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  2. May 16, 2024 · Arnold Schoenberg was an Austrian-American composer who created new methods of musical composition involving atonality, namely serialism and the 12-tone row. He was also an influential teacher; among his most significant pupils were Alban Berg and Anton Webern.

  3. Arnold Schönberg in Payerbach, 1903. Arnold Schoenberg was born into a lower middle-class Jewish family in the Leopoldstadt district (in earlier times a Jewish ghetto) of Vienna, at Obere Donaustraße 5. His father Samuel, a native of Szécsény, Hungary, [e] later moved to Pozsony (Pressburg, at that time part of the Kingdom of Hungary, now ...

  4. Arnold Franz Walter Schoenberg was born in Vienna, Austria, on Sept. 13, 1874. He learned to play the violin as a child and later taught himself the cello. Almost entirely self-taught as a composer, he modeled his work after that of Johannes Brahms. His earliest major works, however—the string sextet Transfigured Night (1899) and choral ...

  5. Arnold Schoenberg was born on 13th September 1874 in the Leopoldstadt district of Vienna. His family had him take violin lessons at the age of eight. In one of his memoirs, he wrote that he could play violin duets of Viotti and Pleyel when he was as little as nine years old. Other than that, Schoenberg had very little formal training in music ...

  6. Mar 4, 2023 · Yet Schoenberg began teaching when he was still completely unknown and continued throughout his life, reaching hundreds of students in Vienna, Berlin, and Los Angeles, including many who went on to successful and impactful careers in very different styles and contexts.

  7. Schoenberg was one of the most recognized teachers of his day, counting among his students Anton Webern and Alban Berg, who both took his twelve-tone technique and developed it into their own distinctive styles.

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