Arnold Schoenberg, by Egon Schiele, 1917 |
Several posts back I rather arbitrarily put up a performance of Arnold Schoenberg's chamber piece for strings (originally for sextet, but also in a version for string orchestra) Verklärte Nacht, composed in 1899. I've known this piece for a long time as I had a vinyl recording of the string orchestra version decades ago. But the performance I posted, by the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra, was so compelling that I keep coming back to it. I sent it to a friend of mind with five decades of experience as an orchestral musician and she was bowled over, saying she had never heard anything like it. Indeed, this is one of the finest classical music performances I have ever heard. Here it is:
Two people are walking through a bare, cold wood;the moon keeps pace with them and draws their gaze.The moon moves along above tall oak trees,there is no wisp of cloud to obscure the radianceto which the black, jagged tips reach up.
The piece was premiered in 1902 and attracted controversy not only for the program, but also for its use of a ninth chord in last inversion. This last I have never understood for two reasons: the chord is merely passing harmony connecting two other chords and besides, Beethoven already used this inversion in one of his string quartets. But I suppose critics at the time were looking for any old stick to beat Schoenberg with.
I have always really liked this piece, but hearing this performance, it occurs to me that this is a truly great piece of music. It both summarizes the 19th century and gazes into the future, hinting at the turmoil of the 20th century.
Just one thing puzzles me: why is one of the violists wearing a red jacket?
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