Schoenberg: Peripetie from ‘Five Orchestral Pieces’ Opus 16 (1909) Analysis section by section.
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Transcript of Schoenberg: Peripetie from ‘Five Orchestral Pieces’ Opus 16 (1909) Analysis section by section.
Schoenberg: Peripetie from ‘Five Orchestral Pieces’ Opus 16 (1909)
Analysis section by section
Score reading taskFind 4 examples of hexachords on your scores
(you should have notes on this).
Annotate them to tell me whether they use verticalisatoin or melodic treatment
You only have 3 minutes to do this
Expressionism so far How did WW1 impact the way artists, composers,
poets etc created their work?
Composers started to use lots of chromatics in their pieces. What are chromatics?
What does atonal mean?
What are the dynamics like in an expressionist piece of music?
How do expressionist composers explore pitch and timbre?
What is a hexachord? What is the compliment?
‘Peripetie’ was written for a large orchestra to produce contrasts with texture, dynamics & timbre.
It is written for quadruple woodwind (4 per section)
3 flutes & piccolo
3 clarinets & bass clarinet
3 bassoons & contrabassoon
3 oboes & cor anglais
A large brass section, with and without mutes.
A large percussion section – cymbals, timpani, xylophone
& of course strings
Flute Piccolo
clarinet Bass clarinet
bassoon
contrabassoon
Oboe Cor
anglais
Important features The parts are very challenging to play
A lot of wide leaps, use of the lowest to the highestregister of all the instruments.
There is no conventional structure – although it is like a ‘free’ Rondo with contrasting textures & tempo.
Use of melodic fragments (very short melodic ideas)
Use of complicated fragmented rhythms
Atonal
Use of hexachords and compliments
The melody is passed around different instruments.
It is made up of 5 sections
Peripetie is Greek for Sudden Changes
Section A: Bars 1-18 Begins with a bang!
Clarinets and flutes begin with 2 hexachords - Bar 1 Clarinets - Bar 3 Flutes
Leads to a fortissimo (ff) horn motif marked principal line
Variations of the hexachords appear throughout the piece as they are a basis for most of the melodic and harmonic content
Most of the ideas to be used in this piece are stated one after the other
Section A: Bars 1-18Tempo/Rhythm
Tempo marking: sehr rasch- Very quick
Opening contains mostly short triplet and sextuplet bursts
Tempo feels a little like its slowing after the burst- etwas ruhiger: slightly calmer - Quiet horn passage
Section A: 1-18 Instrumentation/Texture
The full orchestra get a short appearance
Brass dominate the texture till bar 8 when the woodwind take over with low bassoon/ bass clarinet and silky clarinet line
Instrumental combinations drop in and out in homophonic bursts
Texture thins towards the end of the section leaving a solo clarinet
Section A: Bars 1-18Pitch/Melody
Atonal (no sense of key)
Built on hexachords
Opening bars show the full pitch range of the instruments
Bar 10: Clarinet melody is expressive and gentle, but still has harsh interval leaps used to create tension (Minor 9th/ Major 7th)
Section A: Bars 1-18Dynamics:
Starts loudly, becoming louder with sudden bursts from instrumental groups
Bar 5 reaches fff before dying away to p
Trumpets and trombones use a mute
Mutes usually mellow the tone, but Schoenberg uses it for sound quality
He uses extremes of dynamics that the mute wasn’t designed to reach!
Section B: 18-34 Second section is marked by the cello taking the
principal voice
The high, intense cello line gives way to a frantic section
Tempo/rhythm
Tempo returns to original marking
Short durations give the impression that the tempo has increased more than it has
Section B: 18-34 Instrumentation/texture
Full orchestra used, but not all at once, except for climatic points (e.g. 30-34)
Wind and percussion: very busy and loud dynamicsViolins and Cellos: Soft line, mostly inaudible but add to the effect and texture
Shows Schoenberg's attention to detail
Polyphonic and complex texture throughout
Section B: 18-34 Pitch/Melody
Principal voice snakes through much of the orchestra
Bars 24-28: Bounces rapidly from one brass instrument to another (Klangfarbernmelodie)
Klangfarbernmelodie: Tone, colour melody. Describes how timbre contributes to the melody as well as pitch and rhythm
Bar 28 and 29: Secondary voice makes its only appearance in the piece
Section B: 18-34 Dynamics
Begins quite quietly
Immediate crescendo
Dynamics are varied from instrument to instrument
Principal and secondary voices always f-fff
Other parts ranging from quiet to very loud
Dynamics change dramatically in a restless way
Section A1: 35-43This section is marked by string section taking
principal voice
Horn flourish follows
Return to the pp horn hexachord of bar 8
Menacing mood, gives the impression more fireworks are to come!
Section C: 44-58Section is marked by the bassoon taking the
principal voice, passing it onto solo cello
Tempo/Rhythm: Alternates between ruhiger (calmer) and heftig (passionate)
Instrumentation/texture: Sparse, Schoenberg concentrates on overlapping solo instruments
Bar 53: Full orchestra
Dynamics: range from pp (bars 44/45) to fff (bars 53-55)
Section A2: 59-66Section is introduced by speeding up to the
original tempo and a triplet figure in clarinets and second violin
Tempo/Rhythm:
Rhythmic motifs from Section A returnTrumpets bars 61-63= bar 5/6 repeated in quick succession Clarinets bars 59-61= bar 1Flutes bars 62-63= bar 3
Section A2: 59-66Instrumentation/Texture:
Starting with clarinets and strings, instruments are introduced one by one in quick succession (layering)
Bar 64: Full orchestra comes together for final climatic chord
Section A2: 59-66 Pitch/Melody
Material from the opening is used and developed
No voice is marked as more important than any other
Bar 64: Climatic hexachord (C D Eb F# G G#)
Bar 64: Double basses play an unrelated tremolo chord, very high in their register, which sustains once the climatic chord dies away
Dynamics:
Crescendos quickly from pp at bar 59 to fff in bar 64
Immediately dies away to nothing with the tremolo double basses
Listening and appraising questions
1. Describe the dynamics of the first section of the piece
2. Name the type of ensemble performing Peripetie
3. Describe the tonality of the piece
4. Peripetie was written in the 20th century. List 6 musical features you can hear in the piece that demonstrate this
5. What is the name given to the group of notes Schoenberg used as a basic for his melodic and harmonic material?
6. How might Schoenberg have used this group of notes when he composed the piece?
Listening and appraising questions
7. The horns play a sustained chord in bar 8. In which section later on can the horns be heard playing the same chord? What is the dynamic marking for this chord?
8. What is the term given to Schoenberg's technique of moving the melodic parts rapidly through the instruments?
9. What playing technique can be heard in the strings in the last 2 bars of the piece?
Exam QuestionDescribe the use of rhythm in this expressionist piece (3
marks).
Basic answers:- Rhythms are broken up and do not flow- Rhythms are complicated- Rhythms are varied and keep on changing
Excellent answers:- Rhythms are fragmented and erratic with no regular pulse - Complex patterns features including sextuplets, duplets, constant syncopation etc - There is little repetition of rhythmic ideas in the music, creating a sense of unrest, chaos and lack of order