Why did he develop this method? What was his goal? Was it musical, artistic? What was he hoping to achieve? Was he trying to destroy tonality, or create a new kind of music? Did this need to be done? You tell me, I'm here to listen for a while.
I call this 'modernist thinking,' since it is based on the fact of the 12-note division of the octave. This is its kinship with serialism, not ordered rows or non-repetition. In this sense, Serialism is a subset of more general modern approaches.I do believe that serial thinking in terms of the operations and processes of serialism and the integration of vertical and horizontal dimensions of music is here to stay for quite a long time. We should be aware, for example, that even the "tonal" works Schoenberg wrote after the introduction of 12-tone technique (Suite for Strings, Theme and Variations for Band, parts of the Chamber Symphony No. 2, Kol Nidre, etc.) employ serial treatment of non-row materials.
Yeah, he was worried about harmony! He was worried about how to get it by using those rows! And I'm doing you a favor by calling it 'harmony!'I think Schoenberg was much more worried about harmony.
Both were structurally unstable. :lol:What does Schoenberg's music and the Hindenburg have in common?
Incidentally, here is an essay pointing out features in the Wind Quintet that link it to traditional tonality.The String Trio op. 46 is Expressionist; Schoenberg had abandoned classical phrase-construction in this work, and replaced it with a kind of "musical prose" reminiscent of the Expressionist period of Erwartung, with fragmentary texture. It is jagged, and the work is one of his most 'abstract' compositions. It's generally regarded as exhibiting rather attenuated tonal motivation, as with the Wind Quintet.
But I don't understand what you mean by tonal center. I hear centers in Schoenberg, including the String Trio, like I do in Debussy and Bartok and Stravinsky. I hear him moving from center to center, weighting this one at one point and that one at another.The T5 or T7 form of the row, to create the IV/V relation; the antecendent and consequent phrases; the 'cadential' phrases; 'developing variation;' 'formal prototypes.' It's all there in the String Trio except for one minor detail: a tonal center.
I explained that difference above. If you mean in terms of your perception of it in time, I can't define that.What is the difference between a tone centricity and a tonal center? How long is long enough for a tonal center to have significant definition?
If that were the case, there would be no need for the 12-tone method, which is basically what that article you linked to is stating. I'll have to print that out in order to fully understand, assess, and comment on it, which may take a week or longer.It is true that I do not hear Schoenberg's music in terms of functional tonality, but this is also true of the composers I mentioned, as well as music before 1600 and the music of other non-European countries.
I hear Schoenberg as music, working with themes, motifs, harmonies, and timbres to create coherence. The separation of one of these elements from the others makes no more sense here than in any other piece of music. I don't hear Schoenberg's musical gestures as essentially different in any way than those in music by Beethoven or Mahler.