Results 171 to 180 of about 13,534 (218)
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Austriaca, 1977
Schoenberg Arnold. Arnold Schoenberg : Textes. In: Austriaca : Cahiers universitaires d'information sur l'Autriche, n°5, 1977. Vie et création musicales. pp. 45-55.
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Schoenberg Arnold. Arnold Schoenberg : Textes. In: Austriaca : Cahiers universitaires d'information sur l'Autriche, n°5, 1977. Vie et création musicales. pp. 45-55.
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Arnold Schoenberg and the Language of Music
Perspectives of New Music, 1975"Music," said Boris de Schloezer, "is a language which expresses nothing beyond itself." One could relate this assertion to the statement of Maurice Denis, for whom painting was essentially "a flat surface covered with diversely colored shapes." Both statements reflect the difficulty that confronts any artist in speaking of his art when it is ...
Michel P. Philippot, Marcelle Clements
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1994
Abstract On 7 December 1917, slightly less than two months after his forty-third birthday, Arnold Schoenberg (1874–1951) was finally discharged from the Austrian Army. His first period of military service had lasted from December 1915 until October 1916 and this second short spell had begun in September 1917.
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Abstract On 7 December 1917, slightly less than two months after his forty-third birthday, Arnold Schoenberg (1874–1951) was finally discharged from the Austrian Army. His first period of military service had lasted from December 1915 until October 1916 and this second short spell had begun in September 1917.
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2003
Abstract I mourn the death of Schoenberg. Every serious composer today has felt the effect of his courage, single-mindedness, and determination, and has profited by the clarity of his teaching. The world is a poorer place now this giant is no more. Source: ‘Obituary: Arnold Schoenberg’, Music Survey 4/J (Oct. 1951), 314.
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Abstract I mourn the death of Schoenberg. Every serious composer today has felt the effect of his courage, single-mindedness, and determination, and has profited by the clarity of his teaching. The world is a poorer place now this giant is no more. Source: ‘Obituary: Arnold Schoenberg’, Music Survey 4/J (Oct. 1951), 314.
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ARNOLD SCHOENBERG AND THE THEATER
The Musical Quarterly, 1962IN SHARP contrast to Gustav Mahler, whom he so highly admired, Schoenberg almost never during his lifetime had a professional connection with the theater. Mahler was a lifelong conductor, almost always of opera; Schoenberg was a lifelong teacher of composition and theory.
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