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Arnold Schoenberg
Arnold Schoenberg
Austrian-American composer (1874-1951)
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Alban Berg
Alban Berg
Austrian composer
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Leonard Stein
Leonard Stein
American conductor and musicologist
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Alexander von Zemlinsky
Alexander von Zemlinsky
Austrian composer, conductor, and teacher
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Alexander Goehr
Alexander Goehr
English composer
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Stefan Anton Reck
Stefan Anton Reck
German conductor
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Luigi Nono
Luigi Nono
Italian composer
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Johannes Brahms
Johannes Brahms
German composer and pianist
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Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Russian composer
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Claude Debussy
Claude Debussy
French composer
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Aaron Copland
Aaron Copland
American composer, composition teacher, writer, and conductor
Anton Webern
Austrian composer and conductor

Anton Webern

Intro
Austrian composer and conductor
Member of, past and present
second Viennese School

second Viennese School

Anton Webern in 1912

Anton Friedrich Wilhelm von Webern (3 December 1883 – 15 September 1945) , known as simply Anton Webern (German: [ˈantoːn ˈveːbɐn] (listen)), was an Austrian composer and conductor. Along with his mentor Arnold Schoenberg and his colleague Alban Berg, Webern was in the core of those in the circle of the Second Viennese School, including Theodor W. Adorno, Heinrich Jalowetz, and Ernst Krenek. As an exponent of atonality and twelve-tone technique, Webern exerted influence on contemporaries Luigi Dallapiccola, Křenek, and even Schoenberg himself. As a tutor, Webern guided and variously influenced Arnold Elston, Frederick Dorian (Friederich Deutsch), Matty Niël [nl], Fré Focke [de], Karl Amadeus Hartmann, Philipp Herschkowitz, René Leibowitz, Humphrey Searle, Leopold Spinner, and Stefan Wolpe.

Webern's music was among the most radical of its milieu, both in its concision and in its rigorous and resolute apprehension of twelve-tone technique. His innovations in schematic organization of pitch, rhythm, register, timbre, dynamics, articulation, and melodic contour; his eagerness to redefine imitative contrapuntal techniques such as canon and fugue; and his inclination toward athematicism, abstraction, and lyricism all greatly informed and oriented intra- and post-war European, typically serial or avant-garde composers such as Olivier Messiaen, Pierre Boulez, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Luigi Nono, Bruno Maderna, Henri Pousseur, and György Ligeti. In the United States, meanwhile, his music attracted the interest of Elliott Carter, whose critical ambivalence was marked by a certain enthusiasm nonetheless; Milton Babbitt, who ultimately derived more inspiration from Schoenberg's twelve-tone practice than that of Webern; and Igor Stravinsky, to whom it was very fruitfully reintroduced by Robert Craft.

During and shortly after the post-war period, then, Webern was posthumously received with attention first diverted from his sociocultural upbringing and surroundings and, moreover, focused in a direction apparently antithetical to his participation in German Romanticism and Expressionism. A richer understanding of Webern began to emerge in the later half of the 20th century, notably in the work of scholars Kathryn Bailey, Julian Johnson, Felix Meyer, Anne Shreffler, as archivists and biographers (most importantly Hans and Rosaleen Moldenhauer) gained access to sketches, letters, lectures, audio recordings, and other articles of or associated with Webern's estate.
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