Schoenberg: Pelleas und Melisande Op5; Rudhyar: Stanzas

Track Listings
1. Five Stanzas - I    
2. Five Stanzas - II    
3. Five Stanzas -III    
4. Five Stanzas -IV    
5. Five Stanzas -V    
6. Pelleas and Melisande    
7. Pelleas and Melisande    
8. Pelleas and Melisande    
9. Pelleas and Melisande    
10. Pelleas and Melisande    
11. Pelleas and Melisande    
12. Pelleas and Melisande    
13. Pelleas and Melisande    
14. Pelleas and Melisande    
15. Pelleas and Melisande    

Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Five Stanzas for String Ensemble, dedicated to Carl Ruggles, pioneer and friend, was composed in Hollywood, California, from December 6 to December 26, 1927, and the final score was written during the following weeks. I had met Carl Ruggles in December 1922, when I went to New York to play some of my earlier piano compositions at a concert of the International Composers Guild, of which I had been a founding member a year before. The score of Five Stanzas was printed in the quarterly New Music Orchestra Series that Henry Cowell had started in 1926 with some assistance from Charles Ives, whom I was to meet shortly thereafter. The work was first performed by Friedrich Cerha, director of the Austrian Radio Orchestra, in March 1975. Paul Zukofsky's performance at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts on March 10, 1982 was for me a most memorable event, because of the excellence and intensity of the interpretation and the extraordinary warmth of the audience's reception. The work has a lyrical quality sustained through the five sections. It is truly a "poem" in five stanzas, but I had no story or personal drama in mind when I composed it. Much of the melodic thematic material is given to the lower string instruments, which at times fulfill an almost declamatory function, apparent in the very first bars of the first Stanza marked "tragic and passionate." The second Stanza, "scherzando," starts in a playful mood, but soon the celli, violas, and basses unfold an intense melodic pattern of large intervals, taken up a little later by the violins and whole orchestra. The section ends with a repeat of the beginning.

The third Stanza is an "andante expressivo" featuring softly dissonant harmonic progressions of sevenths and a contemplative mood. The fourth Stanza, "allegro rubato energico," is a fast and tumultuous movement. The work ends with the longest section, "moderato," in which the lower strings develop their declamatory message ending in vast chords spread out in fifths throughout the whole available spectrum of sound.

The Five Stanzas belong to a period which began in 1924 when, after two years away from composing, I developed the concept of "dissonant harmony" and resonance in a series of piano compositions--first in the four Pentagrams (1924-26), then in Paens (1926), and the second through the eighth Tetragrams (1924-29). I have referred to this music as "music of speech" to distinguish it from the music of the classical tradition (suites, sonatas, symphonies) so often based on dance rhythms or physical motions framed by rigid systems of formal development. My music is essentially subjective, evoking psychological feeling-experiences. It is meant to speak directly to the inner nature. It is never "made" as an object according to traditional or fashion-directed patterns.

Schoenberg: Pelleas und Melisande Op5; Rudhyar: Stanzas, Music, Dane Rudhyar, Arnold Schoenberg, Paul Zukofsky, 20th/21st Century Symphony, 20th/21st Century Tone Poem/Symphonic Poem, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Orchestral, Symphonic
Schoenberg: Pelleas und Melisande Op5; Rudhyar: Stanzas
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    Schoenberg: Pelleas und Melisande Op5; Rudhyar: Stanzas

    Manufacturer: Cp2 Records
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    All Works by SchoenbergAll Works by Schoenberg | Schoenberg, Arnold | ( S ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
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    ASIN: B000009J86
    Release Date: 1995-12-12

    Tracks:

    1. Five Stanzas - I
    2. Five Stanzas - II
    3. Five Stanzas -III
    4. Five Stanzas -IV
    5. Five Stanzas -V
    6. Pelleas and Melisande
    7. Pelleas and Melisande
    8. Pelleas and Melisande
    9. Pelleas and Melisande
    10. Pelleas and Melisande
    11. Pelleas and Melisande
    12. Pelleas and Melisande
    13. Pelleas and Melisande
    14. Pelleas and Melisande
    15. Pelleas and Melisande

    Album Description

    Five Stanzas for String Ensemble, dedicated to Carl Ruggles, pioneer and friend, was composed in Hollywood, California, from December 6 to December 26, 1927, and the final score was written during the following weeks. I had met Carl Ruggles in December 1922, when I went to New York to play some of my earlier piano compositions at a concert of the International Composers Guild, of which I had been a founding member a year before. The score of Five Stanzas was printed in the quarterly New Music Orchestra Series that Henry Cowell had started in 1926 with some assistance from Charles Ives, whom I was to meet shortly thereafter. The work was first performed by Friedrich Cerha, director of the Austrian Radio Orchestra, in March 1975. Paul Zukofsky's performance at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts on March 10, 1982 was for me a most memorable event, because of the excellence and intensity of the interpretation and the extraordinary warmth of the audience's reception. The work has a lyrical quality sustained through the five sections. It is truly a "poem" in five stanzas, but I had no story or personal drama in mind when I composed it. Much of the melodic thematic material is given to the lower string instruments, which at times fulfill an almost declamatory function, apparent in the very first bars of the first Stanza marked "tragic and passionate." The second Stanza, "scherzando," starts in a playful mood, but soon the celli, violas, and basses unfold an intense melodic pattern of large intervals, taken up a little later by the violins and whole orchestra. The section ends with a repeat of the beginning.

    The third Stanza is an "andante expressivo" featuring softly dissonant harmonic progressions of sevenths and a contemplative mood. The fourth Stanza, "allegro rubato energico," is a fast and tumultuous movement. The work ends with the longest section, "moderato," in which the lower strings develop their declamatory message ending in vast chords spread out in fifths throughout the whole available spectrum of sound.

    The Five Stanzas belong to a period which began in 1924 when, after two years away from composing, I developed the concept of "dissonant harmony" and resonance in a series of piano compositions--first in the four Pentagrams (1924-26), then in Paens (1926), and the second through the eighth Tetragrams (1924-29). I have referred to this music as "music of speech" to distinguish it from the music of the classical tradition (suites, sonatas, symphonies) so often based on dance rhythms or physical motions framed by rigid systems of formal development. My music is essentially subjective, evoking psychological feeling-experiences. It is meant to speak directly to the inner nature. It is never "made" as an object according to traditional or fashion-directed patterns.

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