Anton Webern
Anton Webern (German: [ˈantoːn ˈveːbɐn] ; 3 December 1883 – 15 September 1945) was an Austrian composer, conductor, and musicologist whose modernist music was among the most radical of its milieu in its lyrical, poetic concision and use of then novel atonal and twelve-tone techniques. His approach was typically rigorous, inspired by his studies of the Franco-Flemish School under Guido Adler and by Arnold Schoenberg's emphasis on structure in teaching composition from the music of Johann Sebastian Bach, the First Viennese School, and Johannes Brahms. Webern, Schoenberg, and their colleague Alban Berg were at the core of what became known as the Second Viennese School.
Webern was arguably the first and certainly the last of the three to write music in an aphoristic and expressionist style, reflecting his instincts and the idiosyncrasy of his compositional process. Working from personal experience, he treated themes of love, nature, mysticism, and nostalgia. Unhappily peripatetic and often assigned light music or operetta in his early conducting career, he aspired to conduct what was seen as more respectable, serious music at home in Vienna. Following Schoenberg's guidance, Webern tried writing music of greater length during and after their World War I service, relying on the structural support of texts in many Lieder.
He rose as a choirmaster and conductor, championing Gustav Mahler's music in Red Vienna and abroad. With Schoenberg based in Berlin, Webern began writing music of increasing confidence, independence, and scale using twelve-tone technique. Marginalized as a "cultural Bolshevist" in Fascist Austria and Nazi Germany, he maintained "the path to the new music", enjoyed international recognition, and relied more on teaching for income. He opposed fascist cultural positions but always espoused pan-Germanism and was torn, like friends and family, among uncertainties. His hope for moderate, stable, and successful governance of Austria within Nazi Germany proved misplaced, and he helped Jewish friends emigrate and hide while repeatedly considering emigrating himself.
A soldier accidentally killed Webern after World War II. In a phenomenon known as post-Webernism, his music was celebrated by composers, musicians, and scholars. René Leibowitz, Pierre Boulez, Robert Craft, and Hans and Rosaleen Moldenhauer established it as an important part of modernism through performance, study, and advocacy. Igor Stravinsky assimilated it. To many, it represented a path to serialism. Broader understanding of Webern's expressive agenda, performance practice, and complex sociocultural and political context lagged. A historical edition of his music is currently underway.
-
Choral Fantasy in C Minor for Piano, Chorus and Orchestra, Op. 80: I. Adagio - Live at Schauspielhaus, Berlin, 1991 - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Choral Fantasy in C Minor for Piano, Chorus and Orchestra, Op. 80: II. Finale: a. Allegro - Meno allegro - Allegro molto - Live at Schauspielhaus, Berlin, 1991 - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Choral Fantasy in C Minor for Piano, Chorus and Orchestra, Op. 80: II. Finale: b. Adagio ma non troppo - Live at Schauspielhaus, Berlin, 1991 - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Choral Fantasy in C Minor for Piano, Chorus and Orchestra, Op. 80: II. Finale: c. Marcia, assai vivace - Allegro - Live at Schauspielhaus, Berlin, 1991 - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Choral Fantasy in C Minor for Piano, Chorus and Orchestra, Op. 80: II. Finale: d. Allegretto, ma non troppo quasi andante con moto - Live at Schauspielhaus, Berlin, 1991 - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Choral Fantasy in C Minor for Piano, Chorus and Orchestra, Op. 80: II. Finale: e. Presto - Live at Schauspielhaus, Berlin, 1991 - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Greisengesang D. 778 (Orch. Reger) - Live at Cité de la musique, Paris, 2002 - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Gretchen am Spinnrade, D. 118 (Orch. Reger) - Live - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Gruppe aus dem Tartarus, D. 583 (Orch. Reger) - Live - Abbado: Baroque & Beyond -
Anton Webern
-
Slow Movement For String Quartet (1905) - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
5 Movements for String Quartet, Op. 5: 1. Heftig bewegt - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
5 Movements for String Quartet, Op. 5: 2. Sehr langsam - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
5 Movements for String Quartet, Op. 5: 3. Sehr bewegt - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
5 Movements for String Quartet, Op. 5: 4. Sehr langsam - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
5 Movements for String Quartet, Op. 5: 5. In zarter Bewegung - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
String Quartet (1905) - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
6 Bagatelles for String Quartet, Op. 9: 1. Mässig - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
6 Bagatelles for String Quartet, Op. 9: 2. Leicht bewegt - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
