Alban Maria Johannes Berg
(February
9,
1885 –
December 24,
1935) was an
Austrian
composer. He was a member of the
Second Viennese School along with
Arnold Schoenberg and
Anton Webern, producing works
that combined
Mahlerian
romanticism with Schoenberg's
twelve tone technique.
Life and work
Berg was born in
Vienna, the third of four
children of Johanna and Conrad Berg. His family lived quite
comfortably until the death of his father in
1900.
He was more interested in
literature than
music as a child, and did not
begin to compose until he was fifteen, when he started to teach
himself music. He had very little formal music eduction until he
began a six-year period of study with Arnold Schoenberg in October
1904 to
1911, studying
counterpoint,
music theory, and
harmony; by
1906 he concentrated on his music
studies full-time, and by
1907 he began
composition lessons. Among his
compositions under Schoenberg were five
piano sonata drafts and various
songs, including his
Seven Early Songs (Sieben
frühe Lieder), three of which were Berg's first publicly
performed work in a concert featuring the music of Schoenberg's
pupils in Vienna that same year.
These early compositions would reveal Berg's
progress as a composer under Schoenberg's tutelage. The early
sonata sketches eventually culminated in Berg's Piano Sonata Op.1
(1907–8);
while considered to be his "graduating composition", is one of the
most formidable Op. 1 ever written by any composer. (See Lauder.)
Schoenberg was a major influence on him throughout his lifetime;
Berg not only greatly admired him as a composer and mentor, but
they remained close friends for the remainder of his life. Many
people believe that Berg also saw him as a surrogate father,
considering Berg's young age during his father's death.
An important idea of Schoenberg is his teaching
was what would later be known as developing variation,
which stated that the unity of a piece is dependent on all aspects
of the composition being derived from a single basic idea. Berg
would then pass this idea down to one of his students,
Theodor Adorno, who stated: "The
main principle he conveyed was that of variation: everything was
supposed to develop out of something else and yet be intrinsically
different." The Sonata is a striking example of the execution of
this idea — the whole composition can be derived from the opening
quartal gesture and from the opening phrase.
Berg was a part of Vienna's cultural elite
during the heady period of
fin de siècle. Among his
circle included the musicians
Alexander von Zemlinsky and
Franz Schreker, painter
Gustav Klimt, writer and satirist
Karl Kraus, architect
Adolf Loos, and poet
Peter Altenberg. In 1906, Berg
met
Helene Nahowski, singer and
daughter of a wealthy family, and despite the outward hostility of
her family, married on May 3, 1911.
In
1913, Berg's Five songs on
picture postcard texts by Peter Altenberg were premiered in
Vienna. The piece caused a riot, and the performance had to be
halted: a complete performance of the work was not given until
1952.
From
1915 to
1918, he served in the
Austrian Army and it was during a
period of leave in
1917 that he began work on his
first
opera,
Wozzeck. Following
World War I, he settled again in
Vienna where he gave private music lessons, one of whom was
Hanns Eisler. He also helped
Schoenberg run the
Society for Private Musical Performances—which
sponsored new work by promising composers.
The performance in
1924 of three excerpts from
Wozzeck brought him his first public success. Wozzeck,
which Berg completed in
1922, but was not performed in
its entireity until a performance conducted by
Erich Kleiber in
1925. The opera is today seen as
one of his most important works; a later opera, also critically
acclaimed,
Lulu, was left incomplete at
his death.
Berg is probably best known for his
Violin Concerto, which, like much
of his work, combines
atonality with tonal passages,
and uses Schoenberg's
twelve tone technique in a way as
to admit
Wagnerian harmonies. Other well
known Berg compositions include the
Lyric Suite (thought to be a
big influence on the String Quartet No. 3 of
Béla Bartók) and the
Chamber
Concerto for
violin,
piano and 13
wind instruments.
Berg died on Christmas Eve, 1935, in Vienna,
from
blood poisoning caused by an
insect bite. He was 50 years old.
Compositions
Bibliography
Analytical Writings
-
Adorno, Theodor W. Alban Berg: Master of
the Smallest Link. Trans. Juliane Brand and Christopher
Hailey. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991.
-
Schmalfeldt, Janet. “Berg’s Path to
Atonality: The Piano Sonata, Op. 1.” Alban Berg: Historical
and Analytical Perspectives. Eds. David Gable and Robert P.
Morgan, pgg. 79-110. New York: Oxford University Press, 1991.
-
Lauder, Robert Neil. Two Early Piano Works
of Alban Berg: A Stylistic and Structural Analysis. Thesis.
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 1986.
-
Bruhn, Siglind, ed. Encrypted Messages in
Alban Berg’s Music. New York: Garland Publishing, 1998.
-
Schweizer, Klaus. Die Sonatensatzform im
Schaffen Alban Bergs. Stuttgart: Satz und Druck, 1970.
-
Wilkey, Jay Weldon. Certain Aspects of
Form in the Vocal Music of Alban Berg. Ph.D. thesis. Ann
Arbor: Indiana University, 1965.
-
Perle, George. The operas of Alban Berg.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1980.
Biographical Writings
-
Brand, Juliane, Christopher Hailey and Donald
Harris, eds. The Berg-Schoenberg Correspondence: Selected
Letters. New York: Norton, 1987.
-
Grun, Bernard, ed. Alban Berg: Letters to
his Wife. London: Faber and Faber, 1971.
-
Redlich, H.F. Alban Berg, the Man and His
Music. London: John Calder, 1957.
-
Reich, Willi. The life and work of Alban
Berg. Trans. Cornelius Cardew. New York : Da Capo Press,
1982.
-
Monson, Karen. Alban Berg: a biography.
London: Macdonald and Jane's, 1979.
-
Carner, Mosco. Alban Berg: the man and the
work. London: Duckworth, 1975.
-
Redlich, Hans Ferdinand. Alban Berg, the
man and his music. London: J. Calder, 1957.
-
Leibowitz, René. Schoenberg and his
school; the contemporary stage of the language of music.
Trans. Dika Newlin. New York: Philosophical Library, 1949.