Anton Webern (1883-1945) - String Trio Op.20

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • Recorded Live on 19th February 2015 - The University of Manchester
    Psappha Ensemble
    Benedict Holland - violin
    Heather Wallington - viola
    Jennifer Langridge - cello
    Anton Webern (1883-1945)
    String Trio op.20
    I. Sehr langsam
    II. Sehr getragen und ausdrucksvoll
    The String Trio was composed between 1926 and 1927. Webern had originally planned to write a three movement piece but, as he noted in his diary in June 1927, 'after much deliberation I have arrived at the difficult decision to give up the planned third movement'. Having decided that the work should consist of only two movements he then exchanged the order of the movements so that the original second movement (a slow Rondo) became the first and the sonata form first movement the second.
    Webern's three earlier twelve note works (op.17,18 and 19) had all been songs; in returning to instrumental music Webern was able, as he said in a letter to Berg, 'once more to write long stretches of music' since, as he later said in the lectures published in The Path to New Music, 'only with the formulation of a law did it again become possible to write long pieces'.
    Unlike the more sparsely textured works that followed it, and in spite of its supposed references to traditional forms such as Rondo and sonata form, the sheer density of the writing in the String Trio makes it a difficult work to get to grips with for both the listener and the performers. It is, as Roger Smalley observed, 'of all Webern's works... the most difficult to grasp aurally. The degree of variation applied to the Rondo on its several returns and to the recapitulation of the Sonata, is so great that it's almost impossible to perceive them as such.' Perhaps, as Erwin Stein suggested in his introduction to the 1955 edition of the score, the work is best approached as a mosaic, as a kaleidoscope 'which continually produces new images through manifold groupings of its colours and forms' .
    Early audiences certainly found the work difficult. Although Webern noted that the première by the Wiener Streichquartett (later the Kolisch Quartet) in Vienna in January 1928 'went very well' a subsequent performance by the Amar Quartet (with Hindemith playing viola) in May brought forth a stream of hostile criticism from the press, while a performance at the ISCM Festival in Sienna in September led to fisticuffs and a demand by an Italian critic that Mussolini order the Festival to be stopped so as to ensure that such music wasn't played in Italy again.
    © Douglas Jarman

Комментарии • 6

  • @bezuglich
    @bezuglich Месяц назад

    Who are your instruments' makers? Always like to know.
    Lovely clean, singing lines; seems to be meant to be looped, without strict beginning or end.
    Thank you!

  • @tunhale
    @tunhale 3 года назад +2

    This still sounds new almost a century after it was composed. Psappha Ensemble:
    Benedict Holland, Heather Wallington and Jennifer Langridge bring the meaning alive.

  • @interglossa
    @interglossa 8 лет назад +2

    This is a pivotal work in Webern's oeuvre and definitely has its admirers. I liked this performance because it was so clearly enunciated, making it more audible.

  • @howardchasnoff208
    @howardchasnoff208 8 лет назад +1

    It lacks emotion and propulsion that it needs but it is by far the cleanest clearest most exact rendition that I have ever heard every note is pure. The music is so full of imagination, tonal variety etc. Its a remarkable emotion filled work.

  • @TheLeoneprimo
    @TheLeoneprimo 4 года назад

    Do you have any sources for the Italian performance episode?

  • @TheSpeeddemonds
    @TheSpeeddemonds 3 года назад

    It sounds creepy Reminds me of a band called sonic youth. They are known to mess with the chromatic scale. If you look them up peep “The Diamond Sea”