6 Bagatelles for String Quartet, Op. 9: 3. Ziemlich fliessend - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
6 Bagatelles for String Quartet, Op. 9: 4. Sehr langsam - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
6 Bagatelles for String Quartet, Op. 9: 5. Äusserst langsam - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
6 Bagatelles for String Quartet, Op. 9: 6. Fliessend - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
Rondo For String Quartet (1906) - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
Movement For String Trio Op. Post. - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
Three Pieces For String Quartet (1913): 1. Bewegt - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
Three Pieces For String Quartet (1913): 2. Langsam "Schmerz immer Blick nach oben" - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
Three Pieces For String Quartet (1913): 3. Nicht zu langsam - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
String Trio Op. 20: 1. Sehr langsam - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
String Trio Op. 20: 2. Sehr getragen und ausdrucksvoll - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
String Quartet, Op. 28: 1. Mässig - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
String Quartet, Op. 28: 2. Gemächlich - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
String Quartet, Op. 28: 3. Sehr fliessend - Webern: Works for String Quartet; String Trio Op.20 -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder aus "Der Siebente Ring", Op. 3: I. Dies ist ein Lied für dich allein - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder aus "Der Siebente Ring", Op. 3: II. Im Windesweben - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder aus "Der Siebente Ring", Op. 3: III. An Baches Ranft - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder aus "Der Siebente Ring", Op. 3: IV. Im Morgentaun - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder aus "Der Siebente Ring", Op. 3: V. Kahl reckt der Baum - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder zu Gedichten von Stefan George, Op. 4: I. Eingang - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder zu Gedichten von Stefan George, Op. 4: II. Noch zwingt mich Treue - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder zu Gedichten von Stefan George, Op. 4: III. Ja Heil und Dank dir - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder zu Gedichten von Stefan George, Op. 4: IV. So ich traurig bin - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Fünf Lieder zu Gedichten von Stefan George, Op. 4: V. Ihr tratet zu dem Herde - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
4 Pieces for Violin & Piano, Op. 7: I. Sehr langsam - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
4 Pieces for Violin & Piano, Op. 7: II. Rasch - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
4 Pieces for Violin & Piano, Op. 7: III. Sehr langsam - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
4 Pieces for Violin & Piano, Op. 7: IV. Bewegt - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
3 Pieces for Cello and Piano, Op. 11: I. Mäßige Achtel - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
3 Pieces for Cello and Piano, Op. 11: II. Sehr bewegt - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
3 Pieces for Cello and Piano, Op. 11: III. Äußerst ruhig - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Vier Lieder für Gesang und Klavier, Op. 12: I. Der Tag ist vergangen - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Vier Lieder für Gesang und Klavier, Op. 12: II. Die geheimnisvolle Flöte - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Vier Lieder für Gesang und Klavier, Op. 12: III. Schien mir's, als ich sah die Sonne - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Vier Lieder für Gesang und Klavier, Op. 12: IV. Gleich und gleich - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Quartet, Op. 22: I. Sehr mäßig - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Quartet, Op. 22: II. Sehr schwungvoll - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Drei Lieder aus "Viae inviae", Op. 23: I. Das Dunkle Herz - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Drei Lieder aus "Viae inviae", Op. 23: II. Es stürzt aus Höhen Frische - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Drei Lieder aus "Viae inviae", Op. 23: III. Herr Jesus mein - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
3 Lieder nach Gedichten von Hildegard Jone, Op. 25: I. Wie bin ich froh! - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
3 Lieder nach Gedichten von Hildegard Jone, Op. 25: II. Des Herzens Purpurvogel - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
3 Lieder nach Gedichten von Hildegard Jone, Op. 25: III. Sterne, Ihr silbernen Bienen - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Variations for Piano, Op. 27: I. Sehr mässig - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Variations for Piano, Op. 27: II. Sehr schnell - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
-
Variations for Piano, Op. 27: III. Ruhig fliessend - Charles Rosen Plays Webern -
Anton Webern
Similar Artists