Название: The New Music
Автор: Theodor W. Adorno
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Философия
isbn: 9781509538096
isbn:
Now, ladies and gentlemen, what I have told you here has, I think, extremely far-reaching implications for an understanding of one of the most characteristic phenomena of Schoenberg’s music, namely an understanding of Schoenbergian dissonance. We all tend at first, if we are coming from the Wagnerian perspective, to understand dissonance in the sense of an expressive principle and to say that it really emerged from the increasing need for expression. And I have, to this day, essentially adhered to this belief that dissonance should be explained only and essentially in terms of expression. But I think that, at the same time, it has an entirely different root. In Schoenberg it comes from both these inorganic elements, which – like silver ribs or pieces of metal put into a soft mass, have the function of articulating and holding together. So I would say that when, later on, Schoenberg’s complex sonorities are sometimes expressive, but sometimes the exact opposite of expressive, and have this peculiar – perhaps one can call it objectivity, an objective constructive power – that this already lies inside them, that these articulating, inorganic leading chords appear in this way in the early works. Let me now just note in advance that Schoenberg’s incredible sense of form is also evident, for example, in the fact that he does not simply take this main theme from the first part of Verklärte Nacht to articulate the second part too but, rather, introduces a second theme; he invents a kind of cadential theme that has the same function in the second part as this chord progression in the first [plays], and that is precisely the last theme I just played you, the one that appears before the coda, but also in many other places. I mean this theme [plays]. And only at the end [plays] does he bring these two sealing themes together, these two brackets, and thus brings about the unity of their function – whereas, in all the analogous passages in the second part, where before there was this strange ninth chord, this inverted ninth chord, he instead has exactly this cadential theme. That too, incidentally, is an element, a formal element, that you will find used in a far more conscious way in the First Chamber Symphony, which, as well as the fourths, has its own cadential theme that enters whenever there are perfect cadences, namely this theme [plays]. And this theme I just mentioned has exactly the same function here, in a slightly more primitive way. So you see that the genuinely revolutionary innovations undertaken by Schoenberg in the great chamber works from op. 7 to op. 10 were, both in their idea and in the technical approach, already present to a considerable extent in Verklärte Nacht.
Now I would like to consider a few details in Verklärte Nacht. But I will not analyse everything for you. I will not provide a complete analysis, least of all a purely thematic analysis, which is very simple in parts, and you can […]
[…] distinguish incredibly precisely between variable motifs and themes, that is, between themes that turn into something and themes that appear with a kind of claim to being, and which consequently have this form of exterritoriality I was describing to you earlier when I spoke about that inorganic quartal element, which is really one of the roots of the later dissonance. So he will not, for example, subject a theme like this [plays] to variation, because it is precisely the fact that this theme in its formal purpose always has a conclusive, a final character, if you will – if you were to develop variations on that, it would lose its whole sense. What he does, what he then does in the Chamber Symphony with incredible artifice, is to transform the endings of such themes in such a way that they always lead into new harmonic regions, that they always take on a different function. In their own substance, however, these themes are preserved. I would like to correct myself in a small matter, incidentally. You must not assume from what I have said that there are no adagio movements in the traditional sense in Schoenberg. The first movement of the Second Chamber Symphony, for example, is an adagio of the grandest kind, though somewhat exceptional in that respect – and indeed the Second Chamber Symphony as a whole, to which I would like to devote an entire lecture course one day, is one of the most exceptional of all works by Schoenberg.
Well, that is really everything I wanted to say to you about Verklärte Nacht, but I would like to give you an opportunity, if you have any questions about these things I have touched on, an opportunity to have those questions answered. Can I assume, after everything I have said, that you are sufficiently familiar with the work to reconstruct approximately what I have said? Because obviously I was unable to carry out a typical thematic analysis here, which would also be entirely beside the point of such a lecture. So, do you have any questions about it? – Yes? Didn’t someone say something?
Question from the auditorium: Just something that may be more peripheral. Should one view the arrangement for string orchestra as authentic, are they equally valid, the chamber work and the one for string orchestra?
Adorno: I think Professor Kolisch can answer that question better than I can. Rudi, what do you think?
Rudolf Kolisch: Yes, Schoenberg approved of both performances, though he preferred the original version.
Adorno: He preferred the original version?
Kolisch: Yes.
Adorno: Yes.
Kolisch: The string orchestra was […]. He made the arrangement himself.
Adorno: The arrangement is his own, yes.
Kolisch: Yes. […]
Adorno: Well, then I can move on to Gurrelieder. So Gurrelieder has no opus number. That is a strange business; I do not know the exact reason. It probably has something to do with the fact that after finishing work on Gurrelieder – I think it was as early as 1900 – Schoenberg interrupted the orchestration at a certain point, either at the melodrama or the interlude before the melodrama in the third part, and completed it only in 1910, around the time of Die glückliche Hand. In its substance, however, this work is obviously an early Schoenbergian work through and through and should not be placed alongside those that were later changed. Although it is very typical of Schoenberg that all manner of works accompanied him over a very long period, and so his ambition to complete everything and present finished results, this ambition was not terribly great on his part, as indeed the idea of the result and the chef d’oeuvre and completing things are not really decisive with the greatest artists. Just think of Michelangelo: almost all of his major works somehow remained fragments. And this tendency towards the fragmentary is very strong in Schoenberg, and one can perhaps discover something of this kind in Gurrelieder, where the orchestration of the later parts indeed differs greatly from the rest. So, Gurrelieder is a kind of – well, one really has to call it a kind of Liederspiel, a song cycle, in which the very short second part is really just one great song that is contrasted with the other songs purely because of its very emphatic character, and in the third part this is combined with choral elements, namely the male choruses sung by King Waldemar’s troops, then with the long orchestral interlude and the melodrama ‘The Wild Hunt of the Summer Wind’ and the big final chorus. The approach in Gurrelieder as a whole is a two-pronged one, if you will, as I touched on with reference to Verklärte Nacht. On the one hand, it is a work that uses leitmotifs, much like Wagner’s music dramas, and those of you who still own the old version, the long version of Berg’s analysis12 – I lost mine in the confusion of emigration – can find very detailed analyses of these leitmotif relationships there. At the same time, the piece is written in such a way that the characters of the individual songs are set off against one another, set apart from one another very sharply. Berg, who is largely – I think this has not been sufficiently emphasized until now – Berg’s specific technique consists largely in further developing the technical achievements of the early Schoenberg. While Schoenberg himself then continued in a completely different direction after op. 10, one might say that Berg transferred СКАЧАТЬ