Schoenberg Quotes

On this page you will find all the quotes on the topic "Schoenberg". There are currently 3 quotes in our collection about Schoenberg. Discover the TOP 10 sayings about Schoenberg!
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  • They [the critics] deal with Schoenberg's early works and all their wealth by classifying them, with the music-historical cliché, as late romantic post-Wagnerian. One might just as well dispose of Beethoven as a late-classicist post-Haydnerian.

    Theodor Adorno, Richard Leppert, Susan H. Gillespie (2002). “Essays on Music”, p.148, Univ of California Press
  • Schoenberg is too melodious for me, too sweet.

  • Why is Schoenberg's Music so Hard to Understand?

  • I think there's just been this "thing" that's developed, this way that we have of talking about our music that alienates people. And I fall into that too! I learned that in graduate school. You just talk about your music in a specific way, and that separates people from you. But some composers like that. Schoenberg liked that. He wanted to feel that he was making music for an elite few. That's fine for him, but I want to set myself free from that sort of attitude.

    Attitude   Fall   School  
    Source: therumpus.net
  • On Sunday 8 April 1945, he had just finished conducting a service of worship at Schoenberg, when two soldiers came took him away. As he left, he said to another prisoner, This is the end - but for me, the beginning - of life. He was hanged the next day, less than a week before the Allies reached the camp.

    Life   Sunday   Two  
  • You can't expect someone born into a family with no music...to understand when I'm conducting the Schönberg Variations.

    "'Europe has to take the initiative now'". Interview with Luke Harding, www.theguardian.com. November 30, 2004.
  • You think about, like, [20th-century classical composers] Alban Berg, Schoenberg, and Webern sitting around in some living room in Vienna and being like, "We are the end of music. We are the end of this tradition. Music is done."

    Thinking   Sitting   Done  
    "Dirty Projectors". Interview with Brandon Stosuy, pitchfork.com. July 2, 2012.
  • One day when I was studying with Schoenberg, he pointed out the eraser on his pencil and said, 'This end is more important than the other.' After twenty years I learned to write directly in ink.

    Mistake   Writing   Years  
    John Cage (2011). “Silence: Lectures and Writings, 50th Anniversary Edition”, Wesleyan University Press
  • Because essentially Schoenberg was an extremely gifted man. And in spite of many of his theories and so on, when he really began to write music, he still was guided very much by his internal hearing, by what we call your internal ear.

    Writing   Men   Ears  
  • In fact, the influence of Schoenberg may be overwhelming on his followers, but the significance of his art is to be identified with influences of a more subtle kind - not the system, but the aesthetic, of his art. I am quite conscious of the fact that my Chansons madécasses are in no way Schoenbergian, but I do not know whether I ever should have been able to write them had Schoenberg never written.

    "Ravel: Man and Musician". Book by Arbie Orenstein, p. 126, 1975.
  • [Charlie "Bird" Parker] would sit down and ask [Phil Wood], "What do you think about this whole secondary Viennese school with Schoenberg, Berg and Webern? Are you listening to that music and what do you feel about it?" These were the conversations that he was having. And he also said, what he learned from Charlie Parker was, not that he studied with him in the formal sense, is that the first thing that Charlie Parker would always ask was, "Did you eat today?".

    School   Thinking   Bird  
  • If... [Alban] Berg departs so radically from tradition, through his substitution of a symmetrical partitioning of the octave for the asymmetrical partionings of the major/minor system, he departs just as radically from the twelve-tone tradition that is represented in the music of Schoenberg and Webern, for whom the twelve-tone series was always an integral structure that could be transposed only as a unit, and for whom twelve-tone music always implied a constant and equivalent circulation of the totality of pitch classes.

    Class   Tone   Twelve  
    "The Listening Composer". Book by George Perle, p. 98, 1990.
  • I certainly had no feeling for harmony, and Schoenberg thought that that would make it impossible for me to write music. He said, 'You'll come to a wall you won't be able to get through.' So I said, 'I'll beat my head against that wall.'

    Wall   Writing   Feelings  
    Observer magazine Interview, 1982.
  • After I had been studying with him for two years, Schoenberg said, ‘In order to write music, you must have a feeling for harmony.’ I explained to him that I had no feeling for harmony. He then said that I would always encounter an obstacle, that it would be as though I came to a wall through which I could not pass. I said, ‘In that case I will devote my life to beating my head against that wall.’

    Wall   Writing   Order  
  • I put together the influences of my life in as clear a way as I possibly can, in the same way that Beethoven or Schoenberg or Bach put their influences together.

    Life   Together   Way  
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