discussion
BMC Library
H-1093 Budapest, Mátyás str. 8.
Free admission

Harvey Sachs: Schönberg

Why it matters

Hungarian language programme!

 

Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951) was a Jewish-born Austrian-American composer who was an international icon in his days, and his twelve-tone compositional technique, dodecaphony, was considered by many to be the future of music. Today, however, his works are rarely performed, and his name evokes indifference at best, and antipathy at worst. Harvey Sachs, the renowned musicologist, attempts to restore Schoenberg to his rightful place as one of the most influential composers and teachers of the twentieth century, who defied his critics, including the Nazis who called his works ‘degenerate’, and who brought about changes that are still felt today, and whose compositions are worthy of study by anyone interested in the past, present and future of Western music.

 

Harvey Sachs (1946), American-Canadian musicologist and author of many excellent books on music, including a major biography of Toscanini, knows exactly what a good biographer should know: how to write in a readable way and present the facts based on years of research in a way that is interesting to any reader interested in the incredibly rich cultural and musical history of the 20th century.

 

 

With the friendly support of Ernst von Siemens Music Foundation.
With the support of the National Cultural Fund of Hungary.

 

   

Participants

  • Judit Rácz - translator
  • Szabolcs Molnár - music historian

program