“The early 20th century is a period that fascinates me. The prevalent
musical aesthetic was disrupted by a new generation of composers who
maintained their roots in tradition, but felt a great desire to expand
music’s horizons: they formed a multitude of currents and embarked on
a number of different paths, all driven by the idea of transfiguring
everything they had previously known. For this disc I have chosen to
retrace the path originally taken by Arnold Schoenberg. Born in Vienna
in 1874, Schoenberg had an atypical career. Upon his father’s death, he
had to leave school as the eldest sibling at the age of sixteen to take
up a profession. As an autodidact he learned the essentials of
composition by sight-reading great repertoire and by playing chamber
music on the cello and the violin. Married to the sister of Alexander
Zemlinsky, Schoenberg took some counterpoint lessons from that composer
and soon started teaching harmony and counterpoint himself, from 1903
on. His teaching activity remained central throughout his life, both in
Europe and after having immigrated to the US. Profoundly aware of the
continual evolution of Art as a historical necessity, Schoenberg
introduced an important change into composition at the beginning of the 20th century. He took it over the brink into the unknown by dissolving
the classical functions of harmony, then by eliminating all familiar
points of melodic and thematic reference. Schoenberg’s Op. 11 is the
first truly atonal work for piano ever written….” (Cathy Krier)
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