Wind Quintet op. 26. 2. Graceful and cheerful

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    Titel Wind Quintet op. 26. 2. Graceful and cheerful
    Titelzusatz Birthday present - Private recording
    Spieldauer 00:05:04
    Urheber/innen Schönberg, Arnold [Komponist/in] [GND]
    Mitwirkende Leeuwen, Ary van [Flöte]
    Peterson, Alfred
    Hoss, Wendell [Horn] [GND]
    Weiss, Adolph [Fagott] [GND]
    Va-Co [Label]
    Datum 1939.09.13 [Aufnahmedatum]
    Ort Traunkirchen, Villa Spaun [Ortsbezug]
    Schlagworte Musik ; E-Musik ; Gesellschaft ; Besetzung - Quintett ; Instrumente - Blasinstrumente ; Feiern ; Jubiläum ; Unveröffentlichte Aufnahme
    20. Jahrhundert - 30er Jahre
    20. Jahrhundert - 20er Jahre
    Typ audio
    Format SCS [Schallplatte, Schellack]
    Sprache Englisch
    Signatur Österreichische Mediathek, e11-00707_b01_k02
    Medienart Mp3-Audiodatei
    Arnold Schönberg, Felix Greissle, Arnold Greissle ("Bubi") and Gertrude Schönberg Greissle in front of Villa Spaun, Arnold Schönberg Center, CC BY-SA 3.0 AT

    Arnold Schönberg, Felix Greissle, Arnold Greissle ("Bubi") and Gertrude Schönberg Greissle in front of Villa Spaun, Arnold Schönberg Center, CC BY-SA 3.0 AT

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    Inhalt

    On April 9, 1923 Arnold Greissle was born in Mödling near Vienna, the son of Schönberg’s daughter Gertrud and her husband Felix Greissle, a former student of Schönberg’s. Only a few days later, on April 14, Schönberg began work on a wind quintet, the first draft of which he completed on July 26, 1924. More than fifteen years earlier, with the “Chamber Symphony,” op. 9, he had succeeded in compressing a complete symphonic cycle into a movement of barely twenty minutes; now the Wind Quintet proved that the twelve-tone method could be used to master extensive formal processes even without tonality. The dedication of the piece “Dem Bubi Arnold” reveals the grandfather’s pride in his first-born grandson, as well as perhaps Schönberg’s conviction that he had laid a foundation for the future with this new work.

    Parts of the Wind Quintet were composed at Traunsee in the summer of 1923, in Villa Spaun (“Hofrichterhaus”), also called the “Roner Villa” after its owner at the time, Baron Hermann Roner. (Text: Arnold Schönberg Center)

    Technische Anmerkungen

    Sammlung Schönberg