Second Viennese School : Alban Berg  and Anton Webern

á          Each developed a very personal style, very different from each other.  Generally, Berg used SchoenbergÕs more conservative aspects as point of departure; Webern used more radical aspects.

á          Alban Berg (1885-1935): Became SchoenbergÕs pupil in 1905, early works  are late romantic

á          shared SchoenbergÕs interest in counterpoint; pieces have very linear style

á          made rich use of tone color

á          works tend to be very lyrical despite their dissonance

á          never completely gave up tonality, although it was used more for effect than functionally in his works

á          Best known work is the expressionist  opera Wozzeck (1921)

á          Based on the play Woyzeck by Georg BŸchner (1813-37), based on true story

á          Uses Leitmotives and Sprechstimme

á          Draws from ideas behind Wunderhorn texts: folk character and deliberately folk-like music Berg composed for certain parts of the opera

á          Wozzeck is expressionist, but also socially relevant: Berg comments on sad state of downtrodden people, and the dark, nightmarish place into which circumstances push them

á          Anton Webern (1883-1945).  Of the three  main Second Viennese School composers, Webern made most complete break with tonality.

á          His style is very economical: every thought stated as simply as possible, then varied but never repeated. 

á          He used very soft dynamics, and most works are very short

á          He seldom used large ensembles, but sometimes unusual combinations

á          He liked to use instruments in extreme registers

á          He sometimes wrote melodies with each note in different instrument or Pointillist: each note is a miniature pinpoint of sound.  In these passages, color is at least as important as pitch, a different kind of Klangfarbenmelodie

á          Example: Five Pieces for Orchestra, Op. 10 (1911-13)

á          extremely short, no repetition of ideas

á          sounds very abstract, but some allusion to nature in 3rd piece: suggests cowbell