Abstract
In this first movement (Moderato)
of the 1927 String Quartet, No. 3 (op. 30), composer Arnold Schoenberg
(1874-1951) showcased his use of the twelve-tone technique, a way of
structuring atonal music. Earlier atonal music followed a free form that
produced short, intense bursts of music that composers found difficult
to sustain without some formal harmonic process. Starting around 1920,
Schoenberg sought to lay down such a syntax with his twelve-tone “row”
that played all one dozen chromatic pitches without repeating any given
one. In other words, it encompassed all black and white keys in an
octave on the piano, and the musician played the entire row before
repeating any tone within it. Schoenberg’s approach influenced a
generation of mid-century composers. As a leading figure in the
so-called “Second Viennese School”
[Zweite
Wiener Schule], a circle of modernist
composers in the 1920s dedicated to the advancement of what they
consciously referred to as “New Music.” Schonberg joined the composers
Anton Webern, Hanns Eisler, and Alban Berg in moving decisively away
from traditional major-minor tonality. Schoenberg won appointment as a
Professor at the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin, where he taught a
master course in composition from 1926 until 1933, when the Nazis seized
power and stripped him of his title on account of his Jewish heritage.
He and his family emigrated to the United States soon thereafter, where
he taught composition at USC and UCLA in Los Angeles, California.