Transfigured Desk: Encounters with Early Schoenberg

The following is a guest post from David H. Plylar, Producer in the Concert Office.

Arnold Schoenberg's holograph score for "Verklarte Nacht" (Photograph used by permission of Belmont Music Publishers).

For those who love music and the people who create it, it would be difficult to match some of the perks of working at the Library of Congress. Perhaps the most rewarding, artistically and intellectually, is having the opportunity to study manuscripts and other composer materials.

I recently had the chance to sit with the holograph manuscript of Arnold Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night, 1899), in preparation for a talk about the work. I confess to a reverence for most musical monuments, and being able to look at Schoenberg’s original work is something of a sacramental experience. I was mildly taken aback at the lack of expected auto-luminosity when the score was unwrapped, but recovered swiftly as the music was revealed.

Others have written about the differences between the manuscript of Verklärte Nacht and the published sextet (and by extension the version for string orchestra (1917) and its later revision in 1943). However, seeing those differences in print is quite different from seeing them in Schoenberg’s hand. Occasionally one finds corrections that have been attached with thread, and a peek beneath reveals that Schoenberg’s revisions were motivated by considerations both dramatic and motivic. In other places he wrote music that does not make it into the final version, or appears in a different key. What one sees, essentially, is the process of composition; it is a glimpse of a great composer at work.

It is a humanizing experience to witness the process of revision, and an excellent reminder that familiar scores could easily have adopted a different form, for better or worse. A study of a work’s origins helps one to better appreciate the qualities of the final version, and the amount of thought that it took to produce the artwork.

The manuscript of Verklärte Nacht and Brahms’ first sextet for strings will be on display to the public before the performance of these works by Pamela Frank, Alexander Simionescu, Nobuko Imai, Nokuthula Ngwenyama, Peter Wiley and Edward Arron on Wednesday, October 10 in the Coolidge Auditorium at the Library of Congress.

 

Event Listing

Pamela Frank and Alexander Simionescu, violin;

Nobuko Imai and Nokuthula Ngwenyama, viola;

Peter Wiley and Edward Arron, cello

Wednesday, October 10, 2012, 8:00 p.m. – Jefferson Building, Coolidge Auditorium

 

DVOŘÁK: Miniatures for two violins and viola, op. 75a

SCHOENBERG: Verklärte Nacht, op. 4

BRAHMS: Sextet in B-flat major, op. 18

 

Pre-concert presentation:

Developing Variations: Brahms, Schoenberg and Verklärte Nacht

6:15 p.m. – Jefferson Building, Whittall Pavilion

Samuel Barber: Serendipitous Discoveries

Next Tuesday, October 2, 2012, Dr. Barbara Heyman will present a lecture in Coolidge Auditorium entitled “Samuel Barber: Serendipitous Discoveries.” This is another in a series of lectures co-sponsored by the Library of Congress and the American Musicological Society that provides an opportunity for scholars, students and enthusiasts to hear about the kinds of research …

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Sheet Music of the Week: Transit of Venus Edition

As seen from the Earth, the planet Venus will move across the face of the sun on June 5, 2012. This week’s featured sheet music celebrates this rare orbit with John Philip Sousa’s commemorative march, part of a Transit of Venus presentation created in the Performing Arts Encyclopedia with the help of  NASA scientist Sten …

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1750: Berlin on the Potomac

The following is a guest post by Daniel Walshaw, Music Division. Berlin – before the nightclubs and the heavy metal concerts, before the cabarets and the brettls, even before the Berlin Philharmonic – evening musical entertainment was centered on a vibrant and growing chamber music tradition, nurtured by King Frederick II of Prussia. C.P.E. Bach, Johann …

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New Webcast: Tchaikovsky & Taneyev: Mentor and Protégé

The Music Division is happy to announce a new webcast from our spring lecture series, featuring Senior Reference Specialist and occasional guest blogger Kevin Lavine. Set within the artistic milieu of the last decades of Imperial Russia, Tchaikovsky & Taneyev: Mentor and Protégé traces the lives and careers of two of that country’s most influential …

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Congratulations to Dafnis Prieto, 2011 MacArthur Fellow

This week the MacArthur Foundation announced their list of  this year’s Fellows,  selected for ” their creativity, originality, and potential to make important contributions in the future.”   Winners came from a variety of fields: clinical psychology, architecture, radio production, and poetry. Among the honored musicans is percussionist/composer Dafnis Prieto, who was a memorable part of …

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Meet the Composer: Olli Kortekangas on his “Seven Songs for Planet Earth”

In her list of “not to miss” DC performances this year, The Washington Post music critic Anne Midgette included the premiere of Finnish composer Olli Kortekangas’s Seven Songs for Planet Earth, which will be performed in a concert called “Northern Lights: Choral Illuminations from Scandinavia and Beyond” by The Choral Arts Society of Washington and …

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American Poetry as Cantata: Turning the Words of Dickinson, Hughes and Glück into Song

We are always excited to welcome composers to the Music Division as it not only affords us the opportunity to connect with new faces and perspectives in the music world, but also allows us the opportunity to appreciate how their activities are an extension of the legacies preserved here in the Library’s collections. This Friday, …

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“An Awful Lot of Notes”—Sketches of Walter Piston

The following is a guest post by Music Reference Specialist Lisa Shiota. “It always makes me smile when the Library of Congress asks me to keep my sketches for their collection. When I get through I don’t have any sketches—they’re all rubbed out. I write an awful lot of notes that don’t stay.” ~Walter Piston, …

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