas, demonstrating the versatility of his new system, and showing off his compositional skill at the same time.
Its four-movement structure is as conventional as any of Reichas wind quintets. The opening Schwungvoll begins with a poignant theme which recurs three times in this sonata-form movement. The scherzo movement is a frantic contrapuntal ballet with a brief trio section at the three-minute mark. The slow movement is a desolate paean in Lied form to his late wife. The finale is an exciting Rondo, restating the exposed theme of the first movement in its closing minutes.
Schoenberg fans whove never heard the Quintet Op. 26 are missing a key work in his career. And anyone who still dismisses Schoenberg as a talentless crank may be surprised by the creativity and sensitivity in this composition, as well as its classically comprehensible form.