Difference between revisions of "Arnold Schoenberg"

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Zappa used the original spelling of Schoenberg's name in both the list of names on the [[Freak Out!]] cover and in [[The Real Frank Zappa Book]].
 
Zappa used the original spelling of Schoenberg's name in both the list of names on the [[Freak Out!]] cover and in [[The Real Frank Zappa Book]].
  
He named ''[[Pierrot Lunaire]]'' in [[Interview with Bob Marshall]] in 1988.  
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He named ''[[Pierrot Lunaire]]'' in [[Interview With Bob Marshall]] in 1988.  
  
 
[[Category:Influences|Schoenberg, Arnold]]
 
[[Category:Influences|Schoenberg, Arnold]]

Revision as of 10:18, 6 May 2011

Arnold Franz Walter Schönberg (September 13, 1874, Vienna, Austria – July 13, 1951, Los Angeles, USA) was an Austriann composer and music teacher. He was one of the early experimenters to explore the idea of atonality. Schoenberg is especially known for his concept of "12-note" or "serial" music, (a form that Charles Ives had earlier experimented with) and used it in most of his later works. At the end of World War I he taught in Vienna and Berlin, until exiled by the Nazi government in 1933. He settled in California in 1934, having anglicised the spelling of his name, started teaching at UCLA in 1936. and took US nationality in 1941.

He taught John Cage and later described him as "not a composer, but an inventor- of genius"

His influential piece Pierrot Lunaire (1912) developed the idea of Sprechgesang, a spoken singing.

Zappa and Schoenberg

Zappa used the original spelling of Schoenberg's name in both the list of names on the Freak Out! cover and in The Real Frank Zappa Book.

He named Pierrot Lunaire in Interview With Bob Marshall in 1988.