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Chamber Symphony No. 1 (Schoenberg)

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Portrait of Arnold Schoenberg byRichard Gerstl (ca. June 1905) (Vienna Museum)

TheChamber Symphony No. 1 inE major,Op. 9 (also known by its title in GermanKammersymphonie, für 15 soloinstrumente, or simply asKammersymphonie) is a composition by Austrian composerArnold Schoenberg.

Schoenberg's first chamber symphony was finished in 1906 and premiered on 8 February 1907 in Vienna by theRosé Quartet together with a wind ensemble from theVienna Philharmonic, under the composer's baton. In 1913, Schoenberg again conducted the piece, as part of the famedSkandalkonzert, in which the heterodox tonalities of Schoenberg's Symphony and, more so, of his studentAlban Berg's works incited the attendees to riot in protest and prematurely end the concert.

Leopold Stokowski gave the work its US premiere with thePhiladelphia Orchestra on 5 November 1915. The first British performance was on 6 May[1][2] (or possibly on 16 April)[3] 1921, at theAeolian Hall, London, conducted byEdward Clark, Schoenberg's champion and former student. The players included Charles Woodhouse (violin),John Barbirolli (cello),Léon Goossens (oboe),Aubrey Brain andAlfred Brain (horns).[4]

The piece is a well-known example of the use ofquartal harmony.

Structure

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The Chamber Symphony is a single-movement work which lasts approximately 20 minutes. Even though it is listed as one movement, the form can be considered as subdivided into as many as five continuous movements. Schoenberg himself outlined the following form using therehearsal numbers as reference points:

  1. Sonata.Allegro (beginning to no. 38)
  2. Scherzo (nos. 38–60)
  3. Development (nos. 60–77)
  4. Adagio (nos. 77–90)
  5. Recapitulation and finale (nos. 90–100)[5]

Schoenberg claimed in later years that the work "was a first attempt to create a chamber orchestra."[5]

Schoenberg makes use of a "motto" theme constructed offourths.[6] The "motto" theme helps delineate the structural articulation points in the piece.

The "motto" theme first appears in measure 5 and is framed by two cadences which introduce the two main key areas.

Cadence 1 in F major:

Cadence 2 in E major:

Schoenberg's concept ofdeveloping variation can be observed in the relationship of the Scherzo theme to the rising chromatic line in the 2nd Violin part in Cadence 1,

as well as in the relationship of the slow movement theme to Cadence 2.[7]

Instrumentation

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It is scored for the following instruments:

1flute (doublingpiccolo)
1oboe
1English horn
1E clarinet
1clarinet
1bass clarinet
1bassoon
1contrabassoon
2Vienna horns
1violin I
1 violin II
1viola
1cello
1double bass

Schoenberg respected the classical arrangement of the musicians on stage, instructing that all strings should be seated in the front row, the winds in the second row, and all the bass sounds should be grouped together. Although this composition is commonly called achamber work, its performance requires aconductor. Some critics and conductors have claimed that an ensemble formed of ten winds and only five strings is inherently unbalanced; however, some of the voices are doubled so that no instrument is playing one-on-one against another.[5][8]

Arrangements

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  • The composer himself arranged this piece forpiano four hands in 1906.[9] He also revised the composition forlarge orchestra in 1923 and again in 1935, which was catalogued as Op. 9b.[10] The latter was premiered inLos Angeles by Schoenberg himself.
  • Fellow composerAlban Berg also arranged the composition fortwo pianos in 1914.[11]
  • Between 1922 and 1923, at Schoenberg's suggestion his discipleAnton Webern made an arrangement for this composition scored for violin, flute (or second violin), clarinet (or viola), cello, and piano;[12] this arrangement was intended to be played alongsidePierrot lunaire, which is similarly scored.

Notable recordings

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Chamber Symphony No. 1 is one of the most recorded of Schoenberg's works and has received attention from conductors includingPierre Boulez,Simon Rattle,Riccardo Chailly,Claudio Abbado,Giuseppe Sinopoli,Zubin Mehta, and chamber groups such as theHyperion Ensemble,Hagen Quartett andOrpheus. A 1998 performance conducted byRobert Craft on theKoch International Classics label and reissued in 2007 onNaxos received a positive critical response.[13][14]

The overall duration of the piece is listed as 22 minutes, though in her survey of 11 recordings spanning 1949–1997, Kathleen McGuire finds a difference in duration of over seven minutes, ranging from Boulez's 19:37 toJascha Horenstein's 26:51.[15] She notes that even in Boulez's comparatively fast recording Schoenberg's metronome marks are still not always achieved, suggesting that they are perhaps impossible to perform.

References

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  1. ^P. A. S., "Music of the Week: Schönberg and Kreisler",The Observer (8 May 1921), p. 10
  2. ^Jennifer Ruth Doctor (1999),The BBC and Ultra-Modern Music, 1922–1936: Shaping a Nation's Tastes, Cambridge University Press,ISBN 9780521661171, p. 425, note 44.
  3. ^British Library, Notable Acquisitions 1985–1994
  4. ^Jennifer Ruth Doctor (1999)The BBC and Ultra-Modern Music, 1922–1936: Shaping a Nation's Tastes, Cambridge University Press,ISBN 9780521661171,p. 339
  5. ^abcRobert Craft (2007)."Schoenberg:Pierrot Lunaire / Chamber Symphony No. 1 / 4 Orchestral Songs (Schoenberg, Vol. 6)" (Liner notes). Naxos Records. CD 8.557523. Retrieved30 September 2021.... a first attempt to create a chamber orchestra.
  6. ^Walter Frisch,The Early Works of Arnold Schoenberg, 1893–1908 (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1993): p. 223.
  7. ^Walter Frisch,The Early Works of Arnold Schoenberg, 1893–1908 (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1993): pp. 225–226.
  8. ^"Meet the Composer: Splitting Adams: John Adams' Chamber Symphonies on Apple Podcasts".Apple Podcasts. Retrieved2023-01-05.
  9. ^"Kammersymphonie [Chamber symphony] no. 1, op. 9 (1906) (arr. Arnold Schoenberg (piano 4 hands))".schoenberg.at. Retrieved30 September 2021.
  10. ^"Kammersymphonie [Chamber symphony] no. 1, op. 9b (1906) (arr. Arnold Schoenberg (1922) (orchestra); rev. Arnold Schoenberg (1935))". www.schoenberg.at. Retrieved26 April 2014.
  11. ^"Kammersymphonie [Chamber symphony] no. 1, op. 9 (1906) (arr. Alban Berg (1914) (2 pianos))". www.schoenberg.at. Retrieved26 April 2014.
  12. ^Jarman, Douglas."Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951) arr. Anton Webern - Chamber Symphony No.1 in E, Op.9". www.youtube.com. Retrieved12 December 2022.
  13. ^"Album Reviews: Schoenberg:Pierrot Lunaire / Chamber Symphony No. 1 / 4 Orchestral Songs (Schoenberg, Vol. 6)". Naxos Records. March–August 2007. CD 8.557523. Retrieved30 September 2021.
  14. ^Blair Sanderson. Review for the Naxos CD 8.557523 atAllMusic "4 stars out of 5"
  15. ^McGuire, Kathleen (November 2003)."Kammersymphonie No. 1, Op. 9, by Arnold Schoenberg (1906): Considerations for the Conductor"(PDF).Journal of the Conductors Guild.24 (1):2–32.

External links

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