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OverviewThis study provides a new view of a composer long considered to be one of the century's most rigorously intellectual creators, Anton Webern. By examining a central pre-twelve-tone work, the Trakl cycle, Op 14, in the context of the Viennese intellectual and artistic climate, Professor Shreffler shows how Webern's responses to Trakl's complex verse enabled him to expand his musical vocabulary. The author's emphasis on Webern's compositional process is of particular importance: whether because of the anxiety of creating a new musical language, or because of an innate hyper-perfectionism (or both), Webern rejected most of what he composed. A close examination of the manuscript sources - fragments, sketches, and fair copies - of Webern's comparatively neglected middle-period lieder enables her to shed light on Webern's musical language and his working methods. A focus on the sources also helps to modify the view that his music progressed steadily in the direction of the twelve-tone technique. The works reveal instead a concern with expressing the essence of the text; this lyricism, rather than articulating a substantially different aesthetic from the later works, provides a better understanding of the consummate lyricism of all his music, however compressed or fragmented its utterance in the `classic' twelve-tone works. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Anne C. Shreffler (Assistant Professor, Department of Music, Assistant Professor, Department of Music, University of Chicago)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Clarendon Press Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 24.20cm Weight: 0.591kg ISBN: 9780198162247ISBN 10: 0198162243 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 19 January 1995 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsShreffler's skills as both archival detective and analytical interpreter combine to produce a convincing and absorbing narrative of the creative process. --The Musical Times<br> Shreffler's prose is clear and engaging, and the ample musical examples are drawn mostly from material hitherto unavailable....This model study of musical structure and genesis belongs in all serious music libraries, pper-division undergraduate and above. --Choice<br> An important book, and a timely one. --Tempo<br> Her book is an excellent discussion, thoroughly convincing and a most important contribution to Trakl and to Webern scholarship. R. S. Furness, Austrian Studies 'Shreffler's skills as both archival detective and analytical interpreter combine to produce a convincing and absorbing narrative of the creative process ... Shreffler's particular sensitivity to matters of form and texture helps to give her interpretation of Webern's struggle to synthesise old and new, radical and traditional, an unusual sophistication and conviction. Above all, she never loses sight of the interaction between text and music, the exploration of which helped to make Webern so fastidious a self-critic, and so prone to initiate projects that ran out of steam.' Musical Times an absorbingly detailed study... a landmaek for Webern scholars and others, including those interested in sketch studies and in the evolution of harmonic language in the early twentieth century. Notes 'Schreffler's skills as both archival detective and analytical interpreter combine to produce a convincing and absorbing narrative of the creative process. Her work has strong asthetic roots in the belief that Webern and Trakl were both modernists... She also has much of value to say about Webern's text-setting... This book is attractively presented... her principal thesis to do with why Webern abandoned some projects while completing others is clearly set out.' Arnold Whittall, Musical Times, March 1995 'Schreffler's skills as both archival detective and analytical interpreter combine to produce a convincing and absorbing narrative of the creative process. Schreffler's particular sensitivity to matters of form and texture helps to give her interpretation of Webern's struggle to synthesis old and new, radical and traditional, an unusual sophistication and conviction. Above all, she never loses sight of the interaction betyween text and music, the exploration of which helped to make Webern so fastidious a self-critic, and so prone to initiate projects that ran out of steam.' Arnold Whittall, The Musical Times, March 1995 an absorbingly detailed study... a landmark for Webern scholars and others, including those interested in sketch studies and in the evolution of harmonic language in the early twentieth century. Notes an important book, and a timely one Tempo `Her book is an excellent discussion, thoroughly convincing and a most important contribution to Trakl and to Webern scholarship.' R. S. Furness, Austrian Studies `Shreffler's skills as both archival detective and analytical interpreter combine to produce a convincing and absorbing narrative of the creative process ... Shreffler's particular sensitivity to matters of form and texture helps to give her interpretation of Webern's struggle to synthesise old and new, radical and traditional, an unusual sophistication and conviction. Above all, she never loses sight of the interaction between text and music, the exploration of which helped to make Webern so fastidious a self-critic, and so prone to initiate projects that ran out of steam.' Musical Times `an absorbingly detailed study... a landmaek for Webern scholars and others, including those interested in sketch studies and in the evolution of harmonic language in the early twentieth century.' Notes 'Schreffler's skills as both archival detective and analytical interpreter combine to produce a convincing and absorbing narrative of the creative process. Her work has strong asthetic roots in the belief that Webern and Trakl were both modernists... She also has much of value to say about Webern's text-setting... This book is attractively presented... her principal thesis to do with why Webern abandoned some projects while completing others is clearly set out.' Arnold Whittall, Musical Times, March 1995 'Schreffler's skills as both archival detective and analytical interpreter combine to produce a convincing and absorbing narrative of the creative process. Schreffler's particular sensitivity to matters of form and texture helps to give her interpretation of Webern's struggle to synthesis old and new, radical and traditional, an unusual sophistication and conviction. Above all, she never loses sight of the interaction betyween text and music, the exploration of which helped to make Webern so fastidious a self-critic, and so prone to initiate projects that ran out of steam.' Arnold Whittall, The Musical Times, March 1995 `an absorbingly detailed study... a landmark for Webern scholars and others, including those interested in sketch studies and in the evolution of harmonic language in the early twentieth century.' Notes `an important book, and a timely one' Tempo Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |